BusinessMirror December 15, 2015

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Life

The mission of the pope

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‘LITTLE NANAY,’ ‘MARIMAR,’ ‘24 ORAS’ IN THREE-WAY FIGHT FOR THE PRIME-TIME DOMINANCE »B2-3

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B2-4 Tuesday, December 15, 2015

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COBONPUE’S APEC CHAIRS GO UP FOR ‘AUCTION FOR ACTION’

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THE Yoda chairs by Kenneth Cobonpue

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IX of the stylish Kenneth Cobonpue-designed Yoda chairs that were used by world leaders at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit last month will be put up for auction this week for the benefit of malnourished children through United Nations Children’s Fund’s (Unicef) “1,000 Days” campaign. According to the renowned Cebu-based designer, who was tasked to be the creative director of Apec, he received a lot of inquiries about the chairs after the Apec welcome dinner reception held at the Mall of Asia Arena. However, he thinks that the pieces are “so much more than just [furniture] to be sold at face value” and that “they’re now a part of our history that can serve a better purpose.” “I had the privilege of doing this big thing for our country, so I thought, ‘Why not extend the same privileges to the children of the Philippines?’” Cobonpue said at the recent news conference of the “Auction for Action” project. Event organizer and Unicef Special Advocate for Children Daphne Oseña-Paez said that when she first approached Cobonpue for the cause a few years back, she immediately got a resounding yes. “[I wanted to] see if I could gather generous artists and designers. The first person I called was Kenneth and, in two seconds, he said yes,” said Oseña-Paez, whose project is in its fourth edition since 2011 and has garnered a total of P8.2 million so far for children’s programs. “Since then, Kenneth has been part of every auction.” The Yoda chairs take inspiration from blades of grass, made of high-quality rattan reeds and are

UNITED Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) Country Representative Lotta Sylwander (left) and Unicef Special Advocate for Children Daphne Oseña-Paez flank worldrenowned designer Kenneth Cobonpue.

manufactured in Cebu. For the Apec dinner, Cobonpue made special iterations of the Yoda, where he made the chairs wider and taller. Also, he equipped the special iterations with

armrests and a swivel mechanism to give the leaders an unobstructed view of the 360-degree stage, which was inspired by the Banaue Rice Terraces. The six chairs up for auction are those used

by US President Barack Obama, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and President Aquino. Winning bids will receive the Yoda chairs especially marked with a metal plaque bearing the name of the state leader and a certificate of authenticity from Cobonpue. The bid price for the Yoda chairs starts at P75,000. The auction is set on December 16, Wednesday, 7 pm, at the Kenneth Cobonpue showroom on the ground floor of The Residences in Greenbelt, Makati City. However, interested bidders must register first not later than 5 pm of December 15. Interested parties can bid at the live auction or through SMS after a pre-registration process outlined on www.unicef.ph. Proceeds from the auction will benefit Unicef’s 1,000 Days campaign, which supports the nutrition of children in the crucial first 1,000 days of their lives that span from conception to their first two years. According to Unicef, 95 children in the world die every day before they reach the age of 5 1/2 because of malnutrition. In the country, there are at least 3.4 million malnourished children. “The first 1,000 days of a child is really important. Whatever the child doesn’t get in that time, they won’t ever be able to catch up,” said Unicef Philippines Country Representative Lotta Sylwander, adding that malnutrition impairs a child’s physical development, mental capacity and cognitive behavior, among others. “We’re very thankful for Kenneth’s generosity. This auction will go a long way in ensuring more children can benefit from this lifechanging Unicef initiative.” ■

