062020 - Los Angeles Weekend Edition

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JUNE 20-23, 2020 Volume 30 - No. 48 • 2 Sections – 18 Pages

Fil-Am DACA recipients breathe a sigh of relief as US Supreme Court halts ending of program by RAE

ANN VARONA AJPress

for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program was “arbitrary and caA U.S. Supreme Court ruling pricious” in that it violated the on Thursday, June 18 stopped Administrative Procedure Act. “I woke up to my Slack notifiPresident Donald Trump’s administration from rescinding a cations going off like wildfire,” program that protected more Set Hernandez Rongkilyo, an than 800,000 young undocu- undocumented Fil-Am filmmakmented immigrants, or “Dream- er and community organizer, ers,” who came to the U.S. as told the Asian Journal. Originally from Caloocan, children from deportation. In a narrow 5-4 vote, the court Philippines, Rongkilyo came held that the Department of to the U.S. from Japan with his Homeland Security’s (DHS) ef- family when he was 12 years old. fort to end the Deferred Action It wasn’t until he began school

at the University of California, Los Angeles when he met other undocumented people. In the days leading up to the ruling announcement, Rongkilyo had been organizing with a group of undocumented people across the country. Like many, he was also protesting with the Black Lives Matter Movement taking place with a backdrop of the still current COVID-19 pandemic. “I was shocked, but I was so u PAGE A2

MAKING A LIVING. A man peddles all sorts of plastic wares, chairs, pails, laundry tubs, and bins along Kaliraya Street in Barangay Tatalon, Quezon City on Friday, June 19. Vendors strive to make ends meet as quarantine restrictions due to the COVID-19 health crisis have greatly affected their means of livelihood. PNA photo by Joey O. Razon

Filipinos say life has worsened - poll

USA

DATELINE Woman who went on racist tirade against Pinay exercising at Torrance park is found but not arrested

by AJPRESS

FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA

A Long Beach, California woman who was caught on video twice last week hurling antiAsian sentiments toward two individuals, including a Filipina American in one instance, was located by Torrance authorities but has not been arrested. Lena Hernandez, 56, was found by Torrance Police Department detectives and members of its Specialized Crisis Intervention Team at a park in San Pedro on Wednesday, June 17. She was interviewed about the three incidents linked to her. The incidents include: berating a Fil-Am woman named Sherry who was exercising at Wilson Park in Torrance; using racist language toward an Asian American man at the parking u PAGE A3

SAFETY FIRST. To make ends meet, vendors make sure to wear face masks as they sell Sampaguita garlands to passersby in front of the Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady of Mercy of Novaliches in Quirino Highway, Quezon City on Thursday, June 18. The vendors said their livelihood has been affected due to the COVID-19 pandemic. PNA photo by Robert Oswald P. Alfiler

RECENT survey results released by Social Weather Stations (SWS) on Thursday, June 18, revealed that 83% of Filipinos think the quality of life has worsened in the last 12 months. The resulting percentage, according to the SWS, is a new peak in the 37-year series of 135 SWS surveys, breaking the previous record of 62% “losers” in June 2008. Meanwhile, 6% of Filipinos believed life got better, which is a new all-time low, breaking the previous record of nine per-

Over 6K Filipinos abroad infected with virus by RITCHEL

MENDIOLA AJPress

The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) on Friday, June 19, reported 37 new cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, among overseas Filipinos, bringing the total number of infected individuals to 6,128. The agency also recorded 11 new fatalities and six recoveries, which raises the tallies for dead and recovered persons to 483 and 2,849 respectively. Meanwhile, 2,796 Filipinos abroad remain under treatment.

“Today’s 37 new cases reported by our Foreign Service Posts in Asia and the Pacific, Europe, and Middle East bring the total number of Filipinos abroad infected with COVID-19 to 6,128 — of which are six new recoveries from two countries in Asia and the Pacific and Middle East and 11 new fatalities recorded in two countries in the Middle East as well,” the DFA said. Overall by region, Europe — which comprises 16 countries with PH Foreign Service coverage — has recorded 937 Filipino cases, including 538 undergoing treatment, 305 recoveries and 94 deaths.

Fil-Am man in SF confronted by white LA County surpasses 3,000 COVID-19 couple for stenciling deaths as more businesses reopen ‘Black Lives Matter’ in Despite early statements alluding to the possible extended lockdown, California lawmakers re-open front of own home A FILIPINO American man was stenciling “Black Lives Matter” in chalk outside his San Francisco home last week when a white couple confronted him and accused him of defacing private property. A video of the June 9 encounter, which has reached over 19.6 million views on Twitter, shows a couple asking James Juanillo, 50, if he lives in the Pacific Heights house before alleging that they know the homeowner and claiming he was engaging in an illegal activity. Juanillo’s post was accompanied with the message, “A white couple call the police on me, a person of color, for stencilling a #BLM chalk message on my own front retaining wall. ‘Karen’ lies and says she knows that I don’t u PAGE A3

cent “gainers” in July 1985. “Losers” is a term that the SWS uses for those who said their quality of life worsened, while “gainers” is the term for those who said their quality of life got better. The remaining 10% Filipinos claimed life was “unchanged.” “The May 2020 net gainers score of -78 (gainers minus losers, correctly rounded) is the worst in survey history, breaking the previous record low -50 in June 2008. It plummeted from a very high +18 in December 2019,” said SWS in its report. The low score of -78 of nationwide net u PAGE A2

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dine-in restaurants and grooming services by KLARIZE

MEDENILLA AJPress

FOUR months after cities and states across the United States first began shutting due to the coronavirus pandemic, businesses and public places are quickly reopening despite the increase in cases and deaths associated with the virus. Los Angeles County has accounted for 3,063 deaths and 79,609 positive cases of the COVID-19 virus, as of Friday, June 19. Thursday to Friday brought a whopping 1,414 cases, among the biggest single-day increases in the county. But despite the increase in cases and

deaths — though officials reported that hospitalizations have remained steady — the county loosened restrictions again, allowing more businesses to reopen on Friday as long as they meet the safety requirements and protocols: face coverings for all employees and customers and 6-feet distancing between individuals. Businesses that have been given the green light to re-open include bars, breweries, wineries, tasting rooms, nail salons, massage studios, tattoo parlors and other body art services, piercing shops and skincare and esthetician services. Still off-limits to the public include loungu PAGE A4

Rappler chief Maria Ressa leaves a Manila court on Monday, June 15 after receiving a guilty verdict for cyber libel. Inquirer.net photo by Grig Montegrande

Ruling on Ressa, Santos revives call to stop treating libel as crime by JIGGER JERUSALEM Inquirer.net

CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY—A lower court decision to convict Rappler CEO Maria Ressa and former researcher Reynaldo Santos Jr for cyber libel has breathed new life into calls for Congress to pass a law that would cease treating libel as a criminal offense. The revival of calls to decriminalize libel came as Cagayan de Oro Rep. Rufus Rodriguez filed a bill setting the prescriptive period, or the amount of time within which a case can be filed, to one year. In separate statements, the Philippine Press Institute (PPI) and the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) said

lawmakers should, however, take the bigger step and pass a law that would stop defining libel as a crime. Ariel Sebellino, PPI executive director, said PPI has long advocated for libel to be decriminalized. Jose Jaime Espina, NUJP chairman, said the group has always been for decriminalizing libel. “While we acknowledge Representative Rodriguez’s intentions, Congress would do better to amend a law that has been used for so long by those in power as they seek to silence or intimidate journalists,” Espina said. Ressa and Santos were found guilty of violating Republic Act u PAGE A4


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