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GÜNTER GRASS
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EAR Lord, it is good to know that Saint Paul was deeply convinced that those who had been called to the faith were the object of God’s special love. He also believed that God would bring to completion in them the work of salvation brought about the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Though life is still fraught with dangers and the attacks of “the flesh,” the believers need not be afraid. They should stand firm, for God is on their side. Amen. EXPLORING GOD’S WORD, FR. SAL PUTZU, SDB AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
‘GLEE’ STAR MATTHEW MORRISON FINDS HIMSELF BACK ON BROADWAY »D4
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Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
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GUNTER GRASS AND WRITING AS A MORAL RESPONSIBILITY B D L. U Los Angeles Times
active duty. When? Why? Since I do not know the exact date and cannot recall the, by then, unstable climate of the war, or list its hot spots from the Arctic to the Caucasus, all I can do for now is string together the circumstances that probably triggered and nourished my decision to enlist. No mitigating epithets allowed. What I did cannot be put down to youthful folly. No pressure from above.” As he acknowledged to the Spanish newspaper El Pais, “I was young, and I wanted to leave home.... I considered the Waffen-SS to be an elite unit. If I had been born three or four years earlier I would, surely, have seen myself caught up in [war] crimes.” That’s an astonishing admission, and coming, as it did, 60 years after the war, it caused an uproar. Why had Grass withheld his relationship with the SS? The truth, of course, was far more complicated; Grass had long discussed his war experience as a way to address the complicity of German society in its Nazi past, although he had avoided talking about the SS, he acknowledged, because of shame. Complicity is one of the lessons of The Tin Drum, as well as of the other two novels in the so-called Danzig Trilogy: Cat and Mouse and Dog Years. For Grass, writing, self-expression, was a moral responsibility, regardless of the controversies it might stir. “[W]riters,” he declared in his 1999 Nobel Prize lecture, “should consider the condition of permanent controversiality to be invigorating, part of the risk involved in choosing the profession. It is a fact of life that writers have always, and with due consideration and great pleasure, spit in the soup of the high and mighty. That is what makes the history of literature analogous to the development and refinement of censorship.” Grass spent six decades operating out of such a premise, as a novelist and essayist, a playwright, artist and poet. (His final book, which has yet to appear in English, was a third volume of memoirs.) Beginning in the late 1950s, he wrote speeches for Berlin Mayor and West German Chancellor Willy Brandt; later, he was an outspoken opponent of reunification, arguing that, because of its history, Germany had abdicated the right to be “strong and united.” This sense of commitment unified his work and public posture, his stature as both artist and human being. Or, as he explained in 1991: “Writers are involved not only with their inner, intellectual lives but also with the process of daily life.... Both my writing and my drawing are invariably mixed up with politics, whether I want them to be or not.” ■
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OW will Gunter Grass be remembered? The German Nobel laureate, who died on Monday at age 87, was not just a novelist, but also a political figure, a voice of conscience, a provocateur. Or, perhaps, it’s more accurate to say that he was a person of letters in the classic mold, in which literature is defined by its engagement with the world. Certainly, that was true of Grass, who came to international attention in 1959 with the publication of his first novel, The Tin Drum. There, he told the story of Oskar Matzerath, a man who, in the physical and metaphoric sense, refuses to grow up.
“Writers should consider the condition of permanent controversiality to be invigorating, part of the risk involved in choosing the profession,” Gunter Grass declared in his 1999 Nobel Prize lecture.
“One must always seek out fresh perspectives,” Grass told the Paris Review about the character. “A dwarf—a child even in adulthood—his size and his passivity make him a perfect vehicle for many different perspectives. He has delusions of grandeur, and that is why he sometimes speaks of himself in the third person, just as young children sometimes do. It is part of his self-glorification. It is like the royal ‘we.’” What Grass was tracing was not just the elusiveness of the line that separates adults and children, but also the way stories can explicate, in some fundamental way, the essence of our circumstance. Grass, who published more than 30 books, came by this perspective honestly. Born in 1927 in Danzig (now Gdansk), he spent six months in the latter part of World War 2 as a teenage tank gunner in an SS unit before being wounded and captured by Allied forces. “In 1943, when I was a 15-year-old schoolboy in Danzig,” he wrote in 2007, “I volunteered for
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S. KOREA FERRY DISASTER The World BusinessMirror
B3-2 Friday, April 17, 2015
Tears, anger mark 1st year of S. Korean ferry disaster
news@businessmirror.com.ph
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HE Supreme Court (SC) has affirmed with finality its ruling directing the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) to subject to a competitive challenge, or to a so-called Swiss challenge, the unsolicited proposal of SM Land Inc. (SMLI) for the acquisition and development of a 33.1-hectare property in Bonifacio South in Taguig City in exchange for P25.9 billion for the government. In a 13-page resolution penned by Associate Justice Presbitero J. Velasco Jr., the Court’s Special Third Division denied the motion for reconsideration filed by the BCDA president seeking the reversal of its ruling issued on August 13, 2014.
