PDIC seeks ‘fair, efficient’ appeals process for denied deposit insurance claims

The Philippine Deposit Insurance Corp. (PDIC) is proposing amendments to rules governing denied deposit insurance claims to ensure that the process of seeking reconsideration is ‘both fair and efficient’.

Among the key enhancements are the expanded coverage of the regulations to address a wider range of cases, the PDIC said in a statement on Monday.

The state deposit insurer is also pushing for refined procedures for the filing of requests for reconsideration (RFR) to make the process more accessible and user-friendly.

The PDIC is likewise proposing defined timelines within which requests must be resolved, ensuring prompt action on claims.

Lastly, the insurer wants a standardized RFR form that aligns with data privacy laws to protect sensitive depositor information.

Stakeholders have until Oct. 15 to submit their comments on the draft rules./tad

BOC donates forfeited goods to earthquake-hit Cebu

The Bureau of Customs (BOC) on Monday turned over forfeited tents, mobile power supplies, and other goods to the Office of Civil Defense (OCD) as part of relief efforts for earthquake-hit Cebu, BOC Commissioner Ariel Nepomuceno said.

According to the BOC, the forfeited items include 1,087 assorted tents, 56 Rapid Emergency Tents, 50 mobile power supplies, and one bio-toilet unit.

BOC officials also donated over 100 sacks of rice.

During the turnover ceremony at Villamor Airbase in Pasay City, Nepomuceno said the donations are expected to arrive in Cebu around 11:30 a.m. on Monday.

‘What we did was share what we could with our fellow Filipinos from the BOC, as instructed by President Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos Jr. to do everything possible to help and provide assistance to our countrymen who are still trying to recover from the earthquake,’ Nepomuceno said in a media interview.

Nepomuceno also said the BOC had originally planned to auction the forfeited goods but chose to coordinate with the OCD to deliver the relief aid to affected residents.

The BOC said the items mostly came from the Manila International Container Port and underwent customs procedures and clearance before being turned over to the OCD.

Nepomuceno said OCD Region 7 will manage the donations and ensure their delivery to the provincial government of Cebu.

‘This is our direct donation through the Office of Civil Defense because I used to work at the OCD, and I know they have the capability to deliver this to our fellow Filipinos,’ he added.

He also said the BOC will release a second batch of donations, consisting of forfeited construction materials, to help rebuild the homes of thousands of affected residents.

According to the latest report from the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), a total of 155,094 families, or 547,394 individuals, were affected by the earthquake.

The NDRRMC also reported that 35,925 houses were damaged in Central Visayas.

Recovery efforts

OCD Administrator Harold Cabreros said recovery efforts are ongoing in the province, with tents being set up as temporary shelters.

He added that private sector groups willing to help may donate tents, food, and water.

‘Their specific needs, first and foremost, are tents because many houses were damaged. Also, due to the trauma from the earthquake, people are still afraid, especially with the ongoing aftershocks,’ Cabreros said.

‘There are houses, but people are reluctant to sleep in them, so at night they go outside. That’s why they also need tents, aside from those whose houses were destroyed,’ he added.

He also said that international organizations wishing to donate may coordinate with the OCD, which will facilitate the turnover to the provincial government of Cebu./mcm

Quakes, storms, and the politics of forgetting

It was an ordinary Tuesday night, almost 11 p.m., the tailend of my 10-day duty at Bantayan District Hospital, 137 kilometers from Cebu City. The kind of night when fatigue turns corridors into silence. Then, like Green Day’s lyric about September ending, the earth jolted us awake.

A magnitude 6.9 earthquake struck Bogo City and several northern Cebu towns on Sept. 30, 2025, at 9:59 p.m. Sixty-eight lives lost. About 366,360 affected. Nearly 80,000 families displaced. Governor Pam Baricuatro, just 142 days into her term, rushed to Cebu Provincial Hospital in Bogo, set up a command center, and appealed for help. Cebu answered, at least for the first two days.

