PICS: Philippines police to help with house-to-house searches for Covid-19 cases

A soldier wearing a protective mask guards a street while children look out from a balcony, as the city undergoes a stricter lockdown to contain the coronavirus spread, in Pasay City, Philippines. Picture: Eloisa Lope/Reuters

A soldier wearing a protective mask guards a street while children look out from a balcony, as the city undergoes a stricter lockdown to contain the coronavirus spread, in Pasay City, Philippines. Picture: Eloisa Lope/Reuters

Published Jul 14, 2020

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Manila - Philippine authorities and

police will carry out house-to-house searches for Covid-19

patients to prevent wider transmission, a minister said on

Tuesday, amid soaring death and infection numbers and some areas

returning to a stricter lockdown.

Interior Minister Eduardo Año urged the public to report

cases in their neighbourhoods, warning that anyone infected who

refused to cooperate faced imprisonment.

The tough approach comes during a week where the Philippines

recorded Southeast Asia biggest daily jump in coronavirus deaths

and saw hospital occupancy grow sharply, after a tripling of

infections since a tough lockdown was eased on June 1 to allow

more movement and commerce.

"We don't want positive patients to stay home in (self)

quarantine especially if their homes don't have the capacity,"

Ano told a news conference.

"So what we will do ... is to go house-to-house and we will

bring the positive cases to our Covid-19 isolation facilities."

The strategy is a departure from previous advice for

positive cases with mild symptoms to self-isolate.

Passengers wearing masks for protection against Covid-19 maintain social distancing while queueing to ride a bus in a terminal in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines. Picture: Eloisa Lopez/Reuters

Justifying the searches, Ano cited a 2019 law on disease

reporting and surveillance. Interior Undersecretary Jonathan

Malaya said tracking down positive cases was necessary because

some had absconded.

The plan will likely alarm human rights groups battling what

they say is impunity for abusive police who have systematically

targeted poor communities in a bloody war on drugs, as noted in

a recent United Nations report. Police have rejected that.

Police are accused of being heavy handed during the

pandemic, including arrests for minor infringements and reports

by activists of children killed while violating curfews.

A man gets the body temperature of passengers before entering a bus in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines. Picture: Eloisa Lopez/Reuters

"How is the government going to ensure that the rights of

Filipinos are respected and protected with this new approach?"

said Phil Robertson, Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director.

"Given that Philippine law enforcers have some of the most

checkered Covid responses in the world in terms of human rights,

this certainly raises fears."

Police did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Passengers wearing masks for protection against the coronavirus maintain social distancing while queueing to ride a bus in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines. Picture: Eloisa Lopez/Reuters

There have been 57 545 Philippine coronavirus infections, of

which 1 603 were deaths. 

Reuters

Related Topics:

coronavirus