April 28-May 1, 2018 Volume 28 - No. 35 • 4 Sections – 30 Pages
PH gov’t releases P448-M for displaced Boracay workers Six-month closure of world-famous island begins by DANA
SIOSON AJPress
THE Philippine government has allotted P448 million in assistance for workers affected by the temporary closure of Boracay island. In a statement on Friday, April 27, the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) said the funds will be used for “emergency employment, livelihood, and training programs for the 6month shutdown and rehabilitation of the resort island.” The financial aid will cover about 17,700 formal sector workers in Malay, Aklan, who were affected by the world-famous BORACAY CLOSURE. A vendor, offering his wares to tourists, will be among those island’s six-month shutdown. According to Budget Secretary affected by the closure of Boracay, which started on Thursday, April 26. The Benjamin Diokno, the funds came Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) said half of the 5,000 affected workers
u PAGE A2
DATELINE
would start working in Boracay on Friday, April 27, a day after the start of the six-month closure of the island to give way to its rehabilitation. PNA photo by Joey Razon
USA
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
Federal judge ruling: US must continue DACA Judge John D. Bates joins other federal judges in support of the Obama-era program that provides benefits to undocumented youth THE Trump administration has been dealt with yet another blow in its mission to terminate a program which grants work authorization and protection from deportation to undocumented youth. Judge John D. Bates of the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia ruled on Tuesday, April 24 that the federal government must keep the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) in place and continue accepting new applications. Like previous federal judges’ rulings, Bates
u PAGE A3
Third version of Trump’s travel ban reaches Supreme Court with intense arguments AFTER months of lower court battles, the third and current version of President Donald Trump’s travel ban reached the Supreme Court on Wednesday, April 25 where heated arguments revolved around the president’s power to issue the ban, and whether or not the ban was to be seen as motivated by animus. Much like in the two previous versions, the ban’s third iteration bars travelers from five predominantly Muslim countries: Iran, Libya, Somalia, Syria, and Yemen. The ban is also extended to certain government officials from Venezuela, and travelers from North Korea. Chad was originally on the ban list, but was
u PAGE A3
Duterte admin backs order for Australian missionary to leave PH by AJPRESS MALACAÑANG has defended the Bureau of Immigration’s (BI) order on Australian Catholic nun Patricia Fox to leave the Philippines after it canceled her missionary visa. “We stand by the Bureau of Immigration’s order to forfeit Sister Patricia Fox‘s privilege of holding a missionary visa and to leave the Philippines,” Palace Spokesperson Harry Roque Jr. said in a statement released on Wednesday, April 25. Asserting that the BI went through the proper procedure, Roque noted that an investigation has been conducted and determined that Fox “violated the terms and conditions of her visa.” The BI on Monday, April 23 released an order directing Fox to leave the country after it forfeited her missionary visa for engaging in “partisan political activities.” “She was found to have engaged in activities that are not allowed under the terms and conditions of her visa,” BI Commissioner Jaime Morente said. Morente explained that Fox’s missionary visa, which is supposed to expire on September 5 of this year, only grants her the “privilege to engage in missionary work and
u PAGE A3
President Rodrigo Duterte and Vietnam Prime Minister Nguyen Phuc engage in a discussion during the bilateral meeting at Ritz-Carlton Millenia Hotel in Singapore on Friday, April 27. Duterte discussed the international arbitral ruling on the Philippines’ dispute with China in the South China Sea with Vietnam’s head of state, who was all praises for the way the Philippine president handled the maritime row, a Palace official said. Malacañang photo by Karl Norman Alonzo
Palace downplays PH’s drop in World Press Freedom Index ranking by AJPRESS THE recently released 2018 World Press Freedom Index by Reporters Without Borders (Reporters Sans Frontiéres, RSF) has ranked the Philippines 133 out of 180 countries on the list, citing a “growing animosity” towards journalists in the country. But Palace Spokesperson Harry Roque Jr. downplayed the report, saying that the media watchdog also expressed alarm
over the developments in the United States, China, and Russia—not just the Philippines “Hindi lang po Pilipinas ang sinabihan nila; ganundin ang sinabi nila sa Amerika, kay [U.S.] President [Donald] Trump (It’s not just the Philippines; they said the same about America, about President Trump),” Roque said. “So hindi lang po iyan (It’s not The dynamism of the Philippine press has been challenged by only) directed to the Philippines, President Rodrigo Duterte, who has repeatedly hurled threats directed also to the U.S. and in against journalists, Reporters Without Borders noted.
u PAGE A2
Philstar.com photo by Kriz John Rosales
The City of Cerritos’ first Fil-Am mayor to serve position once again by RAE
City of Cerritos Mayor Mark E. Pulido Photo courtesy of Gloria Pulido
ANN VARONA AJPress
THE City of Cerritos, California swore in Mark E. Pulido as its mayor on Wednesday, April 25 — four years after he became the city’s first-ever Filipino American to serve the position. “What I love most about serving Cerritos is the opportunity presented each and every day to give back to my hometown for the many blessings that I have received,” Pulido told the Asian Journal. Pulido, who has called Cerritos home since 1972, considers the city’s residents his extended family, often helping the
parents, grandparents, or even children of those he grew up with. He also isn’t a new face in City Hall. In 2011, he was elected to the city council where he drew the most votes recorded in the city’s history of elections. In 2013, he served as Mayor Pro Tem before becoming the city’s first Fil-Am mayor in 2014. A year after, he was re-elected to the city council, and became mayor pro tem again in 2017. Outside City Hall, Pulido has an extensive history of service in both the local community, local state, and federal government. With a passion for education, he served on
u PAGE A5
Malacañang ‘grateful’ for continued trust in Duterte despite a drop in ratings by AJPRESS
Palace Spokesperson Harry Roque Jr.
Malacañang photo
MALACAÑANG on Friday, April 27, thanked Filipinos for their confidence in President Rodrigo Duterte’s leadership. This comes after the latest Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey showing a majority of Filipinos continue to trust the president despite the “unending criticisms and attacks” against him.
Based on the poll, three in every four — or 76 percent of Filipinos — have “much trust” in the president; 10 percent have little trust in him, while the remaining 14 percent are undecided. Results showed that Duterte earned a net trust rating of “very good” +65 for the first quarter of 2018. This, however, is a 10point decline from his previous “excellent” + 75 rating in the fourth quarter of 2017. Commenting on the survey,
Palace Spokesperson Harry Roque Jr. said the Duterte administration is “grateful for our people’s vote of confidence with significant trust in the President, amid being subject to unending criticisms and attacks.” “Rest assured that the president will continue to steer the ship of state until we reach a drug-free destination where the country’s macroeconomic fundamentals would be strong and
u PAGE A4