VIETNAMESE VILLAGERS BLOCK TRAFFIC TO FIGHT COAL PLANT POLLUTION ANOI, Vietnam—Hundreds of villagers in central Vietnam blocked traffic on the country’s main artery for hours to protest pollution from a coal-fired thermo power plant, a local official said on Thursday. Nguyen Thanh Sang in Binh Thuan province said the villagers threw rocks, bricks and gasoline bombs at riot police who were trying to direct traffic on Wednesday night. About 10 policemen suffered minor injuries. Sang said the 500 protesters left after authorities said their concerns will be addressed, adding traffic on Highway 1 was running early Thursday morning. Tens of thousands of vehicles
P. | | 7 DAYS A WEEK
HIGH COURT ORDERS BCDA TO SUBJECT SM LAND’S UNSOLICITED PROPOSAL TO SWISS CHALLENGE
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The work of salvation
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had stood still on dozens of kilometers on Highway 1 for hours, he said. Sang quoted the villagers as saying they blocked traffic to get attention from the central government after repeated demands in the past were not met. Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai urged the power plant and relevant agencies to control pollution from the plant, the government said on its web site on Thursday. Two turbines at the nineturbine Vinh Tan 2 power plant went into operation a year ago. Many power plants have been built in Vietnam in recent years to meet its power demands that are increasing by more than 10 percent a year. AP
The High Tribunal, in that decision, granted the SMLI petition seeking the nullification of the notice issued by BCDA President and CEO Arnel Paciano D. Casanova terminating the Swiss challenge. C A
Small aircraft lands on US Capitol lawn; pilot arrested
W PEOPLE release balloons during a ceremony to commemorate the first anniversary of the Sewol ferry sinking at a port in Jindo, South Korea, on Thursday. PARK CHUL-HONG/YONHAP VIA AP
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EOUL, South Korea—Tears and grief mixed with raw anger on Thursday as blackclad relatives mourned the 300 people, mostly high-school kids, killed one year ago when the ferry Sewol sank in cold waters off the southwestern South Korean coast. In contrast to the near universal shock and outrage in the weeks following the sinking, the first anniversary of one of the nation’s worst disasters saw more complicated emotions. There is widespread frustration among many South Koreans who see their government as having failed to meaningfully improve
safety standards and hold high-level officials accountable for a disaster blamed in part on incompetence and corruption. Some also express fatigue with the continuing focus on the sinking. Hours before she was to leave on a diplomatic trip to Colombia, South Korean President Park Geun-hye visited a small port on a southwest
island near the site of the sinking to offer her condolences to the bereaved relatives. However, the relatives refused to meet her to protest the government’s handling of the sinking, the presidential Blue House said. Flags in public buildings were lowered to half-staff and a minute of silence was observed in Ansan, the city that lost nearly an entire class of high-school students on a doomed field trip to a southern resort island. A total of 304 people died when the ferry Sewol sank. The city was expecting thousands of visitors at an afternoon memorial service at its mourning site, where Prime Minister Lee Wan Koo visited in the morning, only to be turned back by angry relatives. Relatives of the victims threatened to cancel the service if the government didn’t announce firm plans to salvage the ship and promise a new investigation into the cause of the sinking, according to Pil Kyu Hwang, a lawyer represent-
ing the families. The estimated cost of raising the ferry is between $91 million and $137 million, and it could take as long as one-and-a-half years. Many relatives gathered in Ansan. Some wept and touched pictures of their lost loved ones as they recalled helplessly watching on television as the ferry slowly sank into the sea. Hundreds also gathered at Paengmok Port hours before Park’s visit. Dressed in black, they walked to a lighthouse where hundreds of yellow ribbons were tied to handrails in memory of the victims. A candle light vigil was planned in downtown Seoul, where relatives of the victims have been holding protests for months. Also Thursday, South Korean lawmakers adopted a resolution urging the government to salvage the ferry. Of the 165 lawmakers in the National Assembly session, 161 voted to adopt the resolution, two voted against it and two abstained. AP
