BusinessMirror August 24, 2015

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A broader look at today’s business Saturday 2014 24, Vol. 10 No. 40Vol. Monday,18, August 2015 10 No. 319

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Arab airlines crowding out Philippine carriers T

MANILA SEEKS $3.41-B ODAs FROM WORLD BANK, ADB

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INSIDE

OMPETING with Middle Eastern carriers that receive billions of dollars in government subsidies is a losing battle that may force Filipino airlines to abandon their flights to several Arab and European markets, the president of the Philippines’s flag carrier said on Sunday.

djokovic faces federer in finals; serena williams there, too

Sports BusinessMirror

C |

By Lorenz S. Marasigan

M, A , 

mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

STREAK AT STAKE

TIGER WOODS tosses grass clippings before teeing off on the second hole during the third round of the Wyndham Championship. AP

B J K The Associated Press

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ASON, Ohio—Novak Djokovic had to rally against a lowly qualifier to get another shot at a title he’s never won. Next in his way: Roger Federer, who has more Cincinnati trophies than anyone else. Djokovic got a little help in the tiebreaker and pulled away to a 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-2, victory over Alexandr Dolgopolov on Saturday to reach the Western & Southern Open final. He’ll face Federer, a six-time champion who has never lost a Cincinnati title match. “There’s always a lot at stake, this one in particular,” Federer said. The top-ranked Djokovic is 0-4 career in finals at Cincinnati, where he’s never even won a set. It’s the only one of the nine Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Masters to elude him. A victory on Sunday would make him the first player to win all nine ATP Masters during his career. “I gave myself another chance to fight for the trophy,” Djokovic said. “That was the goal and that was the wish coming here in Cincinnati. Obviously, last couple of years, it was always in the back of my mind, the potential history making and obviously, that motivates me even more. “Having that in back of my mind helped me to go through matches like the one today.” On the women’s side, defending champion Serena

years stand to be wiped out due to the unfair advantage that Middle Eastern carriers have. Most, if not all, Arab carriers operating in and out of Manila fly to the Middle East, using airports in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as jumpoff points to European destinations. “Should the UAE airlines get the additional entitlements they seek during the coming Philippine-UAE air talks, this will undermine the Continued on A4

special report

DJOKOVIC FACES FEDERER IN FINALS; SERENA WILLIAMS THERE, TOO

SERBIA’S Novak Djokovic returns the ball to Alexandr Dolgopolov of Ukraine during their semifinals at the Western & Southern Open. Serena Williams (inset) after scoring a point against Elina Svitolina. AP

Philippine Airlines (PAL) President Jaime J. Bautista said Gulf carriers—which are alleged to have received roughly $23 billion in state subsidies—will drive out competition if they manage to secure new entitlements in the forthcoming bilateral air talks between Middle Eastern countries and the Philippines. He lamented that, without a level playing field, the gains that the flag carrier booked during the last two

Williams gave herself a chance to make it two Cincinnati titles in a row. She beat 14th-seeded Elina Svitolina, 6-4, 6-3. Williams will face third-seeded Simona Halep, who beat Jelena Jankovic, 6-1, 6-2, in the other semifinal. Halep’s win will move her ahead of Maria Sharapova, who withdrew from Cincinnati with a leg injury, into the No. 2 seed for the US Open. “It definitely feels good to be back in the finals,” Williams said. “I was playing aggressive more today and it really helped me, and it can keep me going for the next few weeks.” Federer won the marquee matchup of the semifinals, using his steady serve to beat Andy Murray, 6-4, 7-6 (6). The defending champion is trying for an unprecedented seventh title in Cincinnati. It’s his first tournament since he beat Murray in straight sets at Wimbledon before losing to Djokovic in the finals. And he’s looking very fresh, especially with his serve. He hasn’t been broken during his four matches, a total of 29 service games. He lost only 14 points off his serve, while beating Murray for the fifth time in a row. “I’ve definitely been holding my serve very well,” Federer said. “If you seldom get broken or you don’t get broken in a match, it’s quite hard to lose at this point.” Murray played a lot of long, draining matches during the last week. Mainly, he couldn’t keep up with Federer’s serve. “Today it was a tough one,” Murray said. “I started

slowly the last couple of days. Almost got myself back in the match today, and I just didn’t return as well as I would have liked. That was the difference.” For a while, it looked like Djokovic was going to come up short of his finals destination again. He needed a few mistakes by the 66th-ranked Ukranian to help him pull it out. Dolgopolov took advantage of Djokovic’s sluggish start and won the first set in 31 minutes. It wasn’t the first time that Djokovic has fallen behind to him: Dolgopolov got up 7-6, 4-1, at Miami earlier this season before losing in three sets. Djokovic took a medical timeout after the fifth

PHL’S SLOW BUT EXPENSIVE INTERNET SERVICE

game of the second set. A trainer checked his lower rib cage on his left side and his abdomen—Djokovic called it a “minor problem.” He went back out on court and took it to a tiebreaker. Up 5-4 and serving, Dolgopolov dumped a pair of backhand shots into the net. Djokovic closed out the 67-minute set with a forehand winner. “He just makes you play, and [he] plays more careful on the big points,” Dolgopolov said. “You have to beat him and go for the risk. “Ifs, a lot of ifs. You make a decision and you have to roll on it.” Dolgopolov committed 20 unforced errors as the third set slipped away.

