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FEBRUARY 12-18, 2021 Serving San Diego Since 1987 • 12 Pages
T h e F i l i p i n o –A m e r i c a n C o m m u n i t y N e w s pa p e r
Also published in LOS ANGELES • ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE • NORTHERN CALIFORNIA • NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY • LAS VEGAS
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DATELINE
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
Indian Fil-Am millennial joins VP Harris’ team as policy advisor
550 East 8th St., Suite 6, National City, CA 91950 Tel: (818) 502-0651 • (619) 474-0588 • Email: info@asianjournalinc.com
US, PH reaffirm defense alliance by Ritchel
Mendiola AJPress
THE Philippines and the United States have reaffirmed their commitment to the defense alliance through the Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) and the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA). In an introductory phone call made on Wednesday, February 10, Philippine Defense
Secretary Delfin Lorenzana and his counterpart U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III discussed a number of priority bilateral defense issues for both countries. “Secretary Austin affirmed the U.S. commitment to the U.S.-Philippines alliance and our bilateral Mutual Defense Treaty and Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA), highlighting the value the VFA brings to both countries,” said a Pentagon readout.
AS the Biden-Harris administration pledges diverse staffing to reflect the country, several individuals of Filipino descent have been named to key roles to help shape policies across the federal government. The latest Filipino American to join the new leadership is Michael George, who has dedicated his career examining how policy can improve social mobility and reduce inequalities.
‘Safety should be the priority’: Fil-Am teachers respond to calls to reopen schools without vaccinations
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KUNG HEI FAT CHOI. Red Chinese lanterns adorn bazaar stalls at the Gateway Mall in Quezon City on Wednesday, February 10. Araneta City in Cubao has started to showcase its theme for the Chinese New Year on Friday, February 12 as well as for Valentine’s Day this month. PNA photo by Robert Oswald P. Alfiler
Suspect arrested in Fil-Am man slashed in the face while riding NYC subway recent Bay Area attacks A FILIPINO American man received almost 100 stitches after he was slashed across the face by another passenger on the New York City subway last week. Noel Quintana, 61, was riding the L train to get to work in Harlem on Wednesday, February 3, when a man walked by and kicked the tote bag that Quintana had set on the train floor, according to a New York Daily News report. When Quintana confronted the man after he noticed his bag being kicked again, the man took out a box cutter, slashed Quintana across the face from cheek to cheek and took off. None of the passengers came to Quintana’s aid, according to him. When he realized that the train was continuing the trip despite what happened, he stepped out and had to walk all
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on elderly AAPI residents White House responds to the attacks as AAPI communities share outrage over ‘hate crimes’
Filipino American community leaders led by Fr. Julian Jagudilla of the Migrant Center of New York held a Zoom prayer rally on Wednesday, Feb. 10, calling for justice for Noel Quintana and for an end to anti Asian violence. Quintana was a victim of a violent subway attack last week on his way to work.
FOLLOWING a disturbing slew of violent assaults on elderly Asian residents in the Bay Area, Oakland police announced on Monday, Feb. 8 that it had arrested and charged a suspect for a savage assault on a 91-year-old Asian man in Chinatown. Police said they believe that Yahya Muslim (unclear whether the suspect is of Muslim faith) is also behind the attacks of a 60-year-old Asian man and a 55-year-old Asian woman on the same day — Sunday, Jan. 31 — and neigh-
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IATF expands list of Comelec urges Filipinos abroad foreign nationals to join internet voting test run allowed to enter PH by AJPress
by Ritchel
Mendiola AJPress
STARTING February 16, foreigners with certain visas can enter the Philippines, according to new guidelines released by the country’s Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID). Foreign nationals who have visas issued as of March 20, 2020, as well as those who have valid and existing visas at the time of entry, are permitted to enter the country. “The Inter-Agency Task Force on Thurs-
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Support grows for Rob Bonta as California’s next attorney general
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AS COVID-19 vaccinations continue to be distributed across the country, the debate over whether schools should reopen came to a head when the top official of the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced it would be possible to reopen schools without requiring vaccines. “There is increasing data to suggest that schools can safely reopen and that safe reopening does not suggest that teachers need to be vaccinated,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said at a White House press briefing on Wednesday, Feb. 3.
The defense chiefs discussed the importance of enhancing the Armed Forces of the Philippines’ capabilities and increasing interoperability between the two militaries through a variety of bilateral security cooperation activities. Lorenzana and Austin also discussed regional security challenges, including the South China Sea, counterterrorism, and maritime security.
AHEAD of the 2022 Philippine general election, overseas Filipino voters are urged to participate in a test run of four internet voting solutions by different election systems providers. The country’s Commission on Elections (Comelec) Office for Overseas Voting (OFOV) is calling on overseas voters who have active and complete voter registration records to take part in the trial. “Their registration status must be active, which means that it must not have been deactivated for failure to vote in the two previous elections in 2016 and 2019,”
the poll body said on Monday, February 8. The test participants must also have complete biometrics data, including photograph, fingerprints and signature. A smartphone capable of running Android or iOS apps, a laptop or personal computer, or any mobile device with internet/data access is required in order to participate in the test run. “In compliance with our data privacy policy, interested participants will be required to email us their signed consent form, together with a copy of their passport or seafarer’s book. We advise that they only send these documents to our official email address at overseasvoting@comelec.gov.ph.” said
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DOZENS of Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) elected officials, community leaders and advocacy groups are coming together anew to urge Governor Gavin Newsom “to make history” by appointing Assemblymember Rob Bonta as attorney general. Another letter was sent to Newsom’s office on Feb. 3 reminding the governor that he has “the unique opportunity in this critical moment to send a strong message and make history” given that AAPIs are the fastest-growing and third-largest ethnic group in the Golden State. Bonta — the state’s first Filipino American legislator — was reelected for a fifth term last November to represent the 18th Assembly district, which covers the East Bay areas of Oakland, Alameda, and San Leandro. He currently serves as the assistant majority leader, and sits on several committees, including appropriations and health. Since December, he has become a contender to fill the seat once Attorney General Xavier Becerra is confirmed as the Health and Human Services secretary for the Biden administration. “Regardless of race, Assemblymember Bonta is the
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Fil-Am LAPD security officer remembered after battle with COVID-19 by AJPress A THIRD Filipino American working at the Los Angeles Police Department has succumbed to COVID-19, becoming the department’s eighth employee taken by the virus. Dexter De Los Santos, a fulltime security guard with the Security Services Division, died on January 29, the department announced. He was 41 years old.
De Los Santos graduated from Daniel Murphy High School in Los Angeles and worked various jobs before fulfilling his dream of joining the LAPD in 2012. “He was well known for his wittiness, generosity, big heart and the person this colleagues could depend on for covering holiday and late shifts. This was mostly because Dexter’s main goal was to make the world a safer place for all,” his family wrote in an email to the Asian Journal. He embodied the role of a “kuya” (older brother) as the eldest of three siblings, and extended that to his cousins and later when he became an uncle and grand uncle. “When times were tough, he was the person to bring spirits up, mostly through his witty jokes and infectious smile,” his family said. The department has lost eight officers and civilian employees since the beginning of the pandemic.
Dexter De Los Santos (August 28, 1979 - January 29, 2021)
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