

What is Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s solution to vaccine hesitancy among Filipinos? Threaten them with jail time.
Duterte, in a meeting with pandemic task force officials on Monday, June 21, said he would order the arrest of persons who refused to get vaccinated.
“Kung ayaw mo magpabakuna, ipaaresto kita at ang bakuna, itusok ko sa puwet mo. Putang ina, bwisit kayo,” said an irate Duterte in edited footage of the meeting aired on television.
(If you don’t want to get vaccinated, I’ll have you arrested then I’ll inject a vaccine into your buttocks.)
“Magpabakuna kayo or ipakulong ko kayo sa selda (Get vaccinated or I’ll jail you in a cell),” he added.

He has also threatened to inject them with the version of anti-parasitic medicine Ivermectin intended for animals.
Duterte said his justification for such a drastic measure as arrest was the state of national emergency he declared over the country due to COVID-19 and the dangers posed by unvaccinated people as possible “carriers” of the disease.
He conceded it was a “strong-arm” tactic for which he would find a legal way to enforce.
“I will think it over very hard, legally of course, in pursuance of a policy of crisis, this health issue,” said Duterte.
Tells local governments to keep lists
The President also said he would tell local government officials to “find” those who were unwilling to get vaccinated.
“I will order all the barangay captains to have a tally of all the people who refuse to be vaccinated,” said Duterte, adding that the Department of the Interior and Local Government should supervise the effort.
The Duterte administration is already notorious for its use of barangay lists to keep tabs on suspected drug users and peddlers, many of whom have ended up killed either in police operations or by unknown assailants.
Harshest vaccination policy
If Duterte makes good on his threat, his would probably be the harshest penalty for people unwilling to get vaccinated against COVID-19 and would likely raise human rights concerns.
In Indonesia, its capital Jakarta announced it would fine people who refused to get vaccinated.
Will coercion and threat work among a majority of Filipinos unsure about getting their jabs? A Social Weather Stations survey conducted from late April to early May found that only three out of 10 Filipinos were willing to get vaccinated.
The top reason for this unwillingness was fear of side effects and the belief that the vaccines were not safe or effective, according to SWS.
Lawmakers and civil society organizations have called on the government to ramp up its vaccination information drive to counter vaccine hesitancy. – Rappler.com
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