BusinessMirror May 23, 2015

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‘ONE DAY WITHOUT SHOES’ Thousands of

people walked barefoot to support a fund-raising initiative of a footwear company in celebration of its ninth anniversary at the Bonifacio Global City in Taguig. Dubbed as “One Day Without Shoes,” the project aims to raise awareness about safeguarding children’s health and ensuring their access to education, and to give 1 million pairs of shoes to children in need. NORIEL DE GUZMAN

BusinessMirror

THREETIME ROTARY CLUBB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008

A broader look at today’s business Tuesday, November 2014 10 226 No. 40 Saturday, May 23,18, 2015 Vol. Vol. 10 No.

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P.  |     | 7 DAYS A WEEK

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MANILA TO MAKE PITCH FOR WTO TRADEFACILITATION AGREEMENT, BORACAY AGENDA AT APEC MEETING

PHL wants trade barriers dismantled T Life B C N. P

INSIDE

HE Philippines will use its hosting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) meeting this year to pitch for the World Trade Organization (WTO) trade-facilitation agreement (TFA), which Manila believes will be an important tool for its micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs).

CAMPING GETAWAY

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Day by day

EAR Lord, we seek and praise You, day by day. Everytime we wake up in the morning and retire at night, every journey we make, every trial we face, every joy and happiness we find, every sadness and burden that we encounter, every triumph and glory we attain, every heavy cross and torment we carry, and every breath and sigh we make. Day by day, we remember You always. Amen!

7 THINGS NOT TO SAY TO YOUR TEENS (AND WHY) »D3

LOUIE M. LACSON, TEMPLETON DRIVE, CARMICHAEL, CALIFORNIA, USA Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

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Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com

“ART ART in the Sky” will teach you how to make your own kite and fly it along with other campers.

Saturday, May 23, 2015

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GO camping with your family at SandBox in Alviera.

Cap the summer with a camping getaway under the stars

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B A S

N other countries, such as the United States and certain parts of Europe, camping is a summer requirement. No summer is complete without a night in the wilderness, under the stars and nestled by nature. For those who are looking to veer away from the tired equation of summer and beaches around these parts, camping is the way to go with the Alviera Brightscape Campfest on May 30 and 31 at the SandBox, an outdoor play park at Alviera in Porac, Pampanga. A camping festival never before experienced in the Philippines, Brightscape will bring art, music, recreation and adventure all in one place. The overnight campfest will provide around 400 eager campers with their own tents, campfire treats, stargazing sessions with telescopes, and many other fun field-day events and activities at the 1,125-hectare Ayala Land development that is poised to become the commercial and residential growth center in Central Luzon. “Brightscape Campfest is an exclusive summer experience that only Alviera can provide. It’s a unique and great way to celebrate and crown the summer,” said John Estacio, Alviera general manager. “Visitors will even have a choice between staying the whole day and taking in the breezy plains of Porac, or they can go weekend camping with us overnight. We welcome everyone to enjoy the outdoors with us here.” Brightscape will start off with “Art in the Sky,” an event that is all about the lost art of kite-making and kite-flying. Next up, “Wildernecessities” will bring a camper closer to the wild side with lessons in basic nature and survival skills from local experts. Learn

to drink water from bamboo stalks, kindle a small camp fire, and pick out edibles from the available plants around. Ever marched to the beat of your own drum? Find your rhythm and feel the beat at “Pulses & Artbeats.” Led by the high-energy Adinkra Lumads Djembe Community, join this community drum circle and experience pulsing drumbeats like no other. If you’re into moving with the beat, learn the basics of “Flow Motion” from the experts at Flow Arts Philippines. Swing and sway with various classes using poi, hoops and other props. As the sun sets, the outdoor stage show opens with “Ring of Fire,” a sunset spin jam featuring the flow artists and Djembe musicians. “Shadowtales” follows suit, a silhouette puppet-theater performance written and performed exclusively for Brightscape Campfest. Aside from what Brightscape has in store, campers can also enjoy all of SandBox’s outdoor adventures and attractions such as the Adventure Tower, the Avatar One rollercoaster zipline, Giant Swing, Aerial Walk, the 9-kilometer Alviera-Columbia Bike Trail, mini-golf, archery, the children’s playground and ATV/UTV rides. Evenings at Alviera are breezy and cool, marked by a beautiful night sky. To cap the night, the “Brightscape Music Jam” features a concert under the stars from some of the hottest names in music. The evening culminates with the soundtrack to a sizzling summer courtesy of Barbie Almalbis, Imago, Quest, The Ransom Collective, Chocolate Factory, Brisom, Absolute Play, and the Adinkra Lumads. Simultaneously, overnight or weekend campers will be treated to exclusive Camper Field Day Events, such as tent-pitching 101 from Coleman’s camping pros, a bonfire session complete with marshmallows on stick

