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PRO-8 launches Task Force ‘Kamurayaw’ for 2026 Barangay, SK Elections Security

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SECURITY OPERATIONS. Police personnel from Regional Task Force “KAMURAYAW” stand in formation during their send-off ceremony at the PRO-8 Grandstand in Tacloban City on June 10, 2026, ahead of their deployment for security operations for the 2026 BSKE in Eastern Visayas.(PRO-8)
SECURITY OPERATIONS. Police personnel from Regional Task Force “KAMURAYAW” stand in formation during their send-off ceremony at the PRO-8 Grandstand in Tacloban City on June 10, 2026, ahead of their deployment for security operations for the 2026 BSKE in Eastern Visayas.(PRO-8)

TACLOBAN CITY-The Police Regional Office 8 (PRO-8) has officially deployed its Regional Task Force “KAMURAYAW” to strengthen security preparations ahead of the 2026 Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan Elections (BSKE) in Eastern Visayas.

The task force was launched during a send-off ceremony held at the PRO-8 Grandstand on June 10, 2026.

Regional Director B/Gen. Jason Capoy led the event, stressing the Philippine National Police’s (PNP) commitment to ensuring peaceful, orderly, and credible elections.

A total of 302 police personnel were deployed to identified priority areas. These include officers from the regional headquarters, districts in Leyte and Samar, and support units. The deployment focuses on areas considered vulnerable to election-related security risks.
The task force is tasked to carry out anti-criminality operations, prevent violent incidents, respond to shooting cases, and neutralize lawless groups that may threaten public safety and the integrity of the elections.

Capoy emphasized that the deployment serves as a warning against violence and election disruption, urging public cooperation to help maintain peace during the electoral period.

(LIZBETH ANN A. ABELLA)

DSWD-8 alerts public to fraudsters impersonating agency officials

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TACLOBAN CITY — The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) regional office has warned the public against individuals posing as agency officials to solicit money and demand unauthorized payments from suppliers, contractors, and other stakeholders.
In a public advisory, DSWD-8 said it received reports of scammers falsely identifying themselves as agency representatives to deceive individuals and businesses transacting with the department.

 

The agency stressed that these individuals have no connection with DSWD and are using fraudulent schemes for personal financial gain.

DSWD-8 specifically clarified that Regional Director Grace Subong has not authorized any person to request money, favors, commissions, or so-called “standard operating procedure” (SOP) payments on behalf of the agency.

“DSWD strongly condemns these fraudulent schemes and is actively working with law enforcement authorities to track down and apprehend those responsible,” the advisory stated.

The warning comes amid attempts by unscrupulous individuals to exploit the names of DSWD officials in soliciting funds from suppliers, contractors, and members of the public.
Agency officials reminded stakeholders that all official transactions with DSWD are conducted through established and transparent procedures and do not involve unofficial payments or personal solicitations.

DSWD-8 urged the public to exercise caution and verify any suspicious communication, requests for money, or transactions purportedly coming from agency personnel through official DSWD channels.

The agency also encouraged individuals who encounter persons claiming to represent DSWD and asking for money or favors to immediately report the incident to DSWD Field Office VIII or the appropriate law enforcement authorities.

“We urge everyone to remain vigilant and help prevent these fraudulent activities by reporting suspicious individuals and transactions,” the DSWD said.

(LIZBETH ANN A.ABELLA)

Paranas honors first homegrown PMA graduate from town

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HISTORIC. Ensign Jeckey Pabunan of the Philippine Navy receives recognition from local officials during a session of the Sangguniang Bayan of Paranas, Samar on June 8. A member of the Philippine Military Academy “Talang Dangal” Class of 2026, Pabunan, who received the recognition from Vice Mayor Eunice Babalcon, was honored as the municipality’s first homegrown graduate of the country’s premier military academy.

In Samar

HISTORIC. Ensign Jeckey Pabunan of the Philippine Navy receives recognition from local officials during a session of the Sangguniang Bayan of Paranas, Samar on June 8. A member of the Philippine Military Academy “Talang Dangal” Class of 2026, Pabunan, who received the recognition from Vice Mayor Eunice Babalcon, was honored as the municipality’s first homegrown graduate of the country’s premier military academy.

TACLOBAN CITY-The municipality of Paranas formally recognized Ensign Jeckey Pabunan of the Philippine Navy during the regular session of the 12th Sangguniang Bayan on June 8, honoring him as the town’s first homegrown graduate of the Philippine Military Academy (PMA).

Pabunan, a member of the PMA “Talang Dangal” Class of 2026, paid a courtesy visit to local officials, where a special resolution commending his achievement was presented before the municipal council.

