MANILA, Sept 6 (Reuters) - Philippine police drew criticism
from netizens and activists on Sunday for a plan to monitor
social media to enforce quarantine rules, with critics accusing
the authorities of authoritarianism and double standards.
National Police Lieutenant General Guillermo Eleazar, head
of a task force enforcing quarantine protocols, warned of fines
and penalties of community service for people violating
precautionary measures, while violators of liquor bans will face
"additional charges".
"Police could use public postings on social media as leads,
and these will be over and above the police visibility
operations we are conducting and will complement tips we get
from police hotline," Eleazar told Reuters by phone.
Manila ended a second round of strict lockdown measures on
Aug. 19 to boost business activity, but people still must wear
masks in public and observe one-meter distancing, while
children, the elderly and pregnant women are urged to stay at
home.
The plan to monitor social media, announced on Saturday,
seems to show the police agency "wants to use the pandemic to
turn us into a police state, where every action is being watched
by the authorities," Renato Reyes, secretary general of
left-wing activist group Bayan (Nation) said on Twitter.
Critics said the plan shows a double standard after a police
chief was allowed to keep his post despite flouting a ban on
social gatherings in May. Photographs on the police force's Facebook page showed
Debold Sinas, chief of the National Capital Region police,
celebrating his birthday along with dozens of people without
masks sitting close together, with beer cans on their tables
despite an alcohol ban. Sinas apologised.
Eleazar said criminal and administrative cases have been
filed against Sinas for the incident.
The Philippines has recorded 234,570 coronavirus cases, the
highest in Southeast Asia, with 3,790 COVID-19 deaths.