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ThursdaySeptember 18, 2014 Vol.17, 10 No. 40 Thursday, 2015 Vol. 10 No. 343
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D.O.T.C. CLUELESS ON RATIFICATION OF POLICY THAT ENSURES AIR CONNECTIVITY IN THE REGION
PHL delaying Asean open skies By Ma. Stella F. Arnaldo
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Special to the BusinessMirror
HE Philippines remains as the last holdout to signing the open-skies aviation policy for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), one of the key measures to ensure air connectivity and increased visitor arrivals in the region.
INSIDE
feds: Arctic sea ice levels shrink to 4th lowest level BusinessMirror
World The
B2-3| Thursday, September 17, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
A womAn looks at a damaged vehicle swept away during a flash flood on September 15 in Hildale, Utah. The floodwaters swept away vehicles in the Utah-Arizona border town, killing several people. AP
Floods kill at least 16 in polygamous town
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ILDALE, Utah—Rescuers trudged through muddy streambeds on Tuesday in a small polygamous town on the Utah-Arizona border and found the bodies of several children who died when their two vehicles were swept away in a torrent of floodwaters that killed at least 12 people. The same flash floods claimed at least four lives in nearby Zion National Park. The van and sport-utility vehicle (SUV) were filled with three women and 13 children when a wall of brown water overtook them on Monday evening, carrying the vehicles several hundred yards downstream and sending them plunging down a floodedout embankment with terrifying force. The SUV was smashed beyond recognition. Three people survived, all of them children, in the secluded community that is the home base of Warren Jeffs’ polygamous sect. A witness described rushing to where the vehicles came to a stop and seeing a gruesome scene of body parts, twisted metal and a young boy who survived the flood. “The little boy was standing there,” Yvonne Holm said. “He said,
‘Are you guys going to help me?’” Only one person was still missing on Tuesday in the border town, and authorities had not identified the dead. The children in the vehicles ranged from 4 years old to teenagers. At nearby Zion National Park, authorities found four bodies and searched for three missing hikers who set out Monday to rappel down a narrow slot canyon. They left before park officials closed the canyons that evening because of flood warnings, park spokesman Holly Baker said. The hikers, from California and Nevada, were all in their 40s and 50s, Baker said. She had no details on their identities. In Hildale, the streets were caked in red mud, and earth movers cleared the roads and piled up mounds of dirt. As a helicopter buzzed overhead, crowds of boys in jeans and girls and women wearing deep-colored prairie dresses watched the rescue effort. Residents called it the worst f lood in memory for the sister towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Arizona, located about 507 kilometers south of Salt Lake City at the foot of picturesque red rock cliffs. AP
New Australian prime minister wants more women in Cabinet
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A NBER R A, Australia— Australia’s new Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull on Wednesday flagged that more women would be included in his first Cabinet to be sworn in Monday. “There is no greater enthusiast than me for seeing more women in positions of power and influence in Parliament, in ministries right across the country,” Turnbull told reporters in his first news conference as prime minister. “I am very committed to that, but I am not going to say any more about the new ministerial arrangements,” he said. Turnbull replaced his unpopular predecessor Tony Abbott in a surprise leadership vote of lawmakers in the ruling conservative Liberal Party on Monday night. Abbott was widely criticized for including only two women in his
19-member Cabinet, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and Health Minister Sussan Ley. Bishop was the only woman in Abbott’s first Cabinet sworn in in 2013. Turnbull said there would be “some changes” in his Cabinet, but gave no indication of the scale. He declined to comment on the future of the government’s chief economic minister, Treasurer Joe Hockey. In challenging Abbott’s leadership, Turnbull indirectly attacked Hockey with the criticism that “the government is not successful in providing the economic leadership that we need.” The government’s popularity plunged in opinion polls and never recovered after Hockey revealed his first annual budget in May last year. That budget was widely criticized as unfair toward the poor. AP
Feds: Arctic sea ice levels shrink to 4th lowest level
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ASHINGTON—Summer Arctic sea ice shrank to its fourth lowest level on record this month, dispelling faint hopes of a recovery, US scientists said.
