WELCOME TO THE PHILIPPINES The Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 1 is one of the designated landing areas for leaders attending the 2015 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting that begins in earnest today. Various reports cite many scheduled flights were canceled because of the event. NONIE REYES
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A broader look at today’s business Thursday 18, 2014 Vol.17, 10 No. 40 Vol. 11 No. 40 Tuesday, November 2015
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Consumer spending to boost Apec region’s growth in 2016 B C N. P M G P
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SIA Pacific’s growth next year would be driven largely by robust consumer spending and steady government spending, an official of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) Public Support Unit (PSU) said on Monday.
INSIDE
HOW TO SHOP FOR A DESK The good we do today
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EAR Lord, yesterday is over and tomorrow is far away, but we remain faithful and committed to the good we do today. We must line up the following to honor and praise You: An early morning mass and receive You at Holy Communion; visit the sick; go to elderly homes and donate goods for them; round up street children and treat them for a meal and volunteer in activities in the community, to name a few. Help us, Lord, to add to the good we do today and that we may do it every day. Amen. MY DAILY PRAYER, LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos | lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
STEPHEN COLBERT LAMPOONS MAINSTREAM MEDIA’S PENCHANT FOR CENSORING ART
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How to shop for a desk ❶
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❶ BOX Frame Counter Marble Table from West Elm. WEST ELM/TNS
❷ ANNIE BRAHLER designed this office for a client who wanted a vintage desk that reminded her of a horse barn with its warm, worn wood. BJORN WALLANDER/TNS
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SADDLE Office Chairs from West Elm. WEST ELM/TNS
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Chicago Tribune
HEY can be hosts to benign—or unpleasant—tasks. But a desk can be one of the most important purchases in a home. Design experts say that, far from being an afterthought once main rooms are furnished, a desk and its surrounding atmosphere warrant careful planning. “If you don’t feel compelled to be in that space, you’re not going to use it,” said Annie Brahler, owner of interior design company Euro Trash. “It’s going to make you better at everything else if your workspace feels comfortable to you.” A desk should reflect what you hope to achieve, and ideally, it should inspire you in some way. What to consider:
n PURPOSE First, think through what you’ll want to do. Is this desk just for sorting mail? Enduring long hours on a project? Maybe you’ll need heavy filing cabinets for papers or a sleek top for three computer screens. “Form should always follow function,” said Brahler, who is based in Jacksonville, Illinois. “The first thing someone should do is write down what kinds of things they perform at their desk.” “Then,” she added, “they have to think about the way to access things.”
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n STORAGE Pamela Sherman, founder of Chicago Organized Home, said to think about what you’ll want to put in the desk—will you need a small pen drawer or deep cabinets? “You You want to try and strike a balance, because Y you don’t want to have a desk full of junk drawers,” she said. For example, Brahler said she draws designs at a different desk than where she pays her bills. One of her clients, a former pro baseball player and businessman, preferred hard copies in files. So her company added file storage to a customized desk. “He wanted to be able to open that drawer and see his files,” she said. n SIZE Size depends on space, of course. A
studio apartment might invite a secretary desk with a lid, or a leaning shelf tower with a desktop that pulls out. “That way you’re just optimizing every inch of space, and you might not need a full desk surface for writing,” Sherman said. Some people want an L-shaped desk, said Shannon Calderon at ergonomic furniture store The Human Solution, because of the space it allows. But she noted that the space often isn’t all reachable. SURFACE The top of a desk is a focal point. Johanna Mele, lead home stylist at upscale retailer West Elm, suggested considering whether the surface needs to fit a laptop or piles of
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spread-out paperwork. For those who mostly rely on computers, she recommended a smaller desk. But those who need to stretch out should look at a larger size or even a small dining table, Mele said. Pair a small dining table with an upholstered desk chair, she suggested. And she noted that West Elm provides free at-home advice from stylists in its Design Lab. n HEIGHT How high your desk is might have an effect on your posture and, possibly, productivity. The standard height is about 29 inches, experts said. These days, however, many people request counter- or even bar-height, in the range of 36 to 42 inches, Mele noted, so they can stand. Finally, think about comfort. Calderon at the Human Solution, which sells height-adjustable desks, suggests making sure the height is at a level that comfortably accommodates you. If it’s adjustable, ensure it’s easy to use. “You’re You’re less likely to use the sit-stand capabilities Y when the desk is cumbersome to operate,” Calderon noted. And be creative when choosing materials. Remember that you don’t have to purchase something that was created without you in mind. “Really think of that space as your own,” Brahler said. “You You have to really be personal and pay Y attention to yourself and give yourself a little bit of indulgence, as well.”
