NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
T H E F I L I P I N O A M E R I CA N C O M M U N I T Y N E WS PA P E R
Volume 18 - No. 6 • 2 Sections – 16 Pages
F E BR U A RY 8 - 1 4 , 2 0 1 9
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FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
Study: Filipinos spend 10 hours a day online, the most in the world Philippines also tops most time spent on social media
A NEW report revealed that people in the Philippines continued to spend more time on the internet than any other country in the world in 2018. The annual Digital 2019 report, created by social media platforms and agencies We Are Social and Hootsuite, found that those in the Philippines spent an average of 10 hours and two minutes online, an increase from the nine hours and 29 minutes spent per day in the year prior. The average amount of time spent worldwide clocked in at six hours and 42 minutes per day, with Japan spending the least amount of time online with just three hours and 45
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Only 36% of Pinoys in Harvard Humanitarian Initiative poll ‘fully prepared’ for disasters MAJORITYof Filipinos believe they are not “fully prepared” for disaster, according to a recent study by the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative. According to the poll conducted in 2017 and released on Tuesday, February 5, only 36 percent of Filipino respondents perceive themselves as “fully ready” for disasters. This, despite the campaigns of the government, nongovernment organizations (NGOs), and media.
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Also published in LOS ANGELES, LAS VEGAS, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY
DFA chief Teddy Locsin: ‘No need for anti-Chinese hysteria’ by PIA LEE
BRAGO Philstar.com
CHINESE workers are not grabbing jobs from Filipinos, Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said Tuesday, February 5. “Take it easy. Chinese workers are granted visas upon arrival under the program implemented by the immigration bureau and do not take jobs from Filipinos,” Locsin posted on Twitter. He made the statement after former president Benigno Aquino III called for a review of the influx of Chinese workers in the country.
“They are working in online gaming that requires Mandarin,” Locsin said. “They are poor people like ours abroad.” The Senate committee on labor chaired by Sen. Joel Villanueva is looking into the arrival of illegal foreign workers in the country. In 2018 alone, the Department of Foreign Affairs recorded some 1.6 million Chinese tourist arrivals and issued only 18 employment visas. Malacañang shrugged off Aquino’s concern about the number of Chinese workers in the Philippines, saying there is nothing alarming about it as long as they enter the country legally.
Meanwhile, a militant labor group sought an alliance with Chinese workers to demand better employment conditions. “We can have an alliance to forward calls for immediate relief amid rising prices of basic commodities and services and to push for long-term economic reforms,” Kilusang Mayor Uno vice chair Elizar Diayon said. He said Filipino workers should strengthen relations with owners of Filipino-Chinese small and medium businesses operating in the country. “What we want is a positive environment that is beneficial to workers of Fil-Chinese enterprises in the country,” Diayon said. (With Mayen Jaymalin) ■
Palace: ‘Let legal process take its course’ on Dengvaxia mess House panel recommends filing of raps vs Aquino, Abad, Garin, others by DARRYL JOHN
ESGUERRA
Inquirer.net
THE recommendation of the House committees on good government and public accountability, and health stemmed from the controversy over the use of anti-dengue vaccine Dengvaxia in the P3.5-billion national immunization program that started in 2016. “Let the legal process take its course and those found responsible be held administratively, criminally, and civilly liable,” Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo said in a statement. Panelo assured the Department of Justice (DOJ) will perform its task and rule on
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WELCOMING THE YEAR OF THE PIG. Filipino Chinese watch a dragon dance during Chinese New Year festivities in Binondo, Manila on Tuesday, February 5. The dragon dance is one of the highlights of the Lunar New Year festivities as it is believed to bring good luck. ManilaTimes.net photo by Rene Dilan
Duterte impersonator turns US report cites AFP’s ‘limited ability’ to track terrorists heads at Hong Kong church by FRANCIS
MANGOSING Inquirer.net
A Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte impersonator sparked frenzy and confusion during a mass in a Hong Kong church. He was accompanied by Howard X, the Hong Kong-based impersonator of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Photo screengrabbed from Youtube/Inquirer.net by
RAE ANN VARONA AJPress
HEADS were turned on Sunday, February 2 when a Rodrigo Duterte impersonator walked into a Hong Kong church frequented by many of the city’s Filipino community members during a mass service. By his side was an uncanny doppelganger of North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un. Impersonating Duterte was
57-year-old Filipino Cresencio Estremos Jr., who also goes by his impersonator name of Cresencio Extreme. Taking on the look of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was Hong Kong-based impersonator Howard X, who also acts as Estremos’ agent. With Estremos wearing a traditional barong tagalog shirt and black trousers, and Howard wearing a black Mao Suit, the two looked almost exactly like the two real leaders and gave
the spectators great photo opportunities. Agence France-Presse reported all eyes were on the duo as they sat in on the hour-long mass. While many found the performance amusing and took the opportunity to take photos with the toy gun-holding impersonators outside when the mass service ended, some were not so impressed.
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THE Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) has “limited ability” to gather and process intelligence information on its own to effectively fight terrorism, a recently released 2018 assessment report of the United States said. According to the 5th Lead Inspector General quarterly report on Operation Pacific Eagle-Philippines (OPE-P), “the AFP had limited ability to collect information on a target and provide that intelligence to a unit on the ground to act on it.” The counterterrorism mission OPE-P was quietly launched in 2017 when the Philippines was battling ISIS-linked militants in Marawi City. One of its primary objectives was to help improve the AFP’s Intelligence Surveillance Reconnaissance (ISR) capabilities against the local ISIS. The U.S. assistance continued even after five months of fighting in Marawi City, the worst security crisis of the Philippine government in recent years. Government forces’ battle against groups that have pledged allegiance to the Islamic State (IS) and other vio-
lent extremist organizations in Mindanao continue. To fill in the gap, the U.S. had been providing ISR assets and training to AFP personnel in counterterrorism operations. The report said the Philippine military’s limited ISR capabilities were due to lack of assets, as well as institutional and infrastructure shortcomings. “Because of these challenges, the AFP relies heavily on the DOD and its contractors’ ISR capabilities to identify the locations of suspected enemy activity and provide intelligence products for their use,” it said. “…The desired end state is for the AFP to meet its own needs
for ISR support to counterterrorism operations, including the capacity to target and conduct lethal operations against multiple violent extremist threats, without DOD (Department of Defense) assistance,” it added. An assessment of the AFP’s progress was not included in the report, however, as the training has not yet concluded while the report was being made. At a forum on Monday, February 4, Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana also mentioned the Philippine-U.S. cooperation to combat terrorism. This had been going on for some time, he said, even be-
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