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On enforcing quarantine measures: Mobilize the military to support police, barangays

Senator Win Gatchalian favors the deployment of military personnel to strictly enforce quarantine measures, citing the need to support the police and barangay officials on the ground who have been falling ill due to COVID-19.

 

BOCAUE, BULACAN, Philippines – A police officer wears a face mask while on duty in this town north of Manila, amid strict quarantine measures due to the COVID-19 pandemic, 15 April 2020. Senator Win Gatchalian said the military can augment the number of enforcers to ensure that quarantine measures are effectively implemented during the reimposition of MECQ. Photo by Mark Cayabyab/OS WIN GATCHALIAN

Gatchalian said that if quarantine measures, especially the on-going modified enhanced community quarantine (MECQ) in Metro Manila and surrounding provinces (Bulacan, Batangas, Laguna, Riza), are not enforced, it becomes useless to shut down the economy because the virus will only continue to spread.

“I agree that we need to mobilize the military in so far as putting more boots on the ground and enforcing the MECQ, because if we don’t enforce the MECQ to the letter, then it is useless closing the economy,” Gatchalian said.

“It’s a double whammy. You don’t stop the virus and you’re preventing people from earning,” he added.

Gatchalian also made an example of the increasing number of infections among police and barangay officials in Valenzuela, which is now almost 2,000. These officials, however, are the only ones that local governments can immediately deploy to enforce quarantine measures. By calling for military back-up, which Valenzuela did, local governments can increase the number of enforcers to ensure that quarantine measures are effectively imposed.

“For practical purposes, we really need to have more enforcers on the ground, and this is where the military plays a very big role. In fact, kami sa Valenzuela we wrote AFP to give us more military presence kasi nga ang dami naming police na nagkakasakit,” Gatchalian shared.

The lawmaker also explained that increased military presence in a local government does not mean they are taking over the enforcement of quarantine measures to beat COVID-19. He shared that in Valenzuela, deployed military personnel take their directions from the police chief and the local chief executive, adding that the military do not have policing powers. Gatchalian also said that the display of authority by military personnel compels the public to follow quarantine protocols.

Gatchalian also debunked the notion that the national response to COVID-19 is militaristic, emphasizing that the Armed Forces of the Philippines is not the one enforcing the strategy to beat the virus. He pointed out that aside from the health aspect of the response to COVID-19, there are also logistics concerns that are best assigned to the military. Examples of these include the transportation and distribution of personal protective equipment (PPEs) and other public health supplies.

Gatchalian concluded that those who are leading the national response to COVID-19 were specifically appointed for task-driven roles, with medical experts still leading the health aspect of the country’s coronavirus strategy.