The Philippine Star

Comelec extends voter reactivati­on deadline

- By MAYEN JAYMALIN

Over five million deactivate­d voters have until Sept. 25 to reactivate their registrati­on to be able to vote in the 2025 midterm elections, according to the Commission on Elections (Comelec).

In a resolution approved on Monday, the Comelec extended the deadline for online filing of applicatio­ns for voter reactivati­on.

“Due to the large number of deactivate­d voters who have yet to apply for reactivati­on status, the commission resolved to extend the deadline to Sept. 25,” the Comelec said.

Data showed that only 556,231 or 10 percent of the more than 5.3 million deactivate­d voters have applied for reactivati­on status.

Deactivate­d voters can file their applicatio­n for reactivati­on online as long as they have biometrics in the Comelec office where they registered.

The deadline for reactivati­on of voter registrati­on was supposed to end on Sept. 7.

The Comelec has deactivate­d 5,376,630 voters for failing to vote in the past two elections.

2025 voters hit 6.25 M

The number of registered voters for the 2025 midterm elections has reached more than six million, Comelec Chairman George Garcia said.

Garcia said the poll body has processed 6,250,050 applicatio­ns since the start of the registrati­on period in February.

morata.aubriel@yahoo.com melodygeme­ntiza7@gmail.com – sent the bomb threat to Philippine consulates in Sydney, Ontario and Hong Kong, according to the DFA.

The informatio­n was immediatel­y forwarded to a group chat by the DFA’s executive director, prompting immediate action.

DFA intelligen­ce unit chief Raymund Toledo instructed all department offices to implement precaution­ary measures.

Pamela Joy Tulio, DFA security radio control officer, informed the Pasay police about the bomb threat at 8:43 a.m.

Members of the Special Weapons and Tactics team as well as Explosive Ordnance Disposal were dispatched to conduct a thorough sweep of the DFA premises.

The response team led by Capt. Wilbert Aticao was accompanie­d by the Philippine Coast Guard’s K9 Unit under Lt. Sgt. Michael Jayson de Torres.

After sweeping the DFA offices for almost one hour, authoritie­s found no bomb.

The incident disrupted DFA operations, with consular appointmen­ts canceled or delayed.

Felix de Leon, head of the DFA intelligen­ce security unit, said an internal investigat­ion is underway to identify the source of the threat and assess any potential lapses in security.

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