VOL. 9 ISSUE 106 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, JULY 24 - 25, 2016
Inside Edge
P 15.00 • 20 PAGES
EDGEDAVAO www.edgedavao.net
Serving a seamless society
News P2
Mayor Sara ends leave, names new dept heads Bayan Muna party-list solon to wear ‘peace’ barong on Rody’s first SONA
Economy P6
Pres. Duterte to DA: Release P300 M funds for palm oil dev’t
Always be prepared financially – health care provider Indulge A1
Cocktails and beats Dengue patient (Photo courtesy of Dr Richard Mata)
Sports P15
Nagayo fires 80, winds up tied for 12th
Batang Gilas gets drubbing
IF BITES COULD KILL!
‘Digong Phenomenon’ invades the academia By Antonio Figueroa
A
S the country waits in anxiety on what President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s State of the Nation Address (SONA) on July 25, 2016 will announce, silently, the academia, far from the hustle and bustle of media, has added the ‘Digong Phenomenon’ as one of the newest and hottest
political science subjects. This sounds unanticipated but on August 2, 2016, at the Rizal Library at the Ateneo de Manila University, a forum will unfold and is entitled “Doing Digong: Politics in the Wake of EDSA.” The round-table discussion is part of the school’s Kritika Kultura
Lecture Series. Adding glamor and glitter to the event are the high-caliber speakers from higher institutions of learning. 22The jaded lecturers are Carmel Abao, a Political Science instruction at the Ateneo de Manila University; Walden
F DIGONG PHENOMENON, 2
By HENRYLITO D. TACIO
E
L NIÑO’S LONG DROUGHT -which brought famine, hunger, power interruption and even death -- is over. And so here comes the rain. Not just rains but massive rains. It’s a prelude to another forthcoming natural disaster, La Niña. The signs are already visible: floods and the rise in the number of dengue cases. In the Davao region, cases of dengue fever, a
water borne disease, has already “reached alarming proportions,” reported the EDGE Davao in its issues last Tuesday. The Department of Health recorded 4,564 cases as of July. Previously, up until the same month, only 1,850 cases were recorded. What is even more alarming is that dengue-related deaths also rose -from 8 to 40 over the same period. That’s almost fivefold increase, said Engr. Antoniette Ebol, the health
department’s dengue prevention and control manager. More often than not, children have succumbed to dengue. “Please, our son needs help!” pleaded Rina as she carried her son Noel to the hospital. The nurses, who were having lunch that hot Friday afternoon, immediately quit eating and tried to calm the mother of the 9-year-old boy from Bansalan, Davao del Sur.
F COVER, 2