031921 - Northern California Edition

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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

Volume 20 - No. 11 • 14 Pages

T H E F I L I P I N O A M E R I CA N C O M MU N I T Y N E WS PA P E R

Volume 18 - No. 17 • 2 Sections – 16 Pages

1799 Old Bayshore Hwy, Suite 136, Burlingame, CA 94010 • Tel: (650) 689-5160 • Fax: (650) 239-9253 • www.asianjournal.com

MA R C H 1 9 - 2 5 , 2 0 2 1

Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, SAN DIEGO, LAS VEGAS, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY

Nearly 3,800 anti-Asian hate incidents DATELINE USA More Californians reported across US since start of pandemic now eligible for FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA

COVID-19 vaccine Expanded to residents with disabilities, certain health conditions

STARTING this week, approximately 4.4 million more Californians are eligible to get vaccinated against the coronavirus. As of Monday, March 15, individuals who are 16 to 64 years old with disabilities and certain high-risk health conditions can sign up to receive their vaccine. Conditions include: • Cancer, current with weakened immune system • Chronic kidney disease, stage 4 or above • Chronic pulmonary disease, oxygen dependent • Down syndrome • Solid organ transplant, leading to a

503 incidents in first 2 months of 2021 alone; 7.9% of total reports came from Fil-Ams, Stop AAPI Hate finds by CHRISTINA

M. ORIEL

AJPress

NEARLY 3,800 hate incidents have been self-reported by Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) — including approximately 8% coming from Filipinos

— across the country since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to new data from Stop AAPI Hate. Stop AAPI Hate, a national coalition that tracks antiAsian American discrimination, reported on Tuesday, March 16 that from March 19, 2020 to February 28,

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PH to suspend entry of foreigners, non-OFW returnees starting March 20 by RITCHEL

MENDIOLA AJPress

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AAPI Democrats endorse Fil-Am Nani Coloretti to lead U.S. Office of Management and Budget ASIAN American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Democratic leaders are urging President Joe Biden to nominate Filipina American Nani Coloretti to lead the U.S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB) amid concerns over the lack of AAPI representation in his Cabinet. This comes after controversial pick Neera Tanden, who is Indian American, withdrew her nomination as budget chief on March 2, saying “it now seems clear that there is no path forward to gain confirmation.” AAPI leaders have addressed a letter to Biden — first reported by POLITICO’s Anita Kumar on March 12 — endorsing Coloretti, who was deputy secretary at the Department of Housing and Urban Development during the Obama administration. She was the highest ranking Fil-Am at the time. “Our country is facing unprecedented challenges — worldwide pandemic, economic crisis, racial injustice, xenophobia and increase in anti-AAPI violence across the na-

2021, it has received 3,795 firsthand incidents of racism and discrimination from all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Of that number, 503 incidents took place in the first two months of 2021 alone.

TEMP CHECK. A member of the Manila Police District (MPD) checks the body temperature of a motorcycle rider entering Bgy. 374 Zone 38 Sta. Cruz, Manila, which is among the six villages in the city placed under granular lockdown starting Wednesday, March 17. The lockdown will be in effect until Saturday, March 20. PNA photo by Avito C. Dalan

IN an attempt to curb the rising cases of COVID-19 and its variants in the country, the Philippine government is temporarily barring the entry of foreign nationals and Filipinos. The National Task Force Against COVID-19 (NTF COVID-19) on Tuesday, March 16, released a memorandum announcing that the travel ban would start on Saturday, March 20, and end on April 19. Exempted from the travel restrictions are the following: • holders of 9(e) visas • medical repatriation and their escort/s duly endorsed by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) or the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) • distressed returning overseas Filipinos duly endorsed by the DFA and the OWWA • emergency, humanitarian and other analogous

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Filipino Chinese man attacked during lunch break in San Francisco by CHRISTINA

M. ORIEL AND RITCHEL MENDIOLA AJPress

AFTER almost a year of working from home, Danilo Yuchang returned to his company’s office in downtown San Francisco for the first time on Monday, March 15. At around 1:45 p.m., the 59year-old travel agent, who also goes by Danny, was walking u PAGE 3 along Market Street during his

lunch break when a man approached him from behind and began punching his head multiple times. Yuchang said he does not recall the assailant saying anything before the attack. “I was shoved to the ground and lost consciousness. After a while, I woke up and saw there was a lot of blood on the sidewalk and on my clothes,” Yuchang, who is Filipino and Chinese, told the Asian Journal. “I was hit a lot

so my face is so swollen.” The attack happened near the Four Seasons Hotel and the doorman came to Yuchang’s aid and called 911, he recounted. The suspect reportedly fled on a Muni bus, according to various reports. Yuchang said his belongings were not stolen and that the police arrived within minutes to get his statement. Danilo Yuchang, 59, was returning to work from his lunch break in San He was taken to a nearby hos- Francisco on Monday, March 15 when he was viciously assaulted, resulting

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in head and face injuries.

Contributed photo

Angelo Quinto’s 31st birthday marked with Bay Area man charged with a vigil, heightened calls for police reform hate crime in sexual assault against Filipina medical worker by CHRISTINA

M. ORIEL

AJPress

Family, friends and community members gathered at City Park in Antioch, California on Wednesday, March 10 on what would have been Angelo Quinto’s 31st birthday. Quinto, a Navy veteran who suffered a mental health crisis, died on December 26, 2020, three days after a police encounter, his family said. Photo courtesy of Filipino Advocates for Justice

ON March 10, Angelo Quinto would have celebrated his 31st birthday by playing games and singing karaoke with his parents and younger siblings. Instead, the Filipino American Navy veteran’s family held a candlelight vigil to honor his life on Wednesday night at City Park in Antioch, California. It marked another celebration Quinto would not be able to spend with his loved ones after an encounter with police resulted in his death last December. “I should have told him that he was getting

really old without a single doubt in my mind that he would live to see his face wrinkle and his hair turned gray,” Quinto’s younger sister Bella Collins told the crowd. “But that’s not the current scope of our reality.” The somber gathering — set in front of a mural of Quinto painted by Bay Area artist Franceska Gámez — featured his favorite songs, poetry readings, lighted candles, and speeches from elected officials, supporters, and family members of victims who experienced a similar fate in police custody. Hundreds more tuned in virtually as far as the Philippines, while relatives held another vigil down in Chino Hills. In addition

by KLARIZE

MEDENILLA AJPress

A SAN FRANCISCO man was arrested and charged with a hate crime for attacking and sexually assaulting a Filipina American woman in a Caltrain station in San Jose last week, the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office said. The victim, a 26-year-old Filipina medical worker named Tifu PAGE 3

fany who didn’t want her last name released, told KTVU that she was on her way to work in Palo Alto when she took the Caltrain at San Jose’s Diridon Station on Wednesday, March 10 at around 6:30 a.m. The suspect, a 32-year-old white man named Johan Strydom, allegedly grabbed the Filipina by her neck, pulled her to the ground and threw the wom-

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