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AUG U ST 1 7-23, 2018 Volume 11 - No. 43 • 2 Sections – 16 Pages
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Fed up with fighting corruption, Duterte mulls resignation Only if Marcos or Escudero replaces him by CHRISTINA
MENDEZ AND ALEXIS ROMERO Philstar.com
MANILA — Exhausted and frustrated over his failure to curb widespread corruption in government, President Duterte said he is ready to step down before his term ends in 2022. But Duterte prefers the likes of former senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. and Sen. Francis Escudero to succeed him as he claimed that Vice President Leni Ro-
DATELINE
bredo “cannot do the job.” “Guys, I want you to know that I am thinking of resigning because I’m tired,” Duterte said during a gathering of business leaders led by Manny V. Pangilinan of the MVP Group, Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala, Lucio Tan as well as diplomats at Malacañang on Tuesday, August 14.
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SISTER CITY AGREEMENT. Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop smiles as he receives a gift (his portrait done over the native T’nalak weave) from the local government of General Santos City in the Philippines led by its Vice Mayor Shirlyn Bañas-Nograles. Fulop and Bañas-Nograles signed a sister city memorandum of agreement between the two cities and exchanged tokens after the simple rites. The MOA calls for the two cities to pursue cultural, educational and business exchanges, aside from “cross visits of government officials, employees, and public and private organizations to learn about effective governance and efficient public service.” Looking on are (left) Jersey City Council President Rolando Lavarro, program host Darlene Dilangalen Borromeo and General Santos City Council Member Shandee Theresa Pestaño. AJPress photo by Momar G. Visaya
Sara Duterte, Imee Marcos forge 9-party alliance
USA
by MATTHEW
REYSIO-CRUZ Inquirer.net
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
Wyoming officials refuse to return Balangiga bells WYOMING officials have refused to return the Balangiga bells to the Philippines as they are deemed “memorials” to the casualties of the Philippine-American War. In a statement, the all-Republican delegation comprising of U.S. Senators Mike Enzi and John Barrasso, and U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney, said, “These bells are memorials to American war dead and should not be transferred to the Philippines.” “We’ve received assurances that the bells will be returned to the Catholic Church and treated with the respect and honor they deserve,” U.S. Embassy press attache Trude Raizen said on Saturday, August 11, in a report from The Philippine Star. Raizen also emphasized the value of the bells for both Filipinos and Americans. “We are aware that the Bells of Balangiga have deep significance for a number of people, both in the United States and in the Philippines,” she added. Presidential spokesperson Harry Roque
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Legal immigrants’ permanent residency may be rejected if they’ve used certain welfare programs
About 3.8 million Asians and Pacific Islanders rely on forms of public benefit
THE White House may go forth with a rule change that would give legal immigrants looking to gain permanent residency a much harder time if they have ever used certain popular welfare programs. The Trump administration has been reviewing the proposal that would curb permanent residency for months, and reports are saying the an official announcement of the policy may come soon. The move would be among the latest made by White House adviser Stephen Miller who has long been working to restrain legal immigration. And because the underlying law would remain the same, such a move would not require congressional approval.