Led by Vice Mayor Atty. Eunice Babalcon, members of the Sangguniang Bayan welcomed the newly commissioned naval officer and highlighted the significance of his accomplishment for the municipality.

The resolution, read by Councilor Leila Mari Babalcon, recognized Pabunan’s successful completion of the PMA’s four-year cadetship program, which combines rigorous academic, military, and physical training.

Following his appearance before the legislative body, Pabunan met with Mayor Elvira Babalcon and Municipal Administrator Mae Derby Babalcon at the Municipal Mayor’s Office, where local officials extended their congratulations and expressed pride in his achievement.
According to the resolution, Pabunan’s graduation represents a historic milestone for Paranas, making him the first native of the municipality to complete the country’s premier military academy.

The commendation noted that his achievement serves as an inspiration to the town’s youth and reflects the values of discipline, perseverance, integrity, and service.

The Sangguniang Bayan also cited Pabunan for bringing honor and distinction to Paranas and for demonstrating that young people from rural communities can achieve success in national institutions through hard work and determination.

The Philippine Military Academy, based in Baguio, is the country’s premier military institution responsible for training future officers of the Armed Forces of the Philippines. Admission to the academy is highly competitive, with only a small percentage of applicants completing the four-year program and earning commissions in the military service.
For Paranas, a fourth-class municipality in Samar, Pabunan’s graduation marks a significant achievement and adds a new chapter to the town’s history. Local officials said his success underscores the potential of young Paranasanons to excel in national service and leadership roles.

The resolution honoring Pabunan, which was approved on May 25, 2026, has been incorporated into the official records of the Sangguniang Bayan, with copies furnished to the Office of the Municipal Mayor and other concerned offices.

(JOEY A. GABIETA)

 

Treating witnesses right

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The continuing difficulty of investigating powerful individuals is a serious threat to justice and accountability. Allegations surrounding the country’s flood-control scandal have once again raised concerns about whether the truth can ever emerge when influential figures are involved. A society cannot claim to uphold the rule of law if those who seek the truth become the primary targets of scrutiny and retaliation.

One of the most disturbing patterns in high-profile investigations is the treatment of witnesses who come forward with information. Instead of receiving protection and fair consideration, they often face counter-investigations, legal complaints, public attacks, and accusations intended to undermine their credibility. This creates a chilling effect that discourages others from speaking out. When potential witnesses see what happens to those who testify, silence becomes the safer option. As a result, vital evidence remains hidden, and wrongdoing becomes even harder to expose.

The controversy surrounding the flood-control scandal highlights this troubling reality. Public funds are collected through taxes to build infrastructure, protect communities, and improve lives. When questions arise regarding the use of billions of pesos, the public deserves a thorough and impartial investigation. Yet many citizens are left wondering how accountability can be achieved when the focus appears to shift from examining allegations of corruption to examining the individuals who bring those allegations forward. Such a situation risks turning investigations into exercises in intimidation rather than instruments of truth.

Equally alarming is the perception that some institutions tasked with enforcing accountability may be influenced by political alliances or other considerations unrelated to justice. When graft complaints are dismissed without convincing explanations, public suspicion naturally grows. The issue is not merely whether a particular official is guilty or innocent. The larger concern is whether investigative bodies are demonstrating independence, fairness, and consistency in carrying out their duties. If citizens begin to believe that powerful individuals enjoy protections unavailable to ordinary people, confidence in public institutions suffers greatly.

Justice requires courage, independence, and an unwavering commitment to facts wherever they may lead. Witnesses who come forward in good faith must be protected rather than persecuted, and allegations involving public funds must be examined with transparency and rigor. Investigative agencies, prosecutors, and oversight bodies must prove through their actions that no individual is beyond scrutiny. The best way to restore public confidence is not to silence accusers but to conduct fearless investigations and allow evidence—not power, influence, or connections—to determine the outcome.

Travel for me

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Travel begins the moment a person steps beyond the familiar and allows the world to interrupt routine. Every year, millions cross borders, board ferries, ride trains, and fill airports not merely to reach destinations but to escape the small prisons of repetition. I have long believed that traveling as a tourist is not a luxury reserved for the wealthy; it is one of the most rewarding investments a person can make in understanding life itself.
What strikes me most about traveling is its ability to correct the arrogance of familiarity. Staying too long in one place can create the illusion that one’s customs, opinions, and ways of living are the standard by which everything else should be measured. Then comes a journey. A traveler suddenly finds different languages on street signs, different foods on tables, different rhythms in marketplaces, and different ways people greet strangers. The world quietly whispers a lesson that no classroom can fully teach: there are many ways to live a meaningful life.

