NCR alert status iffy—DOH Health official notes declining cases may not reflect reality on ground
T
HE Department of Health on Saturday said it is still too early to say if Metro Manila could deescalate to a more relaxed Alert Level 2 by February.
The independent monitoring group OCTA Research said Metro Manila’s average daily attack rate (ADAR) has dropped to 93.82 percent yesterday from 111.47 percent on Wednesday, but it remained on a “severe” level. “We are monitoring this every day, but we cannot yet say if we can already deescalate by February here in the National Capital Region,” Health spokesperson Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire said. The Department of Health earlier said the peak of the recent surge in COVID-19 cases, likely fueled by the Omicron variant, may happen by the end of January or the middle of February. The Health department also ordered all regions and local governments nationwide to prepare for an increase in COVID-19 cases as four provinces—were escalated to Alert Level 4. CONTINUED ON 3A
300 of daily Pinoy arrivals COVID-positive AT LEAST 10 percent of returning Filipinos arriving daily have tested positive for COVID-19, the Bureau of Quarantine said on Saturday. BOQ deputy director Roberto Salvador Jr. said some 300 of the 3,000 inbound Filipino passengers arriving
daily last week were infected. “Just last Monday, we released some 3,300 people who finished their isolation in their facilities, which was why hotel capacities have eased,” Salvador said. Based on the new guide-
lines set by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF), arriving Filipino passengers who have recently recovered from COVID-19 but still test positive in the required pre-departure test will be CONTINUED ON 3A
Vol. 35 n No. 342
2 SECTIONS
January 23, 2022 8 PAGES
18 .00
IN MET R MANILAO
SOCIALLY-DISTANCED DINAGYANG. Dancers record their choreography for online streaming in celebration of the Dinagyang Festival 2022 in Iloilo City. Arnold Almacen
Leni, Isko, Manny, Ping bare views on issues
LACSON
DOMAGOSO
PACQUIAO
By JOEL ZURBANO, MARICEL CRUZ, AND REY REQUEJO n
FOUR presidential candidates in the May 9 elections identified what they believe are the greatest problems
besetting the country today during a television interview hosted by broadcast journalist Jessica Soho that was aired Saturday evening. For Vice President Leni Robredo, Filipinos not learning from the past and historical revisionism should be addressed. “We don’t learn from our mistakes
Gov’t rolls out Monday P5k ayuda for workers WORKERS affected by Alert Level 3 in Metro Manila and other areas can start filing their applications for a P5,000-cash assistance from the government on Monday, January 24. The Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) confirmed that it will start accepting the appli-
cations starting next week. DOLE Assistant Secretary for the Employment and General Administration Cluster Dominique Tutay said workers who lost their jobs due to the closure of their companies, and workers who were suspended CONTINUED ON 3A
ROBREDO
in the past. There are a lot of lessons from those mistakes, but we keep on repeating the same mistakes and it seems we are not learning anything from them. That is the number one problem,” she said. “Our educational system should address this so that children will grow up understanding what is right and wrong, so we don’t repeat the same mistakes,” Robredo added. Political dynasty, according to Manila Mayor Francisco “Isko Moreno” Domagoso, must end to give Filipinos more choices for their future leaders. “I hope that the passing of political powers to their relatives will really stop so that other people will have the opportunity to choose. It is like only two families are fighting,” he said. For Senator Panfilo Lacson, the government is the country’s biggest problem, while the lack of hope for a better government is the Filipinos’ greatest mistake. CONTINUED ON 2A
Marcos skips show, says TV host ‘biased’ vs. family
AT
A
GLANCE
3,387,524 30,552
280,619
53,406
97
New
Death
Active
New
3,053,499 41,471 Recoveries
New
(As of 4 PM, JAN. 22)
Oil firms to hike prices by P1.90/L NEWS | 2A
Makati workers get P10k incentive NEWS | 2A
Ukraine gets aid as war fears grow
By REY REQUEJO AND JOEL ZURBANO n
AFTER presidential candidate Sen. Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. declined to attend an interview hosted by television anchor Jessica Soho, his spokesperson on Saturday said the broadcast journalist was “biased” against the Marcoses. “The reason why Bongbong Marcos decided not to join the Jessica Soho show CONTINUED ON 2A
COVID-19 PH
WORLD | 3A MARCOS
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