Upgraded Malabon hospital now open

The San Lorenzo Ruiz General Hospital in Malabon City has been upgraded to a Level 2 general hospital with modern facilities and expanded services to cater to more residents.

Mayor Jeannie Sandoval on Monday led the inauguration of the six-story, 200-bed hospital along Panghulo Road.

The hospital features operating rooms, a labor room, an intensive care unit, a surgery consultation room, an emergency room and a spacious lobby.

‘Through the support of our partners and the initiative of former congressman Ricky Sandoval, we now have a more modern hospital that can provide comprehensive services for more Malabueños. This assures our people of better health care alongside the city’s other programs,’ Sandoval said.

The medical facility will offer departmentalized services in medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, surgery and anesthesiology.

It is equipped with MRI, CT scan, ultrasound, X-ray, 2D echo, colposcopy machines, therapy services and a clinical laboratory.

The local government said it would acquire a digital fluoroscopy machine, a digital C-arm machine and hystero-laparoscopy equipment.

The former congressman filed House Bill 5791 in the 17th Congress that paved the way for the expansion of the hospital.

‘It is a milestone for Malabon. From a small women’s hospital, it is now a Level 2 general hospital ready to provide quality medical services to our people,’ he said.

Founded in 1990 as the San Lorenzo Ruiz Municipal Hospital, the facility evolved into the San Lorenzo Ruiz Women’s Hospital in 1998 before being converted into a general hospital under Republic Act 11289 in 2019.

Wind Signal No. 1 raised over Catanduanes as ‘Paolo’ slightly intensifies

As Tropical Depression ‘Paolo’ strengthens and approaches the Philippine land, PAGASA raised Wind Signal No. 1 over four areas in Catanduanes on Wednesday, October 1.

In its 5 p.m. bulletin, the state weather bureau last located Paolo about 665 kilometers east of Virac, Catanduanes, packing maximum sustained winds of 55 kilometers per hour (kph) and gusts up to 70 kph.

The tropical depression is moving west-northwest at 25 kph and is expected to make landfall over Isabela or northern Aurora by Friday, October 3.

PAGASA hoisted Wind Signal No. 1 over Pandan, Bagamanoc, Panganiban, and Viga in Catanduanes, signaling winds of 39 to 61 kph and intermittent rains anticipated within the next 36 hours.

Under the lowest wind signal, little to no infrastructure damage is expected. However, the state weather bureau urged residents to immediately inspect their homes for necessary repairs and clean up drainage systems to prevent possible flooding.

In its latest weather advisory, PAGASA also said that the tropical cyclone is predicted to bring heavy rain across several provinces in Northern Luzon from October 2 to October 3.

Rainfall of 100 to 200 millimeters:

Cagayan

Isabela

Quirino

Aurora

Apayao

Abra

Benguet

Kalinga

Mountain Province

Ifugao

Nueva Vizcaya

Rainfall of 50 to 100 millimeters

Ilocos Norte

Ilocos Sur

La Union

Pangasinan

Nueva Ecija

Tarlac

Zambales

Bataan

Paolo is expected to gain strength as it moves across the Philippine Sea, potentially intensifying into a severe tropical storm by early Friday, with Wind Signal No. 3 as the highest possible alert.

Archbishop Uy formally installed: Cebu’s new ‘shepherd’

The Archdiocese of Cebu has formally installed Archbishop Alberto ‘Abet’ Uy as its new shepherd during a Solemn Canonical Possession and Installation Mass at the Cebu Metropolitan Cathedral on Tuesday, September 30.

Led into the cathedral by Msgr. Vicente Rey Penagunda, Vicar General and Cathedral Rector, Archbishop Uy took his place at the ‘cathedra’, the bishop’s throne symbolizing his authority as the 25th Bishop and fifth Metropolitan Archbishop of Cebu. He succeeds Archbishop Jose Palma, who retired after nearly 15 years as the province’s chief pastor.

In his Words of Thanks, Archbishop Uy declared: ‘My good people in Cebu, I am here, reporting for duty. The Archdiocese of Cebu is so big and my capacity is so little. Please be good to me. I promise to give you my best, so we can walk closer to Christ, our true shepherd.’

The new prelate expressed gratitude to his family, clergy, religious, lay faithful, and those who joined the celebration both onsite and online. He described his family as his ‘first home, first teachers, first good friends, and constant source of support.’