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Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte (second, from left, front row), chair of Hugpong ng Pagbabago, Ilocos Norte Gov. Imee Marcos of Ilocano Timpuyog, Sen. Cynthia Villar of the Nacionalista Party and other leaders of political parties formalize their alliance in a covenant-signing event in preparation for midterm elections in 2019. Inquirer.net photo by Earvin Perias
A SUPERCOALITION is emerging as Hugpong ng Pagbabago, the regional party formed and chaired by Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte, has forged an alliance with nine other political parties, including those of Ilocos Norte Gov. Imee Marcos and Sen. Cynthia Villar. Hugpong joined forces on Monday, August 13, with three national parties — Nacionalista Party (NP), Nationalist People’s Coalition (NPC) and National Unity Party (NUP) — and six local parties — Ilocano Timpuyog, Alyansa Bol-anon Alang sa
Kausaban (Abaka), Aggrupation of Party for Progress (APP), Kambilan, PaDayon Pilipino (PP) and Serbisyo sa Bayan Party. The NP is Villar’s political party, while the NPC was founded by tycoon Eduardo “Danding” Cojuangco Jr. The NUP was formed by former members of the LakasKampi-CMD and allies of former President and now Speaker Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. Mayor Duterte, the influential daughter of President Rodrigo Duterte, and representatives of the nine parties signed an agreement to form an alliance at The
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Ex-tourism chief claims ‘nothing illegal’ in PTV deal OFW remittances down 4.5% by AJPRESS FORMER Department of Tourism (DOT) Secretary Wanda Tulfo-Teo denied all corruption allegations hurled at her regarding the 60 million-peso advertisement deal with PTV4 at a Senate hearing on Tuesday, August 14. “With confidence, I can say that there’s nothing illegal in the said contract,” Tulfo-Teo said. The former tourism secretary testified before the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee that the accusations against her were only meant to discredit her. “I have been defamed, maligned and worse, crucified by allegations of corruptions and competence, all made up to SENATE INQUIRY. Senator Nancy Binay inquires about the look as truth,” Tulfo-Teo said. In a report from the Inquirer, Teo said Department of Tourism ad budget during the Senate Blue Ribbon
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hearing on the P60-million Department of Tourism ad placement on PTV4 on Tuesday, August 14. Senate photos
Worker repatriations, lower Middle East deployments blamed for decline in June inflows by DAXIM LUCAS
During the same month, cash remittances coursed through banks fell by 4.5 percent year-onTHE government’s decision to year to $2.4 billion. The countries repatriate thousands of Filipino that registered the biggest deworkers suffering from abusive clines in cash remittances in June work conditions in the Middle were the United Arab Emirates East took an immediate toll on (UAE), Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. the amount of dollars being sent “The overseas Filipino workers home as the first half of 2018 repatriation program of the govended, the central bank said on ernment may have partly affectWednesday. ed the remittance flows for the The Bangko Sentral ng Pili- month,” the central bank said. pinas said that personal remitIn the first two months of 2018, tances for June declined by 4.9 a total of 4,149 OFWs were repapercent to $2.6 billion compared triated from UAE, Saudi Arabia to the same period last year. Inquirer.net
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Fil-Am community mourns the death of historian and author, Dawn Mabalon by AJPRESS THE Filipino-American community across the United States is mourning the death of Dawn Bohulano Mabalon, a community leader, professor, author, historian and mentor. Mabalon, 46, died on Friday, August 10 while on a family vacation in Kauai, Hawaii. She was an associate professor of history at San Francisco State University, specializing in Philippine and Filipino-American history, as well as race and ethnicity and food cultures. A third-generation Pinay, Mabalon was born and raised in Stockton, where her grandfathers settled in the 1920s. Stockton was home to the largest popu-
lation of Filipinos outside of the Philippines from the 1920s to 1960s. She graduated from Edison High School and San Joaquin Delta College. Fresh out of college in 1999, she, along with Dillon Delvo, co-founded Little Manila Foundation to help save the last remaining buildings and residents of Stockton’s Little Manila. Mabalon went on to receive a master’s degree in Asian American studies from the University of California, Los Angeles, and a Ph.D. in history from Stanford University. Following her childhood aspirations to become a writer, she authored two books about Filipino-American history: “Filipinos in Stockton” (2008) and “Little Manila Is in the Heart: The Making of the Fili-
pina/o American Community in Stockton, California” (2013), which was born from her doctoral thesis at Stanford. The latter book — for which she received an honorable mention for the Frederick Jackson Turner Award by the Organization of American Historians — traced the growth of Stockton’s FilAm community, the formation of Little Manila and efforts to preserve it. Her writings were based on oral histories, archives, as well as stories from the generation of her father, Ernest Tirona Mabalon, who passed away at 79 while she was writing the book. Her paternal grandfather, Pablo “Ambo” Mablaon, ran a popular Fil-Am diner, the Lafayette Lunch Counter, in the heart of
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Dawn Bohulano Mabalon Photo by Jeremy Keith Villaluz