TAGBILARAN
CITY, Bohol, March 19, (PIA)—The Department of Environment and Natural
Resources (DENR) is temporarily closing Bohol’s peak attraction: the Chocolate
Hills and 16 other forest and protected areas in Bohol in a desperate bid to deny
the dreaded corona virus disease the chance to infect other people who may be
near a sick person on tour.
This
as the DENR has also temporarily closed all eco-tourism activities within the
protected areas in the province, in another attempt to deny the entry and
contain the spread of the dreaded coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
The
temporary closure takes effect March 18 and lasts until March 31, according to
a notice to the public issued by Bohol Provincial Environment and Natural
Resources Officer (PENRO) Charlie Fabre.
Expressly
included in the temporary closure order are all eco-tourism activities within
the Rajah Sikatuna Protected Landscape, Chocolate Hills Natural Monuments,
Loboc Watershed Forest Reserve, Alejawan-Cansulay-Anibongan River Watershed and
Forest Reserve.
Alburquerque-Loay-Loboc
Protected Landscape and Seascapes, Panglao Island Protected Seascape, Cabilao
and Sandingan Island Mangrove Swamp Forest Reserve, Pangangan Island Mangrove
Swamp Forest Reserve, Tubigon group of islets and Wilderness Areas, Clarin
group of islates and Wilderness Areas.
Inabanga-Buenavista
Mangrove Swamp Forest Reserve and Wilderness Areas, Getafe mangro Swamp
ForestReserve and Wilderness Area, Ubay Mangrove Forest Reserve, Talibon group
of Islands Protected Landscape.
Candijay-Anda-Mabini
Mangrove Swamp Forest Reserve and Wilderness Area and President Carlos P.
Garcia Mangrove Swamp Forest Reserve and Wilderness Area.
The
temporary closure, according to PENRO Fabre is in compliance with the Presidential
proclamation 922 which president Rodrigo Roa Duterte issued declaring a state
of national health emergency all over the country.
The
outbreak of the corona virus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) constitutes an
emergency that threatens national security as the Department of Health admitted
the first local transmission of the virus which originated in the Wuhan
Province of mainland China.
Said
to be easily transmittable through pneumonia droplets which can be expelled
through coughing or sneezing of an person infected with the virus, the novel
virus has world’s best scientists scrambling to find its vaccine, and has not
been generally successful as of now.
With
the mode of transmission identified, government health authorities have pushed
on proper handwashing by soap and water of alcohol based sanitizer is
unavailable.
The
government has also put up bans on mass gatherings, suspended classes and
adopted flexible work arrangements to limit the number of people in one place
as a certain time with its social distancing policy.
The
temporary closure of these eco-tourism activities also coincide with the
continuing spread of the virus that has since affected 172 of the world’s
countries. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)
SOCIALLY DISTANT.
With social distancing now implemented to deprive the virus the chance to
infect more people, DENR has temporarily closed the Chocolate Hills park,
Bohol’s leading tourism destination as tourism stakeholders now see the
solution to the pandemic a distant
dream. (rahchiu/PIA-7/Bohol)
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