080417 - New York & New Jersey

Page 1

We’ve got you covered from Hollywood to Broadway... and Online!

Volume 10 – Issue 43 • 16 Pages

AUGUST 4-10, 2017

133-30 32nd Ave., Flushing, NY 11354 • Tel. (212) 655-5426 • Fax: (818) 502-0858 • 2500 Plaza S. Harborside Financial Center, Jersey City, NJ 07311 • Tel. (212) 655-5426 • Fax: (818) 502-0858

DATELINE

USA

FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA

Asian American voter potential eyed in 2018 and beyond Rep. Judy Chu, Fil-Am actor/ activist Lou Diamond Phillips discuss importance of mobilizing the AAPI electorate BY now, many are seeing the significance of the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) electorate following the 2016 general election. Particularly, the AAPI community won big during the Senate races and AAPI voter turnout was the largest in American history. As previously reported in the Asian Journal, the Asian American electorate is the fastest-growing voter group in the United States — and political organizations are taking notice. At this year’s Politicon, the annual nonpartisan political convention held in LA, Rep. Judy Chu (D-Calif.) acknowledged the shift in the overall American electorate. “Asian Pacific Islanders are on the rise in this nation and I see it with my own eyes,”

Duterte fires back at Aquino over comments on drug war by AUDREY

MORALLO Philstar.com

MANILA — President Rodrigo Duterte on Wednesday, Aug. 2 blasted his predecessor Benigno Aquino III over remarks on the government’s brutal campaign against illegal drugs and threatened to behead the former president if he gets involved in narcotics. Duterte’s latest tirade, in which he accused some of the former president’s aides of being connected to narcotics, came after Aquino questioned the ef-

mer Interior Secretary Manuel Roxas of being connected to illicit drugs. Duterte said at the anniversary of the Bureau of Internal Revenue: “Mga generals mo noon, yang aide mo, aide ni [Manuel] Roxas puro nasa droga konektado.” The president particularly zeroed in on Vicente Loot, a former police official and now mayor of Daanbantayan in Cebu, whom he accused of threatening him. “Number 1 diyan yung bata niyo si General Loot. Isa pa yang ulol na yan. I

don’t know kung nandito si Loot. P****g ina mo, huwag mo ako takutin general ka,” he said. In a report by The Freeman on Tuesday, Aug. 1, Loot said that the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group regional office in the Central Visayas had “cleared him of alleged involvement in drugs and criminal activities, his alleged failure to implement the anti-drug and criminality programs of the Department of Interior and Local Government, as well as his alleged unexplained wealth.”

u PAGE A2

by DANA

SIOSON AJPress

US conducting talks with PH gov’t to address ISIS threats

u PAGE A2

fectiveness of the government’s war on drugs. “Sabi ni PNoy [Aquino] parang walang nangyari. Sige, pumasok ka sa droga, PNoy, kung hindi kita pinutulan ng ulo buwang ka. Anong walang nangyari. Gago ka,” said the president who regularly uses colorful language when he or his policies are criticized. Duterte said that some of Aquino’s aides and generals were involved in the trade of illegal drugs in the country during his administration. He also accused a former aide to for-

US says South China Sea remains a core issue in ASEAN meet

u PAGE A3

THE United States has been collaborating with the government of the Philippines and other countries within Asia-Pacific to address threats posed by the Islamic State (IS) extremist group in the region. In a press briefing, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson noted that the terror group has gained a foothold in the Philippines, referring to the IS-linked rebels’ attack in Marawi City, Lanao del Sur in Mindanao. “We already see elements of ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) in the Philippines, as you’re aware, gaining a foothold. Some of these fighters have gone to the Philippines from Syria and Iraq,” Tillerson told reporters on Tuesday, August 1. Apart from the Philippines, Tillerson said the U.S. is also conducting talks for cooperation with the governments of Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and Australia to address the threats. He pointed out that the next step to defeat the terrorist group is to recognize it as a global issue. “We are in conversations with the Philippine government, with Indonesia, with Malaysia, with Singapore, with Australia, as partners to recognize this threat, try to get ahead

Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, LAS VEGAS, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

Susan Thornton, Acting Secretary for the U.S. Department of State Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affair

THE United States said that the conflict in South China Sea remains among the major issues to be discussed in Washington’s upcoming meetings with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and other countries. For the first time, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will visit the Philippines next week to participate in the ASEAN Regional Forum, the East Asian Summit, the USASEAN ministerial meeting, and the Lower Mekong Initiative meeting.

u PAGE A2

BIR CELEBRATES 113 YEARS. President Rodrigo Duterte does his signature pose in a photo opportunity with officers of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) during the agency’s 113th Founding Anniversary celebration on Wednesday, Aug. 2. Joining the President are Education Secretary Leonor Briones, Executive Secretary Salvdador Medialdea, BIR Commissioner Caesar Dulay and Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez. Malacañang photo

Aquino hits threats to abolish PCGG, CHR by DANA

SIOSON AJPress

THE Philippine National Police (PNP) on Tuesday, August 1, warned that more operations against personalities involved in illegal drugs will be conducted “without fear or favor.” In a press conference, PNP Chief Director General Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa said the police is building more cases against those tagged in illegal drugs nationwide, following the raid in Ozamiz City that led to the death of 15 people, including its mayor, Reynaldo Parojinog Sr. He remarked that the operation in Oza-

miz City should serve as a warning to others who remain in the illegal drug trade. “We are now conducting a case buildup against them, and when there is a case already, we will operate,” Dela Rosa said. According to him, the PNP will base its case buildup on a list of alleged drug lords and narco politicians earlier announced by President Rodrigo Duterte. The PNP chief, however, assured that those who were erroneously tagged in the list have nothing to fear, as the results of police investigations would surely show whether they are involved in narcotics or Former Pres. Benigno S. Aquino III at the tomb of his parents, former Pres. Corazon C. Aquino not. and Sen. Ninoy Aquino, on the 8th death anniversary of his mother on Tuesday, Aug. 1.

u PAGE A2

Inquirer.net photo by Lyn Rillon

PNP vows more operations Sen. Angara wants revision of tax rules on balikbayan box against drug personalities by WINONA

SADIA Inquirer.net

by DANA

SIOSON AJPress

PNP Chief Ronald Dela Rosa ManilaTimes.net photo

THE Philippine National Police (PNP) on Tuesday, August 1, warned that more operations against personalities involved in illegal drugs will be conducted “without fear or favor.” In a press conference, PNP Chief Director General Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa said the police is building more cases against those tagged in illegal drugs na-

u PAGE A3

Senator Sonny Angara

Inquirer.net photo

THE Department of Finance (DOF) should revise its implementing rules on duty- and tax-free balikbayan boxes to give due benefits to millions of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), Senator Sonny Angara said on Tuesday, Aug. 2. Under the Customs Administrative Order No. 5-2016, which contains the implementing rules and regulations (IRR) of the Customs Modernization Tariff Act (CMTA) as signed by

the DOF and Bureau of Customs (BOC) in December last year, “all balikbayan boxes per sender in any calendar year shall not exceed P150,000.” This rule, Angara said, was contrary to the intent of the CMTA, which allows OFWs to send up to three P150,000worth of duty- and tax-free balikbayan boxes, or not exceeding the amount of P450,000 in a year, given that the goods are not in commercial quantities. “Ang intensyon ng CMTA ay gawing tax-free ang balik-

bayan boxes na may halagang P150,000 times three kada taon, at hindi P150,000 divided by three (The intention of CMTA is to make tax-free the balikbayan boxes amounting to P150,000 times three per year, and not P150,000 divided by three),” Angara said during an oversight committee hearing on the review of CMTA’s implementation. “Ang bawat balikbayan box ay karaniwang naglalaman ng P80,000 worth of items. Talagang pinag-iipunan po ito

u PAGE A2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.