with provided s’mores treats, plus stargazing and starmapping sessions. Campers can choose to avail themselves of the Day Adventurer package (P1,990 per person) that comes with roundtrip transportation from Manila to Alviera (with travel insurance), free use of all SandBox thrills and attractions, access to all Brightscape Field Day Events,

passes to the Brightscape Music Jam, as well as an event kit filled with surprise Brightscape Campfest freebies; or the Weekend Camper (P2,990 per person) that entitles participants to all Day Adventurer inclusions, plus an overnight campsite stay, access to campsite-exclusive activities, free use of Coleman tents, and a hearty buffet breakfast the morning after. ■

CEDRIC VALERA (from left), Travel Factor managing partner; Jules Rodriguez, World Traveller/Game Plan host; and John Estacio, Alviera general manager, join hands for the Alviera Brightscape Campfest on May 30 and 31.

LIFE

NONIE REYES

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WEDDING INSANITY Relationships BusinessMirror

D4 Saturday, May 23, 2015

www.businessmirror.com.ph

8 easy ways to prevent wedding insanity

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ET’S not beat around the bush: planning a wedding is work. With all those decisions and responsibilities, it’s easy to see how some brides and grooms get completely consumed in the minutiae. So how do stressed-out, site-seeing, menu-sampling couples get their eyes back on the ball? By taking a breather from the planning process. Get ready to clear your schedules and forget about picking the favors. These eight stressbreaking activities will help you remove yourselves from nuptial hassles and restore your sanity. 1. Declare a wedding-free weekend. For a full 48-hour period, pretend you’re the two people you were before you got engaged (and, in the meantime, remind yourselves of why you wanted to get married to each other in the first place). No wedding planning or fighting allowed! No talk of hors d’oeuvres, seating charts, or first dance songs. Hang out, laugh, have fun and flirt with each other for a change. 2. Have a night out with the girls (or boys). With all the “togetherness” of being a future bride and groom, remind yourselves you’re individuals, too. Book a night out with your respective same-sex posse (again, no wedding talk). Hit the town like a swinging single and stay out past midnight. Take advantage of the fact that your future spouse isn’t around to do something with your friends he or she doesn’t like to do—we’re talking chick flick, batting cages, steak dinner, manicures. Then entertain each other the next day with tales of your exploits. 3. Go on a fancy date. Chances are, for the past few months you’ve been scrimping and saving every extra nickel to supplement The Budget. If you’ve done well, reward yourselves for your miserly skills by spending a little of that cold hard cash. Book a table at the fanciest restaurant in town and go for the full monty: fine wine, appetizer, entree, dessert and after-dinner drinks. Afterward, stop in a local jazz

club and catch a torch singer belting out inspiring tunes de l’amour. 4. Take a drive. Reserve a weekend afternoon and head for the open road. Check out that little place a couple of towns over that you always mean to visit. Test each other’s map-reading skills. Play road games like— who can spot the most out-of-state license plates? Sing along to cheesy songs on the radio. Buy a souvenir at a highway truck stop. Stumble upon a romantic restaurant for lunch or dinner before heading home. 5. Mastermind a movie marathon. There’s nothing like a good movie to transport you from reality to fantasy. Take the phone off the hook, rent a whole slew of films, and spend an evening in, snacking on popcorn and Sno-Caps. The trick here is to stay away from wedding-theme fare—sorry, this includes Father of the Bride—while keeping the romance theme going with a steamy story like The Lover. Or opt for the comic relief of a Jim Carrey or Eddie Murphy flick—laughter, after all, is still the best stress-reliever. 6. Get in some game play. Sometimes a little healthy competition serves to make you closer, right? Challenge your mate to a night of games: Pictionary, Scrabble, backgammon, even good old cards. If you own a Sony PlayStation, take the high-tech road to fun. Rather venture out? Head for the nearest bowling alley—or look into gocarts, ice-skating, and tennis tournaments for other fun and sporty activities to enjoy a deux. 7. Revert to childhood. There’s nothing like a good amusement park to get you feeling like a kid again. Wake up extra early to avoid long lines, then get your fill of roller coasters, log flumes, and Ferris wheels. Challenge your future mate to a bumper car race. Fill up on cotton candy, funnel cake and waffle cones. Take an old-fashioned photo. Then spend an hour or so trying to win a supersize stuffed animal to take home as a memento of the day.