San Remigio’s recreational center collapsed. Bantayan’s centuries-old church lost its facade. In Bogo, buildings fell like Lego bricks.

In Metro Cebu, the Mandaue-Mactan Bridge swayed. High-rises were inspected for cracks. Hospitals evacuated patients to the streets. At Cebu City Medical Center (CCMC), obstetrician Dr. Grace Rabago delivered a baby in the rain, nurses shielding mother and child with umbrellas.

The province had not felt a quake this strong in years, yet the memory was too familiar. Twelve years earlier, Oct. 15, 2013, a magnitude 7.2 earthquake devastated Bohol. More than 200 dead. The same CCMC was crippled, abandoned, and reduced to a glorified parking lot. Successive mayors staged ribbon-cuttings, but no real hospital rose. Ironically, in 2020, when COVID-19 struck, the city built a ‘temporary quarantine facility’ in just 10 days. But a permanent hospital? Still a promise. The pandemic itself claimed 66,684 Filipino lives out of 4 million confirmed cases.

Twenty-four days after the 2013 quake, Typhoon ‘Yolanda,’ then one of the strongest typhoon in recent world history, slammed Guiuan, Tacloban, and Palo before striking Cebu’s Daanbantayan and Bantayan Island, Iloilo’s Conception, and Palawan’s Coron. Some 6,452 lives lost.

Bohol, still reeling from its earthquake, was left gasping as the world’s attention pivoted to Tacloban. Fast forward: Dec. 16, 2021, Typhoon ‘Odette’ battered Cebu and killed 410. Pandemic protocols evaporated overnight, proof that government memory is even shorter than public patience.

I lived through all of these. I sutured earthquake wounds outside Bantayan Hospital after this year’s quake. I was in Tacloban the day before Yolanda hit, and escaped just in time. I was at home when the 2013 quake struck, and when Odette toppled Cebu’s power lines in 2021.

I also witnessed Yolanda’s global response. Some countries sent aid and doctors to Tacloban and Palo. Humanity, for a moment, outshone politics. Yet at home, calamity funds became receipts without accountability. Relief goods arrived late, some never at all. Yolanda’s housing projects remain unfinished, substandard, or ghost. The Pharmally scandal taught us that in the Philippines, disaster is always a business opportunity.

Last Wednesday, stranded in Santa Fe, Bantayan Island, I could not sail out, the port to San Remigio was damaged. At Kota Beach, I found the skeletal frame of an unfinished hotel tied to a former presidential adviser. It survived not because of structural integrity, but because corruption is earthquake-proof. Untouched, incomplete, and immune to collapse, a ghost project in broad daylight.

Today, passing through Medellin’s Kawit port and Sogod, I saw families begging for food and water on the roadside. Alongside them were convoys of private donors, NGOs, and volunteers, hashtags optional. Uniformed men clustered in Bogo, doing their duty.

But strip away the press releases, the photo ops, the Facebook resibos, and what remains is hunger. No electricity. No potable water. No certainty about tomorrow. Aid trickles; hunger floods. This is the paradox of Filipino resilience: our altruism shines brightest when institutions collapse into darkness. We are always ready to help one another when storms rage and earthquakes, but our leaders remain experts only at rebuilding facades, never foundations.

Twelve years after Bohol and Yolanda, we are still asking: How many disasters will it take before this country learns to build not just buildings, but memory, accountability, and foresight? If resilience is our national virtue, then forgetfulness is our national sin.

From thread to impact: Jor-El Espina’s 20th year

As someone who finds meaning in how beauty can reflect care and community, I have a soft spot for artists and brands who use their platforms for something greater than visibility.

Whether it’s a pop-up that benefits artisans or a collaboration that uplifts a marginalized group, I pay attention to instances when fashion chooses to give back. There is something undeniably moving about creativity that does more than express, that contributes.

This is exactly what designer Jor-El Espina is choosing to celebrate as he marks his 20th anniversary in fashion. Rather than simply stage a retrospective or commercial show, he’s using this milestone to spotlight the community.

