July 21-24, 2018 Volume 28 - No. 59 • 4 Sections – 30 Pages
‘Duterte wants 2019 polls to push through’ DATELINE USA by RITCHEL
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
MENDIOLA AJPress
Proposal to split California into three separate states pulled from November ballot
MALACAÑANG said President Rodrigo Duterte will not be involved in efforts to postpone the elections slated for next year. Presidential spokesperson Harry Roque clarified that Duterte’s position had been to continue with the CALIFORNIA will remain one state for the midterm polls next year and hold the time being after its Supreme Court on Wednes- referendum on the proposed federal day, July 18 shot down an initiative on the November ballot that would have split the state into three separate ones. The state court unanimously decided against Proposition 9 because “significant questions have been raised regarding the proposition’s validity,” ordering California’s Secretary of State Alex Padilla to remove it from the Nov. 6 ballot. “We conclude that the potential harm in permitting the measure to remain on the ballot outweighs the potential harm in delaying the proposition to a future election,” the justices wrote in their ruling. Silicon Valley venture capitalist Tim Draper for years has argued that California should be split into three states, and, because of its massive size, would be governed more effectively with “better decision-making and real solutions closer to home.” This year a petition to get his concept on
charter together with the electoral exercise. “I will quote the president, ‘I will not have any hand in that,’” Roque said in a Palace briefing on Thursday, July 19 when he was asked about the matter amid efforts by Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez to postpone next year’s elections. Alvarez has insisted on suspending the 2019 midterm elections in order
to give the Congress enough time to deliberate on the proposed Constitution. According to him, Congress will not have time to discuss moves to shift to federalism as it will be busy with the budget later this year, and with elections in May, lawmakers will be on campaign mode by the start of 2019. “He believes in democracy, he be-
by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
PH to receive $27-M counterterror aid from US
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Sea dispute biggest challenge to PH
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THE assistance will include equipment, training and other support programs aimed at boosting law enforcement capacity. “This support for non-military rule-of-law approaches to addressing terrorist threats will complement our sustained commitment to building the counterterrorism capabilities of the Armed Forces of the Philippines,” the embassy said in a statement. “The United States is a proud ally of the Philippines and will continue to provide whole-of-government support and assistance to Philippine counterterrorism efforts as we work together to address shared threats to the peace and security of both of our countries,” it added. In February, the U.S. designated the Maute group as a terror organization with links to the Middle East-based Islamic State. In June 2016, IS released a video of militants in the Philippines pledging allegiance to the terror group. In the video, militants encouraged other Muslims to the local IS arm then led by Isnilon Hapilon. Hapilon was killed in Marawi in October 2017. The Maute group was responsible for the
lieves in elections, and he wants to hold the referendum together with the elections. That is the position of the president,” Roque added. The Palace spokesperson also denied that Duterte would run in tandem with losing vice presidential candidate and former Senator Bongbong Marcos to be the transition government leader, explaining that if
SIGNATURE POSE. President Rodrigo Roa Duterte flashes his signature pose with Sec. Bong Go of the Office of the Special Assistant to the President and the guests during the 85th National Convention of the Philippine Public Health Association at the Grand Regal Hotel in Davao City. Malacañang photo by Ace Morandante
ACCORDING to the Cabinet’s security cluster, the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea) dispute is the biggest concern with regards to the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. The assessment was made as the security cluster unveiled the Duterte government’s National Security Policy during the pre-State of the Nation Address (SONA) conference on Wednesday, July 18, in Pasay City. “The dispute over the West Philippine Sea remains to be the foremost security challenge to the Philippines’ sovereignty and territorial integrity,” it said. It added that the Philippines “needs to address” the disputes over the country’s maritime borders “as they affect a complex range of national security concerns as well as threaten regional peace and stability.” President Rodrigo Duterte, however, has maintained a non-confrontational stance in the West Philippine Sea dispute and has fostered economic ties with China since as-
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Duterte to sign BBL before delivering SONA by ALEXIS
ROMERO Philstar.com
MANILA — President Duterte may sign the Bangsamoro organic law before he delivers his third State of the Nation Address (SONA) on Monday, Malacañang said on Friday, July 20. Presidential spokesman Harry Roque thanked the members of Congress for reconciling their versions of the bill, one of the priority measures of the Duterte administration. The bicameral conference committee approved the proposed Bangsamoro organic law on Wednesday night, a year after the Bangsamoro Transition Council submitted its
draft to the president. “We thank our lawmakers and the members of the Bangsamoro Transition Council because the bicameral conference for the BBL or the Bangsamoro Basic Law is finished. The President can now sign the BBL before his SONA on Monday,” Roque said. He could not say when exactly Duterte would sign the measure into law, but expressed belief that the President may do so on Monday, July 23. “As soon as we receive the consolidated version of the proposed Republic Act, the President can sign,” Roque said. “It’s possible that it will be on Monday...I think that’s
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Senate Majority Leader Juan Miguel Zubiri and Majority Floor Leader Rodolfo Farinas Sr. (left) hands over to Bangsamoro Transition Committee Chairman and Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) vice chairman Ghazali Jaafar (2nd left) the Conference Committee Report after the marathon hearing of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) at the Senate in Pasay City on Wednesday, July 18. Also present in the ceremony are Senators Juan Edgardo Angara; Franklin Drilon; Joel Villanueva and the rest of the bicameral conference committee from the House. PNA photo by Avito Dalan
DILG gives green light to Boracay reopening Oct. 26 BI orders deportation of Australian missionary by AJPRESS
by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
Interior Undersecretary Epimaco Densing III said rehabilitation continues on the island after President Duterte ordered its closure on April 26 to give way to massive rehabilitation of the “cesspool.” Philstar.com photo by Walter Bollozos
INTERIOR Undersecretary Empimaco Densing III on Wednesday, July 18 said the target reopening of Boracay island on October 26 will proceed. “Oct. 26 is a go based on (Environment) Secretary Roy Cimatu na madalas sa (who is always in) Boracay,” he said in a radio interview. Densing noted the significant improvement in the water’s quality. According to him, the previously brown and foul-smelling water on Bulabog beach was already “bluish” and did not emit any unpleasant smells two weeks ago. He also mentioned how the
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Sister Patricia Anne Fox
Philstar.com photo
AUSTRALIAN missionary Sister Patricia Anne Fox on Thursday, July 19, was ordered by the Board of Commissioners (BOC) of the Bureau of Immigration (BI) to be deported and blacklisted, barring her from ever returning to the Philippines. The BOC, composed of Commissioner Jaime Morente, Associate Commissioner J. Tobias Javier and OIC Associate Commissioner Marc Red Marinas, ruled that Fox violated Philippine immigration laws and was found to be an undesirable alien after thorough review and deliberation. “The BOC found that her actions are inimical to the interest of the state. The Bureau has ordered her [Fox’s] deportation to Australia, and the inclusion of her name in the BI’s blacklist, barring her re-entry into the country,” Sandoval stated. The BI, in its resolution, noted that Fox was granted a missionary visa on July 21, 2016 valid until September 5 of this year “with a limitation that she will render her missionary work in Barangay Amihan, Quezon City.” However, the BI said “Fox engaged and interfered in po-
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