8. Engage in an eat-a-thon. If you both love to cook, compose a special theme menu for a romantic athome date. Go shopping together and pick the freshest produce around (maybe there’s a farmer’s market near you)—and remember to include some aphrodisiac ingredients! Nab a bouquet and some candles to pretty

up your table while you’re at it. Once at home, take time to really enjoy the meal prep process. Line up all your ingredients on the countertop and open a bottle of wine. And take lots of liberties when it comes to recipes— nothing’s better than creating signature dishes together.

WEDDINGCHANNEL.COM/TNS

The chemistry of love B G M Los Angeles Times COME for the romance, stay for the oxytocin. That’s the neurobiological bottom line on monogamy, according to a new study. Men spritzed with oxytocin, a hormone from the pituitary gland, showed a renewed attraction for the faces of their romantic partners, but not for equally attractive strangers, according to a study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. And the men weren’t just saying so. Their brains were hyped up in areas associated with reward and motivation, according to the study.

“Monogamy is actually quite costly for humans, so there must be some form of benefit,” said Rene Hurlemann, a psychiatrist at the University of Bonn in Germany who led the study. “We’d expect humans, especially males, would disseminate their genes. That would be a very strong evolutionary force driving male behavior. But what drives males to stay in a monogamous relationship?” The answer may lie in a steady diet of oxytocin that triggers dopamine, a neurotransmitter associated with reward, motivation and addiction, according to the study. Only about 3 percent to 5 percent of mammals form strong pair bonds, and

among them, the prairie vole is perhaps the most studied. Monogamous voles, according to those studies, have more receptors for dopamine and have more oxytocin receptors in the cortex and several lower brain areas in the reward loop. In humans, overtures of social support, hugs, massages and sexual intercourse all release oxytocin. And oxytocin, in turn, has been shown to induce pro-social behavior—we tend to trust each other and feel more attached to others in response to the chemical. Hurlemann, who has delved into the mystery of monogamy for years, built the current study on the somewhat surprising results of a previous experiment that

showed monogamous men spritzed with this putative love potion tended to seat themselves farther from a potential new mate—an attractive female. This time, Hurlemann and his colleagues took 20 men who were in longterm and passionate romantic relationships with women, hooked them up to functional magnetic resonance imaging scanners, and showed them photos of their loved ones interspersed with images of an unfamiliar but equally comely stranger, or a house. Some men were spritzed with oxytocin, others with a placebo. To test whether oxytocin varied only with familiarity, they substituted highly familiar faces for the house images. Afterward, the men filled out

the Passionate Love Scale questionnaire, which showed that their inner Romeo prevailed over their inner Lothario. They were fixated on their current romantic partner. So, do men become addicted to love via oxytocin? The metaphor may not be far off the mark, Hurlemann suggests. The data suggest the mere proximity of a partner—in this case, a photo—could touch off the same reward and motivation circuitry behind addictive behavior. So, a steady diet of sexual activity, hugs and other forms of physical contact may be enough to override the desire to spread genes, keeping a man at home. In other words: Keep the home fires burning.

CRISTINA GONZALES-ROMUALDEZ

Victoria’s secret PATIO Victoria, with its old-world charm within the walled city of Intramuros, is ideal for weddings and events. It’s a one-stop shop for brides who want a beautiful, fuss-free wedding, with everything a couple needs to plan their wedding—invitations, souvenirs, flowers, cake, makeup artists, string quartets and others. Patio has its own expert wedding coordinators, bridal cars, photo and video coverages, live band or singers, emcees, even butterflies to add beauty to an event. Former actress-turned-politician Cristina Gonzales-Romualdez knows how stressful wedding preparations could be, as her dream wedding to Tacloban City Mayor Alfred Romualdez was “a major T production that needed intense preparation.” “Preparations were really stressful. But I enjoyed it. Of course, he left to me the decisions on color motif, my gown and the entourage’s wardrobe, invitations, designs of everything. I got a wedding planner to help me since it was quite a big wedding.” At Patio Victoria, cobblestone walkways, antique wooden gates, lush foliage, and an old-fashioned fountain greet guests. T Two gardens and an air-

