032118 - Los Angeles Midweek Edition

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March 21-23, 2018 Volume 28 - No. 24 • 3 Sections - 20 Pages

DATELINE

USA

FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA

Trump unveils plan for opioid crisis, mirrors Duterte in first address President proposes death penalty for certain drug dealers, frames sanctuary policies, immigrants as a reason for drug circulation PRESIDENT Donald Trump’s campaign plan to combat the nationwide opioid addiction calls for a tough-on-crime approach that includes urging Congress to strengthen sentencing laws for traffickers. The plan involves the Department of Justice seeking “the death penalty against drug traffickers, where appropriate under current law,” Andrew Bremberg, director of the president’s Domestic Policy Council, said in a briefing of the plan on Sunday, March 18.

Duterte urges nations to quit ‘rude’ ICC by DANA

SIOSON AJPress

PHILIPPINE President Rodrigo Duterte on Sunday, March 18, called on other countries to follow his example and withdraw from the Rome Statute, the treaty that established the International Criminal Court (ICC). Speaking at the Philippine Military Academy (PMA) graduation rites in

Baguio City, Duterte lashed out anew at the tribunal, calling it “rude.” The president further tagged the Rome Statute as “bullshit,” saying the European Union (EU) sponsored the treaty as an “atonement” for the bloc’s past “sins” and “brutality.” “I will convince everybody now who are under the treaty. Get out, get out, bastos ‘yan (It’s rude). It is not a

SIOSON AJPress

BEIJING always sends Manila a warning whenever the latter conducts aerial patrols around West Philippine Sea—which is part of the highly disputed South China Sea—according to Philippine Defense Secretary Lorenzana. In an interview with CNN Philippines on Tuesday, March 20, Lorenzana bared the usual exchange of words between countries amid patrols within conflict-

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Philippine Defense Secretary Lorenzana

Inquirer.net photo

AGREEMENT. President Rodrigo Duterte welcomed His Royal Highness Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Naif of Saudi Arabia during a courtesy call in Malacañang Palace at Monday, March 19. This was followed by a meeting with President Duterte where the two expressed commitment to combat terrorism and violent extremism. Prince Abdulaziz conveyed the personal and warm wishes of His Majesty and the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman to the president and reaffirmed the importance of the Philippines to Saudi Arabia. For his part, President Duterte stressed the need to expand cooperation across many fields including security, trade and investment, as well as in promoting the rights, safety and well-being of Filipinos. Malacañang photo by Robinson Niñal

Palace: Possible Boracay closure only temporary by AJPRESS MALACAÑANG on Monday, March 19 assured the public that there would be no permanent closure of Boracay Island. Palace spokesperson Harry Roque Jr. clarified that any closure would only be partial and would serve as “remedial” measures to clean up the world-famous tourist destination. “The permanent closure of Boracay is unacceptable. If there will be any partial closure [on the island] it is to ensure that Boracay will be viable for the next generations to come,” Roque told reporters. During a news briefing held in Nabua, Camarines Sur, Roque assured that President Rodrigo Duterte will be making a “fair” decision on the recommendation to close the

island for a maximum of one year. The Palace official also added that Duterte would take into consideration the small resort owners’ plight when he makes a decision on the closure. “What the president has said is he will be fair with what he will do to Boracay and he is a president who listens. Whatever he will do, it is intended for the welfare of Boracay. But as of now, he has no decision yet,” Roque said. Last March 15, the interagency task force led by the Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu, Tourism Secretary Wanda Tulfo-Teo, and Local Government officer-in-charge Undersecretary Eduardo Año recommended a one-year closure for the rehabilitation of the Senator Nancy Binay is joined by Department of Tourism spokesperson Assistant Secretary island. Frederick M. Alegre during the inspection of business establishments in Boracay.

