Weekend balita january 24, 2015

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LOS ANGELES

Vina Morales ready to give love another chance See VINA MORALES page 26

VOL. XXII, NO. 51

JANUARY 24 - 30, 2015

THE LEADING SOURCE OF NEWS AND INFORMATION FOR FILIPINO-AMERICANS

US thaws frozen aid to PHL $15-M military assistance withheld earlier due to human rights abuses

Firefighters try to extinguish the fire on a burning bus at the northbound lane of the Ayala flyover Wednesday. No one was reported hurt in the incident that caused massive traffic and suspension of the Metro Rail Transit operation. (MNS photo)

Manila, Philippines | AFP | Thursday 1/22/2015 – The United States has lifted restrictions on a small portion of its military assistance to the Philippines that was withheld over human rights concerns, the foreign minister said Thursday. The gesture affects about $15 million dollars that have been withheld over the last five years, a fraction of Washington’s total military assistance to the South East Asian island. Albert del Rosario told reporters that the aid restriction had been lifted “sometime last year”, but did not explain why it had been lifted. A day earlier, US assistant defense

secretary David Shear said that the Washington had provided $300 million in military-related assistance since 2001 and would provide another $40 million in 2015 as part of America’s support to modernize the poorly-equipped Philippine military, which is one of the weakest in the region. Philippine-US defense relations have been complicated by leftist and nationalist groups who oppose the longstanding alliance and who have protested against any US military presence or assistance to the Southeast Asian nation. Previously, human rights groups have successfully lobbied US legislators to cut military aid over the Philippine military’s alleged failure to improve its human rights record. See FROZEN AID, page 12

Senate expands Binay probe MANILA, Jan 22 (Mabuhay) – Senator Antonio Trillanes IV on Thursday revealed that he has filed a resolution expanding the scope of the Senate Blue Ribbon subcommittee probe on the corruption allegations against Vice President Jejomar Binay. Trillanes said he filed last Tuesday, January 20, proposed Senate Resolution 1114 which seeks to look into the alleged anomalies at the Home Development Mutual Fund (Pag-IBIG) and the Boy Scouts of the Philippines (BSP), where Binay serves as Board of Trustees chairman and president, respectively. He said Senator TG Guingona, chair of the mother Blue Ribbon Committee,

referred the resolution to sub-committee, chaired by Senator Koko Pimentel. “He (Guingona) believes that it is consistent as far as the personalities involved dito sa ongoing investigation natin. Para doon sa mga nagtatanong kung anong koneksyon nito doon sa first resolution, ito po, meron na pong bagong resolution kaya konektado na siya directly,” Trillanes said. The ongoing sub-committee probe was launched by virtue of Senate Resolution 826, which deals with the alleged overpricing of the Makati City Hall Building II and “other related anomalies committed by past and present Makati City Hall officials.” See BINAY PROBE, page 12

Gov’t admits beggars taken off streets for papal visit Manila, Philippines | AFP | Friday 1/23/2015 – The Philippines government came under fire Friday after admitting that hundreds of homeless people were taken off Manila’s streets and put into luxury accommodation during Pope Francis’s recent visit, when he preached compassion for the poor. Members of parliament demanded an explanation after Social Welfare Secretary Corazon Soliman revealed 490 beggars and homeless people were taken to airconditioned log cabins at a resort near Manila for the January 15-19 visit. “The pope would have wanted to see the Philippines, warts and all. Let us not pretend that we are a first-world country,” House of Representatives member Terry Ridon, who is initiating a congressional inquiry, told AFP. Soliman said the street people, many of whom live in shanties and hammocks tied to palm trees along the Manila Bay seafront, were removed from the capital’s Roxas Boulevard before the visit. A record crowd of six million flooded the bayside road on Sunday to hear Pope Francis celebrate mass in a nearby park, the highlight of his tour of the Catholic outpost where he preached “mercy and See BEGGARS, page 12

PAG-IBIG Chair Atty. Darlene Berberabe attends the Blue Ribbon Subcommittee hearing for the first time. (MNS photo)

Pacquiao wants Mayweather decision this month Los Angeles, United States | AFP | Tuesday 1/20/2015 - Manny Pacquiao thinks fans deserve to see him fight Floyd Mayweather and wants the unbeaten American to confirm a May date by the end of this month, the Los Angeles Times reported Monday. “We have to know soon because if they will not fight, we can move on and choose another opponent,” the Filipino fight king told the newspaper on a visit to its offices to promote his new documentary film, “Manny.” “We have a deadline... this month,” Pacquiao said, although he added that he didn’t know if Mayweather would sign off on a May 2 fight in Las Vegas. Pacquiao says he and promoters Top Rank have agreed to terms that include giving Mayweather a 60 percent cut of the proceeds in a megafight widely expected to shatter all box-office and television revenue records. ESPN reported this month that Pacquiao has also agreed on issues such as the gloves to be used Manny Pacquiao

and a drug testing protocol. Drug testing was one of the issues that caused a Pacquiao-Mayweather showdown to fall through when it was being negotiated in 2009 and early 2010. The eyes of the boxing world have long been on a showdown between the unbeaten Mayweather (47-0, 26 knockouts) and eight-division world champion Pacquiao (57-5-2, 38 knockouts), two of the greatest boxers of their generation. Talk of the superfight gained steam in December, when Mayweather proposed the May 2 date and Pacquiao vowed to chase him into submission.


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