Much ado over taho/ Illegal campaigning
>> Saturday, February 16, 2019
BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
BAGUIO CITY – Cops under this administration are getting pampered by the day it is no wonder a lot of fresh college graduates are applying with the Philippine National Police. After getting hefty pay hikes and benefits, PNP personnel are getting promoted even over trivial matters, according to netizens.
Take
this case of a police officer who was drenched in taho (soybean curd
drink) after a Chinese woman threw her cup at him in Manila.
All
in the line of duty, the PNP said as it awarded a Medalya ng Papuri
commendation medal Tuesday at Camp Crame in Quezon City.
PNP
Chief Director General Oscar Albayalde and former Special Assistant to the
President Bong Go awarded the medal to PO1 William Cristobal, radio station
RMN reported.
The Medalya ng Papuri is awarded to PNP members who demonstrated exemplary efficiency,
devotion, and loyalty to their duty assignments.
Albayalde
also commended Cristobal for his patience despite being humiliated by 23-year-old
Jiale Zhang who now faces assault charges.
Cristobal
also filed complaints of direct assault, disobedience to an agent of a person
in authority, and unjust vexation against Zhang at the Mandaluyong City
Prosecutor’s Office on Tuesday, ABS-CBN News reported.
Zhang,
a freshman Bachelor of Fashion student at the School of Fashion and Arts (SoFA)
Design Institute in Makati, threw a cup of taho at Cristobal after she was barred from entering
the train at the MRT Boni Station in Mandaluyong City morning of Feb. 9.
She
was stopped from entering because of the new liquid ban on Metro Manila
trains. Train lines have banned commuters from bringing bottled drinks and
other liquids to their stations after the recent bombings in Mindanao. Bottled
liquids are banned as they can be used as “liquid bombs.”
Reports
said she threw the taho while
Cristobal explained the new security policy. She was detained after the
incident.
The
incident has gone viral and many have called for Zhang to
get deported. Metro Manila
cops are also asking help from the Bureau of Immigration to have the Chinese national deported,
Rappler added.
Vice
President Leni Robredo reacted to the incident on her weekly radio show saying that it
is not only an insult towards the police but also towards the Philippines and
its citizens, the Philippine
Daily Inquirer reported.
While
many fumed over the incident, Foreign Affairs Secretary Teddy Locsin Jr.
remains chill about it.
He
said on his Twitter the incident was a “non-issue” and that “it can happen
anywhere to anyone in any country.” Taho anyone?
***
The Commission on Elections reminded candidates
to remove illegal campaign materials before the official campaign period started
last week, but then, the hard-headed ones refused to do so.
The Ilocanos call it tangken ulo.
The campaign period for national candidates started on Feb. 12. It is March 29
for candidates for local positions.
The poll body said that since
campaign period began for national candidates started, all campaign posters and
tarpaulins should follow the proper size of 2 feet by 3 feet and should be
placed in common poster areas designated by the agency.
Otherwise, concerned candidates
will be charged of election offense and will be penalized under the Omnibus
Election Code.
The Comelec began conducting its
“Oplan Baklas” on Monday to remove all illegal campaign materials.
In an interview with Daniel Razon on UNTV’s
Digital Interactive Broadcast on Tuesday, Comelec spokesperson Director James
Jimenez said the poll body will be strictly monitoring campaign ads on television,
radio, print and even on social media.
Jimenez reminded candidates to be
careful in gracing requests for appearance as they might fall into political
advertising which can be counted against them.
***
Under Comelec Resolution 10488 in line with R.A.
9006 or the Fair Elections Act, candidates and registered political parties
running for national elective position are given “not more than a total of 120
minutes of television advertising and 180 minutes of radio advertising.”
Candidates for local elective
positions, meanwhile, are given “not more than 60 minutes of television
advertising and 90 minutes of radio advertising”.
“Ang problema,
nagagamit ang mga interviews, mga guesting para kunwari hindi siya ad. Kunwari
interview nga siya o guest spot siya. There are cases na pwedeng ituring na
parang advertising din iyon. Pangkaraniwan, ang pinakabroad na generalization
natin dito is that it’s non-news,” Jimenez explained.
***
Jimenez clarified that interviews for news purposes
are not considered campaigning.
However, the case is different for ‘non-news’
event.
“Halimbawa, may mahalagang event
na relevant naman sa kandidato, tapos na-interview siya tungkol doon, pwede
kasing news event iyon. May sunog sa area niya, i-interview siya, hindi
magiging isyu iyon,” he said.
“Pero kapag halimbawa niyaya siya
sa isang variety show, that’s not a news event. Ituturing iyon na broadcast
advertising. So iyong time na inilagi niya sa oras na iyon ay maaring maibawas
sa kaniyang time limit,” he added.
The Comelec spokesperson also
enlightened the viewers how candidates’ appearances on television would fall to
voters’ education and not an election offense.
Such is the case with UNTV’s
invitation of election hopefuls in its program Get It Straight with Daniel
Razon – a current affairs-talk show-reality show which provides a platform for
controversial personalities such as election candidates to discuss relevant
issues concerning them.
“The fact na iniimbita mo lahat,
that means parang voter education iyan. That’s how I understand your goal to
be. For the most part, hindi iyan maka-count,” Director Jimenez explained as he
talked to Razon via Facetime.
“Ang nagkakaproblema lamang ay
ang mga gumagawa niyan at ang iniimbita lamang ay ang mga kandidatong gusto
lang nila. Nagkakaroon sila ng pagpili kung sino ang iimbitahan nila, sino ang
kakausapin nila, iyon medyo malabo iyon. Kapag iniimbita naman lahat, it
doesn’t really matter kung di dumarating lahat. Ang importante, inimbita
lahat,” he clarified.
***
Prior to the start of official campaign,
the poll body reminded all national candidates to take down campaign materials
especially those hoisted or posted in unauthorized locations or non-common
poster areas.
The poll body clarified, however,
that ‘Oplan Baklas’ at this point covers only national candidates because the
campaign period for local candidates will begin on March 29.
The Comelec spokesperson said sanctions
will be given to national candidates who will not heed the poll body’s policy of
taking down illegal campaign materials.
“Kung national candidate yan,
i-do-document natin. After three days, kung andyan pa, li-litratuhan natin to
make sure na alam natin. We will document the materials that are still in place
and then doon natin sila ngayon pepenahan . After that, once we are able to
document, puwede na nating baklasin,” he said.
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