Specter of checkpoint cops spreading virus feared | Inquirer

Specter of checkpoint cops spreading virus feared

By: - Content Researcher Writer /
/ 06:29 PM August 06, 2021

Police stop motorists to check for IDs at a quarantine checkpoint in Bulacan province on March 29, 2021. FILE/NINO JESUS ORBETA

MANILA, Philippines—Doubts over the health of thousands of policemen deployed to COVID checkpoints are looming large over the enforcement of a new enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) in Metro Manila and raising a key question—what if these law enforcers are the super spreaders?

Another question emerges—what if checkpoints are the super spreader events?

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For many people, this is not a remote possibility.

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The Philippine National Police (PNP) has one of the highest rates of infection of SARS Cov2, the virus that causes COVID-19, in proportion to its workforce.

READ: Active COVID-19 cases in NCR could reach about 500K by end-September without ECQ — DOH

According to the PNP Health Service, at least 31,093 COVID cases had been recorded among police personnel. At least 1,387 of these remained active, 85 had died and 29,621 had recovered.

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Graphic by Kurt Dela Peña

A worker, Aimee, said as thousands of policemen test positive for COVID and many others interact with countless people every day, the likelihood of an infected policeman deployed to checkpoints was high.

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Philippine National Police Chief Gen. Guillermo Eleazar said that 1,203 policemen had been assigned to several checkpoints in the National Capital Region’s lockdown bubbles, which included Metro Manila cities.

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READ: Metro Manila under ECQ from August 6 to 20

Eleazar said 4,346 police officers would be deployed to enforce ECQ, the most stringent form of lockdown which is being imposed for the fourth time since 2020 in the capital, this time to supposedly check the spread of Delta, a SARS Cov2 variant which the US CDC said was as contagious as chickenpox, or 90 percent transmissible.

READ: ECQ begins: Metro LGUs locked down as separate ‘bubbles’

Graphic by Kurt Dela Peña

Aimee said police presence was not reassuring for her especially following the controversy last July 26, during President Rodrigo Duterte’s last State of the Nation Address (SONA), where 51 policemen from the Quezon City Police District (QCPD), who went on security duty then, had been found positive for coronavirus.

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READ: 51 QC cops deployed during Sona found positive for COVID-19

The Quezon City government sought to give assurance that the policemen did not spread the virus since they had no contact with groups of people, especially protesters, as their task at that time was to secure the route of VIPs.

Several groups asked why the infected policemen were deployed at all. Their tests were done last July 23, or three days before the SONA.

READ: Bayan Muna asks why cops supposedly under quarantine were deployed during Sona

In the PNP NCR alone, at least 162 COVID cases had been recorded and 16 policemen had died, according to Brig. Gen. Ronnie Olay, PNP public information chief.

Increased risk of transmission

Bayan Secretary General Renato Reyes said if policemen had not been tested prior to deployment “their increased presence also increases the risk of COVID transmission.”

“The SONA deployment of positive PNP personnel was a disaster not just for the SONA but more so for the communities where these policemen are assigned. They are unwitting spreaders of COVID,” he said.

Graphic by Kurt Dela Peña

This view was shared by lawyer Edre Olalia, of the National Union of People’s Lawyers (NUPL), who said that it is “even aggravated by the high infection rate among police personnel, which is even more perilous and counterproductive to the objective of arresting the spread of the virus.”

Olay told that Eleazar directed “ground commanders” to make sure that those deployed were negative for COVID.

“They were told to make sure that those deployed are healthy, to look after the welfare of their men—that those who will be deployed have complete protective gear,” Olay said.

Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Zarate, however, said the PNP and government must show “proof” that the thousands of policemen being deployed to checkpoints are COVID-negative.

“They have to assure the people that those manning checkpoints are not spreaders of COVID-19, especially because there is this Delta variant,” said Zarate.

Delta was previously called Indian because it was first detected in the highly populous South Asian country.

Militarist lockdown

According to Zarate, instead of implementing a lockdown with the police and military being deployed, the government should instead strengthen its medical efforts to mitigate the spread of the virus.

READ: Manila City requires quarantine passes as NCR goes back to ECQ

Since the beginning of the health crisis, several groups had asked the government to “abandon” its militarist response to the COVID-19 catastrophe, asserting that mass testing, contact tracing and vaccination will help solve the crisis.

READ: Metro Manila ECQ curfew hours: 8 p.m. to 4 a.m.

Olalia said that he would prefer a “more inspiring, pleasant and reassuring interaction with health/social services–related government personnel rather than an invasive and even intrusive enforcement through needle-holes of ingress, egress and movement mazes.”

“While an element of compulsion is needed, arrogant, hostile and coercive steps can engender abuses and distress,” he told .

Worst fears

Eleonor Bulatao, a worker, said the PNP should make sure policemen “practice what they preach.”

“The police here are too tough in saying that we should wear face masks and face shields, but they themselves are not wearing protective gears like those,” she said.

Aimee, who travels everyday from Mandaluyong to Quezon City, said since policemen are considered frontline workers, there should be aggressive testing in the PNP to make sure those deployed to man checkpoints are COVID-free.

Asked if the PNP planned to arm its personnel with proof of negative coronavirus tests, Olay said “the mere fact that they were deployed by their commanders means they should be healthy.”

He said that if a police officer gets infected in the line of duty, he would be immediately isolated.

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According to Olalia, if there is an officer deployed while awaiting results of COVID tests, those behind the deployment should be accountable administratively if the deployed officer turned out to be infected.

TSB

For more news about the novel coronavirus click
What you need to know about Coronavirus.
For more information on COVID-19, call the DOH Hotline: (02) 86517800 local 1149/1150.

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TAGS: Checkpoints, COVID-19, deployment, ECQ, INQFocus

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