021519 - New York & New Jersey

Page 1

We’ve got you covered from Hollywood to Broadway... and Online!

FEBR U A R Y 15-21, 2019 Volume 12 - No. 17 • 16 Pages

133-30 32nd Ave., Flushing, NY 11354 • 2500 Plaza S. Harborside Financial Center, Jersey City, NJ 07311 Tel. (212) 655-5426 • Fax: (818) 502-0858

Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, LAS VEGAS, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

Rappler’s Ressa posts bail after night at NBI by KRISTINE JOY

Philstar.com

PATAG

MANILA — Rappler CEO Maria Ressa posted bail on a cyberlibel case against her on past noon on Thursday, February 14, after spending the night in detention at the National Bureau of Investigation headquarters. Ressa and her lawyers arrived at Manila Regional Trial Court Branch 46 and paid the bail bond of P100,000. “Bail posted. We’re just waiting for the release order,” Rappler multimedia head Beth

Frondoso told reporters just past noon. Manila RTC Branch 46 Judge Rainelda Estacio-Montessa, who issued the order for a warrant against Ressa, was attending to a trial at a Las Piñas court. The Rappler CEO appeared before Manila RTC Branch 45 Judge Maria Teresa Abadilla to post her bail. NBI agents arrested Ressa at her office early Wednesday evening, February 13. Her camp tried to post bail before a night court in Pasay, but failed to do so. Rappler said that

USA

DATELINE Fil-Am federal workers reflect on longest gov’t shutdown ahead of a possible second closure

according to their lawyer, the Pasay Metropolitan court judge expressed concern on jurisdiction matters, as the case was being handled by an RTC, and not an MeTC. Keng complaint Ressa’s cyberlibel charge stemmed from businessman Wilfredo Keng ‘s complaint against Rappler over an article published in May 2012. He filed the complaint in 2017, five years after the story was published. Keng, in a statement, called Ressa’s arrest a vindication over

Palace on Maria Ressa arrest: Peso seen weakening to 54 to $1 ‘No one is above the law’

FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA

Trump ‘extremely unhappy’ with current deal

FILIPINO-American Ted Aquino has been an air traffic controller at John Wayne Airport in Irvine, California for more than 20 years. After emigrating from Manila, Philippines to Tustin, California, a lengthy job search got him this gig, which he said he enjoys. “I’ve always loved airplanes, and wanted to be a pilot originally, but I figured air traffic controllers also have an important job, so I got it and have been happy for the last 20 or so years,” Aquino told the Asian Journal in a recent phone interview. He’s been happy with it, that is, until re-

u PAGE 2

Presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo

THE peso may slip to the 54 level against the dollar by the third quarter of this year as the U.S. Federal Reserve may not by NESTOR CORRALES turn out to be as dovish as exInquirer.net pected by global markets while MANILA — “No one is above the country’s trade deficit continthe law,” Malacañang said on ues to worsen. This was the view of ING Wednesday, February 13, after the National Bureau of Investiga- Philippines economist Nicholas tion arrested Rappler chief ex- Mapa, who projected the peso ecutive officer Maria Ressa over to reach 53.09:$1 by the end of the second quarter, weakening a cyberlibel case. According to presidential to 54.64 by the end of the third spokesperson Salvador Panelo, quarter and close the year at the Duterte administration “has 54.04 to a dollar. The local currency is seen to u PAGE 2 remain at the 54 levels against Inquirer.net photo the greenback in the first two quarters of 2020. While the peso has strength-

Historian: ‘Maharlika’ does not mean ‘noble’ by RITCHEL

MENDIOLA AJPress

more of a concept of serenity and peace),” said Duterte in front of an audience of mostly Muslim Filipinos in Maguindanao. But according to Dr. Rolando Borrinaga, a historian from the National Commission for Culture and the Arts, “Maharlika” actually means “free man.” He told radio DZMM that the members of the maharlika do not participate in politics, unlike the datu class of rulers. He also added that maharlikas are different from the Visayas’ timawa, or free people. The Philippines was named after Spain’s King Philip II in the 16th century when the country was still colonized by the Spanish. Ruy Lopez de Villalobos, a Spanish explorer, coined the name “Las Islas Filipinas” for the archipelago.

