Next week, we will experience Metro Manila we have not seen before.
For the 23rd summit of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation or APEC which will be held in Manila on Nov. 18 and 19, stringent measures will be implemented to ensure the safety of leaders or their representatives of the 21 member Economies.
A number of roads leading to the Philippine International Convention Center will be closed from Nov. 16 to 19. Same thing with roads leading to the Mall of Asia Arena where the Leaders will attend an evening event. (Click here for the detailed advisories on road closures: http://apec2015.ph/2015/10/27/apec-aelm-road-advisories/
Roads from the airport to the hotels when the Leaders arrive will be closed to motorists. More than 300 flights have been suspended to ensure the ease and safety of the arrival and departure of the leaders.
To present a pleasant sight for the important visitors, depressed areas along the Leader’s route have been covered with G.I sheets. Street dwellers have been banished from Metro Manila sidewalks. Where they are, only Social Welfare Secretary Dinky Soliman and the local government social workers know.
Soliman said homeless families are being housed in apartments as part of government’s conditional cash transfer program. She said it is not to conceal poverty from APEC delegates but it is part of their program to protect the poor families especially children because “… streets (as a dwelling place) are not safe, not dignified,” adding that her department has been doing it since 2013.
Owners and operators of buildings along Roxas Boulevard have also been asked to shut their windows during the event.
Ambassador Marciano Paynor, the director general of the APEC 2015 National Organizing Committee, said “Part of how we can secure leaders as they go or traverse Roxas Boulevard from their hotels coming into PICC is to have windows closed. This is a basic security practice worldwide. In New York, when the UN General Assembly commences in end of September towards October, they request all skyscrapers along Manhattan routes going to the UN to have their windows closed. That is a basic practice.”
Those who have announced plans to stage rallies against China’s Xi Jinping over the territorial conflict in the South China Sea and Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau over the garbage issue can do so far from the path the Leaders will pass.
PNP chief Director General Ricardo Marquez said Freedom parks will be established where the protesters can stage a rally.
The 21 APEC members are Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile, China, and Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Philippines, Russia, Singapore, Chinese Taipei or Taiwan, Thailand, United States and Viet Nam.
APEC is an organization of Economies, not countries (That’s why Hongkong is member separate from China. So is Taiwan.) APEC’s primary goal is to support sustainable economic growth and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region. Its 21 member economies are home to around 2.8 billion people and represent approximately 57 per cent of world GDP and 47 per cent of world trade in 2012.
Among the Leaders who have confirmed attendance to the Manila summit are U.S. President Barack Obama, Chinese President Xi Jingpin, Japan’s Shinzo Abe and Canada’s Justin Trudeau.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Indonesia’s Joko Widodo have sent word that they are unable to attend next week’s meeting. Russia will be represented by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev. Taiwan will be represented by former Vice President Vincent C. Siew, not President Ma Ying-jeou.
Prior to the meeting of the Leaders, there are ongoing meetings of senior officials to be followed by the meeting of the foreign ministers.
There will be separate meetings of the chief executives of APEC economies. The APEC2015 CEO summit to be held at the Makati Shangrila from Nov. 16 to 18 is expected to draw some 600 to 800 executives of companies in the Asia Pacific region.
The total number of delegates is about 8,000.
The APEC2015 International Media Center at the World Trade Center has accredited more than 3,000 journalists to cover the annual event.
That explains why all-star-rated hotels in Metro Manila are fully booked.
Guidelines have also been issued to members on media:
Ambush interviews are strictly prohibited within the PICC Complex.
All accredited media personnel must observe silence and proper decorum. Shouting rowdy behavior, and uttering offensive words or expressions to any representative, member, or leader of a delegation will not be tolerated.
Any accredited media personnel who violate protocol shall be sanctioned and stripped of his/ her media accreditation, and will subsequently be banned from covering all remaining AELM events.
depressed areas along the Leader’s route have been covered with G.I sheets. Street dwellers have been banished from Metro Manila sidewalks.
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Some Leaders may mistook the GI Sheets covering as Noise Shield like in many other major roadways in their own metro…and yeah, metro manila is catching up!
It reminds me of the Marcos years. Cover the poverty.
Ang kapangitan ng kapaligiran ay dapat hindi itinatago. Dahil alam na ng mga delegado sa APEC na ang Pilipinas ay ganun. Bakit pa pagtatakpan. Pag aaksaya lang ng panahon ang ganun. Pagkatapos ng APEC sino ang mag may ari ng mga yero. Ang dapat sanang ginawa ay nilinis na lang ang kapaligiran. Na dapat walang nakakakalat na mga basura.
Puting-puti na ang paligid, naitago na ulit ni Dinky ang mga pulubi.
Uso pa talaga si Imeldific!
Can you imagine the transportation and security procedures that have to be put in place to keep 20 of the world’s most powerful people moving comfortably and securely? Helping them to have a good meeting. Rather than appreciate our government’s opportunity to present the Philippines well, we nit-pick and give them problems. Our petty likes are more important, as we pretend we know better.
I’m glad Gilas players and college sports people, at least, grasp the peculiar strength and fulfillment that comes from having a unified team. Each player makes his little sacrifices.
#5
Hey Joe, bakit kailangan takpan ang katotohanan. Kaya nga may APEC para sa ikauunlad ng lahat supposedly.
I don’t know why we are always focused on the flimsy. There are other reasons for the metal cladding beyond the imeldific and the most important one is security. I lived in Pasay practically all my life. Every time a foreign dignitary is scheduled to arrive, the city gov’t is faced with a security nightmare. The students of all public schools in Pasay are mobilized to be a huge part of the welcome party in the routes where the official convoy will pass. To impress the visitor? Nope, a former City Hall official told us lone wolf assassins are easier spotted when he stands out among a sea of small kids. The kids also provide a big buffer zone between the VIP and would-be assassins, a rushing gunman would easily be noticed and neutralized by security forces much faster than if he were blending with a group of adults.
Also among the concerns of securing a VIP is the types of buildings lining the route of the convoy. For example, one of the houses in Pildera II – the depressed village directly in front of NAIA in Imelda Ave. – used to be HQ for the Kabataang Makabayan in the 70s and another house was a owned by another known leftie. Concentration of soldiers and cops in that street especially in front of these two houses looked awkward and alarming then, it was easier and cheaper to install metal cladding to prevent sharpshooters positioned in the squatter’s area from threatening our VIP guests. They did the same in the next squatter’s area beside the bridge in MIA Rd. These were upgraded into advertising boards during Arroyo’s time. The rest of the trip via Roxas Blvd. is considered safe zone but even then, the buildings along the boulevard are asked to close their windows when VIP guests pass, like in the case of the Pope. That is the reason VIP convoys do not pass via Tramo, there are several danger spots (squatters’ colonies) in both sides of the street. After the privatization of that part of Villamor Airbase, convoys now pass that route going to Makati.
You do not need to hide the poverty in the metro with metal sheets, all one needs to do is look outside the plane window just before landing and see the car tires on unpainted rusted roofs just around the airport.
As for the street-dwellers, I am told some of these families, mostly street vendors who live at the sea wall, collect P4,000 monthly from DSWD Pasay supposedly for rental support. That’s aside from the Conditional Cash Transfer they receive for sending their children to school. They just move their shanties to the seawall in Parañaque or Manila after collecting. And those from Manila or Parañaque do the same. Professional squatting. They should be arrested, not hidden.
Yeah..!! They should be demolished, mauled and arrested. Let the Giant SM occupy the land.