10 quick and easy ways to entertain this holiday season B C H Tribune News Service THE holiday season is under way and many of you may be tight on time to create an inviting table for your guests. One of my favorite, creative ways to entertain for the holidays relates to involving the entire family, especially the children, in the creation of items for the table. How you decorate your table may be just as important as what is served, so why not highlight your table with festive décor to enhance the presentation of your meal? Here are some of my holiday table décor ideas that are both fast and festive. 1. Think simple. Decorating a table with walnuts is a fast and affordable way to decorate. Sprinkle some along your table or place in small trays or bowls along the table. You can even cut a little slit on the side and use them as place card holders if you are assigning seats to your guests. 2. Layer your place settings. Using a charger, dinner plate and salad plate is an elegant way to set the table. 3. Use napkin holders. Napkin holders and

rings automatically add a touch of formality that is perfect for the holidays. 4. Have personalized menus. As a child, whenever my mother and late father would entertain family and friends there was always a menu at each place setting indicating the arriving courses. Make your menu using on your home computer, print on vellum and cut to size. Punch a hole in the top and add a colored ribbon or other embellishment. 5. Assign seats. This added touch isn’t just for formal events like weddings. Consider having a place card at each place setting, on a napkin placed in the center of your place settings, or handwritten in beautiful cursive writing at the top of personalized menus. Need more inspiration? You can create your place card holder out of colored paper, in traditional holiday colors such as chocolate brown or deep orange, writing each name using white ink pens found in a craft store. 6. Incorporate nature. From twigs gathered from your backyard to pine cones and small branches of pine, these natural elements can go a long way in dressing up your table in a fast, creative way.

7. Get crafty. One of my favorite Thanksgiving craft ideas involves taking different colored pieces of felt and creating little turkeys. Use pipe cleaners for the feet and little cotton balls for the head. Use the beak of the bird to hold your place cards. 8. Break out the China. So many homeowners keep their china hidden and tucked away in cabinets waiting for that “special occasion” only to want to use the dishwasher-safe set come holiday time to avoid having a huge pile of china dishes to wash. I’ve been there! But now is the time to use that china—what a special way to serve your guests. 9. Consider pumpkins and gourds. White pumpkins are a pretty way to dress up a table. Consider using all white pumpkins, perhaps decorating with paints or glitter. 10. Decorating using fruits or vegetables. Apples, pomegranates or even artichokes make great centerpieces. Just take large vessels and fill!

LIFE

■ Cathy Hobbs, based in New York City, is an Emmy Award-winning television host and a nationally known interior design and home staging expert. Visit her web site at www.cathyhobbs.com.

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OBAMA RAMPS UP BID TO EXPLAIN HIS STRATEGY TO BATTLE TERRORISM

IP Converge Data Services Inc. Reynaldo R. Huergas said the government and the private sector must now work hand in hand to make sure the growing need for secure hybrid cloud solutions in the country is met. The trend is rooted on the perception that the public cloud does not suit needs specific to Asian companies, steering the demand toward private cloud services. The current hybrid model involves storing all mission-critical data in the private cloud, while nonmission critical data are stored into the public counterpart.

The

B2-1 | Tuesday, December 15, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion

IN this November 29, 2014, photo, a factory near the tracks of freight trains is seen at night in Kawasaki, south of Tokyo. Japanese industrial output rose 1.4 percent in October from the month before, below forecasts and a decrease from the year before. AP/EUGENE HOSHIKO

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ASHINGTON—Working to ease public jitters ahead of the holidays, President Barack Obama will use visits to the Pentagon and the National Counter Counterterrorism Center this week to try to explain his strategy for stopping the Islamic State (IS) group abroad and its sympathizers at home. Obama’s high-profile visits to agencies charged with keeping the US safe follow an Oval Office address last Sunday that aimed to reassure the public, but that critics said failed to do the job. Obama is also hoping to draw a contrast with Donald Trump and his inflammatory remarks about Muslims, which Obama’s administration has warned emboldens extremists looking to pull

the US into a war with Islam. “Terrorists like ISIL [Islamic State of Iraq and Levant] are trying to divide us along lines of religion and back background,” Obama said in his weekly address, using an acronym for the ex extremist group. “That’s how they stoke fear. That’s how they recruit.” This week, he said, “we’ll move forward on all fronts.” The public-relations campaign,