‘I come to you as your unworthy servant, fully aware that I cannot complete this mission alone. I will always need God’s unfailing help and yours as well,’ he said, vowing to work with priests, consecrated men and women, lay faithful, government officials, and other faith leaders in building ‘bridges, not walls, for the good of every Cebuano.’

Archbishop Uy also acknowledged the people’s yearning for authentic leadership.

‘In our country today, people long for leaders who are transparent, accountable, and faithful to their mission. I want to embrace that call as your shepherd, and I ask my brother priests to walk with me in this same spirit of integrity,’ he said.

Reflecting on his new responsibility, he quoted an Irish sailor’s prayer: ‘Lord, the ocean is so big, and my boat is so small. Have mercy on me.’

He ended with a humble promise: ‘I do not dream of being a great Archbishop. I may not be the best Archbishop. But I promise you this, I will give you my very best, so that together we may walk closer to Christ, our true Shepherd.’

Messages of support

Palma, Archbishop-Emeritus, urged the faithful to welcome Uy with openness and unity.

‘With the installation of our new Archbishop of Cebu, His Excellency, Most Rev. Alberto Uy, I invite all of you to embrace this moment of synodality, this wonderful opportunity for unity and growth within our community,’ Palma said.

He assured his successor of continued support: ‘To Archbishop Abet, I assure you, in my own little way, I am just a text away. Expect our love and support in any way possible.’

Papal Nuncio Most Rev. Charles John Brown also called on Cebuanos to ‘love, pray, respect, and help’ the new shepherd, while Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle reminded the faithful that ministry must be rooted in service, not worldly recognition.

‘Jesus was not seeking celebrity status, nor marching bands, nor millions of likes and views. He was seeking to do God’s will no matter what the cost,’ Tagle stressed.

CIVIC Welcome

A day prior to his formal installation, a civic reception was held at the Cebu Capitol in honor of the new archbishop. Among those present were Governor Pamela Baricuatro, Vice Governor Glenn Soco, Cebu mayors, church leaders, and civic figures including former Chief Justice Hilario Davide III.

Baricuatro hailed Cebu as ‘the cradle of faith and birthplace of Christianity in the Philippines,’ noting that Uy’s appointment by Pope Francis last July marked ‘another chapter in the faith journey of the Cebuanos.’

‘We are deeply grateful for Archbishop Palma’s years of faithful service and spiritual guidance,’ she said.

‘We are filled with hope as we welcome Archbishop Uy, who has been known for his simplicity, compassion, and genuine love for the poor,’ the governor added.

Uy, in his Capitol address, highlighted that Cebu now has ‘four new leaders’ – a new archbishop, a new governor, a new vice governor, and a new Cebu City mayor.

‘Four new leaders mean four new beginnings, four fresh opportunities to dream together, to build together, and to hope together,’ he said, emphasizing that true leadership is about service, not power.

The Cebu Provincial Board also passed a resolution formally welcoming Uy and extending the felicitations of the August Body and the people of the province.

Advocating green spaces: How Mapúa is helping breathe life in urban areas

Metro Manila’s urban landscape is often dominated by concrete, but Mapúa University is helping to change that by providing a research-based blueprint for revitalizing green spaces. The university’s commitment to urban greening is a core part of its mission to improve the quality of life, environmental health and biodiversity in densely populated areas.

As the Philippines’ leading engineering and technological institution, Mapúa equips its students with the skills and mindset to create sustainable urban solutions.

By introducing important insights such as Place Theory and placemaking principles-a design approach that prioritizes people over infrastructure, imparting latest global best practices and skills, emphasizing sustainability and motivating learners to spearhead research and initiatives that address environmental challenges, Mapúa has been at the forefront of balancing aesthetics with functionality.

The university’s work is exemplified by a recent thesis from architect Sharmaine Baes, who explored the potential of transforming underutilized urban spaces into green areas.

Her research, titled ‘Improving Quality of Urban Residual Spaces Through a Place Theory Approach: A Case Study of District 1, Pasay City,’ proposed converting “residual spaces”-such as vacant lots and plots under elevated infrastructure-into safe, vibrant public areas. This work has been presented as completion of her Master of Science in Architecture – Major in Urban Design program.

Baes’ study addressed the challenges of densely populated cities like Pasay by recommending underutilized residual areas as alternatives for parks and gardens. She proposed converting residual spaces, such as easements, vacant lots and plots under elevated infrastructures into safe, open areas with vegetation to reduce urban heat and provide areas for rest and recreation.

