BusinessMirror May 08, 2022

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A broader look at today’s business n

Sunday, May 8, 2022 Vol. 17 No. 210

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 12 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

A MAN walks past election posters outside a school in Quezon City. AP/AARON FAVILA

2022 POLLS: DAY OF RECKONING

AFP, PNP, Comelec and stakeholders in the energy sector run checklist on last-minute preparations to ensure peaceful, orderly—and brownout-free—elections on Monday.

F

By Rene Acosta & Lenie Lectura

of checkpoints across the country in order to thwart the movement of criminals and armed groups.

ILIPINOS will cast their votes on May 9, 2022, not only to elect their new leaders, including a President who will lead the country in the next six years, but also to find out whether the country could already shrug off its tag as the site of one of the worst, if not the most, dangerous elections in the world.

The country’s periodic political exercise has in the past been associated with incidents of moderate to massive cheating, intimidations, harassments and even killings across the country where candidates or their supporters go against their rivals. Away from the scenes of the elections, snatching of ballot boxes occurs while private armed groups and other lawless elements have worked or exerted efforts to influence the results of the democratic exercise. Inside the polling places, the actual voting is marred by confusion, exacerbated by cases of malfunctioning vote counting machines, and complaints of dead people still found on the voters’ master list, while those who are still living and ready to cast their votes are not on the list or could not find their assigned precincts. There are also “flying voters” on the side.

Enough preps?

THE government—especially the Philippine National Police (PNP) and the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), which are among the agencies deputized by the Commis-

sion on Elections (Comelec) for poll duties centered on maintaining order, peace and security—has, however declared that such cases would just be history on Monday’s elections, given the weeks and months of preparations. But with the Covid-19 spell still hovering around every voting precinct, the political exercise will prove whether the government has prepared well enough. “It’s all systems go,” declared outgoing General Dionardo Carlos, two days before he retired from the PNP on Friday, emphasizing the efforts and preparations that the police exerted along with other deputized agencies in order to ensure that the elections would be “fair, safe, secure and credible.” During the occasion, Carlos and the chiefs of the military and the Philippine Coast Guard led the ceremonial send-off for election duties of more than 18,000 policemen, soldiers, Coast Guard personnel and even staff from the Department of Education, which was witnessed by Comelec Chairman Saidamen Balt Pangarungan. Later in the day, the PNP, already on full alert status as part of

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 52.3310

Army on guard

POLICE officers secure an area where election documents are being printed and delivered to their respective voting centers in Quezon City, on Thursday, May 5, 2022. The country is set to elect its new President tomorrow. AP/AARON FAVILA

its own election preparations, simultaneously opened its National Election Monitoring and Action Center (Nemac) and Regional Election Monitoring and Action Centers (Remacs) that will serve as its “eyes and ears” on all incidents in any parts of the country as Filipinos cast their ballots. Police officers, standby forces and quick-reaction teams were stationed on 24-hour basis at the command posts of their respective headquarters, ready to respond to any incidents and contingencies.

40K personnel deployment

ALL in all, the PNP has mobilized at least 40,000 personnel for the

elections, aside from those already stationed in their respective units in towns, cities and regions, and had beefed up its forces in what the Comelec classified as “watchlist” areas. It has also made available the use of 15,000 deployable transportation equipment, including 239 watercraft and even helicopters. The PNP had tagged 100 towns and 14 cities as election hotspots and recommended to the Comelec that the areas be put on its watchlist. Two days before the start of the official campaign period on March 25, the police in Northern Mindanao placed 217 villages in the region under “red” category,

or those that it classified as “areas of grave concern” due to possibilities of election violence and other threats. Of these barangays, 72 are in Lanao del Norte. On Wednesday, Pangarungan placed the town of Pilar in Abra and the province of Misamis Occidental under Comelec control, also due to threats of violence, intense rivalry among candidates and perceived bias by local authorities toward a particular candidate or group. As part of the overall efforts to ensure the safety, fairness and credibility of the elections, the PNP has also been leading the implementation of the Comelecordered gun ban and the conduct

IN the military, the Army’s 7th Infantry Division under Maj. Gen. Andrew Costelo and the Southern Luzon Command under Lt. Gen. Bartolome Bacarro have also been working to help ensure the safe and peaceful conduct of elections in their areas of operations. Army Commanding General Lt. Gen. Romeo Brawner Jr. has also been visiting Army units across the country, where, among others, he had been emphasizing the need for Army personnel to ensure the credibility of the elections and the need to keep it safe and peaceful. Armed Forces Chief of Staff General Andres Centino also reminded all soldiers about their election duties, which he had said earlier was foremost among the urgent tasks of the military. “I urge all uniformed personnel to remember that the Filipino people trust us to secure the sanctity of their votes, as is their constitutional right to have a say in the future. Let us perform our duties with an utmost dedication that bespeaks our strong hearts for public service. Be assured of the trust and confidence of your leadership in the AFP,” he said. At the Western Mindanao Command, the commander, Lt. Gen. Alfredo Rosario Jr., made a last-minute visit to the headquarters of the Joint Task Force TawiTawi to check on its final preparations for the elections. “We already selected a number of Marine troops who will guard the poll precincts on election day and during the canvassing. We are optimistic that we will be able to carry Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4020 n UK 64.6916 n HK 6.6670 n CHINA 7.8652 n SINGAPORE 37.8251 n AUSTRALIA 37.2230 n EU 55.1778 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.9520

Source: BSP (May 6, 2022)


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