Cebu, other Visayas airports spared from quake damage

The Mactan-Cebu International Airport (MCIA), Cebu’s major gateway, continued normal operations on Wednesday after inspections showed that its runway was not damaged after a magnitude 6.9 earthquake shook the province on Tuesday night, the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (Caap) said.

In its latest situational report, the Caap also said other airports in the three regions in the Visayas were not damaged after the earthquake-its epicenter traced in Bogo City in northern Cebu-struck at 9:59 p.m. Tuesday.

Less than an hour after the quake, passengers were evacuated from the MCIA terminal but were later allowed to enter the building after inspection and assessment.

According to the Caap, the MCIA’s tower cab equipment and tower structure were not damaged from the quake.

The Caap, meanwhile, reported a power outage at the airport.

The aviation authority also said their initial inspection and assessment showed that there was no earthquake-related damage reported in Calbayog Airport (Samar), Hilongos Airport (Leyte), Maasin Airport (Leyte), Ormoc Airport (Leyte), and Tacloban Airport (Leyte) in the Eastern Visayas region.

Tourism advisory

Inspection of the runway of the Bacolod-Silay Airport in Negros Occidental province was done on Wednesday.

‘PAL (Philippine Airlines) and Cebu Pacific flights from Manila were temporarily held for landing while runway inspection is ongoing. Safely landed after they were given safe-to-land clearance,’ according to the Caap.

Meanwhile, the Department of Tourism (DOT) has cautioned the public against visiting tourist destinations in parts of Cebu province hit by the earthquake.

‘Tourists are advised to confirm the status of destinations before traveling. Several tourist sites in affected areas may be closed while safety inspections are ongoing,’ the DOT said in an advisory on Wednesday.

Tourism Secretary Christina Frasco flew to Cebu on Wednesday to assess the situation on the ground and check on the well-being of tourism workers affected by the quake.

Frasco, a former mayor of Liloan, Cebu, said she also ordered the Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority (Tieza), the DOT’s implementing arm, to inspect historical churches in the towns of Daanbantayan, Bantayan, Tabogon and San Remigio and other tourism-heavy areas in Cebu City to guide the department on the next steps to protect the tourism industry and the visiting public.

Aside from Tieza, the tourism chief also coordinated with DOT regional directors as well as airport and port officials to find out the status of tourism gateways.

‘These assessments will guide the next steps to ensure safety and provide appropriate support,’ she said in a statement.

Cebu, a top tourist destination in the country, is home to centuries-old heritage sites, including Catholic churches built during the Spanish colonization.

According to reports, among those damaged by the earthquake were the Archdiocesan Shrine of Santa Rosa de Lima in Daanbantayan and Parroquia de San Pedro Apostol on Bantayan Island.

The DOT asked earthquake-affected tourists and industry workers to reach out to the following contact information should they need assistance: Hotline 151-TOUR (8687); mobile number 09542533215; and the live webchat of the DOT on its website (www.tourism.gov.ph).

72 dead in Cebu quake; survivors cry lack of food, water

The total number of reported deaths due to the strong Cebu earthquake increased to 72 on the second day of the temblor’s aftermath. The second day also saw the termination of search and rescue (SAR) operations, prompting authorities to shift its focus to relief and rehabilitation as residents complain of food and water shortage.

All of the fatalities as well as the 294 reported injuries are recorded in the Central Visayas region, while no missing have been recorded, according to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.

Due to the absence of reported missing individuals from local government units (LGUs), OCD spokesperson Junie Castillo said they are presumed as ‘accounted for.’

Search teams demobilized

Some private rescue teams are even informed of possible demobilization ‘unless they want to continue helping with relief or debris clearing’ due to lack of reported missing individuals, Castillo said.

OCD deputy administration Rafael Alejandro IV said authorities were scrambling to conduct its search and rescue within the first 24 hours after the earthquake, which occurred at 9:59 p.m on Tuesday.

Bogo City, the epicenter of the earthquake, bore the brunt of the temblor, with almost half of the total number fatalities-or around 30-being recorded from the area.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. went to this quake-stricken city to hold a situational briefing for the earthquake which damaged several heritage churches, billions worth of roads and bridges, hundreds of residential houses and hundreds of classrooms, while causing widespread power outages in the province.

During the briefing, an OCD official reported to Marcos that 597 damaged houses were damaged, with 501 tagged as ‘partially damaged’ and 96 deemed as ‘totally damaged.’