PH Senate passes nat’l ID bill by BERNADETTE

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by DANA

Everything you need to know about the new Medicare cards (but beware of scams)

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and made the country rich while leaving the poor Arabs to fight against one another. They divided the Middle East.” Last week, the Philippines sent a formal notice on the withdrawal to UN Chef de Cabinet Maria Luiza Ribeiro Viotti. In its formal notice on the with-

China warns PH planes flying over West PH Sea

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IN April, the government will start sending out new Medicare cards, launching a massive, yearlong effort to alter how 59 million people enrolled in the federal health insurance program are identified. Historically, Medicare ID cards have been stamped with the Social Security numbers of members — currently, about 50 million seniors and 9 million people with serious disabilities. But that’s been problematic: If a wallet or purse were stolen, a thief could use that information, along with an address or birthdate on a driver’s license, to steal someone’s identity. For years, phone scammers have preyed on older adults by requesting their Medicare numbers, giving various reasons for doing so. People who fall for these ruses have found bank accounts emptied, Social Security payments diverted or bills in their mailboxes for medical services or equipment never received. The new cards address these concerns by removing each member’s Social Security number and replacing it with a new,

document that was prepared by anybody. It is an EU-sponsored [treaty],” Duterte said. He continued: “These white fools from EU... I tell you, they are doing it to atone for their sins. They are [seeking pardon] for the many years of brutality that they inflicted. In the Middle East, they took so much of the oil, they increased their productivity

E. TAMAYO

ManilaTimes.net

THE Philippine Senate on Monday, March 19, passed on third and final reading a measure seeking to harmonize “redundant” government identification cards (IDs) with a national identification system. Seventeen senators voted for the bill’s passage while two others — Senators Risa Hontiveros and Francis “Kiko” Pangilinan — did not. Sen. Panfilo Lacson, sponsor of Senate Bill 1738 or the Philippine Identification System (PhilSys) Act of 2018, said there are 33 different forms of “functional” identification cards is- Senator Panfilo Lacson said the public has nothing to fear about the Philippine ID system since it would only contain very basic demographic and biometric data of sued by various government agencies. He said the measure would help the public to “easily” every Filipino citizen and resident alien. Infographic by John Nicole Villamayor/Philstar.com transact with government and private institutions. “The huge number of government-issued IDs may lead to ‘duplication’ of to be issued to us will be our ID until we die. We’ll bring it to efforts, wastage of resources, and uncoordinated identity ap- our grave. No one will ever use that. The ID is unique,” he said proaches,” the senator said. in Filipino. “It will also help deter criminality,” he added. Lacson said the Phililippine Statistics Office (PSA) would Lacson, chairman of the Senate Committee Public Order need P25 billion in five years to fully implement the national and Dangerous Drugs, said the establishment of a National ID system. Reference System could help law enforcers deter criminality “A newborn child will be given a ‘temporary’ ID. But the ID u PAGE A4

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Senate photo

House approves divorce bill on final reading by AJPRESS THE House of Representatives on Monday, March 19, approved on its third and final reading, a bill seeking to introduce divorce and dissolution of marriage in the Philippines. Lawmakers approved House Bill No. 7303 or “An Act Instituting Absolute Divorce and Dissolution of Marriage in the Philippines” with a vote of 134-51-2. The bill aims to give “the opportunity to spouses in irremediably failed marriages to secure an absolute divorce decree under limited grounds and well-defined judicial procedures to terminate a continuing dysfunction of a long broken marriage.” It likewise aims to grant the divorced spouses the “right to marry again for another chance to achieve marital bliss.” Among the grounds of divorce include existing grounds for legal separation under Article 55 of the Family Code, and an-

nulment under Article 45 of the same code, which include physical violence, homosexuality, marital infidelity, and affliction of sexually transmissible infection, among others. Grounds also include separation in fact for at least five years, legal separation by judicial decree for at least two years, psychological incapacity, gender reassignment surgery, irreconcilable differences, and joint petition of spouses. Following the House’s approval, the bill will then be submitted to Senate. The divorce bill, however, will seem to have a hard time in getting approval at the Senate as several senators had already expressed opposition to the measure. Duterte ‘anti-divorce’ President Rodrigo Duterte is against the divorce bill, according to Malacañang. “He doesn’t want to comment but since there was voting already in Congress, the

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