BusinessMirror July 28, 2015

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PNOY GETS HIGH MARKS FROM BUSINESS GROUPS

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HE business community has given the Chief Executive a near-perfect grade in terms of accomplishing economic goals at the occasion of his last State of the Nation Address (Sona), underscoring the increased competitiveness of the country during the Aquino administration. C  A

AP PHOTO

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A broader look at today’s business Saturday 18,July 201428,Vol.2015 10 No. Vol. 40 10 No. 292 Tuesday,

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PNOY PUSHES PASSAGE OF BBL, RFI, 2016 BUDGET

Aquino bares final list of priority bills

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KENYA AT ‘CROSSROADS’

RESIDENT Aquino, in his valedictory address before Congress on Monday, asked lawmakers to pass the proposed Bangsamoro basic law (BBL) and the measures aimed at rationalizing fiscal incentives (RFI) and ending political dynasties in the country.

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PRESIDENT Barack Obama waves good-bye to the crowd, underneath American and Kenyan flags, after delivering a speech at the Safaricom Indoor Arena in the Kasarani area of Nairobi, Kenya, on Sunday. Obama is traveling on a two-nation African tour where he will become the first sitting US president to visit Kenya and Ethiopia. AP/BEN CURTIS

B3-1 | Tuesday, July 28, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion

Obama: Kenya at ‘crossroads’ between peril and promise

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AIROBI, Kenya—Declar Kenya—Declar-ing Kenya at a “crossroads” between promise and peril, President Barack Obama on Sunday pressed the nation of his father’s birth to root out corruption, treat women and minorities as equal citizens, and take responsibility for its future. Closing his historic visit with an address to the Kenyan people, Obama traced the arc of the country’s evolution from colonialism to independence, as well as his own family’s history here. Today, Obama said, young Kenyans are no longer constrained by the limited options of his grandfather, a cook for the country’s former British rulers, or his father, who left to seek an education in America. “Because of Kenya’s progress— because of your potential—you can build your future right here, right now,” Obama told the crowd of 4,500 packed into a sports arena in the capital of Nairobi. But, he bluntly warned that Kenya must make “tough choices” to bolster its fragile democracy and fastgrowing economy. Obama’s visit here, his first as president, captivated a country that views him as a local son. Thick crowds lined the roadways to watch the presidential motorcade speed through the city on Sunday, some climbing on rooftops to get a better view. The audience inside the arena chanted his name as he finished his remarks. The president left Kenya on Sunday afternoon, pausing longer than normal atop the stairs to Air Force

One to wave to the crowd, a huge grin on his face. He arrived two hours later in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, where he met with diplomats at the US Embassy in the evening. Obama has written emotionally about his first visit to Kenya as a young man nearly 30 years ago and he recounted many of those same memories in his remarks on Sunday. The battered Volkswagen his sister drove. Meeting his brothers for the first time. The airport employee who recognized his last name. “That was the first time that my name meant something,” he said. The president barely knew his father, who died in 1982 after leaving the US to return to Kenya. However, Obama has numerous family members in the country, including his half-sister Auma Obama, who introduced her brother on Sunday. “He’s one of us,” she said. “But we’re happy to share him with the world.” The bulk of Obama’s address was a candid commentary on the East African nation’s future. He spent considerable time warning about the risks of government corruption, calling it an “anchor” that could weigh down the country’s promising future.

“Too often here in Kenya, corruption is tolerated because that’s how it’s always been done,” he said. “Here in Kenya, it’s time to change habits.” Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta has taken steps to tackle corruption by suspending four Cabinet secretaries and 16 other senior officials amid an investigation into allegations of dishonesty. But the action has been met with skepticism by the public because in the past, suspensions of senior of officials haven’t resulted in anyone being convicted of a crime. Some officials even returned to their jobs before investigations were complete. Kenyatta has been under public pressure to address corruption following reviews of his two-year-old government that claimed his administration is more corrupt than previous administrations. Obama urged an end to old tribal and ethnic divisions that are “doomed to tear our country apart.” He spent significant time imploring Kenyans to respect the rights of women and girls, saying that marginalizing half of a country’s population is “stupid.” And he called for an end to forced marriages for girls, who should otherwise be attending school and the tradition known as “genital mutilation.” “These traditions may date back centuries. They have no place in the 21st century,” he said. The president drew on the recent debate in the US over the Confederate battle flag, a Civil War-era relic that is seen by many as a racist symbol. The killing of nine people at a black church in South Carolina last month prompted a fresh debate over the flag, spurring some states to remove it from government grounds. “Just because something is a part of your past doesn’t make it right,” Obama said.