conditioned banquet hall can accommodate 1,000 guests. The gardens have gazebos and a covered area on the side to protect guests from the sun and light showers. In case of heavy rains, the reception can move to the banquet room. “Patio Victoria offers a wide selection of international and Spanish cuisine. House specialties include callos, paella, lengua and lasagna. We also offer free food tasting for two because we’re sure our clients will fall in love with our dishes,” Cristina says. The wedding package includes use of venue for four hours, a fine selection of food from various menus, bottomless drinks, an elegant gazebo, three-tiered fondant cake, mobile system, chocolate fountain, cake table with floral arrangement and skirting, torch or sword parade for the couple’s grand entrance or cake cutting ceremony, bottle of champagne for the ceremonial toast, decorated dove cage with doves, guest book, photographic tarpaulin, complementary use of the Cristina Executive Suite, red carpet, flower arrangement for the buffet and table, Tiffany chairs with ribbons, skirting for the presidential table and location map.

RELATIONSHIPS

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WARRIORS UP 2-AND-OH

Sports

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| SATURDAY, MAY 23, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

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WARRIORS UP 2-AND-OH

JAMES HARDEN crumples to the floor and buries his head, his last-second opportunity to win the game dashed. AP

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B D L San Jose Mercury News

AKLAND, California—Stephen Curry looked into the Oracle Arena crowd and punched the air after having ended the cookout between him and James Harden. Harden crumpled to the floor and buried his head, his last-second opportunity to win the game dashed. The Golden State Warriors edged the Houston Rockets in a nail-biting 99-98 win in Game Two of the Western Conference finals on Thursday to take a 2-0 lead in the series. Curry in the end brought along a friend in Klay Thompson to seal it, as they forced Harden to lose the ball just before the buzzer. “Two guys who get a lot of credit for their offense made the best defensive play,” Warriors forward Draymond Green said. “They call it a home-run trot when you kind of jog back. That was a championship trot right there. Everybody sprinted back and got into position and made a play.” Harden scored a game-high 38 points, but Curry poured in 33 points and got the win after the

S Hawks forward DeMarre Carroll limped off the court and the final outcome all but decided in Wednesday’s opening game of the National Basketball Association (NBA) Eastern Conference finals, many longtime Atlanta sports fans were visited by a familiar, relentless dread. It is the playoffs, after all. It’s an expectation born from experience. Braves fans have seen the Cardinals (twice), Giants (twice), Diamondbacks, Cubs and Astros celebrate playoff series clinchers at Turner Field—and that’s just since 2000. Falcons fans watched the 49ers do the same after winning the 2012 National Football Conference Championship at the Georgia Dome, costing Atlanta a chance to advance to its second Super Bowl. The team’s only Super Bowl appearance is best remembered for the arrest of starting safety Eugene Robinson, who was charged with soliciting a prostitute the night before the game. “Sometimes it feels there’s nothing you can do but wait for things to go wrong,” said Atlanta native Dallas Hudgens, 51. “When you watch bad things happen over and over, you worry even when it’s going well.” Even though they’ve made the playoffs each of the last seven years (the longest current streak in the NBA), this year marked a breakthrough for a franchise that had teetered on irrelevance in a sports landscape dominated by football and the Braves. After setting a franchise record for wins, they stand just one series win away from the NBA Finals for the first time in 45 years. Expectations have risen, and though the disappointing Game One loss put a damper on that optimism, some fans say they still believe. “I don’t go to games anymore hoping we don’t lose,” said Atlanta divorce lawyer Randy Kessler, a season-ticket holder since 1999. “Now, I’m thinking they’ll win.”

