Businessmirror 10 16 2014

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Hospital safety guidelines The CDC provides guidelines for hospitals in the prevention and control of Ebola transmission. These are the personal protective gear recommendations for health care personnel working with a potentially infected patient. Sequence for putting on necessary protective equipment

1 Isolation gown

2 Mask or respirator should fit snugly to face and cover bridge of nose to below the chin. Ties or elastic band should be secure at middle of head and neck.

must fully cover torso from neck to knees, arms to end of wrists and be wrapped around the back and fastened.

3 Goggles or face shield must fit securely and shield eyes.

Safe work practices • Keep hands away from face. • Limit surfaces touched. • Change gloves when torn or heavily contaminated. • Wash hands immediately after removing all protective equipment.

4 Gloves are

equipped last and should extend to cover the wrist of the gown.

© 2014 MCT Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Graphic: Troy Oxford, Dallas Morning News

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Dallas nurses on Ebola hospital care: ‘There was no protocol’ No evidence dogs, cats can spread Ebola virus

2006, 2010, 2012

U.N. Media Award 2008

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44-minute game? BusinessMirror

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| Thursday, OCTOber 16, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

“I have no doubt in my mind that if I went to Steve and said tomorrow, ‘You know what, I’m going to start Jeremy and the games that you’re available, we’re going to bring you off the bench,’ he’s such a professional that I don’t think it would be a problem whatsoever,” Scott said on Tuesday. Nash was not available for comment after practice but he would not fight the switch, according to a person familiar with his thinking. Either way, the Lakers planned to sit him for about one-fourth of their games in the regular season. Lin probably won’t play in Thursday’s game against Utah because of a sprained ankle but should be ready on Sunday for the Lakers’ fifth preseason game out of eight. Lin said he would “no question” like to start but had a hard time expressing his thoughts, mainly because he respected Nash while watching NBA games as a teenager, long before he began playing in them. “Just talking to him, he wants to be

healthy, he wants to enjoy what is probably his last year and I would want them for him, as well,” Lin said. “But at the end of the day, whatever position [Scott] calls me to, or whatever it is, I’m going to do my best.”

players or get rid of them or discard them... this organization doesn’t do that.” Bryant also wondered whether there would be a lockout in coming years even though the NBA just agreed to a broadcasting deal worth $24 billion with the parent companies of TNT, ABC and ESPN. “It’s very easy to look at the elite players around the league and talk about the amount of money they get paid,” Bryant said. “But we don’t look at what the owners get paid, or how much revenue they generate off the backs of these players. “Now you have a TV deal that comes out and you look at it almost being up a billion dollars from the previous one. It’s going to be interesting to see what happens in this next labor agreement.... I’m sure they’ll try to lock us out again, and harden the cap even more.” Los Angeles Times

KOBE TALKS MONEY

KOBE BRYANT said he was grateful the Lakers went against the trend of some other franchises that have convinced some of their stars to take contracts below market value. “I’m one of the luckiest basketball players in the league because I got very fortunate to be with an organization that takes care of its players,” said Bryant, who signed a well-scrutinized two-year, $48.5-million contract extension last November to stay with the Lakers. “I think it speaks volumes not only to me and to the city, but to other players around the league, as well. When you look around at some of the other owners that try to milk their

44-MINUTE

GAME? THE Brooklyn Nets’ Cory Jefferson leads a basketball clinic for children with disabilities in Beijing, China, on Tuesday. The Brooklyn Nets will play a preseason game against the Sacremento Kings on Wednesday. AP

The National Basketball Association’s (NBA) willingness to explore the impact of shortened game should not be minimized. The league doesn’t make these moves lightly, and there’s a chance the NBA will experiment with 44-minute games next preseason and in the NBA Development League, which is often used as testing ground for new concepts.

