1 of 12
Jeepney driver Jude Recio takes a shower at the Tandang Sora terminal which have been home for them since the lockdown started. The Philippines' iconic passenger jeepney was one of the first casualties of the country's coronavirus outbreak, with the government imposing a tight lockdown that sidelined Manila's "king of the road" and its thousands of poor drivers.
Image Credit: AP
2 of 12
Driver Michael Navarra cooks fish and vegetables on their portable stove inside a jeepney. The restrictions imposed three months ago barred most public transport, forcing the gaudily decorated jeepneys off the road.
Image Credit: AP
3 of 12
A jeepney driver drinks coffee beside his vehicle. Many of the jobless drivers have resorted to begging in the streets, displaying cardboard signs bearing pleas for money and food on their jeepneys. "A little help please for us drivers," one sign said.
Image Credit: AP
4 of 12
The Recio family sleeps inside their passenger jeepney. In a once-bustling passenger terminal in suburban Quezon city's Tandang Sora village, about 35 drivers have turned their jeepneys into tiny shelters. They squeezed in cooking stoves, a few spare clothes, cellphone chargers and electric fans to fight off the tropical heat and mosquitoes in the cramped passenger compartment where they have now lived and slept for months.
Image Credit: AP
5 of 12
"We have no income now. We have nothing to spend for our children," said Jude Recio, a distraught driver with three children. "I hope we'll be allowed to drive again."
Image Credit: AP
6 of 12
A jeepney driver carries relief goods donated by a catholic church at the Tandang Sora terminal. Well before the outbreak began, jeepneys had already been threatened by a government program to modernize public transport and phase out aging vehicles.
Image Credit: AP
7 of 12
62-year-old driver Arthur Vinluan sits on a passenger jeepney beside a sign that says “sorry we’re not yet in operation”. The diesel-powered jeepneys that are popular among the working class cough out dark fumes which have been blamed for Manila's notoriously polluted air.
Image Credit: AP
8 of 12
Jeepney driver Rey Escanilla, left, sits with another driver at their coffee station in the Tandang Sora terminal. The jeepneys evolved from US military jeeps that American forces left behind after World War II.
Image Credit: AP
9 of 12
Driver Jude Recio walks past jeepneys parked at the Tandang Sora terminal. The vehicles were modified and then were reproduced, many based on a second-hand truck chassis, and for decades were the most popular form of land transport and a showcase of Philippine culture on wheels.
Image Credit: AP
10 of 12
The modernization program aims to make over jeepneys by improving their engines, safety and convenience. Many have electric engines and are called "e-jeeps." They are bigger, safer and more environmentally friendly, but no longer are a head-turning icon.
Image Credit: AP
11 of 12
Jeepney drivers beg for money beside a sign that says “a little help please for the drivers, thank you. The government eased the lockdown this month to reopen the slumping economy, allowing newer passenger vehicles to return to the road under strict quarantine regulations. But the traditional jeepneys remain sidelined.
Image Credit: AP
12 of 12
Driver Michael Navarra prepares egg to be cooked for their afternoon snack inside a jeepney. The drivers in the Tandang Sora terminal have started sprucing up their jeepneys, hoping they can roll back onto the streets soon. But they fear that even if they and their jeepneys survive the pandemic, the government's modernization program will still bring them to extinction.
Image Credit: AP