BusinessMirror March 14, 2020

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Saturday, March 14, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 156

P25.00 nationwide | 12 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

HOW THE ONCE COMMERCIALLY DUBIOUS DAVAO NIGHT MARKET—WHERE TERRORISTS EXPLODED A BOMB—REAPED PATRONAGE, FAME, SUCCESS

THE Night Market on Roxas Avenue in Davao City.

D

MICHAEL O. LIGALIG | DREAMSTIME.COM

By Manuel T. Cayon

AVAO CITY—Scorned at the onset as a city venture unlikely to commercially succeed—and even marred by an unflattering record of a deadly terrorist blast three years after it was launched—the trailblazing Davao Night Market was conceived to accommodate the rising number of sidewalk vendors here.

The market, however, has proven its critics wrong as it continues to earn multimillion-peso revenues for the city, which, in the first place, did not have to spend much to put up the market. It has even evolved to be a tourist attraction, owing to the range of merchandise it offers, especially street food and native delicacies and, not of least importance, providing a means of livelihood to small businesses and street entrepreneurs. Frowned upon and questioned, the night market strip along the 1.5-kilometer stretch of Roxas Avenue here turned in P2.44 million to the city coffers on its second year of operation in 2014, doubling to P5 million in

HALAL foods, or food items including meat, prepared and cooked according to Islamic practice, are sold alongside other street food items at the Roxas night market. MANUEL CAYON

PORK meat for grilling still sell hot at the night market despite recent infection of some pig farms outside Davao City. MANUEL CAYON

the year before terrorists exploded a bomb in 2016. Last year, the city collected P11.63 million from the arcabala, or token collection, from the renter of stalls. Not only did it work wonders to stave off further congestion of the sidewalks while earning extra millions for the city, the night market has also become the micro-window of how security ringing the place has evolved to be the reflection of the city’s peace-and-order situation, providing a comforting sense of well-being among market goers and residents alike. TUNA preparations for stew gourmet are displayed prominently to attract visitors at the Roxas night market. MANUEL CAYON

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 50.8600

Micro-face of the city

“THE face of security at Roxas

night market is the face of security of the whole city,” said retired Col. Lyndron V. Paniza, who took over the helm from other former Army and police officers who were assigned to secure the strip. The impression that visitors derived from visiting the night market revolved around “how they felt secure or how they observed the strict security measures around the place is how they also look at the security of the entire city,” he said. “They would carry the impression that the tight security around the night market is the same tight security we do within the entire city,” he stressed. Paniza is the designated ground

commander of the more than 100 security personnel from units of the city police, the anti-terrorist unit Task Force Davao, the auxiliary units and the city government-paid barangay tanod. While the Civil Security Unit is only part of several city government offices assigned to manage and monitor the nigh market as an economic enterprise, Paniza’s roundthe-clock security management made him the de facto ground operations officer of the site. Like his predecessor, retired Army Col. Yusuf Jimlani described their security duties at the night market as a nightmare. “At the outset, it is indeed a huge job to secure the visitors at night in a place where security soft spots are all

around,” he said. “It’s a highway where people are all around to wait for their ride. At the other side are several intersections where you don’t know everybody,” Jimlani told the BusinessMirror in earlier interviews during his stint in 2013, after the bombing at the section of the area where massage therapists work. The explosion on the night of September 2, 2016, left 15 dead and 69 injured, 11 of them seriously. Two years after, the city government reported having spent around P8.7 million for livelihood, continuing medication and education for the kin of the victims and the survivors of the incident. Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4853 n UK 64.0277 n HK 6.5398 n CHINA 7.2368 n SINGAPORE 36.0991 n AUSTRALIA 32.0774 n EU 56.8055 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.5507

Source: BSP (March 13, 2020)


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