Some of those in attendance for the president’s speech said they were inspired by his appeal for progress in Kenya. Upenbo Abraham, a 23-year-old economics student from an area of western Kenya near Obama’s relatives, said he was “encouraged, as a poor boy from a village next to his home.” Ezekiel Oduor, an accountant, said Obama was “candid and clear” about Kenya’s problems with corruption and his desire to help the country rise “to the next level.” After his speech, Obama met with political opposition leaders, then with a group of African youth and civil leaders on ways to promote civil-society efforts. He told the civil-society group that “the country is going to be better off” if it can cultivate habits of public participation and freedom. Obama is expected to offer similar messages about good governance and human rights during his two days of meetings with leaders in Ethiopia. Human-rights groups have criticized the president for visiting the Horn of Africa nation, which is accused of cracking down on dissent, sometimes violently. Obama planned meetings with Ethiopia’s president and prime minister, and a separate session with regional leaders to discuss the situation in South Sudan, a young nation gripped by turmoil since civil war broke out in December 2013. Countering the al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab in neighboring Somalia also is on the agenda for Obama’s meetings with Ethiopian leaders. That threat was brought into sharp relief on Sunday when alShabab claimed responsibility for a suicide truck bombing at a luxury hotel in Mogadishu, Somalia’s capital, that killed eight people and shattered a period of calm in the city. AP

TURKEY CALLS FOR NATO MEETING TO DISCUSS SECURITY THREATS

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NKARA, Turkey—Turkey on Sunday called for a meeting of its North Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato) allies to discuss threats to its security and its airstrikes targeting Islamic State (IS) militants in Syria and Kurdish rebels in Iraq. The move came as Turkey’s staterun media reported that Turkish F-16 jets again took off from the country’s southeastern Diyarbakir air base to hit Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK targets across the border in northern Iraq.

There was no immediate confirmation of the report by TRT television, which came hours after authorities said PKK militants detonated a car-bomb near Diyarbakir, killing two soldiers and wounding four others. Nato announced that its decisionmaking body, the North Atlantic Council, will convene on Tuesday after Ankara invoked the alliance’s Article 4, which allows member-states to request a meeting if they feel their territorial integrity or security is under threat.

The Turkish Foreign Ministry said Turkey would inform allies about the air strikes, which followed an IS suicide bombing near Turkey’s border with Syria that left 32 people dead, and an IS attack on Turkish forces, which killed a soldier. Turkey requested the meeting, which includes ambassadors of all 28 member-countries, “in view of the seriousness of the situation after the heinous terrorist attacks in recent days,” Nato said.

Nato itself is not involved in operations against the IS group, although many of its members are. As an alliance, however, Nato is committed to helping defend Turkey. Turkey has simultaneously bombed IS group positions near its border with Syria and Kurdish insurgents in northern Iraq. It has also carried out widespread police operations against suspected Kurdish and IS militants and other outlawed groups inside Turkey. AP

COLOMBIA UNEARTHS LANDFILL LOOKING FOR SCORES CCORES OF DISAPPEARED M EDELLIN, Colombia—The last contact Margarita Restrepo had with her daughter was a hurried phone call on October 25, 2002. The school day was over and 17-year-old Carol Vanesa was going to meet friends at a metro stop near the sprawling Comuna 13 hillside slum. Restrepo and her children had fled the violent Medellin neighborhood a few days earlier, right before it was taken over by thousands of Colombian soldiers trying to ferret out leftist rebels. She begged the girl not to risk returning there, but the teen went anyway. Neither she nor her two friends have been seen again and, to this day, nobody knows who is responsible for their disappearance. Thirteen years later, Restrepo and dozens of others who have missing loved ones are closer than ever to closure. On Monday a team of forensic experts will begin removing 31,000 cubic yards (24,000 cubic meters) of rubble from La Escombrera, a debris landfill on Medellin’s outskirts, where the remains of as many as 300 people are believed to have been dumped during one of the darkest chapters of Colombia’s long-running civil conflict. Human-rights activists said it could be the biggest mass grave ever in Colombia and the dig represents a glimmer of hope that justice will be realized. But the search will be complicated. Despite more than a decade-long clamor by victims’ families that the landfill be closed and excavated, giant trucks have continued to dump construction waste daily. “If that light doesn’t shine for me, I hope it does for one of my companions,” Restrepo said while holding up a placard with her daughter’s photo and disappearance date, the eyecatching symbol used by the group Mothers Walking for the Truth to draw attention to their fight. Colombia’s rightist paramilitary groups demobilized a decade ago, and the government is now negotiating a peace deal with the biggest rebel movement. With the five-decade conflict winding down, officials have been fanning out across the country to exhume hundreds of bodies, attempt to identify them through DNA testing and return the remains to family members. But, most of the unmarked graves are in lawless rural areas, not Medellin, which is Colombia’s second-largest city. Restrepo’s disappearance took

