NOVEMBER 2-5, 2019 Volume 29 - No. 86 • 4 Sections – 30 Pages
USA
DATELINE PH among world’s worst impunity offenders FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
THE Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) on Tuesday, October 29, listed the Philippines among the 13 countries that make up the world’s worst impunity offenders. According to its 2019 Global Impunity Index, Somalia is the world’s worst country for the fifth year in a row based on unsolved journalist deaths as a percentage of each country’s population with 25 killings in a country of 15 million people, while the Philippines ranked fifth with 41 killings in a country populated with 107 million people. “The Philippines has been among the worst five countries nearly every year since the index was first published in 2008,” CPJ said. “The country’s fifth-worst ranking is due in part to the deadly ambush of 58 individuals, including 32 journalists and media workers, in Ampatuan, Maguindanao, on November 23, 2009. The trial of over 100 suspects behind the massacre is due to conclude this year, but as of August 31, 2019—the final date CPJ counted convictions for this year’s index—no verdict had been announced,” it added. u PAGE A3
Groups sue Trump admin for making it ‘much harder’ for low-income immigrants to get citizenship fee waived
Duterte to give Robredo a Cabinet secretary rank as drug czar by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
PHILIPPINE President Rodrigo Duterte plans on giving Vice President Leni Robredo a Cabinet secretary rank as the administration’s drug czar to show the seriousness of his previous offer, Malacañang on Thursday, October 31.
Under the drug czar position, Robredo would oversee all bureaus and agencies involved with the enforcement of the law on prohibited drugs as well as anti-drug programs. “To dispel all doubts on the sincerity of the Chief Executive’s offer, as well as to put a halt to the discordant pessimism of the opposition, the president renews his offer to the vice president…’ said presi-
dential spokesperson Salvador Panelo in a statement. According to him, Duterte is offering the position to Robredo once again after critics called it a “trap” because it would be “impossible for VP Leni to solve the social problem with a limited period of six months and without the support of anti-drug buu PAGE A2
1.5-M drug suspects accounted for – PNP by DARWIN
PESCO ManilaTimes.net
ABOUT 1.5 million drug suspects have been accounted for in the first three years of President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs, the Philippine National Police (PNP) said on Wednesday, October 30. PNP spokesman Brig. Gen. Bernard Banac confirmed to The Manila Times that the drug users surrendered voluntarily to the PNP. Banac’s statement came after Lt. Gen. Archie Gamboa, PNP officer in charge, described the war on drugs as “sucessful.” Maj. Gen. Guillermo Eleazar, PNP chief of directorial staff, said the drug war should continue as Filipinos now felt “safer,” citing the 60-percent drop in crimes nationwide. “It is because of the campaign against illegal drugs. It really caused the improvement on peace and order in the country and the safety of the people,” said Eleazar in a television interview on Wednesday. HUGE CROWD. Hundreds flock to visit their departed loved ones at the Manila North Cemetery, in observance of All Saints’ Day on Friday, Based on PNP data from July 2016 to July 2019, November 1. The Manila North Cemetery was formerly part of the La Loma Cemetery but the latter was later separated as an exclusive
THE city of Seattle, Wash. and five legal organizations have filed a lawsuit in California on burial grounds for Catholics. Wednesday, October 30 against the Trump administration for changing the requirements for naturalization, which would make it difficult for immigrants to qualify for the fee waiver when applying for citizenship. This comes after another effort to tighten the United States immigration system when the Trump administration on Friday, Oct. 25 updated the requirements to get naturalization fees waived, which the lawsuit cited as “a sudden and unlawful policy change.” “The American promise must be open to all,” Seattle Mayor Jenny A. Durkan said in a statement. “Wealth is not and should never be a requirement of being an American citizen. Seattle will fight for the promise of America and against a pay-to-play approach to citizenship.” The five legal service providers include the Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Inc. The 6.5-quake damaged a mid-rise condominium in Davao City. u PAGE A4 Philstar.com photo
PNA photo by Joey O. Razon
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23 dead after series of earthquakes in Mindanao by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
A TOTAL of 23 people have died from the earthquakes that have struck areas of Mindanao since mid-October, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said in its latest report. Released on Friday, November 1, the numbers said seven were killed on October 16, when a 6.3 magnitude quake struck the northeast portion of Tulu-
nan, Cotabato. Ten people were killed during the Tuesday, October 29 6.6 magnitude quake that hit the same area, while six died in the 6.5 magnitude on Thursday, Oct. 31 that hit Cotabato and neighboring areas. The tectonic tremor on Thursday was 33 kilometers northeast of Tulunan town — the same epicenter of Tuesday’s magnitude 6.6 quake and Oct. 16’s magnitude 6.3. In addition to the death toll of the three quakes combined, two
others remain missing and 618 injured, as of press time. On Friday, November 1, another earthquake hit Mindanao — this time, a magnitude 5.5 quake off the southern province of Davao Occidental, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) said. According to the state seismologists, the most recent earthquake hit 334 kilometers southeast of Sarangani town around 10:30 a.m. u PAGE A3
Philippine cities among most threatened by rising seas Ancajas title defense canceled
MANILA — Some 70 percent of the people at risk of annual floods and constant inundation due to rising seas are in eight Asian countries including the Philippines, according to new research. The study, produced by Climate Central, a science organization based in New Jersey, and published in the journal Nature Communications said rising seas could affect three times more people by 2050 than previously thought, threatening to all but erase some of the world’s great coastal cities. Also named together with the Philippines were China, Bangladesh, India, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand and Japan. Entire coastal cities could be wiped out if sea defenses are not According to a study, climate change will put pressure on cities in multiple ways. Even as global warming floods more places, it will also push poor farmers off the land to seek work put in place, according to the in cities. Philstar.com photo study.
The authors of the paper published on Tuesday, October 29, developed a more accurate way of calculating land elevation based on satellite readings, a standard way of estimating the effects of sea level rise over large areas, and found that the previous numbers were far too optimistic. The new research shows that some 150 million people are now living on land that will be below the high-tide line by midcentury. Southern Vietnam could all but disappear. More than 20 million people in Vietnam, almost one-quarter of the population, live on land that will be inundated. Much of Ho Chi Minh City, the nation’s economic center, would disappear with it, according to u PAGE A2
as opponent runs into visa issues by AJPRESS
Jerwin “Pretty Boy” Ancajas Inquirer.net photo
THE anticipated fight between Filipino boxer Jerwin “Pretty Boy” Ancajas and Mexican fighter Jonathan Javier Rodriguez on Saturday, November 2 has been canceled after Rodriguez did not get a U.S. visa in time. Ancajas, the 115-pound fighting pride of the Philippines, was set for the eighth defense of his IBF junior bantamweight world title on Saturday at the Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California. The 27-year-old Ancajas (311-1, 21 KOs) is one of boxing’s longest-reigning and most active champions, as only two current world champions (Deontay u PAGE A2