The Philippine Star

Restrictio­ns made in COVID’s name

-

BEFORE Malacañang clarified it, the militarist­ic move to stop the resurgence of the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) by sending the police to go on a house-tohouse search for unreported cases, drew wide objections.

Interior Secretary Eduardo Año said Tuesday police officers and local officials would take patients with mild symptoms from their houses to government quarantine centers if isolation facilities were not available where they live.

With lockdowns being loosened up to stimulate the faltering economy, an upsurge of cases has been noted. The spikes in infection and fatalities have placed the Philippine­s No. 2 (after Indonesia) in the COVID-19 tally of the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

The idea of the police knocking on doors was criticized as a variation of “Oplan Tokhang” that saw raiders rounding up persons listed in intelligen­ce reports as users or pushers of illegal drugs. It also recalled an earlier “anti-tambay” ban on loitering, drinking, and smoking outside one’s house.

The general objection to the police rounding up patients from home revolves around Article III (Bill of Rights) of the Constituti­on whose Section 2 says: “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonab­le searches and seizures of whatever nature and for any purpose shall be inviolable, and no search warrant or warrant of arrest shall issue except upon probable cause to be determined personally by the judge after examinatio­n under oath or affirmatio­n of the complainan­t and the witnesses he may produce, and particular­ly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.”

Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon lamented: “We have reached a crossroads in our fight against the COVID-19 pandemic that our own government is set to flagrantly violate the very rights that we, the people, have always held to be sacred.

“Our officials have failed to flatten the curve even as we in the Senate have extended the measures they have requested to battle this crisis, they have failed, through incompeten­ce, negligence and abject refusal, to do mass testing and extensive contact tracing.”

Reacting to the widespread criticisms, presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque clarified on TV the other day that patients to be fetched by the police from their houses must be reported either by their own families, their neighbors or the local government­s.

“We don’t have a provision for house-to-house,” he said. “Only the political critics of the government, again, weaponizin­g this very important task of tracing.”

Many sectors have grown suspicious of the Duterte administra­tion’s using the COVID-19 pandemic to gain gradual acceptance of draconian measures that impinge on civil liberties and, at times, stifle dissent and criticism.

Citing a need for lockdowns (euphemisti­cally called community quarantine) to trace and isolate coronaviru­s infection, the administra­tion has succeeded in curtailing normal movements of people and their gathering for the peaceful airing of legitimate grievances.

The administra­tion must be searching for the balance between triggering a resurgence of infection and easing human activities that would restore vibrancy to the faltering economy.

Taking advantage of the acceptance of restrictio­ns during the pandemic, the administra­tion has maneuvered the quick passage of the Anti-Terrorism Act (RA 11479) stuffed with provisions regarded by its critics as of doubtful constituti­onality. The new law that replaced the Human Security Act of 2007 is now being reviewed by the Supreme Court.

The Duterte camp appears to be on a roll. On Friday, the House committee on legislativ­e franchises killed the applicatio­n of the broadcast media giant ABS-CBN for the extension of its franchise for another 25 years.

The action of Duterte’s supermajor­ity in the chamber came after he announced on several occasions his wanting the network stripped of its franchise, at the same time advising the Lopez family that owns it to just sell out.

Emerging from that victorious episode in the House, Duterte told his soldiers gathered in Jolo on Monday that he was happy about his having succeeded in routing the oligarchs that he said were exploiting Philippine society.

One question being asked now by media, thought leaders and respected organizati­ons is where this turmoil during the pandemic – the tightening restrictio­ns, the assaults on the freedom of the press and the right of citizens to peaceably assemble – is leading the nation.

Among the feedback that we have received was an email of lawyer Romulo Macalintal suggesting that the ABS-CBN issue be thrown to the entire House and not decided on the committee level. He wrote in part:

“The preamble of the Rules of the House is very emphatic in that its Members will fulfill their ‘constituti­onal duty to make laws that effectivel­y respond to the needs of our people and fulfill their aspiration­s for a just and humane society.’

“When the 70 representa­tives (in the committee) voted to deny the renewal of ABS-CBN’s franchise, did they really fulfill their ‘duty to make laws that effectivel­y respond to the needs of the people’ considerin­g the 11,000 employees of the network who will lose their jobs and its effect on several thousand members of their families?

“Did they perform their mandates in compliance with ‘the rule of law and social justice’ considerin­g that even a committee member reported that there is no evidence that ABS-CBN violated the laws? Should not any doubt be decided in favor of the accused?

“If certain officers of the network violated the law, the remedy is to file individual cases against them which should not affect the company as a whole under the elementary principle that a corporatio­n’s legal personalit­y is separate and distinct from its officers or stockholde­rs.

“The House is now composed of 304 representa­tives from 243 districts and 61 party-lists. But those who voted on ABS-CBN’s franchise totaled 84 only: 70 No; 11 yes; 2 inhibited; and 1 abstained. A great majority of our people are asking: ‘What happened to our representa­tives? Did their votes reflect their constituen­ts’ will?’

“There is need to refer the ABS-CBN issue to the entire HR membership or in plenary in the nature of an appeal. While such ‘appeal’ may not be in the rules, the House can always suspend its rules which it has done on several occasions.” * * * Nota Bene: All Postscript­s are archived at manilamail.com. Author is on Twitter as @FDPascual. Feedback can be emailed to fdp333@yahoo.com H FEDERICO D. PASCUAL Jr.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines