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AUGUST 15-21, 2019
T H E F I L I P I N O –A M E R I C A N C O M M U N I T Y N E W S PA P E R
Volume 30 - No. 33 • 16 Pages
2770 S. Maryland Pkwy., Suite 200 Las Vegas, NV 89109 Tel: (702) 792-6678 • Fax: (702) 792-6879
Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY
Foreign researchers in EEZ must ‘turn Filipino postal over command, control’ to Filipinos worker Joseph Ileto DATELINE
USA
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
remembered 20 years after killing
With race and hate crimes on the rise, Ileto family calls on Asian American inclusion in conversations AUGUST 10, 1999 was a hot day. It was a Tuesday, and Filipino American letter carrier for the United States Postal Service (USPS) Joseph Ileto — who originally had the day off — was called into work to cover for a fellow mailman. While on route delivering the mail in Chatsworth, at the nearby North Valley Jewish Community Center in Granada Hills, a white supremacist walked into the center’s lobby and fired 70 shots using a semi-automatic weapon, wounding five people including three children.
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New rule change may affect millions of legal residents seeking citizenship or permanent residency THE Trump administration has focused a lot on actions to curb illegal immigration in the last two years, but new regulation changes released on Monday, August 12 may have a dramatic effect on immigrants seeking legal permanent residency or U.S. citizenship. Set to go into effect in mid-October, the new rule essentially expands who may be considered a “public charge” — a term used since 1996 to describe an individual likely to become “primarily dependent” on the government through public cash assistance or long-term institutionalized care funded by the government. Whether one is a public charge determines whether one can become a legal permanent resident. Through the expanded definition, visa and green card applicants who have accessed benefits like food stamps, housing vouchers,
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by
CHRISTIA MARIE RAMOS Inquirer.net
MANILA — Foreigners wanting to conduct maritime research within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone (EEZ) must “turn over command and
control” to Filipinos, Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said on Wednesday, August 14. This was the latest position of Locsin with regards to allowing foreign marine survey ships within Philippine waters.
“We can’t join their (foreigners) ships as just passengers; foreigners turn over command and control, all data gathering facilities, the entire enchilada to Filipinos,” the foreign affairs chief said on Twitter. On Tuesday, August 13, the coun-
try’s top diplomat said he was informed that under maritime laws, the Philippines could not ban any marine survey ships in the country’s EEZ. Because of this, Locsin backtracked on his earlier remark that he would
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Former Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. ManilaTimes.net photo
Marcos asks SC to admit evidence on poll fraud by JOMAR
CANLAS ManilaTimes.net
THE Supreme Court (SC) on Tuesday, August 13, was asked by former Senator Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to set his case for immediate hearing and present his evidence on alleged election fraud committed by the camp of Vice President Maria Leonor Robredo in the May 2016 elections. In an extremely urgent motion to set this election protest for preliminary conference dated Aug. 9, 2019,
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DOH EXECS VISIT DENGUE PATIENTS. Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III checks on the condition of one of the dengue patients admitted at the Quezon Medical Center in Lucena City, during his regional rounds to government hospitals. He was accompanied by Assistance Secretary Maria Francia M. Laxamana (center) DOH-Calabarzon Regional Director Eduardo C. Janairo (blue jacket), and Dr. Rolando A. Padre of the Quezon Medical Center. Photo courtesy of DOH
Palace defends Duterte’s stand on police officers getting gifts by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
MALACAÑANG on Monday, August 13, defended President Rodrigo Duterte’s stance on police officers accepting gifts given out of gratitude or generosity. According to presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo, police officers can accept gifts of “nominal value” for as long as these are not “excessive.” “What is important is hindi yun binigay (that is not given) in anticipation of a favor coming from the recipient or in exchange of
a favor from the recipient which is a police officer,” Panelo told the media. “Dapat ‘di nila tatanggapin kung masyado naman malaki (They should not accept it if the gift is too big),” he added. On Friday, August 9, Duterte told policemen that he does not consider accepting gifts as a form of bribery. “Basta kung bigyan kayo, eh tanggapin ninyo (If they give you a gift, accept it). It is not bribery because — it cannot be bribery because it is allowed by law,” he said. Vice President Leni Robredo
Philstar.com photo
Dengue deaths in PH highest in Asia Robredo keeps options open for 2022 presidency by JOSHUAVERA
CRUZ
ManilaTimes.net
A government personnel scoops up garbage at the Estero de San Miguel in Quiapo, Manila. Local government units have started cleaning canals, creeks and other possible breeding sites of mosquitoes to curb the spread of dengue. ManilaTimes.net photo by DJ Diosina
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THE Philippines has the highest death rate from dengue among countries in Southeast Asia, the Department of Health (DOH) said on Tuesday, August 13, as it warned that the number of victims of the mosquito-borne disease had grown exponentially in the past few weeks. Health Secretary Francisco Duque 3rd said dengue cases increased 300 percent in Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, Singapore and Lao People’s Democratic Republic. Cases in the Philippines and Malaysia grew by 100 percent. But the case fatality rate (CFR) or deaths was highest in the Philippines, which reported 720
deaths as of August 8. “The difference is in the CFR. The Philippines continues to have the highest CFR among the five Asean (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) countries,” Duque said in a news briefing. From Jan. 1 to July 27, 2019, the DoH reported 85,011 dengue cases, double that in the same period last year. But from July 21 to July 27, 12,880 cases were reported with 0.3 fatality rate. Majority of these cases were of the Dengue 3 strain, which according to Duque had lower CFR than the other strains. Based on the latest data of the Health department, 167,607 dengue cases had been reported. Western Visayas or Region 6
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by AJPRESS VICE President Leni Robredo on Tuesday, August 13, said she is keeping her options open regarding the 2022 presidential race. In a Bloomberg article written by Andreo Calozo, Robredo said she was ready for the presidency but would decide later on whether to stand as the opposition Liberal Party’s main candidate in elections three years from now, when Filipinos will vote on Duterte’s successor. “If you ask me now, I have no plans, but I am leaving everything open,” she said.
“I wouldn’t have ran for the vice presidency if I didn’t feel I was ready for the presidency,” Robredo added. A 54-year old lawyer with an economics degree, Robredo first entered politics as a congresswoman in 2013 — a year after her husband, Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo, died in a plane crash. She won the vice presidency with her anti-poverty platform, promising to help those in the fringes of society. She defeated former senator Ferdinand Marcos Jr. by more than 200,000 votes. In a June interview, Robredo
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