Bahrain reforms don’t end rights violations, AI says
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UBAI, United Arab Emirates—Government reforms put in place by Bahraini authorities in the wake of widespread antigovernment protests four years ago have failed to end serious violations of human rights in the strategically important Gulf nation, Amnesty International said in a report released on Thursday. The 79-page report documents what the London-based group calls a “chilling crackdown on dissent” that includes the continued jailing of activists, bans on protests in the capital and instances of torture and other mistreatment of detainees. Western-allied Bahrain, a small island kingdom that is home to the US Navy’s 5th Fleet, was rocked by large-scale protests in February 2011 that were led by the country’s majority Shiites seeking greater political rights from the Sunni monarchy. Bahraini authorities, backed by security forces from nearby Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, crushed the demonstrations, but low-level unrest continues. A fact-finding inquiry into the initial uprising called for overhauls in the political system and investigations into alleged abuses by security forces. Authorities have since put some reforms in place and created new institutions, such as an ombudsman’s office at the Interior Ministry, tasked with hearing
A BAHRAINI anti-government protester holds up a picture of jailed opposition human rights activist Zainab al-Khawaja as she participates in a prayer for al-Khawaja’s freedom after a march in Malkiya, Bahrain, in 2013. AP/HASAN JAMALI
complaints about police misconduct. Amnesty says more must be done. “The international image the authorities have attempted to project of the country as a progressive reformist state committed to human rights masks a far more sinister truth,” said Said Boumedouha, the group’s deputy director of its Middle East and North Africa Program. “Four years on from the uprising, repression is widespread and rampant abuses by the security forces continue,” he added.
Bahraini officials did not respond to a request for comment on the report. Amnesty’s report includes accounts of alleged abuse by police over the past year, including claims by unidentified Bahrainis that they were struck by birdshot or tear gas canisters. Police earlier this month detained prominent rights activist Nabeel Rajab over online social media posts related to Bahrain’s participation in Saudi-led air strikes in
Yemen. He already was appealing a verdict in a separate case involving earlier Twitter comments deemed insulting to government ministries when arrested. Other activists and government opponents are also behind bars, including Ali Salman, the head of alWefaq, the country’s main Shiite opposition group, who is charged with incitement to forcibly topple the government. He denies the allegations. Said Haddadi, the lead researcher on the report, told the Associated Press that Amnesty was allowed to carry out its research on the ground in Bahrain in May of last year and again this past January. While the visits were each limited to five days, Haddadi said he had access to activists as well as government ministers and other officials. “In terms of the access, we didn’t have any issues,” during the trips, he said. The rights group urged Bahrain to take a number of steps, including a sweeping reform of the judiciary and the release of those jailed “for lawfully exercising their right to freedom of expression, association or peaceful assembly.” It also called on Bahrain’s allies, particularly the US, Britain and other European countries, to do more to raise concerns about rights abuses and to push for a comprehensive reform of the justice system. AP
ASHINGTON—Police arrested a man who steered his tiny aircraft onto the lawn of the US Capitol, which houses Congress, after flying through restricted airspace around the National Mall on Wednesday. The pilot was Doug Hughes, 61, a Postal Service worker from Florida, according to a person who was briefed by Capitol Police and revealed the information on condition of anonymity. On his web site, Hughes took responsibility for the stunt and said he was delivering letters to all 535 members of Congress to draw attention to campaign finance corruption. “As I have informed the authorities, I have no violent inclinations or intent,” Hughes wrote on his web site, thedemocracyclub.org. “An ultralight aircraft poses no major physical threat—it may present a political threat to graft. I hope so. There’s no need to worry—I’m just delivering the mail.” A second source, a Senate aide, said Capitol Police knew of the plan shortly before Hughes took off, and said he had previously been interviewed by the US Secret Service. The sources spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss details of the investigation. Capitol Police declined to publicly confirm the man’s identity. Capitol Police identified the open-air aircraft, which sported