Warriors blew a 17-point lead. The slugfest saw the top 2 finishers in the Most Valuable Player race each go 13-for-21 from the field, but the Rockets’ final charge was met with a defensive stand. Harden grabbed a rebound with 6.9 seconds left, but on the other end of the court, the Splash Brothers had him surrounded. The ball was fumbled away, leaving Harden on his knees, exasperated that he wasn’t able to attempt a shot. “It’s just don’t let him get a shot off and try to be the hero,” Curry said of the defense. Harden knocked down a curtain in frustration on his way back to the locker room and later said, “It hurts, but they did what they had to do. They won two games at home.” Pressure on Curry forced the Warriors into an eight-second backcourt violation with the Warriors leading by three points. Harden then tossed an alleyoop thrown down by Dwight Howard to make it 99-98 with 33 seconds left. Howard finished with 19 points and 17 rebounds playing with a brace two days after spraining his left knee, but it wasn’t enough as the Warriors brought muscle with them, as well. Andrew Bogut, who, at one

point, had his mouth bloodied by Howard, had 14 points, eight rebounds, five blocks and four assists. “This was more of a street fight, more of a traditional game involving big guys protecting the rim and hard fouls and blocked shots,” Warriors Coach Steve Kerr. Curry went to work in the fourth, scoring on a layup five seconds after checking back into the game. Harden hit a floater to cut the lead to 89-85. Curry found Thompson on an inbound pass for the layup to make it 91-85. Curry followed with a fadeaway jumper. After Harden’s three-pointer, Curry dished to Bogut, who scored as he was being fouled to make it 96-89. Curry’s stepback jumper made it 98-90 to seemingly seal the win with 1:39 left before Harden scored six straight points to make it close. “It doesn’t matter if James has 40 or five [points],” Thompson said. “It’s whether we win or lose.” For a moment in the second quarter, Andre Iguodala delivered the powerful message that the Warriors were coming, and there was little the Rockets could do to stop them. He soared before throwing down a dunk off a stolen inbound pass. The hobbled Howard could only step aside at the sight of Iguodala elevating. The slam was part of a 12-0 run that pushed the

HAWKS FANS NERVOUS, HOPEFUL

DEMARRE CARROLL lies on the court in pain. AP

lead to 16 at a time in the game when Curry was on the bench. Harrison Barnes’s three-pointer pushed the lead to 17, and the Warriors were feeling confident, as they entered the game 53-0 this season when opening up leads of at least 15 points. But the Rockets responded to the gut punch by erasing that deficit over the final seven minutes of the quarter as they closed the first half on a 23-6 run capped by an alley-oop to Howard that tied the score at 55. Harden scored 12 straight points at one point, and then came out in the third quarter and hit a threepointer to give Houston its first lead. The Rockets took a 65-59 lead before the Warriors responded with a 12-2 run, highlighted by a monster dunk from Thompson and Curry hitting his fifth three-pointer. Curry had spent the better part of the first quarter making things look easy for Golden State. Given open looks, Curry was four-for-six from three-point range, racking up 15 points to give the Warriors a 36-28 lead. Warriors turnovers enabled the Rockets to stay within striking distance. Golden State committed seven of them in the quarter, leading to 11 points for Houston. By halftime, the Warriors were up to 11 turnovers due in large part to sloppy passing.

Instead they laid an egg. But for once, it could’ve been worse. Carroll’s injury, initially thought to be a season-ender, at best, turned out to be just badly bruised knee. He’s now listed as “questionable” for Game Two. Maybe, just maybe, Atlanta’s playoff worm has turned. “I’m still optimistic,” said Jay Winter, a regular in Philips Arena’s “Sixth Man” section, filled by the most rabid Hawks fans. “We lost the first game of the Washington series and the sky didn’t fall.” And there’s this: If any city’s sports teams are cursed more than Atlanta, it’s Cleveland, which hasn’t won a championship since 1964. They’ve come close since, including 20 years ago, when the Indians won a franchise-best 69 percent of their games, advancing to the World Series for the first time since 1954. Standing in their way? The Braves, who won the series in six games to claim the city’s first, and only, title. “Our one shining moment came at their expense,” said Matt Gove, 44, a lifelong Braves, Hawks and Falcons fan. “Cleveland may be the best thing we’ve got going for us in this series.” Still, Gove said he’s conditioned to expect the worst. “When the Hawks beat the Wizards, that was as good as I’ve felt about an Atlanta sports team since 1995,” he said. “After so many years of pessimism I allowed myself to be optimistic again.” Then came on Wednesday night. “Cue up that all-too-familiar Atlanta sports numbness of another missed opportunity with the world watching...sigh,” tweeted Bud L. Ellis, 41, of Cumming, after the Game One loss. A die-hard Atlanta sports fan since he was a kid, Ellis was hopeful that Atlanta’s luck was bound to change. The Atlanta Journal-