place at a time and place where being young like her was almost tantamount to a death sentence. Shortly after taking office in 2002, then-President Alvaro Uribe launched Operation Orion to repel leftist rebels from a densely populated hillside slum in the poor and violent Comuna 13 district. The of offensive lionized Uribe’s reputation among Colombians as a crime-fighting conservative, whose tough talk was backed by action. But almost as soon as the military retrenched, the void was filled by far-right militia fighters in ski masks and wielding heavy weapons. Allegations of killings of civilians and disappearances multiplied. Many of the paramilitary crimes were carried out in an alliance with US-trained security forces. Former militia fighters, including Diego Fernando Murillo, the jailed warlord known by the alias Don Berna, who once terrorized much of Medellin, have testified they dumped their victims in La Escombrera. Investigators said it is unclear how many, if any, bodies can be recovered. Too much time has passed and the 8-meter-high (9-yardhigh) mountain of debris likely has crushed many of the remains. But they say their biggest obstacle is providing for the safety of the forensic experts carrying out the painstaking work. While violence in Medellin’s slums has fallen sharply over the past decade, with the city last year reporting its lowest homicide rate since the height of drug boss Pablo Escobar’s power in the mid-1980s, the five-month excavation is taking place in an area where criminal gangs still lurk, many of whose members are implicated in the very crimes being investigated. Mistrust of the police, who are providing around-the-clock protection, still runs high. Still, the experts will try to help close a wound not just for the victims of Comuna 13, but to make a symbolic gesture for millions of Colombians touched by violence and abandoned by the state. They have cordoned off and will focus their search in three sections of the landfill where bodies are believed to have been dumped. A makeshift camp is being built for loved ones who want to stay abreast of the investigators’ progress. There is also a mausoleum planned and an exhibit in a Medellin’s Museum of Memory, a new space for reflection and study of Colombia’s violent past. AP

WORLD

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TOUR DE FROOME! Sports BusinessMirror

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| TUESDAY, JULY 28, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

FLATS MAKE DIFFERENCE

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HE 102nd edition of the Tour de France culminated with a “paradoxical” result, race chief Christian Prudhomme says: Two expert climbers battled for victory, but the flats made the difference. Up until the next-to-last stage in the Alps, Chris Froome held on against a surging Nairo Quintana of Colombia to win his second Tour in three years by one minute and 12 seconds—the closest Tour victory margin since 2008. The two were virtually equal in the mountains this year. But Froome got an early lead in Stage 2 in the Netherlands, outpacing the Colombian by 1:28 in that wind-swept leg. After the race finish on Sunday, Prudhomme said: “It

all played out in Zeeland, in the flat country.” In recent years, skill in time-trials and mountains has been crucial to Tour victory. Time-trialing got lower billing this year. nnn

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ETER SAGAN has made it four in a row. The Slovak speedster has again taken home the green jersey awarded to the Tour’s best sprinter. The honor gives a bit of glory to his Tinkoff Saxo Bank team, whose leader Alberto Contador wasn’t a contender as had been expected before the race, and a personal consolation to him: Sagan finished second in five stages

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ANY French love to boast that the ChampsElysees is the world’s most beautiful avenue. But for Tour de France debutant Warren Barguil, it’s

one of the worst for cycling. The 23-year-old Frenchman said aloud what many Paris cyclists know all too well: That the highly trafficked paving stones have seen their fair share of wear, and it’s not exactly the best place for a smooth ride. “The Champs-Elysees is not a very, very good road, let’s say,” Barguil told France-2 TV. “It may be the worst in the Tour de France!” Many bikes rattled on the various potholes in Sunday’s 21st and final stage, won by Germany’s Andre Greipel as Chris Froome of Britain won the three-week race.