Going the extra mile for residents
A RESIDENTS at 68 Roces were pampered by spa therapists from The Body Spa and Waxing Salon, free of charge.
SK anyone who has lived in a developed community all his life and you are sure to hear many of them saying how they now find it rare for developers to take care of their clients after the turnover of their property. This is what sets Eton Properties apart from other companies. The customer is always at the core of the company’s every undertaking, even long after
the turnover has been done. Indeed, after-sales service in the real-estate industry has many facets—from property management and housekeeping to leasing services and documentation. But Eton Properties goes the extra mile in after-sales service by sponsoring events in the community that aim to enrich the lives of the residents. Each event is well
thought-out and carefully crafted to cater to the specific needs of residents and unit owners. In after-sales service, even the simplest of gestures matter. This year, Eton Properties kicked off its after-sales program on Valentine’s Day. Residents of 68 Roces, Eton Residences Greenbelt and Eton Parkview Greenbelt received chocolate treats from the company—a simple gesture that generated smiles among unit owners and tenants. In North Belton Communities in Quezon City, the company sponsored a summer basketball league and their annual fiesta with the hopes that the activities will help foster camaraderie among the community members. Eton Properties also partnered with Starbucks Coffee and launched “Eton Monday Brews.” On select Mondays within the year, a Starbucks Coffee booth is set up at the lobby of chosen developments. With the help of Starbucks baristas, hundreds of residents are treated to a free cup of brewed coffee or a tall frappuccino. It is an event conceptualized by Eton Properties to help ease the dreaded Monday blues, and to help Eton residents start their week right. Kids also have a place in the
company’s after-sales program. In Belton Place in Makati, Eton Properties organized an Easter EggHunt Party and an event dubbed “Crafternoon,” an arts-and-crafts workshop for kids hosted by veteran artist Precy Brady. Both events were a complete success as both children and their parents had a wonderful time enjoying the games and the fun and creative workshop. In upscale 68 Roces in Quezon City, a successful pampering activity, billed “Saturday Bliss at 68 Roces,” was organized on a sunny Saturday morning. The activity featured seasoned spa therapists from The Body Spa and Waxing Lounge. They rendered manicure, pedicure and back massage services to residents. The best part? The Eton residents enjoyed all of these services for free. “Eton Properties focuses on value creation and fully understanding what our clients want, now and in the future,” says Martha Herrera, Eton Properties AVP for Marketing, PR, and Corporate Communications. “In line with this, we develop programs to anticipate our clients’ lifestyle needs in advance. The after-sales program of Eton Properties is just the beginning of many more companyinitiated projects aimed at enriching the quality of life of our residents.”
Two easy twine projects for a festive season L
IBERATE a roll of humble cotton string from your pantry to make our two sweet projects.
WRAPPED JARS
HOLD flowers, pencils, coins and more in these attractive containers. They make great gifts, too. Start with a clean jar or bottle. Glue about 1/2 inch of the end of a ball of butcher’s twine to the side of the jar. Wind the string around the jar, cut the string, and glue the end to the jar. Decorate the twine with acrylic paint (kids can paint freehand or use stamps), or for a faded, ombre effect, layer on coats of watercolor.
