NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
T H E F I L I P I N O A M E R I CA N C O M M U N I T Y N E WS PA P E R
Volume 17 - No. 28 • 3 Sections – 20 Pages
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DATELINE
USA
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
Census could overlook millions of Californians in 2020 count, new report says Proposed citizenship question could affect overall count in certain geographic 2020 is shaping up to be one of the most crucial years in the history of American democracy. Coming up in the next year and a half, Americans will be participating in two important events: the presidential election and the census survey. There are more or less 40 million people — citizens and otherwise — living in California, a population that has grown twice in size since Gov. Jerry Brown first became governor in 1975. The federal census — the overall PAGE A2
Mendocino Complex fire in California is now the largest in modern state history CALIFORNIA fires have again been making ground, less than a year after a record breaking fire burnt through parts of Southern California’s coast. As of Tuesday morning, August 7, the Mendocino Complex Fire covered over 290,000 acres in Northern California’s Mendocino and Lake counties, making it the largest fire in California’s modern history. Made up of two neighboring fires being the Ranch Fire and River Fire which erupted less than two weeks ago, it has burned through an area nearly the size of Los Angeles, and almost 10 times the size of San Francisco. It overtook last year’s Thomas Fire which PAGE A2
by PATRICIA LOURDES Philstar.com
VIRAY
WHILE China and the Southeast Asian nations are moving forward with negotiations on the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea, the United States stressed its position on the maritime dispute. Piper Campbell, chargé d’affaires ad interim at the U.S. Mission to ASEAN, stressed that Washington has always been watching the developments in the disputed waterway. “We think it’s extremely important that no coun-
try pressure other countries within structures like the Code of Conduct negotiations,” Campbell said in a teleconference Tuesday, August 7. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had the chance to relay Washington’s position on the disputed South China during the recently concluded East Asia Summit and Asean Regional Forum meetings in Singapore. In the meetings with ASEAN member states, China, Japan and Australia, the U.S. top diplomat insisted that concerns of third parties should be incorporated in the COC. In a draft code, Beijing suggested excluding
non-regional countries, including the U.S., from proposed joint militarye exercises and energy exploration in with Southeast Asian nations in the South China Sea. Campbell said that Pompeo had the opportunity to express Washington’s position that “any Code of Conduct needs to incorporate the concerns and the rights of third parties.” While the U.S. is pleased that China and the ASEAN member states are moving forward with negotiations on the COC, Washington stressed the importance of adherence to international law, in-
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Obama endorses Fil-Am TJ Cox for Congress Former president endorses first wave of candidates for midterms elections by RAE
ANN VARONA AJPress
A TOTAL of 81 candidates for federal and state offices got the thumbs-up from former President Barack Obama on Wednesday, August 1 in his first wave of endorsements focused on candidates across 14 different states. Among the first TJ Cox, candidate for California’s wave of endorsees 21st congressional district is Fil-Am congressional candidate TJ Cox who is running for the California’s 21st congressional district, which includes Central Valley areas of Fresno PAGE A3
AFP-PNP COMMAND CONFERENCE. President Rodrigo R. Duterte presides over the Joint Armed Forces of the Philippines-Philippine National Police (AFP-PNP) meeting at Malacañang Palace on Tuesday, August 7. Duterte urged the police to keep on doing good deeds and protect the Filipino people from threat of illegal drugs and criminality despite scalawags in uniform who are hampering their efficiency. Malacañang photo by Valerie Escalera
by AJPRESS HOUSE Speaker Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on Tuesday, August 7, sought the urgent amendment of the 1987 Constitution as she called for the House of Representatives and the Senate to convene into a Constitutional Assembly (ConAss). In a report from The Manila Times, Arroyo filed House Resolution No. 2056 that pushes for the two chambers to convene but permits the House and the Senate to vote separately. PUSHING CHARTER CHANGE. Speaker Gloria Arroyo discusses a point before stopping the Committee “It appears from media reports on Constitutional Amendments from deliberating on proposals to amend the constitution. To her right is former senator Aquilino ‘Nene’ Pimentel, a member of the Consultative Committee that drafted the proposed federal constitution. ManilaTimes.net photo by Ruy Martinez
3 Filipino families affected in Italy road explosion
THE apartments of three Filipino families were affected when a fuel tanker exploded in a highway in Bologna, Italy, the Department of Foreign Affairs said on Tuesday, August 7. A total of 10 Filipinos, including two minors and two infants, were affected by the blast but were not injured. The apartment units of the Filipino families sustained major damage from the explosion, according to Consul General in Milan Irense Susan Natividad.
Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, LAS VEGAS, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY
US: Third party concerns should be included in South China Sea code
Speaker Arroyo to hasten Cha-Cha
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AUGUST 10-16, 2018
According to Natividad, the doors and windows of the apartments of the three Filipino families were blown off. “There were no injuries reported among the family members who were evacuated by authorities and accommodated at a local hotel,” the DFA said. In its latest update, the DFA said that the Office of Civilian Protection in Bologna informed the Philippine Consulate General in Milan that no Filipinos were injured in the blast.
Italian police said one person has died in the incident while 60 to 70 people were injured, with serious burns, when a tanker truck carrying explosive materials was in a traffic accident. Italian news agency ANSA reported that the tanker was carrying liquefied petroleum gas. The explosion sent flames soaring into the air. (Patricia Lourdes Viray/ Philstar.com with Associated Press) ■
National ID system gets mixed reactions from citizens, sectors by AJPRESS THE national ID system garnered mixed reactions from the general public after President Rodrigo Duterte signed its implementation into law on Monday, August 6, in Malacanang. The law, otherwise known as the Republic Act of 11055 includes the establishment of the Philippine ID system (PhilSys), a centralized database that contains all the necessary and vital information of the residents in the country. It will also signify a unified and streamlined identification system for every citizen. Supporters of the said law praised the initiative stating that a national ID will expedite government processes and basic services and will also put an end to bureaucratic red tape. However, those in opposition expressed concern with the privacy issues it might entail. In a report from Inquirer, among those who support the law were Catholic leaders, law enforcers, and public officials while those who do not agree with the law’s provisions were human rights groups. Church leaders, law enforcers
and public officials pro-PhilSys Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) Episcopal Commission on the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People Head Bishop Ruperto Santos said that the law would benefit Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) and will protect them against bribery and red tape. Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) spokesperson Col. Edgard Arevalo said that the law will inhibit criminal activities since falsification of identities would be more difficult. “We believe it will promote a peaceful and secure environment where terrorists, criminals, and
other unscrupulous individuals will have difficulty coping to pursue their evil designs and nefarious activities,” Arevalo said. The Philippine National Police (PNP) also lauded the implementation of the national ID system saying that its benefits offset its issues regarding privacy. In a report from the Philippine Star, Commission on Human Rights (CHR) spokesperson Jacqueline de Guia claimed that PhilSys is aligned with the government’s obligation to provide legal identification. Members of the House also applauded the said law. Surigao del PAGE A3