Cimatu eyes more Covid-19 burial sites in Cebu City

By John Rey Saavedra

July 14, 2020, 8:48 pm

<p><strong>COVID-19 BURIAL SITE</strong>. Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu leads the inspection by some officials of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) of an area in Barangay Sapangdaku, Cebu City which is a proposed burial site for Covid-19 fatalities on Monday (July 13, 2020). The IATF-EID commended the Cebu City government for its efforts to build a burial site in Sitio Catives II, Barangay Guba to address the backlog in cremation. <em>(Photo courtesy of IATF-EID)</em></p>

COVID-19 BURIAL SITE. Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu leads the inspection by some officials of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) of an area in Barangay Sapangdaku, Cebu City which is a proposed burial site for Covid-19 fatalities on Monday (July 13, 2020). The IATF-EID commended the Cebu City government for its efforts to build a burial site in Sitio Catives II, Barangay Guba to address the backlog in cremation. (Photo courtesy of IATF-EID)

CEBU CITY – To address the backlog in cremation throughout the city due to coronavirus disease (Covid-19)-related deaths, Environment Secretary and Cebu Covid-19 response overseer Roy Cimatu is leading the search for areas that can be converted into burial sites.

Cimatu joined local environment officials in inspecting possible sites in the upland village of Sapangdaku where patients who died of coronavirus infection could be buried.

"We have to immediately identify burial sites that are outside protected areas, and will pose no harm to the immediate community," he said in a statement on Tuesday.

Earlier, the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) commended the city government for the construction of a three-hectare burial site in Sitio Catives II in the hinterland village of Guba here.

The Cebu City Council and the barangay officials of Guba, Sirao, Paril and Agsungot approved the proposal for the site's use, acknowledging the need to safely manage the remains of Covid-19 patients and ensure the public's health and safety.

The burial site in Guba will be called the Cebu City Botanical Memorial Garden and is expected to create livelihood opportunities for the residents.

Councilor Dave Tumulak said the opening of the Guba facility “will bring jobs to the community as the people can sell goods by the roadside”.

He assured residents of Barangay Guba and neighboring localities that the cemetery will not pose any health risk to the community, amid reports that Guba sits on a watershed area and is part of the Central Cebu Protected Landscape managed by the Protected Area Management Board (PAMB).

“I saw how they (funeral parlors) handled the dead bodies, and I am willing to stake my name that the process is very thorough to ensure safety,” Tumulak was quoted as saying in an earlier statement from the IATF.

Melquiades Feliciano, who is assisting Cimatu in Cebu, welcomed the initiative in scouting for Covid-19 burial sites after the city's Emergency Operations Center (EOC) adopted a more proactive response to the pandemic.

"Forward planning and swift implementation will give Cebu City the edge it needs to defeat Covid-19. There is an urgent public health risk posed by the lack of crematories, so we have to do what we can and do it quickly," Feliciano said. (PNA)

 

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