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LOS ANGELES Lakers guard Kobe Bryant (24) and guard Jabari Brown sit on the bench during their preseason game against the Golden State Warriors in Ontario, Canada, over the weekend. AP

By Jeff Zillgitt

just reached a nine-year, $24-billion TV deal— also shared by both sides—and that amount is based on the number of games the networks can televise each season. Unless both sides are interested in making less money, a shorter season is not happening. Now, the NBA, coaches and the competition committee will watch minutes played per player. One thought is that it would reduce the number of minutes played, which would eliminate miles on a player not only during the season but over the course of a career. If the NBA played 44-minute games for an 82-game season, it would eliminate about seven games worth of minutes from a regular season, which would be a nod to reducing player minutes without eliminating games. However, that doesn’t mean a coach would play certain players fewer minutes. Thorn acknowledged the league doesn’t know how substitutions will play out, and that’s one reason this is exploratory. The league wants to start gathering data, and that’s why it won’t be a surprise if additional 44-minute test games are added a year from now and in D-League contests. “Let’s get some empirical evidence regarding this and take a fresh look at it,” Thorn said. If the average game is about two hours and 15 minutes, squeezing the game into a two-hour time frame might result in a better fan experience at the arena and at home. Not everyone is happy about it. Indiana Pacers Coach Frank Vogel said he sees problems. “I see why they are doing it...but personally I don’t really like it,” Vogel told reporters on Tuesday. “I don’t have enough minutes to get all my guys enough minutes to keep them happy. So going to take away four minutes of the game that’s going to make my job a lot harder.” The league will examine Sunday’s game with a close eye on total time of the game and player substitution patterns. There’s no suggestion yet that the NBA is headed to making this permanent. But it strengthens the notion that NBA Commissioner Adam Silver is open to ideas that challenge the status quo.

USA Today

HE 44-minute National Basketball Association (NBA) preseason game— four minutes less than a regulation contest—between the Brooklyn Nets and Boston Celtics is an experiment. This is only a test for the NBA. Forty-four minute games are not imminent, NBA President of Basketball Operations Rod Thorn told USA TODAY Sports on Tuesday. But, likewise, the NBA’s willingness to explore the impact of shortened game should not be minimized. The league doesn’t make these moves lightly, and there’s a chance the NBA will experiment with 44-minute games next preseason and in the NBA Development League, which is often used as testing ground for new concepts. At the NBA coaches meeting last month, length of games was a topic, and it was suggested the NBA consider a shorter format that would reduce the length of game as a means to reduce minutes for some players and maybe improve the flow of the game. “We have looked at everything that we do and are taking a fresh look at all the different things we do,” Thorn said. “One of the things that keeps coming up is our schedule and the length of our games.... Our coaches talked about it, and a lot of them seemed to be in favor of at least taking a look at it. We talked with our competition committee, and they were in favor of taking a look at it.” On Twitter, the barometer in which public opinion is often measured today, there was support and opposition to the idea. The dissenters had these refrains: The minutes don’t need to be reduced. It’s fine the way it is. Cut back on the number of regular-season games played—instead of an 82-game season, play 70. The reduced minutes will impact reserves, limiting their time on the court and possibly affecting how they are paid. A shorter regular season is highly unlikely because it cuts into ticket revenue, which is shared by players and owners. Also, the league

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U.S.-Russia vow intel-sharing on I.S. The World BusinessMirror

B3-6 Thursday, October 16, 2014

US, Russia vow intel-sharing on Islamic State

US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov talk as they walk together on the grounds of the Chief of Mission Residence in Paris, France, on Tuesday. The top US and Russian diplomats are hoping to find a way to begin reversing a yearlong spike in tensions stemming from Ukraine’s revolution and civil war. AP/CARoLyn KASTeR