Her research, which included spatial analysis, site observations, stakeholder interviews and surveys, revealed that residents frequented residual areas for walking, resting, selling and socializing even if they were not safe, picturesque or accessible.

She, however, stated that by applying the Place Theory, an assessment framework, and participatory design from concerned communities, residual areas can be transformed into sustainable, vibrant public spaces that have site-specific facilities like pocket parks, open green spaces, modular libraries, mist-cooled waiting sheds, gender-inclusive comfort rooms and PWD-friendly amenities.

Architect Baes also integrated environmental sustainability into her work by introducing concepts like reverse vending machines and modular green infrastructure to promote recycling and climate resilience. Her proposal is not only practical but also highly replicable due to a newly developed Assessment Framework, which could serve as a catalyst for future urban policy reform if adopted by local government units (LGUs).

Mapúa University’s School of Architecture and Planning, Industrial Design and the Built Environment dean Dr. Junar P. Tablan affirmed Baes’ findings by saying that scaling up green spaces in Metro Manila is possible if done incrementally.

‘This can be included in the 25-year development plan for each LGU in Metro Manila. The realistic timeline for this to see significant results would be at least 10 to 20 years of strong enforcement and a strong campaign of environmental policies, as well as a cultural shift in how the spaces are being valued and utilized,’ said Tablan.

He also stated that the success of green space projects depends on local urban development policies, such as zoning reforms, public realm contributions and designated community gardens for food access and greenery, as well as the formal recognition of residual spaces as vital public infrastructure.

Urban greening initiatives would also prosper if they had the collaborative support of industry partners to provide technical expertise, local communities that will share lived insights which will inspire context-sensitive, inclusive designs and the academia to lead research, guide execution and evaluate impact.

Through research like Baes’s and the intentional efforts of institutions like Mapúa, urban greening is becoming a key priority on the national agenda.

Cards start title defense vs Pirates

A year after claiming its first championship in more than three decades, Mapua sets its sights on another one as it clashes with Lyceum of the Philippines University in today’s start of the 101st NCAA basketball tournament at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.

But Cardinals coach Randy Alcantara admitted the road back to the top would be harder this season after losing Chris Hubilla and Laurence Mangubat, vital cogs in their magnificent title run last campaign.

Hubilla and Mangubat have moved over to Jose Rizal U where Nani Epondulan, who was also part of Alcantara’s coaching staff, took over as head coach from Louie Gonzales early this year.

‘It would be tougher this year because we lost some key players,’ said Alcantara. ‘But we’re hoping our new guys will fill those gaps.’

New recruits are Cyrus Nitura from Perpetual Help, Cyril Gonzales from University of the Philippines, and Drex delos Reyes from National U.

Game time is at 2:30 p.m., which will be followed by the duel between last year’s runner-up College of St. Benilde and San Beda at 5 p.m.

PSA: How to get your DiskarTech-powered MySSS Card

The Social Security System (SSS) has teamed up with a major commercial bank to launch an ‘all-in-one’ debit card that lets SSS members access its services while enjoying a range of digital banking features.

Powered by RCBC DiskarTech, the MySSS Card also aims to make managing money easier for users, from settling bills and government contributions to making bank transfers and every day payments.

To get a MySSS Card, follow these six steps:

Log-in to the MySSS Portal: Start by logging into your MySSS portal and selecting RCBC DiskarTech as your preferred ‘Participating Financial Institution.’ This is where you’ll initiate your card application.

Agree to the Terms and Conditions: Next, approve the request for data sharing between SSS and RCBC DiskarTech. Once you agree, you’ll get a transaction number. Save it – this will be your ticket for the next steps.

Download the RCBC Diskartech App: Head over to the Google Play Store or Apple App Store and download the RCBC DiskarTech app. This is where you’ll manage your MySSS Card, from activation to accessing all the banking features that come with it.

Register as an ‘SSS Member’: When registering on the DiskarTech app, select ‘SSS Member.’ This ensures the system tailors the experience and unlocks the suite of services just for you.

Enter Your Details and Complete the Process: Provide your transaction number from the MySSS portal, mobile number, OTP, and eKYC-recognized government IDs. Once you finish your registration, log back in to confirm.