There are still nine impassable roads, five affected bridges, with 10 LGUs experiencing power interruptions, including three LGUs still experiencing telecommunication interruptions, according to the same OCD official.

The same OCD official also told Marcos that the SAR operations have already been terminated.

‘We need food’, ‘We need water’

Nevertheless, aftershocks still remain, which state seismologists said reached a total of 3,081 as of 5:00 p.m., compelling residents to sleep outside.

In Medellin town in northern Cebu, the lack of camping tents, and proper evacuation area left residents still apprehensive of aftershocks to sleep inside plastic bags to protect them from the rain.

Children carrying cardboards begging for food and drinking water were also spotted along the highway in Medellin town.

Residents in Tabuelan town were also reporting lack of food and drinking water, with some children carrying signs saying ‘WE NEED FOOD’ and ‘WE NEED WATER,’ as reported by Cebu Daily News.

Marcos said the government will provide tents with stations for relief goods, waters, and generator sets to 65,000 displaced families in the entire Cebu province.

Marcos seeks emergency funds

During the same briefing, the president also announced over P200 million aid package ‘donation’ for areas affected by the deadly Cebu province earthquake.

Marcos said P50 million will be for the Cebu provincial government, P20 million each for local government unit of Bogo City and towns of San Remigio and Sogod; P10 million each for municipalities of Medellin, Bantayan, Daanbantayan, Madridejos, Santa Fe, Tabogon, and Tabuelan.

Meanwhile, Marcos also said Department of Health-owned hospitals will receive P20 million and P5 million each for LGU-run hospitals affected by the earthquake.

The President also ordered the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) to release a government support fund worth P150 million for Cebu and P75 million for San Remigio, Bogo, and Medellin.

‘This is only an initial release; we are contemplating further releases that will be in the pipeline,’ he said of the fund from the DBM.

Marcos also said he will be going to the House and the Senate to ask for allocation of emergency funds to replenish the government’s Quick Response Fund (QRF).

‘We will have it released as quickly as possible,’ Marcos said.

The QRF is a built-in standby fund for agencies that, once depleted, receives replenishment through the approval of the President or the DBM.

MPD sweeps DLSU, finds no explosives following bomb threat

The Manila Police District (MPD) reported on Wednesday evening that no explosives were found in the vicinity of De La Salle University (DLSU) – Manila, after a security threat was sent to a student from an unknown source.

‘DECU-MPD (District Explosive and Canine Unit-MPD) conducted threat assessment and paneling operation within the school vicinity, including parked vehicles, comfort rooms, building corridors, and trash bins. No explosive or hazardous materials found during paneling,’ the MPD’s report read.

Despite this, the Malate Police Station will still conduct follow-up inspections on Thursday.

According to DLSU Taft Security Area Supervisor Melchor Sagun, an email in the Cebuano dialect containing a bomb threat was sent to a member of the student government, and was circulating among members of the student body.

‘Warning adunay bomba nga gitanom sa De La Salle University Manila nga makaguba ugma sa buntag, OKTUBRE 2, 2025,’ the email read.

(Warning: there is a bomb planted at De La Salle University Manila that will destroy it on the morning of October 2, 2025.)

In response to the supposed threat, the DLSU Office of the Provost announced on Wednesday evening that it tightened security measures, and shortly after announced that all classes on Thursday would shift to online.

‘Manila Campus shall be closed. To ensure the safety of the students and the whole academic community, DLSU shall continue to implement security measures accordingly,’ the Provost said.

On Thursday, the Provost announced that while the school has been cleared of the threat, it is ‘coordinating with the NBI (National Bureau of Investigation) Cybercrime Division for the filing of a case against the perpetrator.)

Onsite work and classes in the university are set to resume on Friday, the Provost added.

It is worth noting that the DLSU University Student Government and the Lasallians Against Corruption have scheduled a walkout against corruption for Thursday afternoon to support the fight against corruption and injustice.

The walkout was postponed due to the temporary closure of the campus.

MMDA conducts clearing ops at QC Lagarian creek for flood mitigation

The Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) has conducted a cleanup operation at the Lagarian creek in Brgy. Kalusugan, Quezon City, to mitigate flooding problems in the city during the rainy season.

The clearing operation, which is in coordination with the Quezon City Government, was inspected by MMDA General Manager Undersecretary Procopio Lipana and Quezon City Engineering Department Chief Mark Dale Perral on Thursday.