FOR A CHANGE, TIGER TO PLAY IN FINAL ROUND B J MC The Associated Press

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REENSBORO, North Carolina— Tiger Woods couldn’t have asked for much more at his first Wyndham Championship. He’s playing with confidence. His scores show it. And now he’ll play a Sunday round that matters. Woods shot a two-under 68 in the third round on Saturday, leaving him two strokes behind leader and longtime friend Jason Gore in a three-way tie for second. Gore had a career-best 62 to reach 15-under 195 at Sedgefield Country Club. “I need to go out there tomorrow and make a run, and get myself up there and make some birdies,” Woods said. “There’s a bunch of guys...at 13 [under]. There’s a whole slew of guys at 12, 11, 10. Anybody can make a run and shoot the score Jason and Jonas [Blixt] did.” Woods—whose streak of 28 holes without a bogey ended on the 18th when his 6-foot par putt lipped out—reeled off 10 straight pars before briefly moving within one stroke of Gore with a birdie on the par-3 16th. “I felt very steady from the word ‘go,’” Woods said. Blixt and Scott Brown joined Woods

at 13 under. Blixt shot a career-best 62, and Brown had a 66. Former Wyndham winners Webb Simpson (64) and Brandt Snedeker (67) were three strokes back along with Paul Casey (66), Jim Herman (66) and Cameron Percy (67). Woods was poised to make a run at his first win in more than two years— one that would earn him enough points to clinch a spot in the FedEx Cup playoffs opener next week in New Jersey. Depending on the math, a solo secondplace finish also might be enough for Woods, who’s at No. 187. “I think it’s awesome to see him playing well again, to see him playing like Tiger Woods,” Gore said, “because that’s what we all want to see.” He also moved one step closer to his 80th Professional Golfers’ Association Tour victory—and first since the 2013 World Golf Championship (WGC)Bridgestone Invitational. Playing the Wyndham for the first time in an effort to hone his game and earn a spot in The Barclays, Woods is attempting to win a tournament in his first try for the first time since 1999—when he won the WGC-Cadillac Championship in Spain. For him, this day was about consis-

tently making pars—15 in all, including a remarkable save on the 10th with a 24-foot putt. “The putter just felt really good. My pace, I felt like I could be aggressive,” Woods said. “I took a few runs at putts and ripped them past the hole, but I never felt like I was going to miss any of them. I took a rip at them. Some I made, some I didn’t.” His only birdie on the back nine was an important one. He plopped his tee shot on 16 about 12 feet from the hole and rolled in the putt to move to 14 under before giving that stroke back on his final hole. That bogey prevented a final Sunday pairing with Gore—who was instead paired with Blixt. Gore says he’s known Woods “since we’ve been 12 years old” as kids in California. Gore started the round six strokes off the lead. He took over the top spot at 14 under with a birdie on the 15th, then closed with another on the 18th—hitting his second shot to 7 to set up his ninth birdie of the day. At No. 166 on the points list, Gore put himself in position for his second career win on tour and his first since the 84 Lumber Classic in 2005. He has just 15 top-10 finishes in the past decade. “Contrary to popular belief,” Gore

quipped, “I’m still a good golfer.” His big round came in relative anonymity because once again, an overflow crowd followed Woods’s every move. Woods began the day sharing the lead with rookie Tom Hoge at 11 under, but claimed sole possession for the first time with a birdie on the first hole. Blixt joined him at 12 under moments later, then jumped ahead with a birdie on the 17th. Woods caught him by rolling in a 5-foot birdie putt on the fifth before Gore shot past them both. Still, Blixt has given himself a shot to make the playoffs and earn his tour card for next year. He’s at No. 135 on the points list and No. 147 on the money list, and said he’d be “very pleased if I secured my job.” “A win will take care of that,” he added. “Shoot another 62, I should have a good chance.” Erik Compton, a two-time heart transplant recipient who shared the firstround lead, withdrew before his third round with an injured left ankle but says he’s hopeful of playing in The Barclays. Had he pulled out a day earlier, the cut line would have moved to two under and 19 more players—including bubble players Michael Putnam (No. 134) and Tom Gillis (No. 138) would still be around this weekend.