FUZZY THE STRINGMAN
OUR twine snowman will keep smiling long after the snow melts. Make the three sections of the stringman’s body by crumpling one, two and three pieces of white paper into tight balls. Wrap each with string, tucking in the ends with a bit of glue. Insert one end of a toothpick into the largest ball, then slide the medium ball over the other end. Do the same with a second toothpick and the smallest ball. Tuck twig arms into the string and glue on paper features, as shown. Display the stringman on a jar lid. TNS
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IRAQ WARNED OF ATTACKS BEFORE PARIS ASSAULT The World BusinessMirror
news@businessmirror.com.ph | Tuesday, November 17, 2015
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Apec Secretariat Director for Policy Support Dennis Hew said in a media briefing that the region’s local output, as measured by GDP, would grow by 3.4 percent in 2016 from the projected 3.1 percent this year. “GDP growth and trade volume in the region are expected to be moderate in 2015 and will recover in 2016,” Hew said. For this year, Hew said GDP growth in Asia Pacific would settle at 3.1 percent, lower than the 3.4 percent recorded in 2014. He also said the volume of exports this year is expected to grow by 2.3 percent, slower than the 4.4-percent hike posted in 2014. MEASURING PROGRESS Don Campbell, cochairman of the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC); Eduardo Pedrosa, secretary-general of PECC; and Tang In May a report published by the Apec PSU indicated that Guoquiang, cochairman of PECC, discuss the outcomes of a survey where the majority expressed their view on key elements promoting inclusive growth, which is the domestic factors, such as robust household spending and steady theme carried by the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation 2015, on Monday. The three key ingredients supporting inclusive growth include the provision of public education government consumption, and investment would boost GDP at the primary and tertiary levels, reducing corruption, and supporting micro, small and medium enterprises. The PECC officials also discussed progress on the so-called Bogor Goals discussed at the 1993 Apec leaders’ meet in Indonesia, which aimed for free and open trade and investment in the region by 2010 for the mature economies in Apec and, by 2020, for the developing member-nations. STEPHANIE TUMAMPOS
C A rises over Sinjar, northern Iraq from oil fires set by Islamic urdish Iraqi fighters, backed by US-led air strikes, launch a major assault on November 12. The strategic town of Sinjar was overran last year by the IS group in an onslaught that caused the flight of tens of thousands of Yazidis and first prompted AP/BRAM JANSSEN
IRAQ WARNED OF ATTACKS
MANILA DOES A LOT Aquino in final infra push as election nears OF STRATEGIC ‘FIRSTS’ W IN APEC HISTORY
BEFORE PARIS ASSAULT AGHDAD — Senior Iraqi intelligence officials warned members of the U.S.-led coalition fighting the Islamic State (IS) group of imminent assaults by the militant organization just one day before last week’s deadly attacks in Paris killed 129 people, the Associated Press has learned.
Officials from the US, French and ot her Wester n gover nments have expressed worries for months about IS-inspired attacks by militants who fought in Syria, the official noted. In recent weeks, the sense of danger had spiked. Six senior Iraqi officials confirmed the information in the dispatch, a copy of which was obtained by the AP, and four of these intelligence officials said they also warned France specifically of a potential attack. Two officials told the AP that France was warned beforehand of details that French authorities have yet to make public. “We have recovered information from our direct sources in the IS terrorist organization about the orders
issued by terrorist ‘Abu Bakr alBaghdadi’ directing all members of the organization to implement an international attack that includes all coalition countries, in addition to Iran and the Russian Federation, through bombings or assassinations or hostage taking in the coming days. We do not have information on the date and place for implementing these terrorist operations at this time,” the Iraqi dispatch read in part. Among the other warnings cited by Iraqi officials: that the Paris attacks appear to have been planned in Raqqa, Syria—the IS de-facto capital—where the attackers were trained specifically for this operation and with the intention of sending them to France. The officials also said a sleeper cell in France then met with the attackers after their training and helped them to execute the plan. There were 24 people involved in the operation, they said: 19 attackers and five others in charge of logistics and planning. The officials all spoke anonymously because they are not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.
The IS group claimed responsibility on Saturday for the gun and bomb attacks on a stadium, a concert hall and Paris cafés that also wounded 350 people, 99 of them seriously. Seven of the attackers blew themselves up. Police have been searching intensively for accomplices. Officials in the French presidential palace would not comment. Every night, the head of French counterintelligence goes to bed asking “why not today?” the French security official said. T he Iraqi gover nment has been sharing intelligence with various coalition nations since they launched their air strike campaign against the IS group last year. In September the Iraqi government also announced that it was part of an intelligenceshar ing quartet w ith Russia, Iran and Syria for the purposes of under mining the mi litant group’s ability to make further battlefield gains. A third of Iraq and Syria are now part of the self-styled caliphate declared by the IS group last year. A US-led coalition operating in
