BuCor Deputy Director General for Administration Assistant Secretary Gil Torralba; BuCor Director General Gregorio Catapang Jr.; PCCR president Ma. Angelica Lei Bautista; University of Perpetual Help System Graduate School of Business Dean Eduardo Zialcita; Daily Tribune president Willie Fernandez; and Bucor Deputy Director General for Administration Assistant Secretary Al Perreras.(PHOTOGRAPHS BY JOY ASAGRA FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE) 
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BuCor as a force for good on its 118th year

Director General Gregorio Catapang Jr. took the occasion to thank the Buddhist Tzu Chi Medical Foundation for the medical and health missions it has conducted among the PDLs under BuCor’s care

Joy Asagra

The Bureau of Corrections recently marked its 118th founding anniversary with a meaningful event held at Alabang Country Club that underscored its contributions to nation-building and creating a positive impact on its PDL (persons deprived of liberty) population and their families.

A highlight of the event was the signing of an agreement between BuCor and the Philippine College of Criminology to strengthen their partnership, with PCCR president Ma. Angelica Lei G. Bautista and BuCor Director General Gregorio Catapang Jr. signing the agreement.

PCCR president Ma. Angelica Lei Bautista and BuCor Director General Gregorio Catapang Jr. with the agreement strengthening the partnership between BuCor and the Philippine College of Criminology.

Catapang also took the occasion to thank the Buddhist Tzu Chi Medical Foundation Inc. for the medical and health missions it has conducted among the PDLs under BuCor's care. The latest Tzu Chi mission — through the help of Daily Tribune led by its president Willie Fernandez and executive vice president Bettina Fernandez — involved providing free eye care, treatment and surgery to a number of aging PDLs losing their vision.

"Our PDLs are losing their sight. Thank you very much, napakamahal magpaayos ng katarata (cataract surgery is very expensive). One eye lang P100,000, dalawa P200,000. So we cannot afford that, that's about P5 million to P50 million na hindi namin kayang i-raise, maraming salamat po sa inyong lahat (thank you very much to all of you)," said Catapang, addressing Tzu Chi.

(Standing) Tzu Chi's Michelle Sy and Rita Tan, Daily Tribune executive vice president Bettina Fernandez; (seated) BuCor chief Gregorio Catapang Jr. and Daily Tribune president Willie Fernandez.

Some 60 aging PDLs awaiting release from the New Bilibid Prison benefited from the free cataract surgery provided by Tzu Chi, a foundation established in Taiwan in 1966 by Dharma Master Cheng Yen as a worldwide humanitarian group guided by Buddhist principles.

Operating on the values of compassion, aid and volunteer work, the foundation has grown globally and is involved in diverse charitable endeavors such as disaster relief, medical aid, education initiatives and environmental projects.