one week before Christmas, comes as the public is jittery about the specter of terrorism after the mass shooting in San Bernardino, California, this month and the Paris attacks a few weeks before. Seven in 10 Americans rated the risk of a terrorist attack in the US as at least somewhat high, according to an Associated Press-GfK poll. That was a sharp increase from the five in 10 who said that in January. US officials have insisted there are no specific, credible threats to the United States. But the apparent lack of warning before San Bernardino has fueled concerns about whether the US has a handle on potential attacks, especially during high-profile times, such as the end-of-year holidays. Obama, who leaves on Friday for his annual vacation in Hawaii, had to interrupt that trip in 2009 when a would-be attacker tried to blow up a plane on Christmas Day. Obama will open the weeklong drive on Monday by traveling to the Pentagon for a rare meeting outside the White House by his National Security Council, followed by a public update from the president about the

fight against IS. White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said Obama did not intend to announce any major changes in approach. “If there’s an opportunity for us to intensify efforts behind one aspect of our strategy, then that is something that he wants his team to be prepared to do,” Earnest said. On Thursday at the National Counterterrorism Center, which analyzes intelligence at its facility in suburban Virginia, Obama plans to address reporters after a briefing by intelligence and security agencies on threat assessments. Obama receives a similar briefing each year before the holidays. Concerns about extremism emanating from the Middle East have taken center stage in the presidential race. Hillary Clinton, the leading Democratic candidate, planned a speech in Minnesota on Tuesday to present a plan for protecting the US homeland from homegrown terrorism and other threats. Obama has tried to use his bully pulpit as a counterpoint to Grand Old Party front-runner Trump and

his widely condemned proposal to bar Muslims from entering the US. The White House scheduled a conference call on Monday with religious leaders about ways to fight discrimination and promote religious tolerance. Aiming to put a human face on the Syrian refugees issue, Obama is to speak on Tuesday at the National Archives Museum, where 31 immigrants from Iraq, Ethiopia, Uganda and 23 other nations will be sworn in as US citizens. Obama planned to use that occasion to reframe the national conversation about immigrants around the country’s founding values of tolerance and freedom. Despite Obama’s reassurances, Republicans say Obama has failed to grasp the severity of the risk. Republican Rep. Will Hurd said the threat from IS and other terrorist groups presents “a clear and present danger to the United States.” “We can’t contain this threat. We have to defeat it,” Hurd said in the weekly Republican address. “To defeat ISIS [Islamic State in Iraq and Syria], we have to be in this for the long haul.” AP

JAPAN SURVEY: BUSINESS SENTIMENT STABLE, BUT OUTLOOK CONTINUES WEAKER

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OKYO—A Japanese central bank survey shows sentiment among big manufacturers is steady, though companies in all sectors expect conditions to deteriorate in the coming months. The Bank of Japan’s Tankan survey, released on Monday, remained at 12 as of December, unchanged from September. The tankan measures corporate sentiment by subtracting the number of companies saying business conditions are negative from those responding they are positive. The reading for nonmanufacturers was 25, also unchanged from September, the survey said. However, the number of companies anticipating worse conditions in the coming quarter outnumbered those expecting improvements, with figures of minus five for manufacturers and minus seven for nonmanufacturers. A total of 10,971 companies responded to the survey. The survey for the coming quarter showed both manufacturers and other companies were pessimistic about the outlook for sales and for investment in the world’s third-largest economy. Japanese companies have seen their profits soar since Prime Minister Shinzo Abe took office three years ago and initiated a recovery strategy that relies heavily on monetary stimulus. But investment and wages have lagged expectations, slowing growth. AP

Families of Uruguay dictatorship victims search for missing

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ONTEVIDEO, Uruguay—Ignacio Errandonea has been searching 39 years for a brother who went missing in the 1970s as military dictator dictatorships swept across South America. Errandonea, a member of an organization searching for the nearly 200 Uruguayans still missing from the small country’s military rule, said he just wants to know what happened and where his brother is buried. Resigned to the reality that such answers may never come from official avenues, Errandonea and other families of missing people have begun promising anonymity to anybody, including aging perpetrators, who come forward with information. It’s a race against time: Many of the former military leaders who may know something have begun dying in recent years. Using a new, anonymous hotline, the families are spreading their message in churches, temples and other public places across the nation of 3.3 million people. An open letter disseminated nationwide said that families simply want to “cry for our disappeared.”

