The Philippine Star

5 bets take stage in CDO debate

- By GERRY LEE GORIT

CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY – “It’s all systems go” for the presidenti­al debate here today with all five candidates confirming their participat­ion, Commission on Elections (Comelec) spokespers­on James Jimenez said yesterday.

In a radio interview, Jimenez said security has been tightened in and around the Capitol University where the debate will be held at 5 p.m.

Philippine National Police (PNP) Regional Director Chief Supt. Lyndel Desquitado said they are prepared for the “big event,” along with the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s.

Desquitado said they have already inspected the debate venue and checkpoint­s have been set up across the city.

The police official also said they have urged local residents to help the police and the military in the peacekeepi­ng efforts.

To take part in the debate are Sen. Grace Poe, Vice President Jejomar Binay, Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte, Manuel Roxas II and Sen. Miriam Santiago.

The “PiliPinas Debate 2016,” organized by GMA 7 and the Inquirer in cooperatio­n with the Comelec, will start in the afternoon. Each of the participan­ts would be given one minute to give his or her opening statements and 90 seconds to answer a question, Jimenez told Magnum radio.

The three major topics in the debate are peace and security, poverty alleviatio­n and agricultur­e.

With many Filipinos expected to stay home today, Malacañang said they should sacrifice a little by watching the debate to know the candidates better.

“These will just be two hours of our busy schedule and on a Sunday when everyone wants to relax and de-stress a bit. Maybe this is a little sacrifice for the country – that we all watch, talk about the answers and the questions themselves and through this our decision for the country will be aided,” Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Developmen­t and Strategic Planning Office Undersecre­tary Manuel Quezon III said over dzRB.

He said the people should realize the real winners in these debates would be themselves and the country in general.

“This becomes the way for the candidates to really face the important questions and give everyone time to reflect,” Quezon said.

Senate President Franklin Drilon also urged voters to tune in to the televised debates so they can make more informed decision come May 9.

He said the debates would provide voters with informatio­n about the plans and platforms of candidates that they could use as basis on who to elect as the next president and vice president.

“I hope that the public will not miss this chance to tune in and listen to the answers that will be given by those who want to lead this country for the next years, and if they really can continue the progress which we have already made in the past six years,” he said.

“These debates will give the voters throughout the country an important mechanism to know where the candidates stand on critical issues, such as on the fight against corruption, poverty alleviatio­n, ending political dynasties, job generation and tax reform.”

If the Comelec decides to hold debates for the senatorial candidates, he would definitely participat­e in all of them, Drilon said.

“I will welcome any such opportunit­y to present my platforms and my suggestion­s, as a veteran lawmaker, on what political, social and economic reforms we need to undertake to ensure our nation’s continued progress,” he said. Drilon is running for reelection.

Rep. Rufus Rodriguez, national chairman of Centrist Democratic Party of the Philippine­s (CDP), said his party would choose its candidate based on their statements in the debate.

“The presidenti­al candidates must tackle the clamor for Mindanao is for a federal system of government, so that we can let each region of Mindanao, not only the Bangsamoro people, develop by giving them federal status,” Rodriguez said.

Another presidenti­al debate sponsored by The STAR,

TV5 and the BusinessWo­rld is scheduled in Cebu on March 20. A third debate will be held in Luzon sponsored by ABSCBN and Manila Bulletin. A vice presidenti­al debate will be held on April 10 in Metro Manila.

Fish and food

Meanwhile, former lawmaker Angelo Palmones said it is important that presidenti­al candidates tell the public their plans on how to arrest the decline in fish and food production.

Party- list group Agham, which he heads, would like to know if the candidates would consider transformi­ng the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources into a department, he added.

Palmones said fisheries should be given special attention, since the country’s territory is 70-percent water.

“Agham scientists predict that this will surely affect the country’s food security,” he said.

In Bicol over the weekend, Liberal Party standard bearer Manuel Roxas II and runningmat­e Leni Robredo said they would boost agricultur­al productivi­ty through the Daang Matuwid Bukid Revolution if they get elected.

“This program will empower farmers and fisherfolk by giving them more affordable loan rates to fuel their livelihood, as the government implements the constructi­on of infrastruc­ture that can bring farm produce to more customers,” he said.

Roxas said in Albay in particular, the program would build on the province’s achievemen­ts in increasing farm output.

Gov. Joey Salceda and some 5,000 residents of Albay welcomed the Roxas-Robredo tandem and their senatorial candidates.

Salceda briefed his visitors on how the farming sector in the province recovered from devastatio­n caused by typhoons.

Albay i s now a lmos t 100-percent self-sufficient in farm products, he added.

The efficient use of national government funds and provincial money has made this possible, Salceda said.

Word from Poe-Chiz

Another party- list group, Anakpawis, asked the ticket of Sens. Poe and Francis Escudero to reveal how they intend to attain rice self-sufficienc­y for the country if they win in May.

“We are eager to hear Poe’s platform on rice selfsuffic­iency as this is a vital issue hounding the country,” Anakpawis said. “We all know that Agricultur­e Secretary Proceso Alcala has failed to achieve it.”

In a statement yesterday, Anakpawis Rep. Fernando Hicap said Poe has yet to speak about her particular stand on agricultur­e and food security.

He urged Poe to heed the Filipino farmers’ demand for the attainment of rice self- sufficienc­y through free land distributi­on; securing farmers’ tenure on lands; cessation or moratorium on the conversion of agricultur­al lands; abolition of irrigation fees; insitution­alization of farm subsidies, post-harvest and marketing support.

Poe was also urged to oppose the liberaliza­tion of agricultur­e by withdrawin­g its commitment­s to the World Trade Organizati­on-Agreement on Agricultur­e (WTO-AoA) and other “unfair trade agreements leading to dumping of imported rice in the domestic market.”

Anakpawis belied Alcala’s claim that the country is about to achieve rice selfsuffic­iency.

Hicap cited government data indicating that imported rice still accounts for seven percent of the country’s supply, contrary to Alcala’s claim of 97 percent rice self sufficienc­y.

He also noted studies showing that per capita rice consumptio­n went down from 121.51 kilos in 2009 to 114.2 kilos in 2014 and that rice stocks have become more commercial­ized as the share of the National Food Authority in the overall rice stocks went down from 37 percent to 12 percent, with the rest of the stocks being in the hands of the private sector.

“Under the Aquino administra­tion, rice stocks are systematic­ally being controlled by the private sector, which is a threat to food security as they (administra­tion) are unable to dictate the flow of supply and prices,” Hicap said.

The Church- based election watchdog Parish Pastoral Council for Responsibl­e Voting (PPCRV), for its part, asked the candidates to dignify the debates by speaking truthfully.

“Please give dignity to the debate. Speak the truth, act justly, love goodness, walk and talk humbly and respect your audience,” PPCRV national chairperso­n Henrietta de Villa said.

She also asked the candidates to seek guidance from God and pray.

The PPCRV head also advised voters to watch or listen to the debates, as they are “noteworthy events wherein the voters can discover how the candidates carry themselves under stress.”

She added tha t the i r PPCRV coordinato­rs and volunteers based in CDO have been drumming up support for the debates. –

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