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NDRE GREIPEL has shown again he’s simply the best sprinter at the Tour de France this year. The hulking German made it four stage victories this year with a sprint victory on the ChampsElysees in the 21st and final stage on Sunday, edging past France’s Bryan Coquard in second. The powerful 33-year-old Lotto-Soudal rider also collected the tenth Tour stage win of his career, and gave Germany a total of six stage wins, including ones by Simon Geschke and Tony Martin—the most of any country at the race. Greipel’s tally equals the number of stage wins that Vincenzo Nibali had on way to winning the Tour last year. AP

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B J L The Associated Press

ARIS—All for one, one for all, and all bathed in yellow. Arms over each other’s shoulders, linked together in a long line of happiness,Tour de France winner Chris Froome and his teammates pedaled slowly over the finish line, soaking up the applause on Sunday on the Champs-Elysees. Three weeks of furious racing, of beating back both a tenacious Colombian, Nairo Quintana, and doping suspicions that are Lance Armstrong’s poisonous legacy to cycling, were over. Time for the winner’s speech. “The Maillot Jaune is special, very special,” Froome said, using the yellow jersey’s French name. “I understand its history, good and bad,” he said. “I will always respect it.” The Tour is still French. But British riders have won three of the last four: Bradley Wiggins in 2012 and now two for Froome, following his first win in 2013. That puts Britain equal with the US, with three from Greg LeMond—and minus seven stripped from Armstrong. Under suitably British weather, on rain-slickened roads, Froome took it easy on the last Stage 21, his

work done having grimly resisted Quintana’s late assault on his hard-won Tour lead the previous day on the final Alpine ascent. The tired 160 riders—of 198 who started—didn’t bother racing for much of the largely flat 110-kilometer ramble from Sevres, in the French capital’s southwest. To minimize risk of crashes, Tour organizers stopped the clock early, on the first of 10 laps up and down the Champs-Élyseés’s cobblestones. That locked in Froome’s lead to guarantee victory. He smiled broadly as he pedaled past flag-waving spectators. He still had to ride the laps to complete the full race distance of 3,354 kilometers. But knowing the title was his, he didn’t have to panic when a paper bag got stuck in his back wheel. He simply stopped and changed bikes. He also had time to raise a glass of Champagne in the saddle and stop to put on a raincoat under the iconic yellow jersey. While sprinters dashed ahead for the stage win— snatched by Andre Greipel, his fourth and Germany’s sixth at this Tour—Froome and his teammates, wearing yellow stripes on their shorts and helmets, linked together for their slow-motion, chorus-line finish. “This is your yellow jersey as much as it is mine,” Froome said. Their powerful riding, chasing rivals in the mountains

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and protecting Froome on flats, was vital. So, too, was the meticulous planning of Dave Brailsford, the organizational brains at Froome’s Team Sky, which has far surpassed its goal in 2009 of nurturing Britain’s first Tour winner within five years. In a repeat of 2013, Quintana was again runner-up. But the margin was much smaller this time: one minute and 12 seconds, the tightest win since 2008. Third-placed Alejandro Valverde, Quintana’s Movistar teammate from Spain, made the podium for the first time, moving up from fourth last year. For all the pre-Tour talk of a possible four-way battle between Froome, Quintana, 2014 champion Vincenzo Nibali and two-time winner Alberto Contador, only the 25-year-old Colombian—who again won the Tour’s white jersey as best young rider—gave the yellow jersey a run for his €450,000 ($494,000) in prize money. “He’s a great rival,” Quintana said. “He suffered a lot to win.” With more experience and more smarts in the first week when he lost too much time, Quintana would have posed a bigger threat and perhaps come closer to becoming the first Colombian winner. This Tour was mountain-heavy, suiting Quintana’s climbing strengths. Future Tours could have more time trials, which Froome excels at. Their developing rivalry,

with youth on Quintana’s side against the 30-year-old Froome, could help the sport win back fans disgusted by the systematic deceit of Armstrong’s era. “I have lots of years ahead of me,” Quintana said. Totaled up, Quintana took more time off Froome on the Tour’s high mountain climbs than the other way around. Yet, the Colombian didn’t have to contend with the scrutiny, doubt and thinly veiled suggestions of doping that Froome was forced to respond to on an almost daily basis, mostly with patience but also with bristle as the race wore on. Such was his strength, it’s no longer a stretch to imagine Froome soon joining the elite group of seven riders who won three Tours or more. The record of five wins—achieved by Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Indurain—is still far off. Froome says he would like to keep competing “as long as my body will allow me.” His aim is at least another six years. “I love the sacrifices, the training, the hard work. That’s what gets me out of bed in the mornings. I’m not trying to do it for a specific amount of Tour titles or fame,” he said after sealing his win in the Alps. “I love riding my bike. I love pushing my body to the limit. I love the freedom that cycling gives you.”

