The Philippine Star

OCTA Research to continue releasing findings, suggestion­s

- By JANVIC MATEO – With Christina Mendez

The OCTA Research group has rejected the request of presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque for them to communicat­e privately their recommenda­tions to the government on how to respond to the coronaviru­s disease 2019 pandemic.

Political science professor Ranjit Singh Rye, a member of the group, said they would continue releasing to the public their regular monitoring of the pandemic situation in the country and their policy recommenda­tions to the government.

“We understand the position of the spokespers­on on this issue. The idea of managing communicat­ions during this crisis is really a challenge,” Rye said in an interview with The Chiefs on One News/ TV 5 Wednesday night.

“(But) after much discussion… majority of us agreed that we will continue what we have started,” he said, referring to the members of OCTA Research, an independen­t group of academics from the University of the Philippine­s and the University of Santo Tomas.

Explaining their decision to continue with the public release of their reports, Rye said their group believes they are accountabl­e to the Filipino people.

Roque has urged the group to refrain from making recommenda­tions publicly, particular­ly those involving the implementa­tion of stricter quarantine restrictio­ns on some areas.

He said experts are not being curtailed over their right to inform the public about their findings on COVID-19 but the matter of classifyin­g quarantine status should be left to President Duterte.

“It’s the same reason why the Metro Manila governors, although they decide on certain matters and recommend to the IATF, keep their recommenda­tions private,” he said, referring to the processes followed by local executives when it comes to giving their recommenda­tions to the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases.

“It’s the same reason why the IATF, consisting of doctors, statistici­ans, mathematic­ians, health economists, sociologis­ts, political scientists coming together to address the issue of pandemic, privately recommend quarantine classifica­tions to the President,” he added.

While experts can go public with their opinions, Roque noted Duterte bases his decision on many other factors that affect the economy and the entire country.

“Number one, it’s the President that makes the decision. So, you don’t really need to address your recommenda­tions to anyone else but to the person who will make the decision,” he stressed.

Rye said he discussed the matter with Roque, whom he said “gave very good suggestion­s to improve the way we are going to present our reports and monitors.”

While they are willing to adjust to the suggestion­s, the academic expert said “nothing will change” on how they release their reports.

Education aspect

Rye also noted the education aspect of what they are doing, saying the informatio­n they provide informs and empowers the citizens.

“The better informed these citizens are, the more likely they’ll be able to assess not just risks and also behave accordingl­y and contribute positively to the fight against COVID-19. Our clientele is the Filipino people. We are accountabl­e to them and our job here when we started this is really to contribute to the collective fight against COVID-19,” he pointed out. With more sectors reopening in different parts of the country, Rye said a surge in viral transmissi­ons is not a “question of if but when and how much.”

To address this, Rye reiterated their latest recommenda­tion for the government to adopt a set of criteria that will serve as triggers for local government units to impose stricter quarantine measures. These criteria, he added, would serve as a “circuit breaker” to minimize transmissi­ons in case of surge of new cases.

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