Manila Standard - 2020 May 26 - Tuesday

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300k jobless OFWs returning Shell-shocked from losing work, migrant labor faces host of issues at home

By Vito Barcelo and Macon Ramos-Araneta

T

HE government expects some 300,000 overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) to return to the country this year as their host countries—under lockdowns because of the COVID-19 pandemic—send migrant workers home, Interior and Local Government Secretary Eduardo Año said Monday.

“For the whole year, we are expecting that 300,000 OFWs will come home,” Año said in Filipino. “The whole world is under lockdown. They are sending home migrant workers, not just from the Philippines, but other countries, too. This is our chance to show the importance of OFWs, when they get home.” But repatriated workers so far have not fared well, Next page

Lockdown takes emotional toll on overseas workers MENTAL and emotional problems, such as anxiety and depression, are beginning to affect Filipino workers in quarantine both here and abroad owing to coronavirus lockdowns― with some opting for a grim end. In Beirut, a Filipina domestic worker committed suicide in Lebanon at a shelter run by her embassy, consular officials said Sunday (Monday in Manila), days after a rights group complained about accommodation at the shelter. Next page

VOL. XXXIV • NO. 92 • 2 SECTIONS 12 PAGES • P18 TUESDAY, MAY 26, 2020 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com

Palace claims PH meets goal of 30,000 daily testing capacity

IN DROVES. Overseas Filipino

workers fill the check-in counters at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 2 and the Paranaque Integrated Terminal Exchange (PITX) to board planes or inter-island buses to take them home to their respective provinces after spending more than a month in quarantine in Metro Manila. Norman Cruz

By Vito Barcelo, Macon Ramos-Araneta and Willie Casas

COVID-19 PH AT A GLANCE

THE Philippines has met its goal of increasing its testing capacity to 30,000 coronavirus disease (COVID-19) tests per day, ahead of the May 30 target, the Palace said Monday. Presidential spokesman Harry Roque said the country was able to increase its capacity to 32,100 polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests per day on May 20, six times more than it was on April 15. He also said the country is aiming to have 66 COVID-19 testing laboratories in the country by the end of the month. The government plans to test up to 2 percent of the country’s population to determine the extent of the COVID-19 outbreak in the Philippines. More than 272,000 individuals have been tested for COVID-19 as of May 23, according to the Department of Health's online tracker. Still, a World Health Organization

(AS OF 4 PM MAY 25)

14,319 873 (5 new) 3,323 (74 new) 10,123 284 NUMBER OF CASES DEATHS

RECOVERIES

ACTIVE CASES NEW CASES

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OIL PRICE HIKE (Effective 6 a.m. May 26) Kerosene: Up P2.65/liter Diesel: Up P2.10/liter Gasoline: Up P1.75/liter Participating oil firms: Shell, PTT, Phoenix, Seaoil, Cleanfuel, Flying V, PetroGazz (Other oil companies to follow suit)

RAMPED-UP TESTING. A young woman takes a swab test for the coronavirus at the Philippine Arena in Bulacan, while employees of Pasay City Hall fill chairs in front of health workers as they undergo rapid testing at the Pasay Sports Complex on Monday. PIA/PNA

Rody’s extra power extension, virus bills okay up By Maricel V. Cruz and Willie Casas CAGAYAN de Oro City Rep. Rufus Rodriguez said he will file a bill Tuesday authorizing Congress to extend President Duterte’s emergency powers under the Bayanihan to Heal as One Law for three

months up to September. Rodriguez said the House of Representatives and the Senate passed the Bayanihan law on March 24 to give the President emergency powers “to respond to the crisis brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic.” Meanwhile, the House Defeat COVID-19 Ad Hoc Committee (DCC)

is set to approve Tuesday morning for plenary deliberations three anticoronavirus disease-19 bills, including the P568 billion economic stimulus package, House Majority Leader and Leyte Rep. Martin Romualdez said. “Such powers are good for three months. Unfortunately, two months after Next page

NCR mayors push for GCQ after May 31 By Joel E. Zurbano and Macon Ramos-Araneta FOURTEEN of the 17 mayors in Metro Manila are supporting the plan to downgrade the modified enhanced community quarantine to general community quarantine in the National Capital Region after May 31. Metro Manila Council chairman and Parañaque City Mayor Edwin Olivarez made the announcement Monday, saying the mayors favored placing their cities under GCQ starting June 1 provided health and safety protocols were strictly implemented. Senator Panfilo Lacson said it would be Next page

COVID rampage across Latin America Maguindanao blast

FAKE PASSES. An officer of the Manila Police District Station 4 shows off fake InterAgency Task Force passes being printed at shops along Recto Avenue in Manila—a district notorious for counterfeiting official documents—following a raid on Monday. Each fake IATF card costs a buyer 350 pesos each, police said. Norman Cruz

WASHINGTON—The United States suspended travel from Brazil over an explosion of coronavirus infections in the South American nation, but across the Atlantic, many parts of Europe were set to further ease lockdowns on Monday after slowing their COVID-19 outbreaks. The pandemic's rampage across Latin America has pushed the worldwide caseload to nearly 5.4 million, with deaths approaching 350,000, but with the global economy battered, governments are scrambling to provide relief however they can to businesses and citizens wearying of mass confinement. Brazil—the world's sixth-largest country—has been declared the latest hotspot with more than 360,000 reported

cases, second only to the United States, even as its leader, the far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, plays down the threat from the virus. In Tokyo, Japan lifted a nationwide state of emergency over the coronavirus on Monday, gradually reopening the world's third-largest economy as government officials warned caution was still necessary to prevent another wave. "We had very stringent criteria for lifting the state of emergency. We have judged that we have met this," Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told a nationally televised news conference. In a sign of global concern about the outbreak in Brazil, where more than Next page

kills 2, injures dozen COTABATO CITY—The military here launched an investigation following Sunday’s alleged mortar blast that killed two children and wounded over a dozen others in Datu Saudi Ampatuan, Maguindanao. Lt. Col. Edgardo Vilchez Jr., the spokesperson of the Army’s 6th Infantry Division (6ID), said the probe came about to clear issues implicating the 6ID to the incident. “We have no troops operating in the area, specifically on the village where the incident happened,” Vilchez said over Next page radio DXMY here Monday.


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