Travel also sharpens the senses in a way that ordinary routines rarely do. A person notices architecture, landscapes, accents, weather, and even the smell of the air with unusual attentiveness. I often think that travel restores something adulthood gradually steals from us—the ability to be amazed. Children naturally stare at everything. Adults often hurry past everything. Travel slows that rush and teaches the eyes to look again. Mountains become more than geography, rivers more than water, and old churches more than stone.

As for the ideal age to travel extensively, my preference leans toward the period between the late twenties and the mid-forties. At that stage, many people possess a healthier balance of energy, financial capability, maturity, and independence. Younger travelers certainly have the advantage of stamina and a sense of adventure, while older travelers often possess a deeper appreciation and wisdom. Yet the years between roughly twenty-eight and forty-five strike me as the sweet spot where curiosity and capability walk hand in hand. The body remains willing, the mind remains open, and resources are often more available than they were in youth.

That said, I dislike rigid rules about age. Travel should not be postponed until some perfect moment arrives because life rarely grants perfect timing. I have seen photographs of retirees trekking through mountain trails and stories of university students crossing continents on modest budgets. The better question is not “How old should one be?” but rather “Is one physically, emotionally, and financially prepared?” A passport does not ask for dreams; it asks for action.

When discussing destinations, my preference is clear: tourists should first explore places that differ significantly from their everyday environment. If someone lives in a crowded city, a journey into nature can be refreshing. If one grows up near beaches, mountains may offer a richer experience. If a traveler comes from a tropical country, visiting places with distinct seasons can broaden their perspective. Contrast is the secret ingredient. The farther a destination stands from ordinary experience—not necessarily in distance but in character—the greater the opportunity for discovery.

I am especially drawn to destinations where natural beauty and cultural heritage coexist. A magnificent landscape alone can inspire wonder, but adding history, traditions, local cuisine, and human stories creates a fuller experience. Consider how much richer a trip becomes when a traveler not only admires a coastline or mountain range but also learns how generations of people have lived beside it. Places that combine scenery with culture leave deeper marks on memory because they engage both the eyes and the intellect. They remind us that geography shapes civilization, and civilization, in turn, shapes identity.

As I see it, travel is less about collecting photographs than collecting perspective. The stamps in a passport eventually fade in importance, but the lessons endure. I have come to believe that the best journeys happen when a person travels neither too early nor too late, neither recklessly nor fearfully, and chooses destinations that challenge assumptions rather than merely confirm them. The world is vast, time is limited, and every worthwhile trip offers a gentle reminder that life becomes richer when curiosity is allowed to wander.

Libertas et lacrymae

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In Latin, the phrase means Freedom and Tears. It is not Freedom from Tears, but simply Freedom and Tears — a combination, not an assurance.

As we mark another Araw ng Kalayaan this June 12, 2026, the recent chaotic events in the Senate and the untimely deaths of two basketball athletes — not yet at their peak but brimming with immense potential — have created tremendous sadness in my heart.
The sadness comes from knowing that in the Senate, where wisdom and integrity should flourish, we have instead witnessed gutter-level political maneuverings. Freedom, it seems, is often tainted by ambition and self-interest. And in tears, we mourn the passing of the athletes — tears for their wasted potential, sorrow for their early demise, and grief for the dreams that will never be realized.

But perhaps this is the essence of Libertas et lacrymae: freedom is inseparable from suffering, and tears are the price of liberty. To be free is to be vulnerable — vulnerable to the failures of our leaders, vulnerable to the fragility of life, vulnerable to the uncertainty of tomorrow. Freedom is not a shield against sorrow; it is the condition that allows us to face sorrow with dignity.

Philosophers remind us that freedom is not merely the absence of chains but the presence of responsibility. It is the burden of choice, the weight of conscience, the courage to act even when the outcome is uncertain. Tears, then, are not contradictions to freedom but companions of it. They remind us that liberty is lived by mortal beings, whose bodies break, whose ambitions falter, whose lives end.

The athletes who passed away embody this paradox: their freedom to play, to strive, to inspire was cut short by mortality. Yet in their absence, we are reminded that freedom is precious precisely because it is finite. The Senate’s chaos, too, is a reminder that liberty is fragile, always threatened by corruption and ego, yet always worth defending.

Thus, Automatic for the People becomes more than a phrase — it is a meditation on the human condition. Freedom is automatic only in the sense that it belongs to all; but its preservation requires vigilance, sacrifice, and yes, tears. To live in freedom is to accept that joy and grief walk hand in hand, that independence is never pure but always mixed with loss.

On this Independence Day, let us embrace both liberty and sorrow. For only by acknowledging our tears can we truly honor our freedom. And only by carrying both can we hope to build a nation that is not merely free, but profoundly human.

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