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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
Volume 22 - No.49 • 12 Pages
T HE F ILIPINO A MERICAN C OMMUNITY N EWSPAPER
Volume 18 - No. 17 • 2 Sections – 16 Pages
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DECEMBER 8-14, 2023
Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, SAN DIEGO, LAS VEGAS, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY
Islamic State admits hand in Marawi blast DATELINE USA by RICHEL V. UMEL, RYAN ROSAURO
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
Desperate families search for affordable home care
IT’S a good day when Frank Lee, a retired chef, can slip out to the hardware store, fairly confident that his wife, Robin, is in the hands of reliable help. He spends nearly every hour of every day anxiously overseeing her care at their home on the Isle of Palms, a barrier island near Charleston, South Carolina. Robin Lee, 67, has had dementia for about a decade, but the couple was able to take overseas trips and enjoy their marriage of some 40 years until three years ago, when she grew more agitated, prone to sudden outbursts, and could no longer explain what she needed or wanted. He struggled to care for her largely on his own. “As Mom’s condition got more difficult to navigate, he was just handling it,” said Jesse Lee, the youngest of the couple’s three adult children. “It was getting harder and harder. Something had to change, or they would both perish.” Frank Lee’s search for trustworthy home health aides — an experience that millions of American families face — has often been exhausting and infuriating, but he has persisted. He didn’t entirely trust the care his wife would get in an assisted living facility. Last August, when a respite program paid for her brief stay in one so Frank, 69, could take a trip to the mountains, she fell PAGE 4
Uncle Sam wants you to help stop insurers’bogus Medicare advantage sales tactics AFTER an unprecedented crackdown on misleading advertising claims by insurers selling private Medicare Advantage and drug plans, the Biden administration hopes to unleash a special weapon to make sure companies follow the new rules: you. Officials at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services are encouraging seniors and other members of the public to become fraud detectives by reporting misleading or deceptive sales tactics to 800-MEDICARE, the agency’s 24-hour information hotline. Suspects include postcards designed to look like they’re from the government and TV ads with celebrities promising benefits and low fees that are available only to some people in certain counties. The new rules, which took effect Sept. 30, close some loopholes in existing requirements by describing what insurers can say in ads and other promotional materials as well as during the enrollment process. PAGE 5
Inquirer.net
MARAWI CITY — The local affiliate of the terrorist network Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the bombing of a Sunday Mass at the Mindanao State University (MSU) campus, but the Armed Forces of the Philippines has expressed doubt, saying it is validating that claim. The Jihad Terrorism Threat Monitor of the Middle East Media and Research Institute (Memri) tracked that pronouncement on Sunday, December 3 by the Islamic State of East Asia Province (ISEAP), hours after the attack that left four dead and at least 50
wounded. Based on the ISEAP pronouncements documented by Memri, Sunday’s attack was the second this year that mainly targeted Christians — the first being in September when local affiliates killed two farmers in a hinterland village in Kauswagan town, Lanao del Norte. The MSU gym bombing, timed on the first Sunday of Advent, a major event in the Christian calendar, followed four years after a suicide bombing in January 2019 at the Our Lady of Mount Carmel Cathedral in Jolo, Sulu, that killed 23 people. There were at least two similar attacks in Mindanao before those bombings targeting a
Christian gathering—the April 1992 grenade attack at an Easter Sunday procession outside St. Michael Cathedral in Iligan City, which killed five; and the lobbing of two grenades at a Mass in Davao City’s San Pedro Cathedral on Easter Sunday in 1981, killing 17. Son’s last look On Monday, December 4, Iligan Bishop Jose Rapadas led a Mass at the Capin Funeral Homes in Iligan City for Evangeline Aromin, a graduate student from Bansalan, Davao del Sur, and one of the four fatalities in Sunday’s blast. Rapadas, who was joined by Cagayan de Oro PAGE 2
Pope sets prayers for blast victims by EVELYN MACAIRAN Philstar.com