His culminating showcase, ’20 Design Anthologies,’ will be unveiled at The Bahaghari Gala on Oct. 24, 2025 at the Grand Ballroom of Shangri-La The Fort. It’s a deeply personal collection presented in partnership with the Philippine Financial and Inter-Industry Pride (PFIP) to benefit a cause close to his heart: the Rainbow Youth Academy, a mentorship and empowerment program for LGBTQIA+ youth.

When I attended a preview of the collection, I was immediately struck by the burst of color. There were playful shapes, diaphanous fabrics, and a kind of joy sewn into the very seams. Each piece evoked something whimsical and unafraid but unmistakably Filipino. Even in its fantasy, there was intention.

‘This collection pushes the limits in terms of where I can take Filipiniana dressing,’ Espina shares. ‘I consider this collection as my playground.’

But it’s a playground with purpose. The gala is more than a celebration of his legacy. It’s a fundraiser that ties fashion to education, visibility, and systemic support for queer Filipino youth. The Rainbow Youth Academy, led by PFIP, is designed to provide mentorship, scholarships, and leadership training for LGBTQIA+ students across the Philippines. It isn’t just about access. It’s about belonging. Programs like this help young people not only dream, but be equipped to thrive in environments that haven’t always made space for them.

‘Creativity is not just about making clothes,’ says Espina. ‘It’s also about creating spaces or experiences where stories, identities, and communities can be uplifted. My role as a Filipino designer is not just to create beautiful things. It is also to use my creativity as a tool for empowering others, championing representation, and sparking change.’

In a landscape where many anniversary shows center solely on legacy or brand growth, Espina’s focus on community impact is refreshingly sincere. Even in his most maximalist moments, there is humility in his work. I saw this, not just in the designs themselves, but in the way he spoke about mentorship, particularly his recent collaboration with the Grand Dame of Philippine Fashion: Patis Tesoro.

‘Working alongside an icon like Patis was both humbling and affirming,’ he says. ‘She reminded me that legacy is not only about what we create. It’s also about what we pass on: skills, values, and vision.’

Tesoro’s influence is clear. Her own ethos of honoring craft, while pushing boundaries, mirrors Espina’s approach to this collection. He brings together embroidery, fringe, beadwork, and even corsetry in ways that feel celebratory rather than excessive. The result is a collection that pays homage to tradition while refusing to be boxed in by it.

‘I am always guided by instinct and memory,’ he explains. ‘The textures of piña, the geometry of callado embroidery, or the colors of fiestas-these are details that are inherently Filipino. But I reinterpret and reimagine them into new silhouettes and present new contexts that resonate globally.’

The garments, from what we’ve seen, are not just outfits. They declare visibility, honor heritage, and carry possibility.

How indie bands in Manila live the hustle

Manila is a chaotic concrete jungle, thriving in traffic jams and the buzzing nightlife. On a stage of any Manila bar, musicians plug in their guitars, murmuring ‘sound-check’ into the mic for the awaiting audience-whether it’s a full house, or even just one person watching. Then, the first beat of the drum pulses through the air as the band unleashes its sound.

But off-stage, the hustle resumes: schoolwork, corporate life, rising costs, and agonizingly long commutes with an instrument on their back and an amplifier in their grip. Long before stepping foot into the bar, indie musicians must pay their dues through the unseen effort and commitment we rarely see in their set.

Here, we sat down with two rising groups-TBK, an indie-alternative OPM band, and Benchfly, a five-piece indie pop and alternative rock band-to shed light on independent music-making and how their passion continues to drive them despite the daily grind.

Benchfly is a five-piece indie pop and alternative rock band formed in 2019. Their latest release, ‘Quiet Hours,’ speaks for their style of introspective storytelling with melodic guitar backdrops. TBK, formerly known as The Baseball Kids, has been active since its members’ high school years in 2017. As an indie-alternative OPM band, they compose original songs that revolve around love and youth, their most popular single being ‘Shinjuku.’

Describe Manila as a hub for the indie scene.

