MANILA, Philippines — President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said he is evaluating the possible extension of Gen. Rommel Marbil as chief of the Philippine National Police (PNP) until after the May polls.
In an ambush interview in Taguig City on Monday, Marcos was asked about Marbil, who is up for retirement next month. Marbil will reach the PNP’s mandatory retirement age of 56 this February.
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“Well, there is a very strong argument that it would be, it would not be good for stability, especially to change the chief PNP in the middle of a campaign period and approaching an election period,” he answered.
sba99 slot“So, we are studying it, but I think that is probably a very strong argument to keep him on. At the very least, until after the elections,” Marcos added in mixed Filipino and English.
Article continues after this advertisementREAD: DILG’s Remulla ‘indicates’ PNP chief Marbil may extend post until June
Article continues after this advertisementIt was Interior Secretary Jonvic Remulla who pointed out that Marbil may stay as PNP chief until June.
Article continues after this advertisement“There are indications that he will be extended until June, but let the President be the one to announce that. Indications pa lang (Just indications),” Remulla said at the Kapihan sa Manila Bay forum last January 15.
READ: Getting to know new PNP chief Maj. Gen. Marbil
Article continues after this advertisement“Tapos na ang rigodon ng personnel, so magiging ineffective kung maglalagay ka ng bagong Chief PNP,” Remulla argued.
(The reshuffle of personnel has been finished, so it would be ineffective if we installed a new Chief PNP.)
The election period began last Sunday, Jan. 12. It will end on June 11, a month after the May 12 midterm elections.
“At the request of (New World Development Company Limited), trading … has been halted with effect from 9:00 a.m. on Thursday, 26 September 2024, pending the release of announcements in relation to certain inside information of the Company,” a filing at the Hong Kong stock exchange said.
Murati called her more than six years at the San Francisco-based company “an extraordinary privilege” and described her decision to leave as difficult in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
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