Avail the MySSS Card through Diskartech App: Once logged in Diskartech, request for the MySSS card to avail of your physical card.

While waiting for the card, users can already explore DiskarTech’s features:

A rewarding regular savings product

Quick cardless or carded withdrawals

Shop with QR-powered and Card-powered payments

Affordable and accessible insurance products

Convenient LRT1 , LRT2 and MRT3 Payments with your Card!

Daily Rewards for Log-ins, mobile load transactions and bills payments

Loan applications (coming soon)

P8 Instapay transfer fee to other banks

Qualified for the promo? Check the following requirements:

Registered with PhilSys and has a PhilSys Number (PSN)

Updated your contact details in SSS records

Have no existing UMID ATM/Pay Card enrolled in SSS

Have no active Diskartech account

Must be 18 years old and above

Must be a Filipino citizen and a non-US person (no US citizenship or residency)

EDITORIAL – New vehicles, old attitudes

You might have already seen photos online of a modern Public Utility Jeepney stuck under a pedestrian overpass in Raintree Mall in Barangay Sta. Cruz, Cebu City, after its driver decided to divert from the usual route and take a ‘shortcut’ to avoid heavy traffic.

The modern PUJ got wedged in under the overpass morning the other day after the driver misjudged the vertical clearance of his vehicle. Seven feet of vertical clearance was okay, the modern PUJ was slightly taller than that. Damage was caused to both the vehicle and the overpass. While no injuries were reported as a result of the incident, we are sure it caused traffic in that road for a while.

Sure, it’s a funny thing to happen, but it’s also a symptom of something else; drivers with old traditional PUJ attitudes handling new vehicles.

Yes, we now see a lot of modern PUJs plying different routes in our streets, and they are convenient. They are much roomier, with air-conditioning, the option to pay cashless, and closed off from the street; who wouldn’t mind forking over a few more pesos to ride them, rather than suffer being overcrowded and exposed to the heat, dust, and dirt of the road in a traditional PUJ?

But then again, many of the people behind the wheel of a modern PUJ are still of a mindset that they are driving traditional PUJs. So at times we can see them racing against each other, stopping where they shouldn’t to pick up or drop off passengers, packing passengers in like sardines in a can, and taking liberties –read that as shortcuts– when it comes to avoiding traffic.

Which was what happened here.

New vehicles and old attitudes don’t mix. Modern PUJ drivers should realize they are no longer driving traditional PUJs, but much bigger and heavier vehicles that can cause more damage or result in more injuries, or worse, if mishandled. They should be more mindful of the rules of the road and what is and isn’t allowed.

COA yet to confront exec on resignation over ties to contractor-wife, kickback claims

The Commission on Audit (COA) has yet to speak with Commissioner Mario Lipana about his possible resignation or early retirement, as he remains hospitalized and reportedly unable to speak.

During the House plenary debates on Wednesday, October 1, Rep. John Tracy Cagas (Davao Del Sur, Lone District) stood in as COA’s budget sponsor and answered questions on the agency’s behalf.

Rep. Leila de Lima (ML Party-list) asked for an update on her earlier request for COA Chair Gamaliel Cordoba to talk to Lipana.

She and two other minority lawmakers want Lipana to address concerns about a possible conflict of interest, especially in connection with the ongoing investigation into irregular flood control projects.

Cagas, however, said he was told that Lipana remains hospitalized and is still too sick to communicate, showing the medical certificate sent to COA.

This surprised De Lima, prompting her to ask COA if they did not even try to speak with Lipana’s relatives, let alone his wife or a common friend, when the issue he faces is a matter of public interest.

‘Kailangan po kasi masettle po yung issue na ‘yan because as I said, it affects very much the commission itself. Hindi pwedeng tumagal hanging itong issue na ito,’ De Lima said. (We have to settle this issue because as I said, it affects very much the commission itself. This issue can’t be left hanging.)

Lipana’s wife, Marilou Laurio Lipana, owns a contracting firm that secured over P1 billion worth of flood control projects in Bulacan between 2023 and 2025.

She served as the president and general manager of Olympus Mining and Builders Group Philippines Corp.

Bulacan is not only Lipana’s hometown, but public works officials have also accused him of receiving kickbacks from projects in the province.

De Lima also questioned why Cordoba had not communicated with Lipana in writing, given the latter’s medical condition. However, neither the budget sponsor nor the commission provided an answer.