“If you saw something, know something or know some detail that can help find [our loved ones], we appeal to your humanity,” read part of the letter. The families make clear they are not forgiving perpetrators, and their offer of anonymity isn’t the same thing as government immunity from prosecution. “Realistically I know that my brother was killed,” said Errandonea, a gray-haired 61-year-old janitor. “But he was taken alive and the military has yet to say what happened and prove to me that he’s dead.” The number of people who were disappeared or killed during Uruguay’s 19731985 dictatorship is small compared to other countries in the region. In neighbor neighboring Argentina, rights groups estimate that 30,000 were killed or disappeared. More than 3,000 people are estimated to have been killed or disappeared in Chile. However, Uruguay’s search for its 192 missing citizens is an example of how nations across the region are still struggling over how to come to terms with their loss and get justice for victims and their families. When Uruguay returned to democracy

in 1985, then-President Julio Maria Sanguinetti appointed a military prosecutor to investigate claims of disappeared loved ones. But the effort failed to obtain much information and no remains were recovered. Gerardo Bleier, a local journalist whose father disappeared in 1975 in Montevideo, the capital, says Sanguinetti mistakenly downplayed the military’s violence. “It’s true that the barbarity in Uruguay never got to the level of Chile and Argentina,” said Bleier, whose father was a Communist Party member. “But that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.” In 2003 the Commission for Peace was created and charged with getting information from the military, which recognized its responsibility in a handful of disappearances. In 2005 a search for the remains of disappeared people was launched, but the effort only led to the recovery of four bodies. In March President Tabare Vazquez created a new commission to search for answers about the disappeared. But family members worry it could end up like previous failed attempts to find people.

Bleier estimates that there are about 50 people, including three or four former military leaders, who could provide key information about what happened. But he says a recent Supreme Court decision that crimes committed during the dictator dictatorship should not come under any statute of limitation probably has kept people from coming forward. “The campaign by the families is the last resort,” Bleier said. “Those who know what happened are going to die. At most there is about five years.” In September retired Gen. Pedro Barneix committed suicide before he was to be sent to prison for the death of a detainee during the dictatorship. Last year retired Gen. Pedro Dalmao died in prison, where he was serving time for the death of a dic dictatorship opponent. Retired Col. Guillermo Cedrez, former leader of the Military Center, an organization for retired officials of all military branches, said the families are asking for answers that don’t exist. “The Army gave all the information it had and the families refuse to believe it,” he said.

WORLD

In this December 4 photo, visitors observe the names written in the “Memorial de los desaparecidos,” a monument erected to remember those political prisoners presumedly executed during the Uruguayan dictatorship and whose remains in most cases where never found. AP/MAT A ILDE CAMPODONICO AT

Such statements do little to ease Errandonea’s pain. His then 20-year-old brother disappeared in 1976 from neighboring Argentina, where he had gone into exile after opposing the Uruguayan dictatorship. Errandonea believes his brother was caught up in Operation Condor, a coordinated effort among military governments in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay to share

intelligence and eliminate opponents. So far, the family’s effort has led to 300 calls to the anonymous hotline and a handful of leads that have not panned out. But the families are not giving up. “We are asking for information from the random soldier who perhaps was on duty and saw or heard something,” Errandonea said. “People who were not involved could know something.” AP

