Residential units, lifetime flying miles among incentives awarded to Olympic silver medalist Nesthy Petecio

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Sena Irie of Japan celebrates after winning her fight against Nesthy Petecio of the Philippines in Tokyo, Japan, Tuesday. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino

Silver medalist Nesthy A. Petecio, who went up against Japanese opponent Sena Irie in the women’s featherweight final bout, is guaranteed P5 million pesos for her 2021 Tokyo Olympics stint, per Republic Act No. 10699 

She is also set to receive other incentives, including a condominium in Davao Park District from Megaworld Corporation chairman Andrew L. Tan, and lifetime Mabuhay Miles from Philippine Airlines.  

“Your silver win showed the heart of a strong Filipina to the world!,” said PAL in a statement on Tuesday.  

Here are the details of her windfall thus far:  

Philippine Airlines – 60,000 Mabuhay Miles per year for life   
AirAsia Philippines – 5 years unlimited flights. All 14 Filipino athletes who competed in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics additionally get three free round-trip tickets to any AirAsia domestic destination.  
Megaworld Corporation – a P10 million residential condominium unit by Suntrust Properties, Inc., a Megaworld subsidiary, inside its Davao Park District township  
Ovialand, Inc. – a Caliya house and lot unit worth P2.5 million in Candelaria, Quezon   
Philippine Sports Foundation – P5 million  
MVP Sports Foundation, Inc. – P5 million  
San Miguel Foundation – P5 million  
Deputy speaker representative Michael “Mikee” L. Romero  P2 million  
Baguio City – P300,000, care of the city’s athletes’ incentives  

 Ms. Petecio is the first Filipino boxer to earn a place on the Olympics podium since Mansueto “Onyok” Velasco, Jr. in the 1996 Atlanta Games.  

 Her journey to a silver finish in the women’s featherweight (5457 kg) included a unanimous decision against Colombian boxer Yeni Marcela A. Castaneda in the quarterfinals, and a win over European boxing champion Irma Testa of Italy via split decision in the semifinal bout.   

Weightlifter Hidilyn F. Diaz received similar incentives after she secured the Philippines’ first-ever Olympic gold medal on July 27. — Patricia B. Mirasol