the US Postal Service logo and landed about half a city block from the Capitol building, as a “gyrocopter with a single occupant.” Hughes flew to Washington from the vicinity of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, which took about an hour, said Ben Montgomery, a reporter with the Tampa Bay Times. Montgomery said Hughes discussed his plan in advance with the newspaper, had meticulously plotted his flight and considered himself on a mission that was “sort of a mix of P.T. Barnum and Paul Revere.” House of Representatives Homeland Security panel Chairman Michael McCaul said the pilot landed on his own, but authorities were prepared to shoot him down if he had made it much closer to the Capitol. “Had it gotten any closer to the speaker’s balcony they have long guns to take it down, but it didn’t. It landed right in front,” McCaul said. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said the pilot had not been in contact with air traffic controllers and the FAA didn’t authorize him to enter restricted airspace. Airspace security rules that cover the Capitol and the District of Columbia prohibit private aircraft flights without prior coordination and permission. Violators can face civil and criminal penalties. The White House said President Barack Obama had been briefed on the situation. AP
WORLD BANK: CHANNEL REMITTANCES TO INFRA
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AUSTRALIA’S NAURU REFUGEES WILL BE SENT TO CAMBODIA CANBERRA, Australia—Refugees rejected by Australia will soon fly from the Pacific atoll of Nauru to be resettled in Cambodia, the Australian government said on Thursday. A charter flight could fly the first refugees to be resettled in Phnom Penh as early as Monday, according to a copy of a fact sheet that the Refugee Action Collective advocacy group said
has been circulated at Nauru. Immigration Minister Peter Dutton’s office did not specify when the first group would fly under a bilateral agreement signed by Cambodia and Australia last September. “The first group of volunteers is anticipated to depart for Cambodia in the near future,” his office said in a statement. AP
PARTY TREASURER NABBED IN BRAZIL KICKBACK CASE RIO DE JANEIRO—Federal police on Wednesday detained the treasurer of Brazil’s governing Workers’ Party in the wide-ranging investigation into corruption at state-run oil giant Petrobras, and the party said later he had asked to resign the post. Joao Vaccari Neto was detained in São Paulo as he was heading out for an early morning jog, police and judicial
officials told reporters at a news conference in the southern city of Curitiba, where the investigation is being led. An arrest warrant also was issued for Vaccari’s sister-in-law and his wife was questioned in connection with a series of unidentified deposits in her account that investigators suspect might be related to the kickback scheme at Petrobras. AP
EX-COLOMBIA MINISTERS CONVICTED OF BRIBES BOGOTA, Colombia—Colombia’s Supreme Court convicted two close aides of former President Alvaro Uribe on Wednesday of bribing lawmakers to support the conservative leader’s 2006 reelection. Former Interior Minister Sabas Pretelt and Social Protection Minister Diego Palacio were each sentenced to more than six years in jail. A former congresswoman in 2008
accused the Uribe aides of offering her favors and political appointments in exchange for supporting the lifting of a constitutional ban on presidential reelection. The legislation was approved and Uribe became the first Colombian president in over 100 years to stand for reelection, winning easily thanks to his USbacked military offensive against leftist rebels. AP
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RECKLESS FIGHTER? C1
Sports
| FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 2015
BusinessMirror
mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
RECKLESS FIGHTER?
MANNY PACQUIAO (right) gives a thumbs-up as he shadow-boxes during a workout on Wednesday as Floyd Mayweather Jr. works out with his uncle Roger Mayweather in Las Vegas. AP
Manny Pacquiao: Reckless fighter? That’s how people like me and love me, because they like an exciting fight.... We call this boxing, (and) boxing is more punching. We talk about punching.