Iraq and Syria is providing aerial support to allied ground forces in both countries, and they are arming and training Iraqi forces. The US said it is also sending as many as 50 special forces to northern Syria. Russia is also conducting airstrikes in Syria and recently endured a tragedy of its own when a Russian airplane was downed in a suspected bombing in Egypt last month, killing all 224 passengers onboard. The IS group claimed responsibility for the attack. US Rep. Ad a m Sc h if f, t he ranking member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, said on Sunday the attack was likely directed and funded out of Syria. France has been on edge since January, when Islamic extremists attacked the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which had run cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, and a kosher grocery. Twenty people died, including the three attackers. The Charlie Hebdo attackers claimed links to extremists in Yemen, while the kosher market attacker claimed ties to the IS group. At the time, France’s prime
minister acknowledged “ failings” in intelligence that led to the three-day spree of horror, as criticism mounted that the attacks might have been avoided if officials had been more alert to the deadly peril posed by suspects already on their radar. Experts noted that several factors may have been behind the failures in January: Security services are drowning in data, overwhelmed by the quantity of people and e-mails they are expected to track, and hampered by the inability to make preemptive arrests in democratic countries. Criticism had focused on the failure to more closely follow the two brothers who carried out the attack on the Charlie Hebdo newspaper. One had been convicted on terrorism charges and the other was believed to have linked up with al-Qaeda forces while in Yemen. Both were on the US no-fly list, according to a senior US official, because of their links to terrorist movements. Bernard Bajolet, the head of the French spy service, spoke during a public appearance at George Washington University in
Washington two weeks ago about the twin threats France was facing, both from its own extremists and “terrorist actions which are planned [and] ordered from outside or only through fighters coming back to our countries.” General warnings about potential attacks from Iraqi intelligence or other Middle Eastern intelligence services are not uncommon, the official said. The French were already on high alert. “During the last month we have disrupted a certain number of attacks in our territory,” Bajolet said. “But this doesn’t mean that we will be able all the time to disrupt such attacks.” Obtaining intelligence about the IS group has been no easy feat given difficulties accessing territor y held by the radical Sunni group. Iraqi agencies genera lly rely on infor mants inside the group in both Iraq and Syria for information, but that is not always infallible. Last year reports from Iraqi intelligence officials and the Iraqi government that al-Baghdadi was injured were later denied or contradicted. AP
‘Hell’: Famous Paris venue becomes scene of terror bloodbath can group, the Eagles of Death Metal. Less than an hour after the band began its set, a series of bangs rang out. Many thought it was firecrackers or pyrotechnics. “Everyone thought it was part of the show, but then I saw the lead singer’s face drop before he ran off stage, and the lights came on,” university student Hanna Corbett, 21, told the Nottingham Post newspaper of Britain. “We all just dropped to the floor. When the music stopped, there was this haunting silence in between gunfire and I could see blood on the floor.” The Bataclan already had a storied history, opening its doors on Paris’ Right Bank in 1865. French crooner Maurice Chevalier of “Gigi” fame enjoyed some of his earliest successes there, before it was converted into a movie theater, devastated by fire and resurrected as a concert hall again in
the mid-1980s. Friday’s headliner was a California band whose music is far less harsh than its name, described by a cofounder as a mix of bluegrass slide guitar, stripper drum beats and Canned Heat-style vocals. As the Eagles of Death Metal performed, at about 9:40 p.m., a black Volkswagen Polo drew up and parked outside the Bataclan, French officials said. Three occupants emerged from the vehicle, armed with automatic weapons and wearing belts packed with extremely volatile explosives. They entered the club apparently unnoticed amid the high-decibel music, and opened fire at the crowd. Julien Pearce, a journalist at Europe 1 radio, also thought the pop-pop noises were a harmless
part of the act. “Then I looked back and saw the assailants...who were coming toward us with assault rifles and were randomly firing into the crowd,” he said on Europe 1. “We immediately got on the ground to protect ourselves, to be less exposed.” The Bataclan had become one of the targets of the deadliest violence to hit the French capital since World War II. That same evening outside the France-Germany soccer match in Paris’s northern suburbs, a pair of suicide bombers had already detonated their explosives, and another would blow himself up on Boulevard Voltaire, a thoroughfare in eastern Paris near the Bataclan. The coordinated attack included volleys of Kalashnikov fire at
Parisians and others who thronged bars and restaurants on an unseasonably balmy November night. In all, at least 129 people were killed and 350 wounded. France’s leaders have said their country is now at war. In claiming responsibility for the attacks, the Islamic State group said the Bataclan had expressly been targeted for its “hundreds of pagans gathered for a concert of prostitution and vice.” The gunmen in the concert hall were “were very calm, very methodical, very slow,” John Leader, 46, told Australia Broadcasting Corp. after escaping with his 12-year-old son. Two of the men worked together, one aiming and shooting while the other covered him.
