Taiwan Taps Filipino Talent For Global Semiconductor Workforce At 2026 Career Day

Taiwan brings semiconductor career opportunities to Manila, connecting Filipino engineers with global industry leaders as demand for skilled talent continues to rise.

When Publicity Stopped Being Proof Of Reputation Strength

Modern reputation management requires more than visibility, as stakeholders now rely on evidence from actions, culture, and engagement rather than curated public communications.

Chef Tatung Sarthou Introduces A Filipino Philosophy Of Living Through The Wisdom Of The Kitchen

Chef Tatung Sarthou introduces KitchiZen, a book that reframes the Filipino kitchen as a space for life lessons on balance, patience, and understanding enough.

From Narrative To Infrastructure: How Reputation Management Evolved In The Last 10 Years

Reputation today is no longer shaped by messaging alone but by systems, actions, and consistency that stakeholders experience and verify across platforms over time.

Pres. Duterte: Future Of PNP Rests On Año

Pres. Duterte: Future Of PNP Rests On Año

63
63

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

The future of the country’s police force will depend on Interior Secretary Eduardo Año’s efforts to rid the Philippine National Police (PNP) of corruption, President Rodrigo Duterte said.

Duterte made this remark admitting that he has yet to appoint a PNP chief but only because he wanted Año to ensure that the police force is corrupt-free before he names its new head.

He earlier appointed Año to supervise the PNP while Lt. Gen. Archie Francisco Gamboa remains as PNP officer-in-charge (OIC).

“I have given Secretary Año the blanket authority to get rid of corruption,” Duterte said in a media interview in Malacañang.

“And it is on his shoulder the future of how the police would behave in the coming years — na kay Año ‘yan (it’s Año’s responsibility),” he added.

At present, the President said it was enough for him for Año “to make the corrections.”

He expressed confidence that Año would be successful in cleansing the police force.

“And I think that with the remaining — remaining two years, if I can just fix a third of what’s bogging the PNP, and that is corruption,” he added.

Even if he appointed a new head, the President said he was sure that the new PNP chief would “not be able to solve the problem.”

“You know, historically — historically, the police, the PNP, has always been a problem for any administration,” Duterte said.

Earlier, Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo said Año will manage the country’s police force for as long as the President thinks is necessary.

“‘Di ba sabi niya hanggang kailan niya gusto? (Didn’t he say that he wanted Año to supervise the PNP as long as he wanted him to?),” Panelo said in a January 2 Palace briefing.

Despite his delay in appointing a new PNP chief, the President assured that a new commander will definitely be named for the police force within his term.

“They should have a commander,” Duterte said.

However, he said he has not selected a new PNP chief “at this time.”

Contenders for the PNP chief post are Gamboa, Lt. Gen. Camilo Cascolan, deputy chief for operations and Maj. Gen. Guillermo Eleazar, former Metro Manila police director and now head of the directorial staff.

Also considered were Central Visayas regional director, Brig. Gen. Valeriano de Leon and Calabarzon regional director, Brig. Gen. Vicente Danao Jr. (PNA)