The National Snow and Ice Data Center announced on Tuesday that the Arctic hit its summer minimum last week with 4.4 million square kilometers (sq km) of sea ice, down 621.6 million sq km from 2014. “The ice is decreasing over time, which you would expect because the Arctic is warming,” data center scientist Julienne Stroeve said. Summer minimum sea ice has
shrunk since satellites started measuring in 1979. It reached a peak of 7.5 million sq km in 1980 and hit an all-time low of 3.3 million sq km in 2012. It went back up to 5 million sq km in 2013 and hovered near there in 2014. Variations in weather mean sea ice levels drift a bit year to year, but Stroeve said there’s a long-term trend that is best seen when looking at averages
of five years or more. The five years between 1979 and 1983 averaged 7.15 million sq km during the summer minimum. The last five years average 4.45 million sq km, a decrease of 38 percent. That means there’s no recovery in Arctic sea ice, despite claims of some climate-change doubters, said Stroeve and Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann, who wasn’t part of the government measurement team. The world overall so far this year is easily the hottest it has been in more than a century of record keeping, according to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. However, the El Niño that has been helping
push temperatures even warmer isn’t having as much an effect up north, which is farther away from the tropical Pacific Ocean, Stroeve said. It has been hot, but not near record breaking in the Arctic this summer. With human-caused warming continuing, computer simulations show on average that around the year 2040, sea ice will disappear from the Arctic during some summers, Stroeve said. “We remain on a trajectory that is actually ahead of model predictions,” Mann said. “Arctic sea ice is one of several aspects of climate change that his happening even faster than originally predicted.” Sea ice in Antarctica, which had been at record high levels in recent years, are about average, Stroeve said. AP
California wildfire evacuees return home, find charred ruins
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IDDLETOWN, California—Some residents cried as they walked through the rubble of their homes while others shared amazing stories of survival as more people returned to their houses on Tuesday and surveyed the twisted metal and smoking ruins left behind by a devastating California wildfire. Gary Herrin sobbed as he walked through what had been his childhood home in Middletown. “Yep, grew up here, was able to walk to school from here. Many friends lived close by,” Herrin recalled, looking around. “There’s a lot of good people here, but it’s a ghost town now, it’s really eerie.” His brother had been living in the home and members of his extended family resided nearby. “I go to my brother-in-law’s house, my niece’s house, and there’s nothing, nothing, ashes,” Herrin said. A number of people saw the devastation for the first time since the massive flames sped on Saturday through rural Lake
County, less than 160 kilometers north of San Francisco. Aided by drought, it has consumed more than 269 square kilometers and was 15 percent contained. Authorities say 585 homes were known to be destroyed, and the number was expected to increase. Another 9,000 structures remained threatened. The Lake County fire and another blaze about 193 km to the southeast have displaced 23,000 people and were the worst of a dozen wildfires burning in the state. The Lake County fire spread into northern Napa County, but the region’s famous wine valley was not threatened. Rancher Lisa Comstock said she and her three dogs survived the raging fire in rural Middletown by jumping into a water trough as flames neared her home. Comstock was also able to keep her horses nearby as the fire burned around them. “The flames were coming over that mountain and surrounding
this place like there was no tomorrow,” she said. “I jumped in the water trough with all the dogs, and the horses came up around. Thank God they just stayed here.” At one point she was sure she wasn’t going to make it but talking to her animals helped keep her and the animals calm. “If this is how I go, I’m not leaving these animals. That’s all I could think of,” she said. Thousands of utility crew members and firefighters were working diligently to control the blaze and get life back to normal for as many people as possible, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Spokesman Dave Shaw said. The utility companies were trying to restore power to the area and water was flowing in some areas of town. One person has been confirmed dead, and others were unaccounted for, but authorities said they could be staying with relatives, on vacation or elsewhere and not impacted by the fire. The dead woman has
been identified as Barbara McWilliams, 72. She told her caretaker she didn’t want to leave her home near Middletown. The world traveler and sharp-minded woman with advanced multiple sclerosis said she would be fine. Her body was found on Sunday in her burned-out home after flames kept Lake County sheriff’s officials from reaching her. Scores of people in Lake County were escorted back to their homes on Tuesday to check on pets and farm animals. They were allowed to remain for 15 minutes to feed and give water to the animals. Lake County has been particularly hard-hit. In late July a wildfire east of Clear Lake destroyed 43 homes as it spread across more than 260 sq km. Another fire erupted on August 9 several miles from the community of Lower Lake. East of Fresno, California’s largest wildfire had moved away from the Sierra Nevada’s Giant Sequoia trees, some of which are 3,000 years old. AP
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‘HENERAL LUNA’: THE POLITICS OF ELITE RAGE AND DISCONTENT www.businessmirror.com.ph
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Thursday, September 17, 2015
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By Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz
in terms of heft in build and character, John arcilla’s general luna is gravitas personified in the powerful film directed and cowritten by Jerold tarog.
