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DECEMBER 21-27, 2023
T HE F ILIPINO A MERICAN C OMMUNITY N EWSPAPER
Volume 34 - No. 51 • 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
Man who assaulted Filipina in New York pleads guilty to anti-Asian hate crime WITH anti-semitic attacks on the rise, let’s not forget that anti-Asian hate is still in the picture. Recently, a man fresh out of his parole hit off an unpleasant encore brutally assaulting a 65-year-old Filipino woman in New York. Brandon Elliott, who pleaded guilty to antiAsian hate crime, already had a crime history. He was on parole for killing his mother. This time, a Filipino American woman in New York was left battered and bruised. According to the criminal complaint, Elliott approached the victim shouting, “F*ck you, you don’t belong here,” before the violent attack, reported by AM New York. And as if that wasn’t enough, Elliott took out a knife and threatened a Good Samaritan trying to thwart the assault. Police caught him a few days later. He pleaded guilty to assault as a hate crime and criminal possession of a
Marcos says ‘paradigm shift’ needed in diplomacy with China by GAEA KATREENA CABICO Philstar.com
MANILA — President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. emphasized the need for a “paradigm shift” in tackling China’s increasingly aggressive behavior in
the West Philippine Sea as diplomatic efforts with summoning Chinese envoys—had been disregarded Beijing were heading in a “poor direction.” by Beijing. In an interview with Japanese media Saturday, “We have been doing this for many years now, December 16, Marcos said “traditional methods with very little progress,” Marcos was quoted as of diplomacy”—such as sending note verbales and PAGE 2
Filipinos upbeat on 2024 economic prospects by KRISTINA MARALIT ManilaTimes.net
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California EDD language access expanded to include Tagalog LOS ANGELES – California’s Employment Development Department (EDD) is expanding language access options, which will include Tagalog starting March 2024. By that time, California residents can apply for unemployment benefits in the myEDD web portal and UI Online and manage their claims via application forms translated into Tagalog, Korean and Armenian, EDD has announced. This is in addition to the Spanish, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese and Vietnamese application forms already being offered. These seven languages represent the top languages spoken by working-age adults in California. “This significant enhancement to myEDD and UI Online is an important milestone in our multilingual expansion to better serve California’s diverse communities,” said EDD Director Nancy Farias. “This significant enhancement to myEDD and UI Online is an important milestone in our multilingual expansion to better serve California’s diverse communities,” said EDD Director Nancy Farias. PAGE 2
BUDGET. President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. led the ceremonial signing of the P5.768-trillion 2024 national budget on Wednesday, December 20, calling on agencies to carry out the expenditure program lawfully and to honor the taxpayers who made the next year’s budget possible. Speaking during the signing ceremony in Malacañang, President Marcos reminded agencies implementing the expenditure program to fight red tape “that leads to underspending and overspending that disregards legal guardrails,” emphasizing further that these are ‘two sides of the same coin.’ Malacañang photo
MORE Filipinos are optimistic about the country’s economic prospects for 2024, the Publicus Asia’s yearend survey showed. Conducted from November 29 to December 4, the poll reflected a slight improvement in the public outlook of the country’s current state, from 43 percent to 45 percent. In terms of region, optimism in North-Central Luzon rose from 43 percent in the third quarter to 49 percent in the fourth quarter, South Luzon from 40 percent to 45 percent, and the Visayas from 41 percent to 47 percent. Optimism sharply declined in Mindanao, from 50 percent to 44 percent. The outlook on the country’s direction has recovered, surging from 61 percent in the third quarter to 66 percent in the fourth quarter. The positive views on economic prospects for the next quarter went up from 57 percent to 67 percent. This positive trend was observed across all demographics. “Household Financial Prospects for the Next Quarter also exhibit a positive trajectory, increasing from 62 PAGE 2
Groups say human rights in PH remain under threat even after Duterte by CRISTINA ELOISA BACLIG Inquirer.net
MANILA — Marking the 75th year of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, various groups in the Philippines claimed that the country’s human rights situation has barely improved, saying President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. has transitioned into a “carefully crafted” persona that appeared to have a better human rights record. Last December 10, countries across the world observed International Human Rights Day and commemorated the 75th anniversary
of what the United Nations (UN) described as “one of the world’s most groundbreaking global pledges”: the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). The UDHR was officially announced by the UN General Assembly in Paris on December 10, 1948. It was the first major step in establishing fundamental human rights intended for universal protection. With translations in over 500 languages, it holds the distinction of being the world’s Overseas Filipino worker Gelienor “Jimmy” Pacheco, a freed Hamas hostage, hugs his loved ones most translated document. The landmark document lists down the upon arrival at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 1 in Parañaque City on Monday, Dec. 18. PNA photo by Yancy Lim PAGE 4
Filipino who was held hostage by Marcos on 2024 budget: Secret fund issue already settled Hamas finally arrives home in PH by DELON PORCALLA, ALEXIS ROMERO Philstar.com
TOKYO — As he prepares to sign the P5.768-trillion budget program on Wednesday, December 20, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on Monday, December 18 declared as a “settled issue” the controversy over the aborted inclusion of P650-million confidential funds in the 2024 budgets of the Office of Vice President Sara Duterte and the education department which she heads. Speaking to reporters who President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on Monday, December 18 declared as a “settled issue” the covered his visit in Tokyo, controversy over the aborted inclusion of P650-million confidential funds in the 2024 budgets Marcos said he was “fairly of the Office of Vice President Sara Duterte and the education department which she heads. comfortable” with the way the Malacañang file photo
budget has turned out, even as he acknowledged that “a little work” has to be done to make sure that the items in the spending plan would be funded. “Yes, I think we are scheduled for Wednesday (December 20),” the president said. “That was actually the initiative of the vice president,” he said when asked about the confidential fund issue that observers said had soured his relationship with Duterte and her supporters. “I’m not actually talking about PAGE 3
by CHARIE ABARCA Inquirer.net
MANILA — Thirty-three-yearold Jimmy Pacheco, one of the two Filipinos previously held hostage by Palestinian group Hamas, has finally arrived in the Philippines. The Department of Migrant Workers (DMW) and its attached agencies welcomed Pacheco on Monday, December 18 along with other Filipinos returning home in time for the holidays. Pacheco was released by Hamas in November after he was taken hostage on October 7. But despite his traumatic
experience, Pacheco said he’ll go back to Israel and continue his work as an Overseas Filipino Worker. “Gaya ng sinabi ko sa asawa ko, babalik po ako ng Israel dahil kahit ganun po ang nakaraan ko, [gusto kong] maibigay ‘yung gusto kong gawin sa kanila. Ganun naman po dapat ang mga magulang,” said Pacheco in press conference on Monday, December 18. (Just like what I told my wife, I will go back to Israel because I want to provide for my family. That’s how parents should be.) “Ayaw ko pong maranasan PAGE 2