Sports

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bombing the latest of many challenges for thailand’s military leaders Perspective BusinessMirror

E4 Monday, August 24, 2015

www.businessmirror.com.ph

JUNTA’S WOES

Bombing the latest of many challenges for Thailand’s military leaders

By Lorenz S. Marasigan TRAFFIC passes the Erawan Shrine, the site of Monday’s deadly bombing, at Rajprasong intersection in Bangkok, Thailand. The central Bangkok shrine reopened on Wednesday to the public.AP/KARLY DOMB SADOF

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B D D. G | The Associated Press

ANGKOK—When a military coup last year ended months of political turmoil and violence in Thailand, even some democracy advocates welcomed the junta’s promise to restore stability and return “happiness to the people.” But 15 months later, a deadly bomb that ripped through a venerated shrine in downtown Bangkok highlights a critical question: Are the generals losing their grip on troubles blitzing them from all directions, in a land that once seemed endowed with a magic touch? Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, the former army chief who engineered the May 2014 coup, has said he had to take over the government to end protests and political clashes that left about 30 people dead. With the junta cracking down on dissent, most of the country had been relatively peaceful until the August 17 bombing, which killed 20 people and injured scores of others. Speculation about possible motives and culprits ranges from antigovernment radicals to Muslim extremists to a renegade military faction, underscoring the array of woes facing the country. Prayuth described the attack as “the worst incident that has ever happened in Thailand.” The prime minister has said he will step aside for a new elected government as soon as possible, but when that will happen, and the true strength of that future government, has grown increasingly murky. Prayuth is spearheading the drafting of a constitution that would ensure that the military and traditional ruling elite retain sufficient political power beyond the general elections, which would be held a year from now at the earliest. Some analysts say Prayuth is trying to turn the clock back to an era when a feudallike hierarchy dominated. They say that won’t work in an increasingly diverse, Internet-connected society, and that men in

uniform simply don’t have the know-how to resolve contemporary complexities. Thailand’s economy has been flagging under the junta, with disappointing figures for both foreign investment and domestic consumption. Tourism—which accounts for 9 percent of the economy—has been relatively resilient, but Monday’s bombing has already driven some visitors away. Prayuth replaced the country’s economic leadership in a Cabinet shake-up on Thursday. On a continent earlier populated by military strongmen, Thailand remains the last country in Asia overtly ruled by the military. Uniformed or ex-military men have led Thailand for 55 of the 83 years since absolute monarchy was overthrown in 1932, with coups occurring almost as frequently as the monsoons. “I think the military is capable of fi xing problems in the short run, but superficially because the use of force and fear is a painkiller. But like with a painkiller, the real problem is not understood, let alone solved,” says Thongchai Winichakul, a Thai professor of Southeast Asian history at the University of Wisconsin. Prayuth, however, stresses that Thailand needs a cooling-off period of reform and reconciliation before “Thai-democracy” can be instituted and political chaos avoided. Sharp differences voiced daily over the future constitution reflect the deep rifts in society that gathered momentum as the country so rapidly modernized: between Bangkok and rural regions, the entrenched traditional elite and pro-democracy forces, the haves and have-nots. The dividing lines have changed little

THAILAND’S Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, the former army chief who engineered the May 2014 coup, has said he had to take over the government to end protests and political clashes. AP

since 2010, when the military cracked down on “Red Shirt” protesters in central Bangkok, leaving about 90 people dead. The Red Shirts were key supporters of the elected government that the military ousted last year. “National-level political conflict is the overarching challenge facing Thailand right now,” says Matthew Wheeler, Southeast Asia analyst for the think tank International Crisis Group. But this is hardly the only tribulation in today’s Thailand, which despite periods of turbulence has historically enjoyed multiple advantages, from abundance of natural resources to absence of war on its soil since the 1790s. Now, Muslim insurgents continue to fight for autonomy in the country’s southernmost provinces, where more than 5,000 people have died since 2004. Peace talks are producing no results. Last month, Thailand also sparked the ire of the Islamic world— along with condemnation by Washington and the United Nations—for forcibly repatriating more than 100 Muslim Uighur refugees to China, where it was feared some would face punishment for involvement in antigovernment activities. US-based Human Rights Watch says Thailand’s human rights are in “free fall” with crackdowns on peaceful protests and

trials of civilians in military courts. Prosecutions under a draconian law proscribing insults to the Thai monarchy have increased in recent years and continued under the junta. Since the coup, at least 51 people have been sentenced under the law, including some who had been declared mentally ill and a young woman imprisoned for 28 years for a posting on her Facebook page. Once a poster child for press freedom in Asia, Thailand dropped four places to 134th out of 180 countries on the 2015 press freedom index compiled by Reporters Without Borders. The US State Department last month retained Thailand’s lowest Tier 3 ranking in its annual Trafficking in Persons report, citing persistent forced labor and sex trafficking. The ranking could trigger bars on US foreign assistance and access to World Bank funds. An Associated Press investigation this year exposed slave labor aboard Thai fishing vessels. Tourism has been a steady bright spot, seemingly immune from political violence, natural disasters and other crises as visitors come to the “Land of Smiles” for its numerous attractions, low prices and hospitable people. But the bombing could damage the industry, since it is Thailand’s first major attack on an area popular with tourists.