During committee-level budget hearings, Cordoba committed to personally addressing the conflict-of-interest concerns with Lipana once the commissioner returned from medical leave. That leave was expected to end in September.

As of October, however, Lipana remains hospitalized. In the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee’s hearing, state auditor Tracy Ann Sunico said Lipana was in Singapore.

Cagas only said that the COA commits to exhausting all means to communicate with Lipana.

De Lima then asked whether a motu proprio investigation has been launched into Lipana’s ties and involvement with a government contractor, to which Cagas said the Ombudsman already has.

This was already confirmed about a week ago during COA’s first round of plenary debates.

Two separate testimonies have tied Lipana to irregularities in infrastructure projects in Bulacan.

Dismissed district engineer Henry Alcantara claimed Lipana received P1.4 billion in kickbacks from local projects. In a corroborating narrative, former Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) Usec. Roberto Bernardo said Lipana asked to be introduced to officials from Bulacan’s First District Engineering Office.

He said he referred Lipana to Brice Hernandez, another DPWH official who has since been dismissed and implicated in the flood control controversy.

Apart from the Ombudsman, the Department of Justice said it is also reviewing Lipana’s liability in the case, especially as state auditors are involved in conducting post-audits for public works projects.

De Lima warned again that if Lipana refuses to step down, Congress may have to file impeachment raps against him.

Discayas do a ‘tell-all plus plus’ at ICI – lawyer

Disgraced contractor couple Pacifico ‘Curlee’ and Cezarah ‘Sarah’ Discaya did a ‘tell-all plus plus’ when they appeared before the Independent Commission on Infrastructure (ICI) yesterday.

Cornelio Samaniego III, the couple’s legal counsel, said the Discayas were fully cooperative and bared everything they know to the ICI.

‘They are not hiding anything anymore,’ he said.

Samaniego said his clients divulged everything – from the persons involved up to the history of transactions they had undertaken.

‘We are telling everything,’ he stressed.

Pressed on the revelations made by his clients before the commission, Samaniego said that most were already included in the affidavit they had filed before the Senate and Congress, yet there were also new names bared by his clients to the commission.

‘We’ll submit a supplemental affidavit, so we will add new names. In due time, it will come out,’ Samaniego said. ‘For now, no comment.’

Samaniego said his clients were scheduled to come back to the ICI to finish giving their statement.

‘It went OK. The members of the ICI were very cordial,’ Samaniego said.

He added that unlike former DPWH Bulacan district engineer Brice Hernandez, the Discayas are not inclined to return any of their luxury cars to the government as a goodwill gesture.

‘We are not returning anything at the moment, because the accounts were frozen,’ Samaniego said.

AMLC, BIR tie-up

Meanwhile, the ICI has forged a cooperation and information-sharing pact with the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) that will facilitate the freezing of assets of personalities implicated in the numerous ghost and substandard flood control projects at the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH).

ICI executive director Brian Keith Hosaka said the agreement, which also includes the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), will speed up investigation of the anomalous flood control projects, the filing of the relevant criminal cases as well as the recovery of the proceeds.

‘We will have information-sharing, coordination and cooperation which is crucial for the verification of information divulged to us by their ‘resource persons’,’ Hosaka told reporters.

Several senators, congressmen, contractors and former and current DPWH officials and officers have appeared before the ICI to provide information regarding multibillion-peso ghost and substandard flood control projects implemented by the DPWH.

Hosaka said the partnership with BIR will be helpful in determining tax liabilities, while the AMLC will facilitate the freezing of assets of individuals involved in the flood control mess.

According to BIR commissioner Romeo Lumagui, Jr., they aim to build strong cases for tax evasion.

‘We already have preliminary draft of (tax) assessments. But they still lack a number of information. We don’t want to file haphazard criminal complaint(s) with the Department of Justice. That’s why we want to get all the useful information,’ he said.

Closed hearing up to ICI – Palace

Malacañang will not intervene with the decision of the ICI against livestreaming its hearings on anomalous flood control projects, stressing that President Marcos respects the body’s independence.

‘The President has already said that this ICI is an independent commission. So, whatever their policies and procedures are, the President will respect them and he will not interfere because they are an independent body or commission,’ Presidential Communications Undersecretary Claire Castro told reporters.

ICI’s Hosaka earlier defended the decision to keep the hearings closed, saying it is necessary to ‘avoid a trial by publicity.’