SPORTS Constitution

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ings, and the Philippines continues to push for the adoption of the Boracay Action Agenda Plan by the end of the MRT meeting. The Boracay Action Agenda Plan consists of specific, concrete and practical interventions that Apec economies can implement to provide MSMEs wider opportunities to integrate into the global or regional trade arena, either through global value chains, or as direct exporters of finished goods and services. According to Domingo, the TFA, C  A

PHL’S TOURISM POTENTIAL AIG Hospitality & Leisure Industry Practice Group leader Lance Ewing talks about the potential of Philippine tourism to boost economic growth during the Asia CEO Forum held at a hotel in Makati City.

PUBLIC SHIELDED FROM UNDUE CALAXTOLLRATE HIKESDPWH B L S. M

BusinessMirror

Houston’s James Harden loses control of the ball as time expired, allowing Golden State to hang on for a 99-98 win against the Rockets on Thursday and take a 2-0 lead in the Western Conference finals series that is developing into a showdown between Harden and Stephen Curry.

“There are many interventions that can help micro and small businesses, in particular, to participate in global value chain, since these two segments are usually left out. Among these is the support for the TFA of the WTO,” Trade Secretary Gregory L. Domingo said in a media briefing before the commencement of the Apec Ministers Responsible for Trade (MRT) meeting in Boracay, Aklan. The theme, “Fostering MSMEs Participation in Regional and Global Value Chains,” has been the general focus of Apec trade-related meet-

HE Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) has assured the public that the hiked premium-bid requirement for the P55-billion Cavite-Laguna Expressway (Calax) deal will not result in higher toll rates for the proposed thoroughfare. “The public is protected. We have already established the base or initial toll—something that the winning bidder cannot adjust,” said Ariel C. Angeles, DPWH Public-Private Partnership (PPP) officer in charge. Angeles was responding to a

PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 44.5100

BM report on Friday that quoted business chambers as saying that the project’s rebidding —which required at least P20.1 billion in premium payment—places the consumers at the losing end. Angeles explained that the base toll was “at a fair price” relative to the project cost. The public, he added, is also protected by the concession agreement, which requires bidders to seek regulatory approval before imposing toll increases. This places most of the risk to the winning concessionaire. “If the private sector fails to make money out of it, then it’s their

problem,” he said. Angeles also announced that his office already opened the technical bids of San Miguel Corp. and Metro Pacific Investments Corp. for the project on Friday. With this, results of the evaluation of the two bidders’ technical proposals will be out by Friday. “The process shouldn’t take that long. It’s quite impossible that they didn’t comply with the rules,” he told the BM in a phone interview. “I believe that they have done their assignments already.” Earlier, business chambers scored S “C,” A

ALYSA SALEN

China, US assert right to patrol disputed sea

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HINA said on Thursday it is entitled to keep watch over airspace and seas surrounding artificial islands it created in the disputed waters of the South China Sea, following an exchange in which its navy warned off a US surveillance plane. Malacañang, meanwhile, said it is verifying the full details of the latest Kagitingan (Fiery Cross) Reef incident reported by CNN, where Chinese military repeatedly warned a US Navy Orion aircraft to “go away”. Communications Secretary Herminio B. Coloma Jr. on Friday said the Philippine government stands fast on its diplomatic track to pursue its case

against China under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. Coloma added that the Aquino administration is also prodding the Asean to adopt a legally binding Code of Conduct covering all claimants in disputed territories. In a news briefing, the Palace official acknowledged that the CNN report indicates the stark reality of heightening tension caused by illegal Chinese reclamations and Beijing’s nine-dash line, claiming almost the entire South China Sea. He expects that discussions in Tokyo last year—where all Asean members rejected Chinese notion S “D ,” A

■ JAPAN 0.3677 ■ UK 69.7160 ■ HK 5.7410 ■ CHINA 7.1828 ■ SINGAPORE 33.3184 ■ AUSTRALIA 35.1053 ■ EU 49.4595 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 11.8693 Source: BSP (22 May 2015)


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