In an interview with reporters, Lipana emphasized that the 4-kilometer-long Lagarian Creek must be cleared of waste and desilted to enhance water flow and prevent the accumulation of floodwaters during heavy rains.

‘The houses here are almost submerged (in the flood). A lot will be affected by flooding if we don’t desilt this creek,’ he said.

Meanwhile, Perral noted that the Lagarian creek is a critical waterway, since it is upstream of the San Juan River, adding that as for the Roxas District alone, the estimated flood volume can reach around 30,000 cubic meters.

‘If we can desilt it, the capacity of the creek will increase. It will be a big help,’ he said.

The QC engineering chief, meanwhile, noted that they observed that aside from the dumped garbage, the waste found along the creek are mostly belongings of residents that were washed away due to the flood.

Nonetheless, Perral and Lipana appealed to the public to stop dumping waste in wrong places, such as canals and creeks.

Perral affirmed that the Quezon City government has been implementing the resolution recently passed by the Metro Manila Council, where the maximum penalty standard fine for those caught illegally throwing garbage in public places is P5,000.

Lacson drops cryptic post about ‘crazy cat, annoying dog’

Senate President Pro Tempore Panfilo Lacson continued to make cryptic posts on X, this time about a ‘crazy cat’ meowing on the ground floor and ‘an annoying dog that keeps barking on the upper floor.’

‘Help! Is there a veterinary clinic with an animal psychiatric ward?’ read his X post on Thursday.

‘We have a crazy cat that keeps meowing on the ground floor and an annoying dog that keeps barking on the upper floor,’ Lacson added.

Incidentally, the senator’s remark came just a day after Sen. Rodante Marcoleta’s privilege speech on the Senate floor about Lacson’s earlier disclosure that almost all senators in the 19th Congress inserted at least P100 billion in the 2025 national budget.

Lacson has already explained to his colleagues in a caucus that his mention of ‘almost all senators’ in his media interviews was not meant to put them or the whole Senate on the spot.

‘The overarching reason for my disclosure or revelation was to point out that we must accept the fact that we are all in crisis owing to the recent anomalies involving the substandard and even ghost flood control projects unearthed in the course of the Blue Ribbon Committee hearings and other similar investigations,’ he said then.

Senate President Vicente ‘Tito’ Sotto III has also clarified that individual or institutional amendments or insertions made during Senate deliberations are part of the regular budget process.

But Marcoleta, in the privilege speech on Monday, noted how Sotto seemed to draw a ‘moral line that insertions were wrong’ when he refused an alleged insertion offer to him in the 2026 budget by the Department of Public Works and Highways Usec. Maria Catalina Cabral.

‘Does this mean that the Senate President never had budget insertions during all the time he served as senator of the Republic and as Senate President for almost five years?’ Marcoleta asked.

Before answering the question, Sotto said he wished Marcoleta had delivered his speech when Lacson was still in the session hall.

‘But nevertheless, to answer his question of whether from my 1992 to the present, have I not had any insertions, I guarantee you I have never made any insertion in the budget. Because insertions are not tolerated and I will never do that.’ the Senate chief said.

Sotto explained that insertions are those that were made during the bicameral conference committee, and not those that were made on second reading on the Senate floor.

‘An insertion is different from an amendment. [An] amendment is legally done during second reading and approved on third reading,’ he pointed out, speaking partly in Filipino.

To ensure transparency in the current and next budget proposals, all amendments of senators would have to be made on the Senate floor.

‘They will own what they amend whatever it is and we will not accept any amendment in the bicameral conference committee,’ Sotto said.

SWS: Marcos satisfaction rating up at 46%

Public satisfaction with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s performance rose in the second quarter of 2025, according to the Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey released on Tuesday.

The survey, conducted from June 25 to 29, 2025, indicated that the President received the highest gain from those in Balance Luzon and among the 55-year-old and older age group, but his rating remained ‘poor’ among those in the 18- to 24-year-old bracket.

It showed that nearly half, or 46 percent, of adult Filipinos were satisfied with Marcos’ performance, up from 38 percent in April 2025. Thirty-six percent, on the other hand, were dissatisfied, down from 48 percent in the same period. Those who were ‘undecided’ accounted for 19 percent, an increase from April’s 14 percent.