‘We don’t want the commission to be used for any political agenda or leverage that’s why we are careful,’ Hosaka said.

He said the ICI’s investigation is a ‘process’ that cannot be defined by piecemeal revelations.

‘People might be misled,’ he noted. ‘We would like to prevent that because we want the people to trust the system and in the independent commission that we will be doing our jobs fairly, objectively and independently.’

Meanwhile, Castro also defended the appointment of former Philippine National Police chief Rodolfo Azurin Jr. as special adviser and investigator to the ICI.

Castro said Azurin was chosen to replace Baguio City Mayor Benjamin Magalong based on his capabilities and experience as an investigator.

There were some who questioned Azurin’s appointment as he was previously implicated in the alleged cover-up of the P6.7-billion shabu haul involving high-ranking PNP officers in 2022.

He was later cleared in the Senate committee on public order and dangerous drugs’ investigation into the massive controversy.

‘It’s clear he was never charged,’ Castro said.

‘What I want to stress here is that the independent nature of this commission. We will not interfere with their work. We will, of course, be in discussion with them. We will ask them what happened, what have you found, what are we doing next,’ Marcos said during a Sept. 15 press conference.

‘But we were not about to direct them as to how they were going to conduct their investigations, and we are going to leave it up to them,’ he said.

‘Let the people in’

For some lawmakers, keeping the ICI hearings away from the public invites doubt into what transpires behind closed doors.

‘There’s no real accountability without transparency. Let the people in. It is the right of the people who were robbed of billions of pesos to watch the proceedings of the ICI,’ Akbayan party-list Rep. Perci Cendaña said in a statement.

Cendaña said corruption existed because of the lack of transparency in the process of the bicameral conference committee, which reviewed and approved the national budget of the government up to its project implementation.

‘It is time to pass the Independent Commission for Infrastructure Bill or House Bill (HB) 4453 that will put in place the mandatory public hearings with livestreaming,’ Cendaña said.

For her part, ML party-list Rep. Leila de Lima said given the witnesses’ testimonies in the Senate Blue Ribbon committee hearings on flood control anomalies, it is ripe for Congress to pass HB 4453 into law.

‘As the plot thickens, it becomes even more urgent and imperative to pass House Bill No. 4453. To ferret out the truth and ensure accountability – whoever is involved – Congress must act swiftly and decisively,’ De Lima said in a separate statement.

‘This is the biggest corruption scandal in our history, and we cannot address it with partial solutions. The ICI cannot handle this widespread corruption using its limited powers. The DOJ (Department of Justice) and the ombudsman must hasten the filing of strong cases,’ De Lima said.

Firefighter, coast guard personnel killed during Cebu quake

At least four uniformed personnel were killed during the collapse of the San Remegio Sports Complex during the deadly magnitude 6.9 earthquake that hit Cebu on Tuesday, September 30.

The Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP) announced the death of 31-year-old FO2 Allier Vincent Catadman. Catadman, a firefighter assigned to the San Remigio Fire Station, was killed during the quake.

‘He died in the line of duty following the collapse of the San Remigio Sports Complex during the magnitude 6.9 earthquake. We honor his service, bravery, and sacrifice. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family, especially his wife and young child,’ the BFP said in a statement.

The Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) also confirmed that at least three of its personnel were killed in the same sports complex. Seaman Second Class Lawrence Palomo, Apprentice Seaman Jujay Mahusay, and ASN Ert Cart Dacunes died when the San Remigio Sports Complex collapsed.

The PCG said the three personnel were rushed to Bogo General Hospital for treatment, but were all eventually pronounced dead.

“We extend our sincere condolences to the families of our fallen personnel. Their dedication to the service and camaraderie with our fellow uniformed men and women will always be remembered. The PCG stands in full solidarity with their loved ones and will ensure that they receive the utmost support,’ PCG Commandant Admiral Ronnie Gil Gavan said.

Despite the tragedy, more PCG personnel and other uniformed workers have been deployed on the ground for rescue efforts in Cebu.

The earthquake has killed at least 60 people, according to the Office of the Civil Defense, with around 154 others injured.

Cebu province has declared a state of calamity following the deadly quake.

Critical infrastructure has been damaged, including several roads and bridges. A number of historical churches have also sustained damage.

Despite the tragedy, more PCG personnel and other uniformed workers have been deployed to assist with rescue efforts in Cebu.