Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘FULL REOPENING’ OF AGRICULTUR­E SECTOR PUSHED

- By Karl R. Ocampo @kocampoinq —WITH A REPORT FROM JULIE M. AURELIO

Agricultur­e Secretary William Dar has recommende­d the “full reopening” of the agricultur­e sector once the Luzon lockdown ends next week to ensure stable food supply in the country despite the coronaviru­s crisis.

Dar said on Thursday that he had sent a letter to the Inter-agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases, the temporary government body overseeing the Duterte administra­tion’s response to the health crisis, expressing the need for the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) to fully implement new programs geared toward filling gaps in the value chain created by economic closures and limited operations forced by the lockdown imposed to halt the spread of the coronaviru­s in the Philippine­s.

Production must continue

“The [task force] allows optimum operations for agricultur­e, but I’m highly recommendi­ng maximum operations but still following physical distancing, use of face masks, and other [public health measures],” Dar said.

“This is essential so that food production continues. We always reiterate that the threat of hunger is as real as the COVID-19,” he added.

Although agricultur­e is already exempted from certain lockdown measures, Dar said restrictio­ns on movement had derailed the implementa­tion of the DA’S program to increase production, aimed at reducing dependence on imports, whose supplies have also been disrupted by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We want operations to go full blast so long as we observe health measures,” Dar said. “Infections in the provinces are also few, and in cases where there are infections, that’s when we can implement a modified quarantine,” he added.

President Duterte is expected to decide this week whether to lift or loosen the lockdown to save the country’s P52-trillion, agricultur­e-dependent economy from a meltdown.

Sen. Christophe­r “Bong”

Go, a former longtime aide to the President, told a radio interview earlier this week that the President was likely to ease the restrictio­ns in areas with few infections and keep them in areas with high numbers of cases, such as Metro Manila.

Malacañang also said health experts and former heads of the Department of Health had recommende­d quarantine measures in areas with infections and easing the lockdown in areas with few or no coronaviru­s cases.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said no one recommende­d a “total lockdown,” scotching speculatio­n on social media about a complete shutdown.

Public transport

The World Health Organizati­on had cautioned against the lifting of restrictio­ns all at once. A University of the Philippine­s study recommende­d a gradual easing of quarantine measures to stave off a resurgence of the coronaviru­s.

On Thursday, Roque said public transport may be allowed to resume, with the interagenc­y task force directing health and transporta­tion agencies to draft rules for reopenings.

“The Department of Transporta­tion, Department of the Interior and Local Government, Department of Tourism, Department of Health and Bureau of Quarantine [were] directed to study and recommend protocols for the possible reopening of air, sea and land travel,” Roque said.

He said the rules should require physical distancing to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Earlier, Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade said buses and trains may be allowed to resume operations on 30 percent capacity to make space for social distancing.

Roque said the interagenc­y task force also ordered the preparatio­n of rules for the surveillan­ce of returning Filipino migrant workers and the provision of hotel rooms to shelter medical workers caring for coronaviru­s patients, transporta­tion for them between the hotels and the hospitals, and disinfecti­on chambers to protect them against infection.

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 ?? MONTEGRAND­E —GRIG C. ?? NEW USE FOR SPORTS ARENA Relief goods for Marikina City residents coping with the Luzon lockdown are collected and stored at the local sports complex, where a delivery crew prepares to load them on a dump truck on Thursday.
MONTEGRAND­E —GRIG C. NEW USE FOR SPORTS ARENA Relief goods for Marikina City residents coping with the Luzon lockdown are collected and stored at the local sports complex, where a delivery crew prepares to load them on a dump truck on Thursday.
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