tito genova valiente
titovaliente@yahoo.com
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ENERAL LUNA is a powerful film. That said, this power that compels us to look and look and be in awe of this general of the Philippine-American Revolution is also what devaluates the Filipino people of that period, and of any period that is marked by radical change. The film begins at a time when a new wave of colonizers have hit Philippine soil. The revolutionary army is lost in the memories of the Spanish forces now not in command of the islands, and is surprised that in place of a mighty power comes an even mightier force: the Americano. Gen. Antonio Luna is in command at the trenches and has two duties: to defend their position and to stop the ordinary soldiers from running away. The general doesn’t know fear but under him are men cowering in fear. Not the presence of women-warriors can dispel the fact that the general faces both courage and cowardice in the trenches. The great tactician that General Luna is known for, sends urgent words for the Kawit group to bring support. The group does not send any and the general rides his horse to catch ordinary soldiers playing cards and resting. He catches Janolino in bed with a woman. All this happens while soldiers are dying in another place. Absurdity is the better word to describe the scenario; in reality, the inutil makes his day in history. Early on in the film, one finds demarcated and articulated how grossly unprepared our soldiers were during the revolution. Early on, we find—and marvel at—a general who is ready, as in willing, to die for what could have been an abstracted notion of a nation. General Luna was schooled in the rules of war and governance that he was willing to ride his horse anytime and run into enemies’ territory. He was educated but he did not have time to educate those who would form the rank-and-file of his army. Was General Luna even aware that he was issuing commands to uneducated men? In the newly formed Cabinet, debates are fierce and cruel. At stake are personal interests, wealth and statuses. The elite forms the majority of the members of the Cabinet. Outside there is the war with the Americans; inside there is the animosity among the so-called patriots and Ilustrados. Nowhere is the common man factored in the discussion and if you find this statement atrocious, then it is because history is always written large, with monumentalism forming the curlicued frame for the past events illustrated for the consumption of those who write them or related to the authors at least of the documentarian. So, why are thinkers and artists declaring a golden age of cinema with the coming of Heneral Luna?
There are reasons to celebrate this film. There is the sense of narrative daring, which perhaps comes with the distance from that historical past: the fact that we can now call the Paternos and the Buencaminos traitors. There is the screenplay—a series of unfolding and foreboding—attributed to EA. Rocha, Henry Hunt Francia and Jerold Tarog. Each move of the general bears with it the dark, dank scent of danger. Even as we know General Luna is a fierce warrior, the story gleams with the threat of the next day or the enduring night. The screenplay also leaves off where histories terminate. The linear narrating is suffused and intervened by flashbacks which are not really flashbacks but memories of a personal past. For the general, the memory is personal; but for us readers of histories, they are the substance of what could make us into citizens of a nation. Sadly, the story of Luna is not mainstream in history classes. We have lighted candles at the grave of Rizal and mourned the hacking of Bonifacio. We have forgiven the Paternos and the Buencaminos. We have made Aguinaldo a hero and we raise each year the Philippine flag at his balcony and sacralize even the spot of his heroism. And yet—and yet—no one is outraged that the leaders and heroes of this nation would have time to plot and engineer the butchering of a real general while we were at war with the enemy. And that all these patriots would wash their hands in order to declare their innocence of the crime. This brings us to the inner power of Heneral Luna: the character himself. Drawn in broad strokes when the battlefield looms near but etched in sharp and silken details when the spirit of the general is under grave examination, General Luna thunders at the enemies and bellows in front of the president. General Mascardo