This result translated into a net satisfaction rating of +10 (satisfied minus dissatisfied), which the SWS classifies as ‘moderate.’ It marks a 20-point improvement from the ‘poor’ -10 recorded in April 2025, reversing the steady decline from ‘very good’ +32 in September 2024 to ‘neutral’ +1 in February 2025.

Not numbers alone

Asked for his comment, Marcos appeared to be surprised, saying he was not aware of the improvement in his trust ratings.

‘It’s, of course, nice to note. I didn’t know about that. But now that you tell me, of course I’m glad that it’s that way,’ he told reporters during his visit to Masbate City on Wednesday to lead the distribution of assistance to families affected by Typhoon Opong last week.

‘I guess we just have to keep working. Whatever is happening-whether there’s a storm, a scandal, or unrest-the people always expect the government to continue delivering services, to keep doing its work at every level, both national and local,’ he added.

As public servants, Marcos said, they should be simply working to serve the people, and not be seen as playing games, or engaging in nonsense or politicking.

Gains in all areas

An improvement in the President’s satisfaction ratings was driven by gains across all areas, with the highest recorded in Luzon outside Metro Manila at ‘moderate’ +28, representing a 21-point jump from ‘neutral’ +7 in April 2025.

This was followed by Metro Manila at +1, the Visayas at -2, and Mindanao at -9, all classified as ‘neutral.’ Compared to the previous survey, these reflect increases of seven points from ‘neutral’ -6, nine points from ‘poor’ -11, and 35 points from ‘bad’ -44, respectively.

Marcos’ net satisfaction also improved across both rural and urban areas. In rural areas, it rose by 11 points from -4 to +7, both ‘neutral,’ while in urban areas it climbed by 27 points from ‘poor’ -14 to ‘moderate’ +13.

The President’s net satisfaction rating also rose among all age groups except for those between 18 and 24 years old.

‘Poor’ for Gen Z

Compared to April 2025, net satisfaction with the President among those 55 years and older rose by 23 points from ‘neutral’ +9 to a ‘good’ +32 in the latest survey. It rose six points to ‘neutral’ +5 compared to ‘neutral’ -1 among 45- to 54-year-olds.

For 35 to 44-year-olds, his net satisfaction was at ‘neutral’ +5, up by 18 points from ‘poor’ -13 in April 2025. It also rose by 43 points to ‘neutral’ +4 from ‘bad’ -39 among 25 to 34-year-olds.

Meanwhile, it hardly moved at ‘poor’ -18 from ‘poor’ -19 among the 18 to 24-year-olds, or those from Generation Z.

The survey was conducted among 1,200 adults using face-to-face interviews and had a sampling margin of error of plus-or-minus 3 percent for national percentages and plus-or-minus 6 percent for Metro Manila, Visayas, Mindanao, and Luzon outside Metro Manila.

PNP stays on full alert even as search and rescue end

The Philippine National Police (PNP) said it will remain on full alert in Cebu even as search and rescue operations ended in the wake of the magnitude 6.9 earthquake in the province.

‘The search and retrieval operations were stopped last night because their search for the injured ended. All the missing individuals have been accounted for,’ PNP public information chief Brig. Gen. Randulf Tuaño said in a press briefing in Camp Crame on Thursday.

‘That’s why our concentration is now just relief and rehab operations. That’s why the PNP is still on full alert,’ he added.

This came after the Office of Civil Defense also stated that some rescue teams have been informed they may demobilize and continue assisting with relief operations.

The PNP also stated that it has yet to receive reports of violence and looting in the aftermath of the earthquake and that the Central Visayas police have increased their deployment from 1,356 officers to 2,250 officers to bolster relief and rehabilitation efforts.

At least 72 individuals were reported dead and 294 were reported injured, according to the latest National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) situational report on Thursday morning.

However, the NDRRMC noted that these casualties have yet to be validated.

Alleged gunman in Sept. 21 riot not part of PNP, solon assures

A man seen on video holding a pistol, believed to be behind the killing of a 37-year-old construction worker at the height of a riot in Manila after the September 21 protests, is not part of the Philippine National Police (PNP), according to a lawmaker.

During the plenary debates at the House of Representatives on Thursday regarding the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), budget sponsor and Camarines Sur 4th District Rep. Arnie Fuentebella assured ACT Teachers party-list Rep. Antonio Tinio that no PNP officer discharged a firearm that killed Eric Saber.