A FILIPINO historian on Wednesday, February 13, said that the understanding of “Maharlika” as nobility is a common misconception due to mistranslated historical texts. This was after President Rodrigo Duterte proposed the idea of replacing the u PAGE 2 name of the Philippines with this term. “Actually, tama si Marcos. Panahon ni Marcos, tama talaga si Marcos. Gusto niya palitan [ng] Maharlika, the Republic of Maharlika because Maharlika is a Malay word and it means more of a concept of serenity and peace (Actually, Marcos is right. This was during the time of Marcos, he is really right. He wanted to change the name to Maharlika, the Republic of Maharlika because THE U.S. Indo-Pacific Command has as- Maharlika is a Malay word and it means sured the Senate that Southeast Asian nations continue to share common principles with Washington. “The United States and ASEAN share the common principles of a rules-based international order, respect for international law, and the peaceful resolution of disputes,” Indo-Pacific Command commander Adm. Philip Davidson told the Senate Armed Services Committee. While Davidson declared confidence with Washington’s regional allies, Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative director Gregory Poling pointed out that long-time ally the Philippines has been asking for a treaty review. “During SASC testimony, Adm. Davidson twice said there is no doubt U.S. credibility in any of our Asian allies. That must come as a big surprise to friends in the Philippines who are demanding a review of the (Mutual Defense Treaty) because of U.S. ambivalence,” Poling said on Twitter. In his statement, Davidson said he was fo- President Rodrigo Duterte raises his fist while delivering his speech at the cused on working with allies Thailand and ceremonial distribution of Certificates of Land Ownership Award (CLOAs) to the

US confident in ‘likeminded’ allies while PH seeks treaty review

u PAGE 3

RESSA ARRESTED. NBI agents from the cybercrime division arrested Rappler CEO Maria Ressa from her office in Pasig City after securing an arrest warrant from Manila City Regional Trial Court Branch 46 over a cyber libel case recently filed by the Department of Justice (DOJ) on Wednesday, February 13. Philstar.com photo by Manuel Tupac

Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries (ARBs) of Maguindanao at the Buluan Municipal Gymnasium on Monday, February 11. Malacañang photo by Albert Alcain

u PAGE 2

ened recently, Mapa said this was due to foreign portfolio flows to local stocks, driven by expectations of a dovish U.S. Fed. But Mapa said the Fed might not remain as dovish. “That can have a negative impact on the peso. That’s why we think the dollar will eventually move higher for the rest of the year,” he said. “The second reason is the trade deficit will continue to outpace traditional flows of foreign currency,” Mapa said, noting that remittances would not be enough to fill the gap. In previous years, the Philippines enjoyed a current-account surplus because large remittanc-

u PAGE 2

A man claims his money at a foreign currency exchange booth.

Inquirer.net photo

Palace: Duterte allowed to endorse election bets by AJPRESS AS the 90-day campaign period for senatorial and party-list candidates started on Tuesday, February 12, Malacañang informed the public that it is lawful for Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to engage in partisan activities. Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo said that while the Article XXII Section 261 (i) known as the Prohibited Acts of the Omnibus Election Code prohibits public officers and employees from endorsing, the provision simply excludes the president. “The president even asked – called upon the members of the cabinet to strictly follow the rules

on the prohibition on government employees, officials not to campaign for or against any political candidate, exempting himself, because the provision says he is exempted from it,” Panelo said as reported by The Philippine Star. The Code, otherwise known as the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) Resolution No. 9115, stated that “the following shall be guilty of an election offense.” Under the “intervention of public officers and employees,” the provision exempts those “holding political offices” from getting an election sanction. “Any officer or employee in the civil service, except those holding political offices; any officer, employee, or member of the Armed

Forces of the Philippines (AFP), or any police force, special forces, home defense forces, barangay self-defense units and all other para-military units that now exist or which may hereafter be organized who, directly or indirectly, intervenes in any election campaign or engages in any partisan political activity, except to vote or to preserve public order, if he is a peace officer,” the provision stated. Such law is confirmed by COMELEC Spokesperson James Jimenez during his interview with Cignal TV’s One News segment, “The Chiefs”. He admitted that while this rule clearly exempts politicians in office, there are still

u PAGE 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.