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OS ANGELES—Manny Pacquiao intends to put on a show when he faces Floyd Mayweather Jr. in twoand-a-half weeks. He really hopes Mayweather is also coming to fight, for the fans’ sake—and maybe for his own strategic purposes, as well. Pacquiao radiated confidence and excitement on Wednesday at the Wild Card gym in Hollywood before his latest workout in preparation for their bout on May 2, in Las Vegas. With the most anticipated fight in recent years looming ever closer, both boxers kept their public comments civil and mostly respectful this week. But Pacquiao laughed when told that the defense-minded Mayweather had called him “a very reckless fighter” on Tuesday. “Reckless fighter? That’s how people like me and love me, because they like an exciting fight,” Pacquiao said. “We call this boxing, [and] boxing is more punching. We talk about punching.” Pacquiao (57-5-2, 38 KOs) has rarely skimped on excitement during his remarkable career as an eight-division champion, but the Filipino congressman realizes he is facing the greatest defensive fighter of their era. Mayweather (47-0, 26 KOs) has been nearly unhittable for most of his opponents during his perfect career. But Pacquiao hopes Money realizes that the best way to get paid is to put on a fight worth
seeing. After all, they’re counting on fans to pay a record $99.95 for the pay-per-view, a figure described by no less than Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum as “ostentatious consumerism” if a fan bought it to watch all by himself. And if Pacquiao is trying a bit of psychological trickery, it isn’t very subtle: He didn’t even try to hide the fact that a brawl would be his best chance to win. “If he [does] that, that’s good for me,” Pacquiao said. “I like that. We’ll see. That’s what I want, and that’s definitely what the fans want—action.” Unlike Mayweather, Pacquiao knows what it’s like to be knocked out and to get back up. Pacquiao lost both of his bouts in 2012 and ended his fourth fight with Juan Manuel Marquez facedown on the canvas in the sixth round. Pacquiao took time off after that bout, but returned to the ring and won three more fights before Mayweather finally agreed to get in the ring with him, five years after fans first called for the matchup. Yet the former knockout machine hasn’t stopped an opponent since November 2009, when he finished Miguel Cotto in arguably the greatest performance of his career. This fight has captured the full attention of Pacquiao, who has found time to actually study film of Mayweather during his chaotic life among his entourage, his large family and his congressional duties. Trainer Freddie Roach hasn’t seen Pacquiao watching film of his opponents in
‘IT’S ALL ABOUT TIMING’ B L P
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Los Angeles Times
AS VEGAS—Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s crafty, well-plotted style in the boxing ring carried over to his decision of choosing when to fight Manny Pacquiao too, he said. At his gym on Tuesday, on media day for a fight that is expected to destroy pay-per-view and live-gate records, Mayweather (47-0, 26 knockouts) detailed why he finally agreed to fight the record eightdivision champion from the Philippines. “Everything in life is about timing,” Mayweather said. “I don’t regret anything. The time is now. “Before, I don’t think this fight was as big as this. With me going out there getting bigger and bigger, not just in boxing, but outside the sport, and him stepping outside boxing and continuing to grow outside the sport, the names are much bigger now than they were before.
“You can’t rush everything in life. Certain things aren’t meant to be [rushed].” Mayweather, 38, and Pacquiao, 36, first began fight negotiations more than five years ago, but a series of disagreements and Mayweather’s general apathy kept boxing’s super-fight on pause. In the interim, Mayweather in 2013 signed a six-fight deal with Showtime/CBS that has given him four purses in excess of $30 million, including record sales for his September 2013, victory over Mexico’s Saul “Canelo” Alvarez. Forbes said Mayweather earned $105 million last year, becoming the second athlete after Tiger Woods to reach $100 million in a year. Hopes for the super-fight took a dark turn when Pacquiao was knocked out by Juan Manuel Marquez in 2012, but he has rallied with three convincing victories, knocking down previously unbeaten Chris Algieri six times in a November victory by decision. “I didn’t really say anything [after the Marquez loss], I just thought
years, yet Pacquiao came to him with ideas and plans for the fight. Pacquiao is clearly a student of Mayweather’s techniques, even doing a serviceable impersonation of Mayweather’s famed shoulder roll to entertain Roach. “I haven’t really seen him have this much speed and power in a long time,” Roach said. “My chest hurts really bad right now. You can see how much it means to him. He lives for these huge moments, and he knows what this fight means. Floyd is in trouble.” Pacquiao confirmed his eagerness to make the fight happen, pointing out that he agreed to every term proposed by Mayweather over the past several years of intermittent negotiations. Pacquiao also agreed to a 60-40 split of the proceeds. “If my concern is myself alone, I don’t [think of] the fans,” Pacquiao said. “Then the fight, it’s hard to make happen. Because of course, I don’t want to take 60-40, a disadvantage and everything. I agreed with that for the sake of the fans. I agreed to make the fight happen.” Pacquiao also said he felt a virtual duty to make a possible nine-figure payday resulting from this bout to further his charitable work in the Philippines, where he plans to give away a significant portion of his cut. “I cannot see them being hungry and not helping them,” Pacquiao said. “I’m not materialistic.... I have to use it for the glory of the Lord, and also for my family and for helping people.”
