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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
Volume 21 - No. 10 • 14 Pages
T HE F ILIPINO A MERICAN C OMMUNITY N EWSPAPER
1799 Old Bayshore Hwy, Suite 136, Burlingame, CA 94010 • Tel: (650) 689-5160 • Fax: (650) 239-9253 • www.asianjournal.com
MARCH 11-17, 2022
Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, SAN DIEGO, LAS VEGAS, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY
PH gov’t: 199 Filipinos from US delivers 4 million Pfizer jabs, largest Ukraine now ‘out of harm’s way’ DATELINE USA FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
in single day to PH
MANILA — The United States delivered on Monday, March 7 its largest single-day shipment of 3,999,060 doses of PfizerBioNTech COVID-19 vaccines to the Philippines as part of its continuing worldwide effort to combat COVID-19. The U.S. embassy in Manila said the U.S. government’s latest donation is part of the 1.2 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses that the U.S. distributed through the COVAX Facility. “We are immensely proud that our friends, partners and allies in the Philippines are receiving this historic shipment. This significant donation underscores the United States’ commitment to continue working with our Philippine partners to combat COVID-19 even as we face serious challenges around the world,” said U.S. embassy Chargé d’Affaires ad interim Heather Variava. U.S. Agency for International Development Philippines Health Office director Michelle Lang-Alli joined Philippine government
by CATHRINE
GONZALES Inquirer.net
MANILA — A total of 199 Filipinos who were evacuated from Ukraine are now “out of harm’s way,” an official of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said on Wednesday, March 9.
DFA Undersecretary for Migrant Workers’ Affairs Sarah Lou Arriola said 63 Filipinos have so far been repatriated to the Philippines, while 136 have been transported to other European countries. “As of now, 199 Filipinos na po ang out of harm’s way, kasi may nakauwi na pong 63 tapos ‘yung iba po, ‘yung 136 nandoon na po sa ibang countries,
MARTINEZ — A policeman was sentenced to six years in prison on Friday, March 4 for the on-duty shooting death of a mentally ill Filipino American man in a slowspeed chase two years ago. Ex-sheriff’s Dep. Andrew Hall was convicted last year of assault with a firearm and a gun enhancement in 33-year-old Laudemer Arboleda’s shooting death. The jury could not reach a verdict on a more serious manslaughter count. A sheriff’s internal probe cleared Hall of wrongdoing, and he returned to duty. In March 2021, Hall shot and killed another man, 32-year-old Tyrell Wilson, who pulled a knife and took a step toward Hall during a jaywalking stop. Hall was cleared by an internal sheriff’s probe; the
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‘We need greater investment in our community’: Asian American women reflect on anti-Asian racism one year after Atlanta massacre by KLARIZE
MEDENILLA AJPress
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California cop who killed mentally ill Fil-Am sentenced to 6 years in prison
naghihintay na lang ng eroplanong pabalik sa Pilipinas,” she said in an interview with ABS-CBN News’ Teleradyo. (As of now, 199 Filipinos are already out of harm’s way, because 63 have already been sent home, and 136 have been evacuated to other countries and are
FERRY RIDE. Partido Reporma presidential candidate Senator Panfilo Lacson (left) and running mate Tito Sotto (right) show a thumbs-up sign as they cruise on a Pasig ferry from Kalawaan to Maybunga station in Pasig City on Wednesday, March 9 after the courtesy call on Mayor Vico Sotto. Former Information and Communications Technology secretary Gregorio Honasan II joined the two on the ferry ride. PNA photo by Joey O. Razon
LAST year, when anti-Asian violence and hate spiked exponentially due to the coronavirus pandemic, the heartbroken Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community continued demanding justice for these senseless attacks, which primarily targeted women and the elderly. The frustrations and tragedy among the AAPI community crested on March 16, 2021 when a gunman drove to three separate Asian-owned massage parlors and shot and killed eight people, including six Asian women. Since March 2020, the community has faced more than 10,905 attacks, 16% of which were physically violent, according to Stop AAPI Hate, the national coalition of AAPI organizations that began gathering