his nemesis, postures and preens but Luna plants both his feet on the ground and we know this is a man who could not be killed (murdered, yes, as we would find out) because he is already dead. The same general who is serious about the arts of war simmers and glimmers in front of the moon and his woman. He writes poetry and, part of his self-effacing way, does not even recall he has written those lines. There are many grand and colorful characters in the film. Epy Quizon provides a shock of recognition as Apolinario Mabini. All those rotogravures of Mabini, the “Sublime Paralytic,” are replicated in this film. We know Mabini is wise but there is pathos in his presence because, by prescience, that intelligence and wisdom do not have currency in this land. He sits beside Aguinaldo who does not seem to listen to him. Mon Confiado is a master of subtlety (I am not calling it deceit) and strategy as Aguinaldo. He is indecisive and compromising. When Luna arrives to see Aguinaldo, the latter, who is entertaining Paterno and Buencamino, orders the two to hide—“and please do not forget your glass of wine.” Beside Mabini, Aguinaldo is sublime and pathetic. Aaron Villaflor provides the poignant turn in this account as the young man documenting the great general. We believe his tears as he recites once more the lines from the poetry of General Luna. The reason, however, for the conviction of the audience as to the greatness of this film is the man who plays General Luna: John Arcilla. In terms of heft in build and character, Arcilla’s Luna is gravitas personified. Arcilla’s warrior is really a gracious man, an individual not even balancing but just keeping
within his soul, an artist, a lover, a patriot, and a man whose bravery is both lunacy and largesse, madness and foresight. Arcilla squints and smiles, grins and grimaces. He is human and grand in gestures. Arcilla is as huge as the battle he fights as Luna, and as magnificent as the defeat he incurs because his enemies are within his camps. Credibility can be the bane of many of our heroes, but in the portrayal of Arcilla as Luna, his truth is lightning and his performance a blistering spark in our shadowed history. If all of Heneral Luna is history, I doubt there would be exclamatory writings about it. But history, it is not merely; the film finds a space for creation and there Jerold Tarog, the director, conjures what all historical past is all about: that is, memory rekindled by a nurturing element. In the film, it is the mother of Luna, played with such candor by Bing Pimentel, who asks our hero to close his eyes. Soon, the sala of the Lunas opens and an ardent childhood is remembered. But more than that, the histories in which Luna himself will play a great role is retold. Away from metaphors, Heneral Luna reminds us how we failed as people during the revolution because our leaders were splendid fiascos. There was one general but he was angry at the weaknesses of others and he was called a madman. In the end, he dies and, together with his aide, pulled like the dead gladiators in his brother’s masterpiece, Spoliarium. We remember in art what we do not recall in history. We await some dead mothers to ask us to close our eyes and go back again to what made us great. Heneral Luna is produced by Artikulo Uno Productions and released through Quantum Films. n
MBC seeks Best Choirs nationwide
MANILA Broadcasting Co. (MBC) has launched the 2015 MBC National Choral Competitions, open to academic institutions, churches, special interest groups, as well as companies or agencies in the public and private sectors. At stake is P150,000 for the grand-prize winner in the open category, with P100,000 going to the champion in the children’s choir division. Live auditions will be held in Iloilo City (September 26), Cebu City (October 1), Palo, Leyte (October 3), General Santos City (October 10), Cagayan de Oro City (October 11), Calasiao, Pangasinan (October 17) and at the Aliw Theater in Pasay (October 24). Choirs from distant provinces may opt to send video audition packets consisting of the application form and a DVD recording of the group in performance. These should be sent to MBC, Sotto Street, Cultural Center of the Philippines Complex, Roxas Boulevard, Pasay City, on or before October 10. Detailed competition mechanics and application forms are downloadable from the official Facebook page of the MBC National Choral Competitions.
