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APRIL 22-28, 2022 Volume 15 - No.24 • 16 Pages
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PH Consulate suspends consular services DATELINE USA due to staff exposure to COVID-19 Civil rights org FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
continues bystander intervention trainings amid hate surge
TO help put an end to the proliferation of anti-Asian hate and harassment, Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Los Angeles (Advancing Justice-LA) is offering free virtual bystander intervention trainings in the native Filipino language. Starting last fall, Advancing Justice-LA began offering trainings in Tagalog as well as other Asian languages. Jeanette Sayno, Advancing Justice-LA community
by MOMAR
G. VISAYA
AJPress
THE Philippine Consulate General in New York has suspended consular operations beginning Wednesday, April 20 because several consulate personnel has tested positive for COVID-19. The consulate has also postponed its consular outreach
mission scheduled on Saturday, April 23 in Bergenfield, New Jersey. “A number of us tested positive today for a very aggressive strain of COVID-19. The rest, who tested negative, are monitoring themselves because they were exposed to our positive colleagues while doing election duty in the past several days and nights. Some have been told to isolate after
exhibiting symptoms,” the consulate posted on Facebook. PCGNY officers and staff have been working overtime for the past eight days to make sure that election ballots that only arrived in New York last Monday, April 11 would reach registered overseas voters as soon as possible to allow them to exercise their right to vote.
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WTTC Economic Impact Report reveals significant recovery of PH tourism amid COVID-19 pandemic
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by MOMAR
G. VISAYA
AJPress
WTTC President and CEO Julia Simpson (left) on Wednesday, April 20 shared about the Council’s promising projections for tourism recovery in the Philippines enclosed in its latest Economic Impact Report (EIR) done in partnership with Oxford Economics. Simpson also recognized DOT Secretary Berna Romulo-Puyat (center) for her leadership and efforts to continue to steer the country’s tourism industry to recovery, which included the push for border reopening and lifting of restrictions to allow a seamless process for visitors. AJPress
THE World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC) is bullish on the prospect of the Philippines’ tourism industry recovery, projecting a bright future and a rosy outlook in terms of economic growth and employment generation in the next 10 years. Citing the latest Economic Impact Report, WTTC President and Chief Executive Officer Julia Simpson revealed that the embattled travel and tourism industry in the country reached US$ 41 billion in 2021, climbing 129.5.% year on year.
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Ditas Katague
Mask mandate lifted DILG takes offense at Fil-Am Ditas US State Department report Katague appointed to for US travelers on impunity of PH state forces by AJP US Census Bureau post RESS
THE U.S. Census Bureau announced the appointment of Ditas Katague as associate director of communications, responsible for leading internal and external communications activities of the nation’s largest statistical agency. This includes oversight of marketing, public affairs, congressional and intergovernmental affairs, partner engagement and media
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THE United States government this week announced that it will not enforce the mask mandate on public transportation. The decision comes after a federal judge on Monday, April 18 ruled that the mandate, which was to minimize the spread of the
coronavirus, was unlawful. U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle ruled against the mandate after a lawsuit was filed in Tampa, Florida, arguing that health officials were overstepping with the mandate. “The agencies are reviewing the decision and assessing potential next steps,” the Biden
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MANILA — The Department of the Interior and Local Government panned the U.S. State Department’s 2021 Country Report on Human Rights Practices released on the abuses by security forces in the Philippines, calling it “sweeping, rhetorical, and unfounded.” This comes after the U.S. Department of State said that it received “credible reports that
members of the security forces committed numerous abuses” in its 2021 Country Report on Human Rights Practices. The report pointed out — correctly, as even the national government’s own data will show — that drugrelated killings linked to President Rodrigo Duterte’s “war on drugs” continue in the Philippines.
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