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‘Hide-and-seek’ from debates? Marcos Jr. Peso breaches 52 vs dollar, can’t be in two places at once, says spokesman first time in 2.5 years by CHRISTIA
MARIE Inquirer.net
RAMOS
MANILA — The camp of Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. countered criticisms made by former congressman Erin Tañada, who called out the former senator’s nonappearance in most of the presidential debates. “Mr. Tañada is perfectly right in saying that leadership is about honoring commitments — the very same reason why presidential candidate Bongbong Marcos cannot be in two
different places at one given time,” Marcos Jr.’s spokesperson, Atty. Vic Rodriguez, said in a statement on Tuesday, March 8. This is in response to a statement issued by Tañada reminding Marcos Jr. that the “presidency is not a game of hide-andseek.” Tañada is the campaign manager for the senatorial slate of Vice President Leni Robredo and Senator Francis Pangilinan. According to Rodriguez, Marcos Jr. had to “politely beg off media interviews, sometimes skip debates and fora in order to honor his
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‘Not just a woman’: Filipinas carve their niches, defy stereotypes by CRISTINA
ELOISA Inquirer.net
BACLIG
MANILA — During the celebration of International Women’s Year in 1975, the United Nations (UN) formally began celebrating March 8 as International Women’s Day. In 1977, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution proclaiming a United Nations Day for Women’s Rights and International Peace to be observed on any day of the year by member states, in accordance with their historical and national traditions. At least 10 years after, the Philippine government—through Proclamation No. 224 signed by Inquirer.net file photos then-president Corazon Aquino
in 1988—declared the first week of March of every year as Women’s Week and March 8 of every year as Women’s Rights and International Peace Day. “Filipino women have been active in the struggle for national independence, for civil liberties, for equality of the sexes, and for human rights,” the proclamation stated. “[I]t is but just and proper to declare a week and a particular day of the year as Women’s Rights and International Peace Day, in solidarity with the United Nations, and in commemoration of the struggle of Filipino women for national freedom, civil liberty, equality, and human rights,” it added.
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by DAPHNE
GALVEZ Inquirer.net
MANILA — The Philippine peso breached the 52-per-dollar mark on Monday, March 7 for the first time in almost two and a half years, with expectations that it will get even weaker over the next few months due to the worsening Russia-Ukraine conflict. The local currency closed trading at P52.001 to the dollar on March 7, the weakest position since the P52.042 recorded on Sept. 30, 2019. As of this writing, the peso was trading at between 52.01 and 52.30 against the greenback as the escalating war between Russia and Ukraine has sent shock waves across the global economy. In a research note on the Asian markets, ING Bank said the peso was also facing headwinds from rising oil prices and the policy stance of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), which remained accommodative even as influential central banks like the US Federal Reserve are tipped to start tightening in the next few months. Trade deficit “Surging oil prices will bloat the country’s trade deficit as the Philippines is a net energy importer, resulting in an
increased demand for dollars,” the bank said. “Dovish comments from the central bank may have also hurt the currency with BSP Governor (Benjamin) Diokno reiterating his preference to keep rates untouched for now,” it added. In a separate commentary, ING’s senior economist in the Philippines Nicholas Mapa noted that Diokno had penciled in a 4.7-percent inflation under a worst-case scenario when the price of crude oil would go as high as $140 per barrel. The BSP chief has also said inflation would stay within the government’s target band of 2 percent to 4 percent if crude oil averaged at less than $95 per barrel. “Diokno has touted his hefty supply of GIR (gross international reserves) as his reason for comfort,” Mapa said. “He has also cited the peso’s general tracking of regional peers even if the local unit has largely underperformed and is now headed to a 2-percent depreciation for the year,” he added. Spot market The economist said the BSP might be expected to step up presence in the spot market to
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