Kevin (Benchfly): Manila is a melting pot of the indie music scene. The authenticity in the art-[the] intimate lyrics and experimental instrumentals. all that draws listeners in. At the moment, there’s a growing trend of genre fusion. Artists often blend electronic elements with traditional music, creating a uniquely modern OPM sound. There’s also a rise in female-fronted bands that adds diversity.

Yoro (TBK): There are a bunch of local productions that rotate around the Metro Manila ‘circuit of bars and venues.’ Sometimes they have themes. Minsan may mga Japanese cover night, indie night, ’80s, at ’90s. A random person pays to enter a bar with indie bands in it. Sometimes they hear a band they like, then eventually, they’ll look out for their next gig.

BENCHFLY – Quiet Hours (Official Lyric Video)

What are the cost-effective methods you have for gear and practice?

Edric (Benchfly): Invest in a multi-effects pedal. Space-wise and price-wise, there are a lot of choices you can buy online and in physical stores. I have been using my Boss ME-80 for at least six to seven years. It’s okay to buy secondhand equipment as long as you can gauge its quality and condition. Quality over aesthetic. Your real dream guitar can wait.

Yoro (TBK): [Our drummer] Elian’s dad is sound engineer Albert Michael Idioma. Really famous and a big contributor to Filipino cinema. Back when we were starting out in high school, we would practice in the home studio while the Idiomas were still at work. The drum kit was also there. So yeah, we’re lucky that we got to use that for free.

How do you balance late-night gigs with off-stage commitments?

Junelle (Benchfly’s manager): Everyone’s got stuff going on, so we make sure we’re clear about priorities. Sometimes, it means missing out on other things or turning down gig invites if the set times are too late. It’s exhausting, but the energy you get from playing live makes it all worth it.

What’s the hardest thing you face as an indie band?

Miguel (Benchfly): Now that I’m working in the corporate world, finding time for band rehearsals that work for everyone is a real challenge. But no matter how tired we are from day jobs, nothing beats the feeling of performing and connecting with the audience. The energy is just electrifying. While it’s tough, it’s a commitment we all share by making music together.

Elian (TBK): The very concept of pursuing it is hard enough. You have to be accepting and understanding if someone has something going on. Then, this thing that you really love at this moment will have to wait. It’ll wait until it can or it doesn’t [wait] at all. An indie band is rooted in nothing but passion, a pure feeling, which means it’ll always be fleeting.

Yoro (TBK): Adding onto Elian’s point on time, the age gap between the four of us is only one year. There’s the element of distance (we’re all taking different programs in different schools). Eventually, personalities change, and a re-rendering of style and a rehashing of priorities might be in order. We’ve had disagreements, but what really brought us back was our friendship and our wanting to create music together (cheesy as it may sound).

Does ‘making it big’ matter to you?

Edric (Benchfly): Nine to 10 years ago, it would have been the dream. But as you grow older, your responsibilities shift. The idea of ‘making it big’ would be nice. However, with the current ecosystem of social media, it’s best if you have a strong or solid number of fans or friends.

Migz (TBK): It matters to us at some level in this age, where content (especially music) can become viral at any moment, as long as you’re the one who hooks people on your stuff. We aspire to get big, but as independent musicians, it stays a pipe dream until we get that perfect formula of luck, skill, and talent.

What advice would you give to aspiring indie bands?

Eldric (Benchfly): Put your heart into your music, and be smart with your money. Passion is everything, but without solid financial planning, it’s easy to burn out. Also, be sure to network; building connections could open doors in the future. It’s also essential to connect with the fans and your audience; they’ll be the sole reason to keep going.

Zoilo (TBK): A band’s own identity is what makes them stand out. Once you figure that out, embrace it. Just be yourself and keep improving. Conversely, don’t [feel like] you should steal some riffs or licks from bands you like. Make it fit into what you’re writing. Music has always been like that-taking a sound you like before making it your own.

INQToday: Change in Senate leadership will raise suspicion of a cover-up, says CBCP

Marcos on accountability in flood control mess: Resignation isn’t enough

Resigning does not absolve one from culpability, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said during the first part of the fifth episode of his online program titled BBM Podcast.

