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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
Volume 22 - No.48 • 12 Pages
T he F ilipino A mericAn c ommuniTy n ewspAper
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DATELINE
USA
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
FTC scales language barriers to battle scammers THE Federal Trade Commission has a new strategy for battling fraud. As of this fall, its Language Access Initiative provides interpreters who can take fraud reports and provide advice in many more languages than just English and Spanish. At a November 21 press briefing the federal agency hosted with Ethnic Media Services – simultaneously translated into Spanish, Korean and Mandarin – two FTC officials and a lawyer/journalist described how the new multilingual services work and some of the ways they’re expected to help protect consumers. “We’ve long had the ability to hear from people in English and Spanish,” said Monica Vaca, deputy director in the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “Getting reports from people in other languages has been a limitation for us.” Vaca emphasized the importance of people making those reports not just for their own sake but to help the FTC get the word out before more people are scammed. u PAGE 2
DECEMBER 1-7, 2023
Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, SAN DIEGO, LAS VEGAS, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY
‘ALL FILIPINOS AFFECTED BY THE WAR HAVE BEEN ACCOUNTED FOR’
Bongbong Marcos: Gov’t secured last Filipino held by Hamas in Gaza by Jean Mangaluz Inquirer.net
MANILA – President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said on Wednesday, November 29 that the government has located and secured the second and last Filipino
held by Hamas in Gaza. Marcos said Noralyn Babadilla is now in Israel. “I have entrusted our officials at the Philippine Embassy in Tel Aviv to attend to her needs in coordination with Israeli authorities. With this positive development, I am pleased to inform the
NO CRACKS IN UNITEAM
‘We just work as Pres. and VP,’ says Duterte on Marcos by Zacarian Sarao Inquirer.net
More than 60 Asian American groups raise alarm over surveillance program LOS ANGELES – More than 60 Asian American groups have opposed the anticipated reauthorization of a controversial surveillance measure that could be used to racially profile their communities. In a letter to Congress, the groups said the statute – Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) – has been “misused” to spy on Americans in the past. “The consequences of such misuse have had a profound impact on our Asian American community, resulting in wrongful targeting, unjust surveillance and devastating tolls on careers, livelihoods and reputations,” said the letter signed by a coalition of 63 Asian American organizations. The coalition is led by the Stop AAPI Hate, Asian Americans Advancing Justice (AAAJ) and the Asian American Scholar Forum. Section 702 is a surveillance program designed to collect information related to national security threats from foreigners outside the United States. It is granted through annual certifications and relies on the mandatory assistance of American telecom providers. (Nimfa U. Rueda/Inquirer.net)
FAREWELL MALI. A boy sits beside a replica of Vishwa Ma’ali, popularly known as “Mali,” the country’s lone elephant who died at the age of 49 at the Manila Zoological and Botanical Garden on Tuesday, Nov. 28. Manila Mayor Honey Lacuna, in a press briefing on Wednesday, Nov. 29, raised the possibility of subjecting the animal’s remains to taxidermy and preserving her bones as an attraction to visitors. PNA photo by Yancy Lim
MANILA — No “cracks” exist between the MarcosDuterte tandem, otherwise known as the ‘UniTeam,’ Vice President Sara Duterte herself said on Tuesday, November 28. Duterte made the pronouncement after President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. recently revealed that the prospect of the Philippines reintegrating as a state party to the International Criminal Court (ICC) is currently being studied. His statement fueled speculation that differences may have started to form within the political teamup. The speculation is further fanned with alleged plans within the House of Representatives to impeach the vice president. “Wala naman. Wala namang [cracks]. (There’s none. There aren’t any cracks),” said Duterte at the sidelines of “Bata, Bida Ka!” program for the 31st National Children’s Month. According to Duterte, her partnership with Marcos u PAGE 2
2023 digital lending in PH tipped to hit $489M ‘Philippines must build up defense capability’ by ronnel W. Domingo Inquirer.net
MANILA – The Philippine digital lending market is expected to grow by 45.4 percent to reach $488.8 million in 2023 from $336 million in 2022 and is poised for a “rampant surge” over the next four years, according to PayNEXT360. The research and consulting firm — which holds offices in the United Kingdom, the United States and India — said in a report that the adoption of alternative lending channels in the Philippines is growing by an aver-
age of 36.2 percent yearly during the forecast period of 2023-2027. This means that the market is expected to ring up $1.68 billion by 2027, thanks mainly to digital banking service providers such as neo-banks and financial technology or fintech firms. PayNEXT360 describes alternative lending as ranging from personalized business-to-consumer offerings like payroll advances to strategic business-to-business solutions like lines of credit. Payment instruments for these transacu PAGE 2
Sara appeals to DOJ: Don’t cooperate with ICC by neil JaySon ServalloS Philstar.com
Vice President Sara Duterte
nation that all Filipinos affected by the war have been accounted for,” the president said in a post on X (formerly Twitter). Marcos also thanked Israeli authorities for overseeing Babadilla’s release. u PAGE 2
MANILA — While maintaining that President Marcos’ foreign policy decisions should be followed, Vice President Sara Duterte said she would urge the Department of Justice (DOJ) not to cooperate in the International Criminal Court (ICC)’s investigation of the bloody war on drugs during the administration of her father. Asked about Marcos’ softened tone regarding the issue of cooperation with the ICC, Duterte said, “We all should respect the position of the president, being the chief Photo from Facebook/@MayorIndaySaraDuterteOfficial/ architect of foreign policy. His
position should be the position of all.” But she stressed her office would continue to assert its position against cooperating with the ICC’s investigation on her father’s drug war. “But we will continue to reach out to DOJ regarding our position on this matter… and we will lay down the legal basis of our position,” she told reporters on Monday, November 27. Last week, Marcos said proposals for the country to rejoin the ICC are “under study,” raising the possibility of ICC prosecutors being allowed to investigate and possibly prosecute Duterte and u PAGE 5
by FranciSco Tuyay ManilaTimes.net
DEFENSE Secretary Gilbert Teodoro Jr. said on Monday, November 27 the Philippines must build up its defense capability to counter China’s expansionist claims in the West Philippine Sea, which threaten the survival of future generations of Filipinos. Speaking at a symposium in Camp Aguinaldo, Teodoro said China defends its incursions in Philippine waters with arguments that contradict international law. “What China is doing is to contain the survival of future generations of Filipinos,” the official said. He said the Philippines is one of the five countries whose sovereignty is protected by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos). “It is not only for us, but it is for the peace and prosperity of our future generations that we are able to explore, exploit and protect natural resources that rightfully belong to [the] Republic of the Philippines patrimony and if we fail in doing so, we are doing a disservice to future generations and for
the rest of mankind,” Teodoro said. Experts on maritime law also shared their insights on territorial and sovereign rights during the symposium. China continues to assert its claims on the West Philippine Sea using harassment and intimidation. It has prevented Filipino fishers from entering the Bajo de Masinloc or Scarborough Shoal, which is well within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone (EEZ), and Chinese ships have been harassing boats delivering supplies to Filipino soldiers stationed at the Ayungin Shoal. To respond to challenges to its sovereignty in the disputed areas, the Philippines must have “robust armed forces and defense mechanisms,” Teodoro said. “We have to build a resilient, redundant and self-reliant defense system,” he said. To achieve that, the Defense department is strengthening its logistical capability. “We’ve built logistical reserves, and we in the Defense department are totally committed to that reserve u PAGE 2