hopefully he’d be able to bounce back,” Mayweather said of Pacquiao. “And he bounced back. It was the right thing for the sport of boxing and for himself.” Mayweather has previously taken verbal shots at Pacquiao for remaining with Mayweather’s former promoter, Bob Arum of Top Rank Inc., but declined to do so on Tuesday. He said he told his closest advisors nearly a decade ago, when he decided to part ways with Arum, that he’d be the first fighter to make $100 million for a bout. For this bout, it’s believed Mayweather, who’ll earn a 60-percent purse split to Pacquiao’s 40 percent, could earn nearly $200 million. “I always knew if I made the right moves...eventually I’d get to the next level,” Mayweather said. For this fight, Mayweather said he has taken to the most basic of training techniques, including chopping wood, while also incorporating swimming workouts. “[There’s] more excitement, [but] it’s been smooth and comfortable
and I’m happy with my performance,” Mayweather said. Mayweather’s father/trainer, Floyd Mayweather Sr., said his son’s intelligence will prove too much for Pacquiao. The elder Mayweather went as far as predicting a knockout. “It’s not going to be the [toss-up] fight that people think it’s going to be,” Mayweather Sr. said. “The Mayweathers are like this: When we see what a guy’s doing, and see him keep doing it, we know what to do.” Pacquiao, said Mayweather Jr., is “a very, very reckless fighter,” leaving himself open to punches. Mayweather also cracked jokes about Pacquiao’s height disadvantage—“he wears lifts in his shoes”—and raised his eyebrows and flashed a smile when someone took note of his reach advantage. “My career wouldn’t have lasted this long if I had been a reckless fighter like that,” Mayweather said of Pacquiao. “A guy can land a good shot, but one thing about Floyd Mayweather: I can make adjustments. “Always.”
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HE World Bank has some novel ideas for remittances coming into India, China, the Philippines, Mexico and Nigeria: build infrastructure. Money sent home from citizens working overseas as engineers, teachers, nurses, sailors and domestic helps reached about $583 billion last year, according to the World Bank. Of that, India received about $70 billion; China, $64 billion; and the Philippines, $28 billion. And those are just the official flows. Traditionally, this money has been used to send kids to school, pay for weddings, buy a car or build a home. Now, the World Bank wants migrants to put their hard-earned money to more productive use for their countries. “Migration and remittances can be leveraged for innovative
PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 44.5550
financing,’’ said Dilip Ratha, lead economist for migration and remittances at the World Bank’s Development Prospects Group. “I would love to see a bullet-train system in India; an international airport in Nigeria; another Suez Canal in Egypt; a hydro-project in Pakistan; a community-development program in the Philippines—all financed by mobilizing the power of remittances and diaspora savings.’’ Remittances are critical: In the Philippines they accounted for about 10 percent of gross domestic product in 2013. Globally, they totaled more than double the official development assistance, or international aid last year. In addition, diaspora savings held by migrants from developing countries in their host nations were about $497 billion in 2013. C A
ENERGY Secretary Carlos Jericho L. Petilla during The Round Table forum held at the BUSINESSMIRROR offices in Makati City.
ROY DOMINGO
DOE to look into TSI’s claim blackout damaged its facility B L L
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NERGY Secretary Carlos Jericho L. Petilla on Thursday said his office would investigate Therma South Inc. (TSI), a subsidiary of AboitizPower Corp., whose power facility in Davao City was damaged by the recent Mindanao-wide blackout. In a discussion hosted on Thursday by the BM, the energy chief bared an inquiry into the cause of the power failure and the damage it wrought, implying this could have been avoided entirely had the company put in place preventive measures in the first place.
“My question to them is simple— Where is their circuit breaker? Why are they the only ones affected? They can say all they want, but they are a party of interest. We will investigate this,” Petilla said. Company representatives did not reply when sought for comments. There was a seven-hour power outage that hit Mindanao on April 5. TSI President Benjie A. Cariaso Jr. said initial findings show the disruption wrecked the auxiliary components to the boiler equipment of Unit 2. In particular, the auxiliary components to the boiler of Unit 2 of TSI’s 300-megawatt (MW) coal-
power plant were damaged. Affected machinery and components included the air preheater, as well as the electrostatic precipitator, which is part of the power plant’s pollution-control system. The property damage will delay the commercial operations of Unit 2 by approximately 10 months, or until February 2016. Units 1 and 2 of the power plant have yet to be turned over to TSI by their contractors. TSI was scheduled to put online Unit 2 with the Mindanao grid last week. Full commercial operations were supposed to happen a month later. S “B,” A
■ JAPAN 0.3740 ■ UK 66.1241 ■ HK 5.7476 ■ CHINA 7.1803 ■ SINGAPORE 32.8455 ■ AUSTRALIA 33.9338 ■ EU 47.6159 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 11.8810 Source: BSP (16 April 2015)