Also hanging heavily over Thailand is the future of the 700-year-old monarchy. King Bhumibol Adulyadej, regarded as a key stabilizing and much revered figure for decades, is 87 and ailing. Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn, the probable successor, does not possess his stature or popularity, and there are reportedly conflicts about how the transition should proceed. “Thailand is coming to the end of an era, and there’s a lack of consensus on what will follow, what will work for Thailand,” Wheeler said. Other challenges for the country include being “red-flagged” by the International Civil Aviation Organization over aviation safety standards, and an ongoing failure to reform its outdated education system and raise the level of English. A Swiss survey ranked Thailand 55th among 60 countries where English is not a mother tongue. “No single Thai administration is capable of solving the country’s most chronic and deeply embedded problems. For the past 50 years, we have swept so many problems under the carpet. The chickens are now coming home to roost,” Songkran Grachangnetara, a businessman and analyst, wrote recently in the English-language Bangkok Post. Critics of the junta doubt it will take up the sweeping reforms Thailand needs. Instead, the military is trying to tackle some of these problems by promoting “Thainess,” incorporating 12 core values that schoolchildren must recite daily, including respect for teachers, religion, nation and monarchy. What persists, says Thongchai, the history professor, are politics of personal relations, loyalty to superiors and a “mentality suitable to a village” rather than modern society. Charles F. Keyes, an American anthropologist who has studied Thai culture for half a century, says military leaders, in alliance with other conservative forces, seek a throwback to the “despotic paternalism” of the past. “It is becoming clear that the vast majority of people in upcountry Thailand and the majority in Bangkok are not willing to be compelled to accept a hierarchical order such as existed through the 1950s,” he said, predicting that such opposition could “lead to more political turmoil in the kingdom of no-longer-smiling Thai.”

PERSPECTIVE

First of three parts

E4

I

NTERNET access is no longer just a privilege for the rich, thanks to the ongoing global digital revolution. In the Philippines, however, access to the Web remains to be at the lower end of the spectrum.

And considering pronouncements from the United Nations (UN), this is another basic human right that Filipinos are being deprived of. For Frank La Rue, the special rapporteur on freedom of expression and opinion of the UN, the Internet is a human right. Access to the Web, La Rue argued, is not merely a privilege for the rich and the famous, but is now

considered a basic need, as the Internet is an avenue where people can enjoy their rights to freedom of expression and opinion. It also gives people the access to a marketplace of information—a library of ideas and opinions, where people converge and exchange concepts and ideas encompassing basically anything under the sun. Continued on A2

By Cai U. Ordinario

he Philippines is seeking a total $3.41 billion in submarket official development assistance (ODA) loans and grants from the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank (ADB). Data from the World Bank indicate that Manila is seeking some $2.08 billion worth of loans and grants from the Washingtonbased lender. Another $1.33 billion is sought from the ADB, the Manila-based multilateral development bank. The anticipated ODA loans and grants from the World Bank cover nine projects. Of these, the largest are the Second Disaster Risk Management (DRM) Development Policy Loan (DPL) with a Catastrophe Deferred Drawdown Option (Cat-DDO) and the Philippine National Program Support for Social Protection Project. The second DRM DPL with CATDDO Project would cost $500 million, which is to be funded entirely by the World Bank. The new project is a follow-up on the first DPL with a CAT-DDO, also in the amount of $500 million. The CAT-DDO was fully drawn after Typhoon Sendong (international code name Washi) resulted in a presidential declaration of a state of calamity in the Philippines in December 2011. “The proposed operation will provide the government with an emergency line of credit, increasing the government’s postdisaster financial-response capacity,” the World Bank said. The National Program Support for Social Protection Project has a total project cost of $450 million. The entire amount is proposed for World Bank funding. The program aims to support social-protection projects of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), particularly its so-called Conditional Cash-Transfer (CCT) program. Project documents show support for the CCT Program will require $350 million. This will cover grants Continued on A4

PESO exchange rates n US 46.3060

n japan 0.3739 n UK 72.6124 n HK 5.9727 n CHINA 7.2404 n singapore 33.0073 n australia 33.9512 n EU 51.5201 n SAUDI arabia 12.3456 Source: BSP (20 August 2015)


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