By Chito Chavez
Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) Secretary Eduardo M. Año on Wednesday warned the public that “breaking quarantine directives is breaking the law’’.
DILG Secretary Eduardo Año (PCOO/ MANILA BULLETIN)
The reminder was issued after Barangay 12 Chairman Alfredo Dacles of Caloocan City was asked to explain why quarantine protocols are violated in his turf.
Since violating the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) is breaking the law, Año emphasized that the violators should face the consequences of their actions and be ready to spend time in jail, possibly until the end of the lockdown.
He said it is absurd that people still attempt to travel and leave their homes in clear violation of the provisions of the “Bayanihan To Heal as One Act’’ and the resolutions imposed by the Inter-agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) and the DILG.
The DILG had confirmed that in Barangay 12, Dagat-Dagat, groups of people were seen on Bangayngay street, while motorcycle riders traveled unimpeded and individuals flying kites could also be observed.
Last Monday, a barangay tanod found a local resident identified as Pablito Monsales to be apparently intoxicated inside a billiard hall.
In an interview over ABS-CBN, Dacles insisted they regularly monitored the streets area but admitted that people are still able to get out of their homes undetected by barangay officials.
Dacles said his barangay had already sought the assistance of the military to patrol their streets.
In Quezon City, a homeless family said they are so poor that they have no choice but to stay on the streets.
Clad in tattered shirt, a certain Augusto Lopez admitted having been arrested several times during the quarantine period.
He admitted staying in a wooden cart with his live-in partner and four year old son during curfew hours.
Displaying the jolly traits of Filipinos during distressed times, Lopez smiled and said that he enjoyed roaming around his vast property with his family riding his “limousine’’, referring to the makeshift wooden cart.
DILG Secretary Eduardo Año (PCOO/ MANILA BULLETIN)
The reminder was issued after Barangay 12 Chairman Alfredo Dacles of Caloocan City was asked to explain why quarantine protocols are violated in his turf.
Since violating the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) is breaking the law, Año emphasized that the violators should face the consequences of their actions and be ready to spend time in jail, possibly until the end of the lockdown.
He said it is absurd that people still attempt to travel and leave their homes in clear violation of the provisions of the “Bayanihan To Heal as One Act’’ and the resolutions imposed by the Inter-agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) and the DILG.
The DILG had confirmed that in Barangay 12, Dagat-Dagat, groups of people were seen on Bangayngay street, while motorcycle riders traveled unimpeded and individuals flying kites could also be observed.
Last Monday, a barangay tanod found a local resident identified as Pablito Monsales to be apparently intoxicated inside a billiard hall.
In an interview over ABS-CBN, Dacles insisted they regularly monitored the streets area but admitted that people are still able to get out of their homes undetected by barangay officials.
Dacles said his barangay had already sought the assistance of the military to patrol their streets.
In Quezon City, a homeless family said they are so poor that they have no choice but to stay on the streets.
Clad in tattered shirt, a certain Augusto Lopez admitted having been arrested several times during the quarantine period.
He admitted staying in a wooden cart with his live-in partner and four year old son during curfew hours.
Displaying the jolly traits of Filipinos during distressed times, Lopez smiled and said that he enjoyed roaming around his vast property with his family riding his “limousine’’, referring to the makeshift wooden cart.