Obama, allies plot anti-ISIS strategy

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A S H I N G T O N—P r e s i dent Barack Obama and military chiefs from more than 20 nations gathered on Tuesday in a show of strength against Islamic State (IS) fighters in Iraq and Syria. But the alliance faced a fresh test as Turkey launched air strikes against Kurdish rebels inside its borders, defying pleas from the US to instead focus on the IS. The attacks marked Turkey’s first major air strikes against Kurdish rebels on its own soil since peace talks began two years ago, and occurred amid heightened concern over Islamic State advances on the Syrian town of Kobani. Kurds in Turkey accuse the government there of standing idly by while Syrian Kurds are being killed in the besieged border town. The US has been pressing Turkey to take a more active role in the campaign to destroy the Islamic State group. Officials from Ankara were participating in Tuesday’s meeting at Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland, where US officials said the coalition countries were to discuss their strategy. “This is an operation that involves

the world against ISIL [Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant],” Obama declared, referring to the militant group by one of its many names. Officials from Ankara participated in the meeting at Andrews Air Force Base. A US military official familiar with the talks said the chiefs of defense agreed to recommend to their governments that they continue to move forward together against the extremists, “to contribute capabilities best suited to each nation, and to take action to build on the successes already achieved by coalition efforts on the ground and in the air.” The official requested anonymity for providing the information. Earlier Tuesday the US-led coalition launched 21 air strikes in and around Kobani. One of the strikes targeted the Tel Shair hill that overlooks parts of the city, according to Idriss Nassan, deputy head of Kobani’s foreign relations committee. Nassan said Kurdish fighters later captured the hill and brought down the black flag of the IS group. The extremist group still controls more than a third of the predomi-

Rights group: Iraq Shiite militias killing Sunnis

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AGHDAD—Iraq’s Shiite militias have abducted and killed scores of Sunni civilians with the tacit support of the government in retaliation for Islamic State group attacks, Amnesty International said on Tuesday, as a suicide car bombing claimed by the Sunni extremists killed 23 people, including a Shiite lawmaker. The Shiite militiamen number in the tens of thousands and wear military uniforms but operate outside any legal framework and without any official oversight, the London-based watchdog said, adding that they are not prosecuted for the crimes. The accusations were based on interviews with relatives of victims and survivors who claimed that members of four prominent Iraqi Shiite militias—Asaib Ahl al-Haq, the Badr Brigades, the Mahdi Army, and Ketaeb Hizbollah—were behind many abductions and killings of Sunnis in the country, the rights group said in a 28-page report, entitled “Absolute Impunity: Militia Rule in Iraq.” Sunni grievances have metastasized since the US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003 and handed power to the longoppressed Shiite majority.

Sunni anger helped fuel the rampage across northern and western Iraq by the Islamic State group and the onslaught has aggravated sectarian tensions elsewhere, again driving Iraq to the brink of civil war. Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Hezbollah Brigades were among a group of Shiite militias backed by Iran that carried out lethal attacks against US bases in June 2012. A spokesman for the Iraqi military, Brig. Gen. Saad Maan Ibrahim, dismissed the Amnesty report, saying that the government would “in no way be an accomplice for killing its own citizens.” He added that the Iraqi government and its military “do not support any group, including militias, which work to kill innocent people.” Amnesty says the fate of many of the Sunni abductees remains unknown and that some captives have been killed even after their families paid ransoms of $80,000 and more. Waleed Khalid, a shop owner in Baghdad’s Sunni-majority Slueikh district, was headed to Sadr City for his weekly trip to restock his store when he received a call on Monday from a Shiite friend warning that the militias were out in force, kidnapping Sunnis they came across in the Shiite stronghold. AP

nantly Kurdish town. While the White House has tried to point out progress in the campaign against the militants, the government is also preparing the American public for a military effort that could extend well beyond Obama’s presidency. Officials acknowledged on Tuesday that the air strikes in Kobani might not be enough to prevent a militant takeover, given the lack of an effective fighting force on the ground. “We certainly do not want the town to fall,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. “At the same time, our capacity to prevent that town from falling is limited by the fact that air strikes can only do so much.” Syrian Kurds have been begging the international community for heavy weapons to help bolster their defense of Kobani. They’ve also called for Turkey to open the border to allow members of the Kurdish militia in northwestern Syria—known as the People’s Protection Units—to travel through Turkish territory to reinforce the city. So far, both requests have gone unfulfilled. AP

