LAS VEGAS
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DECEMBER 14-20, 2023
T HE F ILIPINO A MERICAN C OMMUNITY N EWSPAPER
Volume 34 - No. 50 • 12 Pages
2770 S. Maryland Pkwy., Suite 201 Las Vegas, NV 89109 Tel: (702) 792-6678 • Fax: (702) 792-6879
Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY
DATELINE USA FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
$5.5 million in stolen wages returned to residential caregivers Settlement makes California’s largest residential care facility wage theft case
PH, US vow closer coordination amid worsening China acts by MICHAEL PUNONGBAYAN, ALEXIS ROMERO
officials of the Philippines and the United States held a teleconference last Monday, December 11 to discuss the need for them to work more closely in MANILA — With China reportedly becoming addressing pressing security issues in the region. The phone meeting between Armed Forces of bolder in harassing Filipinos and committing illegal activities in Philippine territorial waters, top military the Philippines (AFP) chief Gen. Romeo Brawner Philstar.com
Marcos says Philippines ‘undeterred’ by China’s actions in West PH Sea
LOS ANGELES - One hundred and fortyeight individuals who worked at Adat Shalom Board and Care for the Elderly in the San Fernando Valley recovered $5.5 million in wages stolen from them while they were working as caregivers. Through conversations with the workers, organizers with the Pilipino Workers Center discovered that Adat Shalom managers and owners were committing wage theft. An investigation into Adat Shalom by the state Labor Commissioner’s Office found that workers at six Adat Shalom locations in Southern California, the majority of whom are Filipino immigrants, worked 24-hour shifts, six days per week for as little as $2.40/hour with no overtime. Workers were required to
by GAEA KATREENA CABICO Philstar.com
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Who are America’s new ethnic voters? AT a Dec. 8 Ethnic Media Services briefing, experts discussed who these new ethnic voters are, what motivates them, and how their affiliations compare to their white counterparts. AAPI party preference “When it comes to candidates, voters’ party identification shapes their opinions on issues more than the other way around,” said Karthick Ramakrishnan, public policy professor at UC Riverside, AAPI Data founder and California 100 co-founder. “For example,” he continued, “no matter your opinions on taxes or environmental protection, your Republican, Democratic or Independent identity will likely shape them over time.” Among AAPI voters, he found that Vietnamese Americans tend to identify as most strongly Republican, while Japanese and Indian Americans tend to identify as most strongly Democratic. “So it’s interesting that Indian Americans like Vivek Ramaswamy and Nikki Haley have risen to such prominence in Republican leadership, far from Indian American voter opinion,” he noted. Nevertheless, Ramakrishnan added, the PAGE 4
Jr. and Gen. Charles Brown Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the U.S., came after a weekend of tension in the West Philippine Sea where Chinese coast guard and militia ships harassed and tried to drive away Philippine vessels on humani PAGE 2
NOCHE BUENA STAPLE. Less than two weeks before Christmas Day, customers turn up at a famous ham store in Quiapo, Manila on Wednesday, Dec. 13. Ham is a common dish served in Filipino households during holiday feasts. PNA photo by Yancy Lim
MANILA — President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said the government remains “undeterred” despite China’s continued harassment of Philippine vessels in the West Philippine Sea. “The aggression and provocations perpetrated by the China Coast Guard (CCG) and their Chinese Maritime Militia against our vessels and personnel over the weekend have only further steeled our determination to defend and protect our nation’s sovereignty, sovereign rights, and jurisdiction in the West Philippine Sea,” Marcos said in a statement late Sunday, December 10. He stressed that China’s “illegal presence in our waters and dangerous actions against our citizens is an outright and blatant violation of international law and the rules-based international order.” Manila and Beijing have traded accusations over the collisions of their vessels. PAGE 4
DOT surpasses 5 million mark in foreign tourist arrivals for 2023 by ZACARIAN SARAO Inquirer.net
MANILA — Department of Tourism (DOT) has already breached the 5-million mark in international tourist arrivals for 2023. According to DOT Secretary Christina Frasco, international tourist arrivals as of December 12 have been logged at 5,067,752. “With the holidays already here, we are confident we will further breach the target that was set this year at 4.8 million international arrivals,” said Frasco at the
presentation of the accomplishments of DOT. She added that with this development, tourism has contributed nearly P440 billion to the Philippine economy in 2023. In 2022, 2.6 million foreign tourists visited the country. In 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, the tourists numbered to over 163,000. Frasco said the country’s recovery from the pandemic, in terms of international tourist arrivals, from January to November 2023 is at 65 percent. PAGE 4
Maria Ressa
Contributed photo
Third petition filed vs Sara Duterte’s secret funds reaches SC Philippines drops foreign ownership case against Ressa by IAN LAQUI Philstar.com
MANILA — Current and former lawmakers from the Makabayan Bloc on Monday, December 11 filed a petition for certiorari, challenging Vice President Sara Duterte’s allocation of P125 million for confidential and intelligence funds (CIF). Among the petitioners include Rep. France Castro (ACT-Teachers), Rep. Arlene Brosas (Gabriela), Rep. Raoul Manuel (Kabataan), Bayan Muna Chairman Neri Colmenares, former Bayan Former Bayan Muna Representatives Neri Colmenares, Carlos Zarate, together with Rep. France Castro Muna Partylist Representatives (ACT-Teachers) and Rep. Arlene Brosas (Gabriela) at the Supreme Court filing a petition against the Carlos Zarate, Ferdinand Gaite, 2022 Confidential and Intelligence Funds of Vice President Sara Duterte.
Philstar.com photo
Eufemia Cullamat and Raymond Palatino. This will be the third petition against Duterte’s confidential and intelligence funds. The petitioners urged the Supreme Court to review the constitutionality of transferring the Office of the President’s contingency fund to the Office of the Vice President’s confidential and intelligence funds, questioning both the transfer itself and its subsequent utilization. “Petitioners assail the constitutionality of the release of P125 million confidential funds by the Office of the President (OP) to the Office of the Vice President (OVP) in late December 2022, PAGE 4
MANILA — A foreign ownership case against Philippine Nobel laureate Maria Ressa has been dropped, her media outlet said Wednesday, December 13, but the journalist still faces the threat of imprisonment on other charges. Ressa, who won a Nobel Peace Prize in 2021, has been fighting multiple charges filed during former president Rodrigo Duterte’s administration. A vocal critic of Duterte and his deadly drug war, Ressa has long maintained that the charges against her and Rappler, the news website she co-founded in 2012, were politically motivated.
Ressa, 60, was acquitted on five government charges of tax evasion earlier this year. The Department of Justice has now dropped a charge alleging Ressa illegally put Rappler under foreign control through the 2015 sale of foreign depositary receipts to U.S. investment firm Omidyar Network, her lawyers Amal Clooney and Caoilfhionn Gallagher said in a statement on Tuesday, December 12. Rappler confirmed the department’s decision on Wednesday. “Again, facts win. Truth wins. Justice wins. We will continue to PAGE 2