082319 - New York & New Jersey

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AU GUS T 23-29, 2019 Volume 12 - No. 44 • 16 Pages 133-30 32nd Ave., Flushing, NY 11354 • 2500 Plaza S. Harborside Financial Center, Jersey City, NJ 07311 • Tel. (212) 655-5426 • Fax: (818) 502-0858

Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, LAS VEGAS, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

US slams ‘bullying’ in South China Sea DATELINE USA by CHRISTINA

MENDEZ

Philstar.com

FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA

WASHINGTON — The White House on Tuesday, August 20, accused China of “bullying tactics” in the increasingly tense waters of the South China Sea and said it would resist Beijing on the dispute. “China’s recent escalation of efforts to intimidate others out of developing resources in the South China Sea is disturbing,” President

Donald Trump’s national security advisor John Bolton tweeted. “The United States stands firmly with those who oppose coercive behavior and bullying tactics which threaten regional peace and security.” China has been accused of deploying warships, arming island outposts and ramming fishing vessels in the resource-rich sea, also contested by Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam.

Washington has repeatedly criticized China’s attempts to exert growing dominance in the disputed waters, but Bolton’s latest broadside comes as the two economic superpowers face off in a damaging trade war. In Manila, Cabinet Secretary Karlo Alexei Nograles said that while President Duterte may have been displeased by reports of Chinese incursion into Philippines waters, his administration has not

given up on peaceful means to resolve any conflict with Beijing. “I think it has something to do with Ship Identification System… when they pass through our sea lanes and turn them off. We are able to (only) monitor the commercial vessels,” Nograles said when asked about the President’s unusual reproach on China. “It came to the attention of the president, they are switching it off

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Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, documentary filmmaker and immigrant advocate Jose Antonio Vargas gives his speech as school officials listen at the dedication ceremony for the newlyopened Jose Antonio Vargas Elementary School on Thursday, August 15. AJPress photo by Joseph Peralta

Duterte tells public servants: Serve with Silicon Valley elementary honor, integrity like Ninoy school named after Filipino Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, immigration activist by ALEXIS

ROMERO Philstar.com

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.— After seeing two schools close down in the city over the past 19 years, an elementary school named after a Filipino Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and immigration activist was officially opened in a dedication ceremony on Thursday, August 15 attended by district officials, faculty and community members.

PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte on Wednesday, August 21, expressed hope that the life of the late senator Benigno Aquino Jr. would inspire government workers to serve with honor and to help fight the problems that beset the nation. In his message for the Ninoy Aquino Day, Duterte said Aquino’s sacrifice “altered the course of our nation’s history and still continues to ignite the spirit of heroism among our people.” “May this auspicious occasion remind us of what we had lost so that we may remain committed to our solemn duty to safeguard the freedom that we now enjoy,” Duterte said.

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SOLAR-DIESEL POWER PLANT. President Rodrigo Duterte inaugurated on Wednesday, August 21 the P550-million Tumingad Solar Power Project, the country’s first and largest hybrid solar-diesel microgrid with battery facility. Speaking before the attendees of the inauguration rites, President Duterte said the commercial operation of the 7.5-MWp hybrid solar-diesel power plant will pave the way to a greener tomorrow for Romblon and the rest of the country. It is a milestone, he said, not only for the people of the province but also for the environment. Malacañang photos by Richard Madelo

Ex-mayor Antonio Sanchez eligible for release Lacson pushes treaty to help Filipino convicts abroad by

RITCHEL MENDIOLA AJPress

Murder and rape convict Antonio Sanchez in his prison cell where the image of the Virgin Mary, to whom he says he is devoted, is prominently displayed in this February 1999 photo. Inquirer.net photo

THE Department of Justice (DOJ) on Tuesday, August 20, said convicted rapist and murderer Antonio Sanchez may walk free out of prison as he becomes one of the 11,000 inmates eligible for release under a new law. According to Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra, Sanchez would benefit from the recent ruling issued by the Supreme Court (SC) that orders the retro-

active application of the number of days credited to prisoners for their good-conduct time allowance (GCTA). “He (Sanchez) is not the only one involved here but also thousands under detention, persons deprived of liberty. So many prisoners’ good-conduct time allowances would be subjected to recomputation. Maybe one after the other they would be released,” he said. The Republic Act (RA) 10592 amended provisions of the Revised Penal Code and allowed

the credit of preventive imprisonment and revision of GCTA of persons deprived of liberty. Under the law, 20 days will be deducted for each month for good behavior during the first two years of imprisonment, while 23 days for each month will be deducted during the third to fifth year. From sixth to 10th year, 25 days will be deducted for each month of good behavior; and 30 days for each month from the 11th year to succeeding years.

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‘Transfer of Sentenced Persons’ to give convicts option to serve time in their home country by AJPRESS

SENATOR Panfilo Lacson on Monday, August 19, called for the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) to pursue more Transfer of Sentenced Persons agreements with other countries, pointing out the efforts of the government to help Filipino drug convicts

abroad while it is “killing people” in the Philippines. “How do you reconcile [the fact that] here in our country we’re killing people and then we’re saving drug convicts detained in another country. I’m just curious,” Lacson asked Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. during the

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