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Grace and favor

EAR God, we know from the very start that Your grace and favor make up all we have from You, not by luck nor chance. We strive each day to earn our daily bread and other basic needs. We express our desires and goals but we believe that Your will ultimately sums up everything we want to have. May Your grace and favor be abundant to each one of us. Amen. CITAS SUGUE AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com

Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com

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Ways to prevent and fix air-travel ‘fail’ B G H | Airfarewatchdog.com

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VERYONE likes to complain about air travel these days and all the things that can go wrong—canceled flights, missed connections, overbooking, lost bags, and bad customer service. Here are some common air travel woes, and how to prevent, and fix, them. I WAS BUMPED FROM MY FLIGHT ■ How to prevent: Bumping (involuntary boarding) is relatively rare, but some airlines are worse than others, so avoid them. Avoiding peak travel days (Tuesday and Wednesday are the slowest) and peak holiday periods also helps. Don’t be the last person to check in for your flight, get to the airport as early as possible, and if you have status in the airline’s frequent flyer program, that helps too. ■ How to fix: Ask to be put on another airline’s flight if that will get you to where you’re going faster than your original airline (some airlines still offer this option if there are seats available). If you’ll be delayed more than an hour, you’re entitled to cash compensation (refuse to accept an airline travel voucher). To lessen the pain, ask for a free pass to the airline’s airport lounge if you’re not already a member. If you’re on Twitter, many airlines try to fix bumping issues there; Google airlines’ Twitter “handles.” MY CHECKED BAGS (OR CONTENTS) WERE STOLEN ■ How to prevent: Other than not checking bags in the first place, there’s no sure way to prevent theft. Bags and their contents can be pilfered by baggage handlers, TSA agents, and even by thieves who hang around the luggage carousels. Some bags are taken from carousels by accident because they all look alike, so choose one in a bright color rather than black. Locks help, but only so far. Never pack valuables or electronics in checked bags, because

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MORE THAN D2 ECSTATIC TO BE ‘LEFT BEHIND’

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airlines won’t compensate for these if lost or stolen. If traveling internationally, consider buying “excess valuation” coverage from your airline (it’s inexpensive), since airlines offer paltry compensation for international travel. Make sure you have receipts for any expensive items in your bag. And make sure you don’t lose your checked bag receipt. It’s also not a bad idea to lock your carry-on bag while in the overhead compartment. ■ How to fix: Even if your bag arrives at the bag claim safely, it’s a good idea to open the bag and check the contents. If there’s a problem, file a claim with the airline before leaving the airport. Airlines are required to cover up to $3,400 for domestic travel, but much less for international flights, and they will depreciate the value of the contents. If the airline denies your claim or only pays part of the bag’s value, check your credit card: most cards offer lost or damaged bag insurance for free, even for carryon bags, and some even cover electronics such as cameras and computers, as long as you paid for the trip with the card. MY FLIGHT WAS CANCELED OR DELAYED ■ How to prevent: Every US domestic flight is required to have an on-time performance score assigned to it and some flights are more prone to cancellations or delays than others. For example, in August, United flight 5714 from New York JFK to Washington Dulles was canceled 6 percent of the time and on-time (defined as within 15 minutes of schedule) just 45 percent of the time—not very reassuring if you’re making a connection. Some airlines, such as United, post this information online or you can call the airline and ask for its on-time and cancellation numbers. Avoid flights with dismal performance statistics, and naturally you up your chances of success by avoiding connecting flights. If you must connect, avoid doing so in winter through cold weather airports that are prone to snow storms, such as Chicago and Minneapolis, opting for Phoenix or