Party gone bad

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CHRIS FROOME (above photo) to his Sky teammates, who delivers him to the top of the podium in Sunday’s final stage: This is your yellow jersey as much as it is mine. AP

ARIS—Paris police were searching for four occupants of a car that struck a taxi and tried to crash barricades set up near the Tour de France finish line on Sunday morning, drawing police fire hours before the arrival of cyclists and spectators. Police said they didn’t suspect terrorism. Police found the car with bullet impacts not far from the Place de la Concorde where police opened fire, according to a police official and a ranking official close to the investigation. They asked not to be identified by name because the investigation was ongoing. The car carried two men and two women, one of whom was injured on her upper body, the ranking official said, citing a witness at a hotel where the group sought a glass of water for her. It was not immediately clear if the woman had been hit by a bullet. Tour de France wasn’t be affected by the incident. Paris has been on edge since double attacks in January by Islamic extremists on the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo and a Kosher grocery left 20 people dead, including the three attackers. Thousands of police and soldiers were deployed on the streets after the attack to protect sensitive sites and tourist attractions. Police had opened fire at the Place de la Concorde, where the cyclists make their final triumphant rounds to conclude the race. The police official said the investigation is “moving completely away from any terrorist lead or voluntary action against police.” Police believe the car’s occupants had left one of the nightclubs in the ritzy neighborhood, were intoxicated, or had taken illegal substances, and didn’t want to submit to a police check, officials have said. “The scenario is becoming clearer. The party ended badly,” the ranking official said. AP

SPORTS

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Delivering his sixth and last State of the Nation Address (Sona) at the joint session of the Senate and the House, the President took the opportunity to press Congress to pass the BBL that would replace the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao with a new entity, as part of the government’s peace agreement with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. Mr. Aquino dared administration critics to provide a good alternative

COMMUTERS HOPED TO BENEFIT IN TAXI, UBER, GRABCAR TIFF B L S. M

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Second of three parts

R A NSPORT net work companies, or TNCs, are at the forefront of the digital revolution that has been happening in the Philippines for a few years now. Filipinos are, more than ever, more open to technological advances—especially in the mobile arena. More often than not, one will see a pedestrian looking at his mobile phone while walk-

ing along the streets of Manila, checking out his social-media accounts or his e-mail. Internet penetration, although, is not yet 100 percent. Smartphone penetration, meanwhile, is now roughly more than 50 percent. This means half of the population is now using smartphones, which have better functions than a feature phone. Now, people could use their mobile phones to pay for their C  A

C  A

Anemic trading greets President’s last Sona B VG C

this year, but never won one. The green jersey is awarded based on a points-system based around sprint sections during the stage, plus each stage finish. Andre Greipel of Germany, who won four stages in sprints, including Sunday’s 21st and final leg, was Sagan’s runner-up. Quipped Sagan, who had the green jersey pretty much locked up before Sunday: “I’m happy I didn’t fall.”

Tour de FROOME! Team Sky’s powerful riding, chasing rivals in the mountains and protecting Chris Froome on flats, was vital. So, too, was the meticulous planning of Dave Brailsford, the organizational brains at Froome’s Team Sky, which has far surpassed its goal in 2009 of nurturing Britain’s first Tour winner within five years.

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SPECIAL REPORT

N the day President Aquino delivered his last State of the Nation Address, redcolored numbers dominated the big board of the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE). Trading ended with losers edging out gainers 123 to 44, with 41 shares unchanged. T he benchmark Phi lippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) shed 1.5 percent, or 110.08 points, to close at 7,547.44 points, as other

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 45.4660

indices also fell. Total volume was 4.48 billion shares worth an anemic P5.51 billion. Other subindices were also down, led by the All Shares index that lost 55.02 to 4,320.13; the Financials index dropped 30.37 to 1,659.17; the Industrial index declined 98.88 to 11,445.66; and the Property index shed 92.22 to 3,074.30. “Something spooked the market again, as a new trading week opened. At this point, there just isn’t enough S “A ,” A

A TRADER at the Philippine Stock Exchange looks at the big board in Makati City which reflected mostly red lights, as trading was down just before the start of the last State of the Nation Address of President Aquino. NONIE REYES

n JAPAN 0.3673 n UK 70.5041 n HK 5.8658 n CHINA 7.322 n SINGAPORE 33.1530 n AUSTRALIA 33.1168 n EU 49.9399 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.1243 Source: BSP (27 July 2015)


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