Tinio, during his time to quiz the PNP, an attached agency of the DILG, asked whether the police force had seen videos circulating on social media showing the exact moment Saber was gunned down amid the riot along Claro M. Recto Avenue in the City of Manila.

‘This is widely circulated on social media [.] the ones who entered the hotel have firearms before they eventually went out, so in the video, the alleged gunman who fired is wearing a blue sweater or sweatshirt, he is allegedly the gunman. This is evident in the video. He went in, and his two companions went in to rescue him,’ Tinio said.

‘We are not making any conclusions, but who are those people? Some are saying that maybe they are police officers (in plainclothes). My point is, there is evidence circulating on social media of gunmen in the vicinity right where the shooting happened. So in other words, if the police work on the investigation, they can identify the actual gunman who shot Eric Saber,’ he added.

‘Yes, actually, Madam Speaker, that’s part of the investigation, but we can say that these are not police officers; these people pertain to what we have been saying that they are rioters with guns. So, they are not part of the organization of the Philippine National Police,’ Fuentebella replied.

Tinio said he hopes Saber would get justice, saying that it is the wish of the victim’s relatives when he went to the wake over the weekend.

‘We talked to the family, of course, they are looking for justice for their brother,’ he added.

According to Tinio, Saber was neither part of the rally nor the riot – stressing that Saber’s family relayed that the construction worker only went to a mall in Pasay City to hang out with friends before returning home.

Since Saber lives in Tondo, he had to move through Recto Avenue to go home. Tinio said that Saber was curious about the rally and checked out what was happening.

‘He’s a construction worker, and actually he and his friends only visited MOA that afternoon – meaning, he is not part of those staging a rally. That is his photo. Then, when they were returning home in the afternoon, since he hails from Tondo, he had to move along Recto Avenue,’ Tinio said.

‘And because there has been a commotion near the area, and you know that many Filipinos during commotions are curious to see what is happening. So that is what happened, he was clearly a bystander, watching the riot unfolding,’ he added.

On September 21, two major rallies were organized by opposition groups – one in Luneta Park, Manila, in the morning, and another along the EDSA Shrine and the People Power Monument in Quezon City. Both were geared at protesting against the corruption schemes in the government’s infrastructure projects.

While the programs were generally peaceful, rallies took on a violent turn after some protesters not affiliated with organizers burned down a container trailer along Ayala Avenue – just a few steps from one of Malacañang complex’s gates.

The riot then shifted to Recto Avenue, and in one instance, shots were heard being fired near a hotel chain. The National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO), meanwhile, said that their officers did not fire guns during the protest.

No tear gas

Fuentebella, who was assisted by Interior Secretary Jonvic Remulla and acting PNP chief Lt. Gen. Jose Melencio Nartatez, also maintained that no tear gas was released by the anti-riot force during the protests.

Fuentebella said this after being asked by Kamanggagawa party-list Rep. Elijah San Fernando about news reports stating that tear gas was used. According to the Camarines Sur solon, only ‘smoke grenades’ were deployed.

‘The DILG Secretary claims no teargas and guns were used by the police officers [.] Now based on media reports, the police responded with teargas and water cannons, and there are many pieces of evidence, videos, posts,’ San Fernando said.

‘Yes actually Madam Speaker, we have to be careful also in watching the media, because it is not teargas, it was smoke grenades Madam Speaker,’ Fuentebella replied.

San Fernando also asked Fuentebella about police officers carrying firearms to areas of rallies, which supposedly violates Batas Pambansa No. 880 or the The Public Assembly Act of 1985.

Fuentebella then said that only members of the PNP’s Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) unit have firearms, and they are located at the far end of the police line – and not at the front lines.

‘Now, the Public Assembly Act of 1985 or BP 880, Section 10(b), it says members of the law enforcement contingent shall not carry any kind of firearms but maybe equipped with batons, riot sticks, shields, crash helmets, visors, gas masks, boots, or ankle-high shoes with shin guards. Now there are media reports circulating that we can actually see our police personnel carrying firearms during the rally,’ San Fernando said.

‘Yes, the riot police had no firearms but SWAT they do have. But they were at the far back Madam Speaker, if we cannot control the rioters who we saw burning things, throwing stones, and causing violence in our society, then the SWAT has firearms to address it. But at the forefront, the ones in front are riot police, who do not have firearms, Madam Speaker,’ Fuentebella answered.