SHOW
10 potent herbs and spices
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he leaders of the House of Representatives on Wednesday rejected the Palace proposal to lift certain bank-secrecy provisions as compensating revenue for losses arising from the proposed income-tax rate cuts. Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. said the proposal will only scare businessmen in the country. “I am against it because this will scare off local and foreign investors,” Belmonte said. Instead, Belmonte challenged the
CAUGHT BY SURPRISE A police officer stands near the seal of the US Embassy after protesters managed to slip past them to splatter red and blue paint following a rally to mark the 24th anniversary of the termination of the US military bases in the country, on Wednesday, in Manila. Riot policemen have dispersed dozens of left-wing students, who stormed past a police cordon after dawn and splattered red paint on the seal of the US Embassy in Manila to protest the American military presence in the country. AP
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Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) to catch big-time tax cheats, smugglers and money launderers to generate revenue for the nation’s coffers. “My challenge to the BIR is to expand the minuscule tax base of the country, and start with the country’s richest families and those ostensibly not rich that deport themselves with super expensive cars,” Belmonte said. House Independent Bloc Leader and Lakas Rep. Ferdinand Martin Romualdez of Leyte considers the proposal “good and very laudable See “Bank-secrecy,” A2
Palace ignores JFC plea on tax cut By Butch Fernandez
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alacañang practically ignored the Joint Foreign Chambers’s (JFC) call for the lowering of individual and corporate tax rates as part of the administration’s comprehensive tax reform. In a news briefing on Wednesday, Secretary Edwin Lacierda pointed anew to President Aquino’s remarks in Iloilo earlier this week that the options offered to fill the resulting revenue hole are not good enough. The JFC said on Tuesday that the Aquino administration can cut individual and corporate income-tax rates, while making upward adjustments in the valueadded tax and oil-excise tax. The International Monetary Fund’s resident representative to the Philippines had also advised a two-track approach of widening taxpayers’ base while cutting income-tax rates. Asked if the Palace would heed the JFC’s appeal for President Aquino to reconsider its rejection of the
chamber’s proposal—which is meant to spur investments and commerce while avoiding deficit spending—both Lacierda and Communications Secretary Herminio B. Coloma Jr. affirmed Mr. Aquino’s position on the issue. “The President prefers to stay the course for the remainder of his term in order to preserve and consolidate the gains achieved through sound management of macroeconomic fundamentals,” Coloma said in response to JFC’s bid for reconsideration. But Lacierda admitted that Palace officials have yet to sit down to take up JFC’s alternative proposals. “Well, we haven’t discussed it other than the statement that he [President Aquino] has already made yesterday [Monday], so it hasn’t been discussed yet. But I believe the President responded to this yesterday,” Lacierda said. At the same time, Lacierda shrugged off negative comments by disappointed netizens that the See “JFC,” A2
Mining, prices of metals to recover strongly in 2019–expert
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Clemente, who is also president of Rajah Travel Corp., noted that the goal of Asean’s current tourism strategic plan is to “provide an increasing number of visitors to the region with authentic and diverse products, enhanced connectivity, a safe and secure environment, increased quality of services, while, at the same time, ensuring an increased quality of life and opportunities for residents through responsible and sustainable tourism development by working effectively with a wide range of stakeholders,” by 2015.
‘Bank-secrecy revision to scare off investors’
‘Heneral Luna’: The politics of elite rage and discontent reeling
Aileen Clemente, president of the Asean Travel Association (Aseanta), made this revelation during the recent Third Philippines Tourism Forum, and urged the Aquino administration to ratify the policy immediately. “Our signing is, first of all, symbolic—that we are already willing to be taken as Asean and that [we are prioritizing] economic benefits over protectionism,” she later told the BusinessMirror. She added that being an archipelago, the country “will need connectivity with our neighbors as we grow tourism in the Philippines, as well as trade and business.”
By Jonathan L. Mayuga
espite the multiple threats to the global mining industry, base metals—such as gold, silver, platinum, aluminum, copper, lead, nickel, tin and zinc—and metals prices in the world market will recover in 2019, according to international mining and metals market expert Julia Ralph. “Zinc, tin, nickel, in particular, will recover very strongly in terms of market prices,” she told participants of the Mining Philippines 2015 Conference and Exhibition at the Solaire
PESO exchange rates n US 46.7430
Resort and Casino in Manila on Tuesday. “Lead and copper global market prices will have a mild improvement,” she said. A three-day international event organized by the Chamber of Mines of the Philippines (COMP), the conference invited experts to discuss the global trend in mining. Ralph said the recovery in metals will be pushed by factors, such as room to manage oversupply; more value being placed on costand-savings management; and optimism for new projects. “Mining companies are facing multiple
threats, such as slower demand growth, flexible competitors, new low-cost production and competition in managing project costs,” she said. According to Ralph, there is oversupply right now. But for base metals, the “oversupply is limited” and that the appetite to invest in high-risk new mines is still low. The key, according to Ralph, is “limited sustainable and cyclical cost savings” or simply put, managing project costs. COMP President Philip Romualdez said that threats, such as the flexibility of certain competitors, as well as the competition
in managing project costs, are something that the Philippine mining industry and the national government could work together if the country would still want to be a “prime mining investment” destination. “The Philippine government must help current and prospective mining projects and investors manage costs and be flexible amid competition by ensuring there is stability and consistency in mining policies and regulations, especially in the fiscal regime,” Romualdez said. See “Mining,” A2
n japan 0.3882 n UK 71.7225 n HK 6.0314 n CHINA 7.3380 n singapore 33.3545 n australia 33.1746 n EU 52.6794 n SAUDI arabia 12.4675 Source: BSP (16 September 2015)