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PALACE priority measure institutionalizing and strengthening the public-private partnership (PPP) scheme has been approved at the House Committee on Appropriations on Monday. Liberal Party (LP) Rep. Isidro T. Ungab of Davao said the substitute bill seeks to recognize the indispensable role of the private sector as the main engine for national growth and development, as well as in creating an enabling environment for PPP. The measure also seeks to provide the most appropriate incentives to mobilize private resources for financing, design, construction, operation and maintenance of infrastructure projects and services

PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 47.2290

THE WINNERS AND LOSERS IN PARIS CLIMATE ACCORD

“The Philippines ranks as the 33rd most attacked country in the world. A hybrid cloud, one that also includes a DDoS [distributed denial of service] mitigation system, will best respond to the ICT demands of an Asian enterprise,” Huergas said. Research agency Frost & Sullivan said more than half of Asian enterprises intend to adopt hybrid cloud solutions in 2016, thus, stirring its growth rate by 20 percent from 2014 to 2019. This translates to a market value of $25.7 billion to $65.2 billion in 2019, hence, the need C  A

Bill setting perks, strengthening PPP scheme hurdles House panel

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World

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

B L S. M

B J M N.  C

Obama ramps up bid to explain his strategy to battle terrorism

Thursday 2014 Vol.15, 10 No. 40 Vol. 11 No. 68 Tuesday, 18, December 2015

Reforms, investments needed as ‘cloud’use, attacks climb

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COBONPUE’S APEC CHAIRS GO UP FOR ‘AUCTION FOR ACTION’ HANK You, Lord, for knowing that the Pope, Bishop of Rome and the successor of Saint Peter, is the perpetual, visible source and foundation of the unity of the Church. He is the vicar of Christ, the head of the College of bishops and pastor of the universal Church over which he has by divine institution full, supreme, immediate and universal power. May we pray always for his intentions in that way we become One in glorifying and honoring God. Amen.

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RITICAL policy reforms—foremost of which is the creation of the Department of Information and Communication Technology (DICT)—and ample IT infrastructure investments have become more pressing for the Philippines, with the demand for hybrid cloud solutions rising alongside the incidence of cyberattacks.

INSIDE

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A broader look at today’s business

normally financed and undertaken by the government, he said. The measure was principally authored by Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr., Majority Leader Neptali M. Gonzales II, House Committee on Ways and Means Chairman and LP Rep. Romero S. Quimbo of Marikina City, and LP Rep. Ronald M. Cosalan of Benguet. The PPP refers to a contractual arrangement between the implementing agency and the project proponent for the financing, design, construction, operation and maintenance, or any combination thereof, of an infrastructure facility, in which the project proponent bears significant risk, management responsibility or both.

FILIPINOS raise their bicycles as they join a rally in Manila on Sunday to criticize the agreement reached during the 21st Conference of Parties, United Nations conference on climate change, in Paris. Nearly 200 nations adopted the first global pact to fight climate change on Saturday, calling on the world to collectively cut and then eliminate greenhouse-gas pollution but imposing no sanctions on countries that don’t. AP

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AVING the world isn’t going to be cheap. If you sell oil, coal or old-fashioned cars, that threatens disaster. For makers of stuff like solar panels, high-tech home insulation and efficient lighting, it’s a potential miracle. That’s the bottom line from this weekend’s climate deal in Paris, which commits 195 countries to reducing pollution in order to head off dangerous climate change. Global governments and companies

are counting the costs and benefits from the agreement, which calls for wholesale transformations of energy, transportation and dozens of other lines of business. Fossil-fuel producers and countries that depend on them face massive, costly disruption. Players in up and coming industries, like renewable power and energy efficiency, are looking at an unprecedented opportunity. S “P  ,” A

S “PPP,” A

■ JAPAN 0.3908 ■ UK 71.9062 ■ HK 6.0937 ■ CHINA 7.3163 ■ SINGAPORE 33.4365 ■ AUSTRALIA 34.0561 ■ EU 51.9188 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 12.5904

Source: BSP (14 December 2015)


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