Sotto ‘very confident’ majority bloc backs his leadership amid coup talk

Senate President Vicente ‘Tito’ Sotto III expressed confidence in the majority bloc’s support for his leadership.

In a text message to reporters on Monday, Sotto said he is ‘very confident’ of his colleagues’ backing amid murmurs of another coup d’état attempt.

Coup in Senate leadership will raise suspicion of a cover-up, says CBCP

The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) on Monday warned that any attempt to change the Senate leadership or divert focus from investigations in flood control project anomalies ‘would only heighten public suspicion of a cover-up’ after revelations in congressional hearings.

Justice Secretary Remulla shortlisted for Ombudsman post

Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla has been included in the shortlist of candidates being considered as Ombudsman.

‘Pursuant to Article VIII, Section 9 of the Constitution, the Judicial and Bar Council has the honor to submit the following nominations for the position of Ombudsman,’ read the letter dated Oct. 6, 2025 addressed to President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.

Flash floods shut down portions of Maasim, Sarangani highway

Hours of rain in Maasim, Sarangani triggered flash floods at 3 p.m. on and Monday and shut down portions of the national highway linking the town to General Santos City.

Arlene Hollero, Maasim Municipal Disaster Risk Reduction and Management (MMDRRM) officer, said in a report that the national highway remained closed to traffic as of 7 p.m.

Heavy downpour triggered by the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ) was experienced in the mountains of Maasim while light rains affected the town center.

The Tinago creek overflowed at 3:11 p.m., forcing nearby residents to evacuate as the flash floods carried with it boulders and forest debris as it inundated the national highway.

The local government unit of Maasim is calling on all residents, especially those living near rivers, creeks and in low-lying areas to conduct pre-emptive evacuation as heavy rains continued to affect the municipality.

As of 7 p.m., the national highway in Barangay Poblacion (Tinago Creek area) remained impassable due to flooding and debris.

Affected families are now staying at the municipal gymnasium.

The local government, in its social media page, reminded locals to stay alert, monitor official advisories and prioritize safety at all times.

No one was reported injured due to the flash floods, a staff at the MDRRMO said.

Eight years after Marawi: the courage that rebuilt hope

Eight years ago, the Battle of Marawi tested not only the strength of our Armed Forces but also the soul of our nation. What began on May 23, 2017, as an operation to arrest a terrorist leader escalated into a five-month struggle that would define a generation of soldiers-men and women who turned devastation into defiance and fear into faith. From the ruins of war, they rebuilt not just a city but hope itself.

The battle tested the courage and character of our troops like never before. Marawi City stood at a crossroads of faith and fury, its narrow streets transformed into the frontlines of a nation’s resolve. Almost overnight, black flags-the symbols of ISIS allegiance-rose over captured buildings. Families fled their homes as gunshots thundered across the skyline, and the fight to reclaim Marawi became one of the longest and fiercest in our country’s history.

When the Maute-ISIS group launched its assault, I was in the United States completing my studies at the U.S. Army War College. From my television screen, I watched in disbelief as a city I once knew for its warmth and devotion was engulfed in flames. I told myself that when I returned home, I would go where I was needed most. Two weeks later, I reported to then Armed Forces of the Philippines Chief of Staff General Eduardo Año. Before I could even say, ‘Send me, Sir, to Marawi,’ he said, ‘Report to Marawi.’ That was all I needed to hear.

I was designated Deputy Commander of Task Force Ranao under Brigadier General Ramiro Rey, concurrent Commander of the Special Forces Regiment. Our mission was to secure the flanks and periphery of the Main Battle Area, sustain governance in the rest of Marawi and its neighboring towns, and uphold what every Filipino deserves-safety, dignity, and the chance to rebuild their lives.

Those early days were harsh lessons in modern urban warfare. The enemy-foreign fighters and local extremists-was deeply entrenched, tunneling through walls, laying booby traps, and turning homes and mosques into fortresses. Their aim was to establish Marawi as a wilayah, or province, of the so-called Islamic State in Southeast Asia. The fighting dragged on for months-street by street, block by block, room by room.