PNP: Cebu earthquake damages 36 police stations, headquarters

At least 34 police stations and two police headquarters in Cebu were damaged in the magnitude 6.9 earthquake that struck the province, the Philippine National Police (PNP) said.

Although the PNP could not specify all the affected stations and headquarters, PNP Community Affairs Division Chief Col. Esmeraldo Osia Jr. said in a briefing at Camp Crame on Thursday that the stations were in northern Cebu, near the quake’s epicenter.

The tremor hit 19 kilometers northeast of Bogo City on Tuesday night, according to the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology.

Osia said one of the damaged headquarters was the Cebu Provincial Police Office in Cebu City.

Osia said the stations and headquarters had ‘cracks in their walls,’ while the Directorate for Police Community Relations Deputy Chief Brig. Gen. Antonio Marallag Jr. noted ‘varying degrees of damage.’

‘We are deploying teams of PNP civil engineers supported by experts from the Philippine Institute of Civil Engineers to conduct a detailed and comprehensive assessment. The assessment is scheduled to begin tomorrow,’ Marallag said.

He added that six PNP mobility assets were damaged but that communication equipment remained operational.

Marallag further said 36 uniformed PNP personnel and one non-uniformed personnel from the Police Regional Office Central Visayas (PRO 7) reported that their homes were affected by the tremor.

He added that the PNP has not received any reports of violence or looting following the earthquake and that Central Visayas police increased their deployment from 1,356 to 2,250 officers to support relief and rehabilitation efforts.

At least 72 individuals were reported dead and 294 were reported injured, according to the latest National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) situational report on Thursday morning.

However, the NDRRMC noted that these casualties have yet to be validated.

Magalong has himself to blame for short-lived ICI stint, says solon

Baguio City Mayor Benjamin Magalong ‘has only himself to blame’ for his short-lived tenure as special advisor to the Independent Commission on Infrastructure (ICI), a lawmaker said Thursday, after it was revealed that the controversy-dogged Discayas built a project in his city.

In a statement, House infrastructure committee chair Terry Ridon said Magalong’s failure to disclose that St. Gerrard Construction Company – owned by big-time contractor Pacifico ‘Curlee’ Discaya – had undertaken a ?110-million Baguio tennis court project ‘does not speak well of his actual commitment to transparency, accountability, and good governance.’

Curlee and his wife Cezarah are accused of enriching themselves through ghost and substandard projects implemented by their nine-company empire and of colluding with Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) officials to secure lucrative contracts.

‘It is the height of hypocrisy for a public official who styles himself as a champion of transparency, accountability, and good governance to reject public scrutiny of projects within his own local government,’ Ridon said.

This, after Magalong claimed in a Senate hearing on Thursday that he might have ‘struck a nerve or several nerves’ during his stint at the ICI, which is tasked with investigating anomalous infrastructure projects over the past 10 years.

Tennis court project

This, he said, might be the reason for the ‘sudden below-the-belt accusation’ tagging the tennis court project as anomalous.

Magalong maintained that the tennis court project followed proper procurement and denied any irregularities, and that it was unfair to suggest he was corrupt ‘just because the Discayas have a project (in Baguio).’

The anti-corruption group Mayors for Good Governance (M4GG) likewise rallied behind Magalong, whom it said ‘cannot be bought, bullied, or swayed by favors or threats.’

Magalong resigned from the ICI last week after President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. ordered a review of his role in light of the controversy. He was then replaced by former Philippine National Police chief Rodolfo Azurin.

Ridon, however, argued that the scrutiny was justified given the Discayas’ track record of poor infrastructure projects.

At the same time, the Bicol Saro lawmaker said, this would have ‘directly test(ed) Mayor Magalong’s integrity and commitment to transparency, as he himself, as the city’s Head of Procuring Entity, has engaged a contractor linked to ghost and substandard projects.’

He noted that Magalong had more than a month – from Marcos’ Aug. 11 disclosure of the Discayas’ role in anomalous projects to the family’s Sept. 2 admission that they controlled multiple firms, including St. Gerrard – to reveal the Baguio project, but kept silent until a news report surfaced on Sept. 20.

‘To be clear, there is no allegation at this point that the ?110-million Baguio City tennis court project is tainted with corruption, or that city officials received kickbacks from the Discayas. There is, however, a legitimate allegation that the project may be substandard-giving the public every reason to ask questions,’ Ridon said.

‘And more importantly, even the loudest champions of good governance should never reject scrutiny of their own projects,’ he added.