MANILA — Pope Francis expressed his intention to pray for the victims of the bombing attack that occurred during a mass inside a university campus in Marawi City on Sunday, December 3. In @Pontifex, which serves as the pope’s official page on X, formerly Twitter, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church said that he is close to the people of Mindanao. “I wish to assure my prayer for the victims of the attack that occurred this (Sunday) morning in the Philippines, where a bomb exploded during mass. I am close to the families and the people of Mindanao, who have already suffered so much,” said the pontiff from his residences in remarks broadcast in Saint Peter’s Square. Four people died and 45 people were hurt during the explosion at a morning Catholic mass at the Dimaporo Gymnasium of the Mindanao State University (MSU) in Marawi City. According to Vatican News, the pope had sent a telegram to Marawi Bishop Edwin dela Peña, saying he is “deeply saddened to be informed of the injuries and loss of life caused by the bombing.” WORK AS USUAL. President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. signed the Public-Private Partnership Code of the Philippines (PPP Code) and the Internet The message was reportedly signed by Vatican Transactions Act of 2023 on Tuesday, December 5, while in isolation after testing positive for COVID-19. Malacañang photo PAGE 4
Most Filipinos oppose divorce by RED MENDOZA ManilaTimes.net
MAJORITY of Filipinos continue to oppose the passage of a law that would legalize divorce in the country, a survey conducted by OCTA Research showed. OCTA's Tugon ng Masa third-quarter survey showed that 51 percent of adult Filipinos surveyed were not in favor of passing a law that would legalize divorce, while 41 percent were in favor. Nine percent were undecided. Mindanao had the highest percentage of adult Filipinos who favor passing a law that would legalize divorce at 48 percent, followed
by the National Capital Region at 46 percent, while the lowest is in the Visayas at 33 percent. Visayas had the most number of respondents who are not in favor of divorce at 59 percent, while the lowest is in the National Capital Region (NCR) at 39 percent. NCR had the higher number of respondents who were undecided in passing a bill against divorce, at 15 percent. Broken down by region, Northern Mindanao had the most respondents who support divorce at 78 percent, while Cagayan Valley had the highest number who are not in favor of divorce at 96 percent. Younger Filipinos ages 18 to 24 were the PAGE 2
(From left) Department of Tourism (DOT) Undersecretary Shahlimar Hofer Tamano, World Travel Awards (WTA) President and Founder Graham Cooke, and DOT Assistant Secretary Rica Bueno hold the Philippines’ awards from the preeminent WTA in a ceremony held in Dubai on December 1. DOT photo
PH wins 4 major awards in Ex-President Duterte skips preliminary probe of grave threats case World Travel Awards 2023 by GILLIAN N. VILLANUEVA Inquirer.net
ACT Teachers Rep. France Castro and former President Rodrigo Duterte
MANILA — The preliminary investigation of the complaint of grave threats filed by ACT Teachers Rep. France Castro against former President Rodrigo Duterte was reset to Dec. 15 after he failed to appear before the Quezon City Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, December 4. Only his lawyers, Penrose Ann Valles and Kristia Lorraine Caringal, showed up and said they had yet to receive any complaint or subpoena against their client. They were later given a copy of Castro’s complaint affidavit and Inquirer.net photos supplemental complaint affidavit
against Duterte. The lawmaker’s counsel, Rico Domingo, said they did not expect further delays, adding: “We’re not saying this is a delaying tactic, since what the lawyers said, we assume good faith there.” “Now, under Rule 112 of the Revised Penal Code… they have 10 days to respond to the criminal complaint and the supplemental complaint. There will be no delays there, there won’t be another extension,” Domingo said. Duterte had been asked to appear before the Quezon City prosecutor to submit his counteraffidavit in response to Castro’s complaint of grave threats based PAGE 2
by LUISA CABATO Inquirer.net
MANILA — The Philippines bagged four major tourism recognitions from the prestigious World Travel Awards (WTA) 2023, the Department of Tourism (DOT) said on Tuesday, December 5. According to the DOT, the country was once again named the World’s Leading Dive Destination and the World’s Leading Beach Destination, defending its 2022 titles. For the first time, the country was also conferred with the World’s Leading City Destination for its capital, Manila.
The DOT added that the Philippines was also given the Global Tourism Resilience Award for demonstrating “global leadership, pioneering vision, and innovation to overcome critical challenges and adversity.” The country was one of the only five countries that received the award, the agency noted in a press release. The awarding ceremony was held in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on December 1. Other titles received by the Philippines in the WTA 2023 included the World’s Leading Dive Resort (Amanpulo), the World’s PAGE 4