In the early hours of the siege, martial law was declared across Mindanao. The decision remains debated to this day, but on the ground, what we enforced was a kind of martial law remembered by many civilians as protective rather than punitive-from checkpoints conducted with courtesy to curfews carried out with compassion and an unwavering commitment to keep the innocent safe. Congress later extended martial law until December 31, 2019, after which it was lifted.

The fight reached its turning point on October 16, 2017, when Isnilon Hapilon, ISIS’s designated emir in the Philippines, and Omar Maute were killed in a precision operation. The following day, Marawi was declared ‘liberated from the influence of ISIS.’ That moment marked not only the triumph of our arms but the beginning of an even greater test-the long and difficult work of rebuilding lives, homes, and trust.

But victory carried a price that only soldiers’ families truly fathom. In Marawi, we lost 168 members of our uniformed services-124 from the Philippine Army, 36 from the Philippine Marines, and eight from the Philippine National Police. Each one left behind a name spoken with pride and a chair that will forever remain empty at the family table.

Among our fallen were men whose valor became the light that guided us through the darkest days: Captain Rommel Sandoval, Medal of Valor awardee, who gave his life shielding a wounded Ranger; and Private First Class Gener Tinangag of the Marines, posthumously awarded the same honor for extraordinary gallantry. Their stories remind us that we salute not only with our hands but with our hearts.

When the guns finally fell silent, I returned to Marawi as Brigade Commander of the 103rd Infantry Brigade in Kampo Ranao. Incidentally, my uncle, the late Brigadier General Felix Brawner Jr., was also a Brigade Commander in Marawi, and I stayed in the same quarters he stayed in several years ago. This was the same hill where U.S. General Pershing lived when the American forces occupied Marawi.

Our mission then shifted from clearing operations to pursuing remnants and preventing relapse. Within six months, we neutralized Abu Dar, the last original leader of the Maute-ISIS network, effectively dismantling the core that once dreamed of turning Marawi into a permanent citadel of terror.

Nearly a decade has passed since then. The battle scars remain visible-but so does the resilience. In the Most Affected Area, once the Main Battle Area, mosques have risen again. Schools and health centers are open. A stadium stands as a symbol of community life. Yet the path home has been neither easy nor swift. The return of residents has followed a deliberate course, guided by safety as the north star. The area was reopened in phases, with permits and inspections ensuring that rebuilding would proceed on solid and secure ground.

National government agencies and partners have remained steadfast. Under the current administration, Executive Order No. 78 established the Office of the Presidential Adviser for Marawi Rehabilitation and Development (OPAMRAD) to consolidate, accelerate, and sustain recovery efforts.

What, then, did Marawi teach us? First, that peace is more than the silence of gunfire. It is justice that can be seen and felt-from compensation to livelihood, from education to healthcare, from the right to worship to the freedom to rebuild one’s ancestral home. The siege displaced over 350,000 people, and their return to normalcy is the truest measure of our success.

Second, that the Filipino soldier’s calling extends beyond combat. In Marawi, our troops evacuated civilians under fire, opened corridors for aid, and, when the smoke cleared, helped remove debris, retrieve remains, and reconnect families. The uniforms remained the same, but the mission became humanitarian. This was a war fought not only to win but to heal. Independent observers would later record the scale of damage-a sobering reminder that rehabilitation must be steady, transparent, and people-centered.

Third, that unity-across all services and with communities-is what wins urban wars. Soldiers, Marines, airmen, sailors, coast guardsmen, police, engineers, medics, and local government units formed a chain that held firm. Our allies and partners shared intelligence and technology that, combined with our troops’ tenacity and adaptability, turned the tide in a fight defined by snipers, IEDs, and fortified structures. Analysts now cite Marawi as a case study in modern urban warfare; I cite it as proof of what Filipinos can achieve when courage and compassion move in the same direction.