“They weren’t in there shooting like in an American movie,” Leader said. “It was finding a target and then shooting, and then finding the next target and then shooting.” After several minutes of lying still on the Bataclan’s floor, Pearce and people around him decided to move as the gunmen paused to reload. “We needed to get out of this hell, to try something, at least,” he said. “Bullets started to fly again in our direction so we ran, crawled and got into a tiny dark room next to the stage.” “There was no exit, so we were just in another trap, less exposed, but still a trap,” he said. Other people escaped through the Bataclan’s side doors, some dragging bodies with them. One woman
clung to a second-story window, trying to get out of the line of fire. Among those attempting to flee was the sister of French football striker Antoine Griezmann, who was playing in the game going on against Germany. Mariesha Payne and Christine Tudhope, both from Scotland, hid in a cellar at the Bataclan for three hours. They had come to Paris to celebrate Tudhope’s 35th birthday and were standing near the stage when the shooting started. Speaking to Sky News after they returned to Edinburgh airport, Payne, 33, said she saw bullets hit the stage. “A second round went off, most people ducked, but I just said, ‘Run, just get out of here,’” she said. AP
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HE Philippines is again trailblazing the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) organization by introducing several strategic initiatives considered to be the “firsts” in Apec history. Tony Tan Caktiong, chairman of the Apec 2015 CEO Summit, said the “Apec gathering is one opportunity event for the Philippines to introduce itself to the world again in a big way by pushing for strategic initiatives that could be the first of its kind.” Inclusion of small farmers. Caktiong himself, who built the food chain giant Jollibee, is also known for developing the first of its kind in the local food industry—among the first in the fast-food chain and for popularizing a local brand that capitalized on the Filipino taste, the Filipino culture and values, and thus creating a Filipino niche market that has gone global, wherever Filipino C A
ITH seven months left in office, President Aquino is taking measures to strengthen his infrastructure legacy and boost the resilience of one of Asia’s fastestgrowing economies. The government aims to award by the end of the first quarter at least 60 percent of the $7.6 billion in public-works projects planned for 2016 before a preelection ban comes into force, Public Works Secretary Rogelio L. Singson said. The President also signed an order on November 13 to ease access for foreign contractors to deals worth at least P3 billion ($64 million) by allowing them to apply for a permanent license to potentially work on multiple projects instead of having to apply on a per-project basis, he said. “These measures will help fast-track projects to ensure they meet deadlines
and avoid delays we have seen in the past,” Singson said in an interview on Friday in Manila. “We try to do a lot of the bidding before the end of the year. We are working on pre-construction activities: detailed engineering, bidding—activities short of an award.” The Philippines joins neighbors, like Indonesia, where governments are under pressure to step up spending to support their economies, amid faltering global growth. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr., who has held interest rates steady this year, said last week there is no urgent need to ease policy as state outlays pick up.
Weak growth
PRESIDENTIAL elections are due to be held in the Philippines in May and the government will be banned from awarding public-works contracts from around
the end of March. Delays in government spending earlier this year hobbled the economy, with the World Bank forecasting growth will slow to 5.8 percent this year, the weakest since 2011. Faster state outlays will help ensure an expansion of as much as 8 percent is within reach next year, BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo said last week. The government is also speeding up projects under its Public-Private Partnership Program, with officials working on an executive order that will give the winner of the Laguna Lakeshore Expressway Dike project the right to sell reclaimed land, which is part of the contract, Singson said. The public works agency’s budget is almost half of the P766.5 billion in infrastructure spending planned for 2016, which is equal to about 5 percent of gross S “A,” A
Aquino, Bachelet agreed to expand Manila-Chile joint ventures B B F
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HE governments of the Philippines and Chile on Monday agreed to expand cooperation in natural resource and energy development, among other joint ventures forged dur-
PESO EXCHANGE RATES
ing bilateral talks hosted by President Aquino for visiting C h i l e a n P r e s i d e nt M i c h e l l e Bachelet in Malacañang. During state visit rites at the Palace, Mr. Aquino and Bachelet stood witness, as Trade Secretary Gregory L. Domingo and Chile’s
US 47.0320
JAPAN 0.3835
Minister of Foreign Affairs Heraldo Muñoz signed a letter of intent (LOI) between the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) of the Republic of the Philippines and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Chile on enhancing trade relations. Communication Secretary Her-
UK 71.6438
HK 6.0679
CHINA 7.3787
minio B. Coloma Jr. said the LOI paves the way for the Philippines and Chile to “commence discussions on developing a framework for negotiating a mutually beneficial trade agreement that is flexible and pragmatic as to its depth and scope, which may contribute
SINGAPORE 33.0327
to an increase in trade, in goods and investments, and the promotion of technical cooperation in areas of mutual interest.” Before that, Presidents Aquino and Bachelet first witnessed the signing of a separate agreement on disaster reduction and manage-
AUSTRALIA 33.4771
EU 50.5688
ment by Defense Secretary Voltaire T. Gazmin and Muñoz. The Palace said the memorandum of understanding aims to strengthen cooperation between the Philippines and Chile in the area of disaster-risk reduction and S “J ,” A
SAUDI ARABIA 12.5416 Source: BSP (16 November 2015)