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JUNE 19-25, 2020 Volume 13 - No. 33 • 16 Pages 133-30 32nd Ave., Flushing, NY 11354 • 2500 Plaza S. Harborside Financial Center, Jersey City, NJ 07311 • Tel. (212) 655-5426 • Fax: (818) 502-0858
Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, LAS VEGAS, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
US voices concern over Ressa’s guilty verdict by Ritchel
Mendiola AJPress
THE United States on Tuesday, June 16, expressed concern over Rappler executive editor and chief executive officer Maria Ressa and writer Reynaldo Santos Jr. being convicted of
cyber libel by a Manila court. “The United States is concerned by the trial court’s verdict against journalists Maria Ressa and Reynaldo Santos and calls for resolution of the case in a way that reinforces the U.S. and Philippines’ long shared commitment to freedom of expression, including for members
of the press,” said U.S. Department of State spokesperson Morgan Ortagus in a statement. Meanwhile, U.S. Senators Edward Markey, Patrick Leahy, and Dick Durbin slammed the court’s verdict, calling it a “travesty of justice.”
“It is shocking to see the Philippine government strain to extend its legal reach to target journalists while so many extrajudicial abuses cry out for investigation and prosecution,” they said. “At the very least, the defendants must be
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PH tourism stakeholders tell DATELINE balikbayans: Fil-Am man in SF Postpone trips to confronted by white the homeland couple for stenciling ‘Black Lives Matter’ in front of own home
USA
from the AJPress NEWS TEAM across America
by Momar
G. Visaya
AJPress
A FILIPINO American man was stenciling “Black Lives Matter” in chalk outside his San Francisco home last week when a white couple confronted him and accused him of defacing private property. A video of the June 9 encounter, which has reached over 19.6 million views on Twitter,
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Palace: Duterte to wait for anti-terror bill to be vetted before making his decision by Ritchel
Mendiola AJPress
MANY Filipinos in the United States are looking at the possibility of traveling back to the Philippines even while the world is going through a pandemic. However, the tourism sector stakeholders are asking them not to travel back in the next three to four months, if possible. “I wouldn’t really recommend it for now, nakita naman natin (we have seen) how stringent the policies are, the quarantine, swab testing. Definitely we see that the balikbayan market, the
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Nanay Fedelina, human Remittances fall by trafficking survivor kept by $100 billion worldwide Filipino family for 4 generations in Southern California, dies at 83 by Pia Lee-Brago Philstar.com
by Christina
Malacañang on Wednesday, June 17, said President Rodrigo Duterte will be waiting for the vetting process to be finished before deciding whether to sign or veto the anti-terrorism bill. When he spoke about the anti-terror bill, he was saying, “I’m waiting for Senator Lacson to finalize his commas and periods before I sign the bill,’” said presidential
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HOMEWARD BOUND. The local government of Isabela dispatched buses to transport locally stranded individuals (LSI) in Metro Manila to Isabela province on Wednesday, June 17. The buses are stationed at the Quezon Memorial Circle in Quezon City. Inquirer.net photo by Grig Montegrande
M. Oriel
AJPress
Fedelina Lugasan, 1936-2020 AJPress photo by Noel Ty
FEDELINA Lugasan, a former domestic worker who spent 65 years enslaved by a Filipino family, died on Thursday, June 11 in Long Beach, California. She was 83. Fondly known as Nanay Fedelina, Lugasan was hospitalized earlier in the week for respiratory problems as-
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THE remittances that over 200 million migrants send to support their 800 million family members back home have fallen by more than $100 billion as millions lost their jobs amid the coronavirus disease 2019 or COVID-19 pandemic, according to the United Nations International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). Pedro de Vasconcelos,
head of IFAD financing facility for remittances, said the economic impact of the pandemic has led to the loss of millions of jobs in developed and developing countries in the world. He said migrant workers are among the most directly affected as they worked in economic sectors adversely impacted by the economic slowdown. These sectors include construction, hospitality industry, tourism, food,
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