This month, as we mark the eighth anniversary of Liberation Day, we pause to speak the names of our fallen, to embrace their families, and to renew our promise to guard the peace they secured at ultimate cost. We owe them more than wreaths. We owe them continuity of care for their loved ones, integrity in reconstruction, and vigilance against the ideologies that prey on poverty, grievance, and misinformation.

To the people of Marawi-thank you for your patience, faith, and example. Your city’s rebirth is not merely a construction project; it is a national journey of reconciliation and hope. Every classroom reopened, every shop relit, every prayer uttered in a restored masjid is a victory over those who believed fear could divide us.

To our troops across the archipelago-remember Marawi as both a proving ground of bravery and a testament to humanity. Remember Captain Sandoval, PFC Tinangag, and all 168 of our brothers-in-arms whose lives now light the way forward. We carry their legacy when we train harder, plan wiser, and serve with deeper compassion for the people we protect.

And to our nation-let us choose, again and again, the hard work of peace. Let us build communities where extremist narratives find no foothold because children are in school, parents have livelihoods, governance is trusted, and faith is freely and respectfully practiced. If we do this, the story of Marawi will not end with ruin and rebuilding but with a generation that looks back and says: We overcame, together.

Eight years ago, we took back a city. Today, and every day after, we must keep building a future where no Filipino child ever learns the sound of war before the sound of morning prayer.

Overloaded trucks blamed for Piggatan Bridge collapse in Cagayan

The collapse of Piggatan Bridge in Alcala, Cagayan, on Monday afternoon was likely triggered by four heavily loaded trucks carrying rice and corn.

The bridge, a vital link to downstream towns, collapsed at around 5 p.m., leaving the trucks stranded at the site.

Witnesses Jay-ar Apao and Jovel Dellosa, who captured video footage of the incident, said the drivers and helpers sustained injuries.

Personnel from Task Force Lingkod Cagayan-Quick Response Team (TFLC-QRT) in Amulung were immediately dispatched to assist in rescue operations and guide motorists to alternate routes.

Warning signs have since been placed in the area to prevent further accidents.

Built in 1974, the 74.7-meter steel bridge was described as being in ‘good overall condition’ in a Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) inspection conducted in October 2024.

The incident marks the second bridge collapse in Cagayan Valley in recent months.

Earlier, the newly retrofitted Cabagan-Santa Maria Bridge in Isabela province also gave way, causing four vehicles to plunge and injuring six people.

BOC, LTO should shed light on Discaya luxury vehicles – solon

Bureau of Customs (BOC) Commissioner Ariel Nepomuceno and Land Transportation Office (LTO) chief Assistant Secretary Vigor Mendoza II should be invited by the Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI) to discuss the alleged smuggling of cars owned by the Discaya couple.

This was the call of Bicol Saro party-list Rep. Terry Ridon on Monday, amid recent discovery that eight of the vehicles owned by contractor-couple Pacifico ‘Curlee’ and Cezarah ‘Sarah’ Discaya were possibly smuggled.

The Discaya couple are among the key figures in the flood control projects controversy, as different companies linked to the two were found to be among the top contractors for flood control projects.

The ICI, Ridon said, should ascertain whether BOC and LTO should be held liable for allowing these vehicles to enter the country.

‘ICI should invite BOC and LTO heads to shed light on the Discaya vehicles,’ Ridon, chairperson of the House of Representatives’ infra-committee that tackled the contractors’ involvement in anomalous flood control projects.

‘Both BOC and LTO’s liability should be determined by the ICI as to how these vehicles were able to be imported, registered and used in the country,’ he added.

Last September 10, Nepomuceno stated that eight out of the 30 luxury cars under the agency’s custody were found to be missing import entry documents and payment certificates.

When asked if the cars may be considered smuggled for having no record of entry, Nepomuceno replied : ‘That is the assumption. There are no documents; that’s why that’s our assumption.’

On October 1, Nepomuceno said that the BOC may auction 13 luxury cars owned by the Discaya couple if they fail to prove the legitimacy of the purchases.