Thursday, October 16, 2014

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FRIGHTFUL FUN AT CRIMSON

EXPERIENCE a one-of-a-kind family affair this Halloween as Crimson Hotel Filinvest City, Manila (tinyurl.com/ovprpvn), sets a frightfully fun escapade that will surely have you and your family scream in delight. Spend a bewitching night in one of the hotel’s luxurious rooms for a quick and easy way to celebrate Halloween. For as low as P4,888 net per night, get to stay in a Deluxe Room inclusive of buffet breakfast for two and two passes for the Tricks and Treats Halloween Festival on October 26. This room package is valid until festival day. The whole family can enjoy the spirit of Halloween and Thanksgiving with Tricks and Treats Halloween Festival, which happens at the Crimson Grand Ballroom. Kids can go trick-or-treating in their favorite and most creative costumes and enjoy a lot of other “spooktacular” activities. This family festivity is in partnership with Kids First Discovery Space as it celebrates its 10th anniversary, and with Rajito, kiddie couture by fashion designer Rajo Laurel. Expect a trail of fun and entertainment starting off with a Silent Auction for the benefit of Move. org Foundation and Starlight Training School for Special Youth, followed by a fashion show featuring Rajito, puppet and magic show, mom and pop trunk show, looming workshop, arts and crafts, haunted playhouse, and more. Halloween ticket price is at P950 net per person. Children aged 2 and below are free of charge. For room and ticket reservations and inquiries, call 863-2222.

Houston instead. ■ How to fix: Have a plan B. Keep a list of alternate flights, even if on a competing airline, and ask to be rebooked. It’s often faster to use Twitter rather than waiting in line at the airport. If all else fails and you have to overnight, ask—nicely—for hotel accommodations (airlines are not required to provide rooms or meals, but many do). Again, your credit card may include free compensation (usually $100 per day) if you incur expenses due to a delay or cancellation. I COULDN’T FIND SEATS NEXT TO MY TRAVELING COMPANION(S) ■ How to prevent: Book seats as early as possible. If you’re traveling with a child 12 years of age or younger, be sure to indicate that when you make your reservation since airlines do attempt to sit children together with companions if they know the child’s age. Or call the airline’s reservation number and request adjacent seats ■ How to fix: If all else fails, get to the airport super early and ask for seat reassignment. And if that doesn’t work, bring along some Starbucks gift certificates of movie passes to “bribe” passengers to switch seats with you. I CAN’T FIND FREQUENT FLYER SEATS FOR THE DATES I WANT ■ How to prevent: The best strategy is to look for seats way ahead, or at the last minute. Airlines open up frequent flyer seats close in to departure if it looks like they won’t be able to sell them. Look for seats on partner airlines. ■ How to fix: If all else fails, don’t hesitate to call the airline’s frequent flyer service number rather than just looking online. And check for seats often, since inventory changes frequently as people holding seats release them or change their plans. ■ George Hobica is founder of the low-airfare listing web site Airfarewatchdog.com.

A ROOM with a divine view in Discovery Country Suites Tagaytay.

TRAVEL IN STYLE WITH DISCOVERY

IT’S never too early to plan a vacation and travel in style. The Discovery Leisure Co. Inc., the management company behind the Discovery hotels and resorts, presents its Second Visit Discovery Travel Mart ongoing until October 16 at the SM Megamall Atrium. The Visit Discovery campaign is Discovery’s open invitation to the public to experience Discovery Suites in Ortigas Center, Discovery Shores Boracay, Discovery Country Suites Tagaytay and Club Paradise in Palawan. It is also a unique opportunity for our guests to get a glimpse of the exciting new developments happening with the Discovery group, including the much-awaited opening of Discovery Primea in Makati City. Take advantage of the special rates offered exclusively during the travel mart. Join the My Discovery Elite loyalty program and enjoy bigger discounts on room rates during the travel mart. Tick off Palawan, Tagaytay, Boracay from your travel bucket list next summer or grab the opportunity to book a staycation during the Christmas holiday in Makati or Ortigas with the Discovery hotels at the travel mart. For details, visit www.discoveryhotels-resorts. com.

Airport travelers to face new Ebola measures THE deadly Ebola virus scare will impact every international passenger arriving on international flights into Detroit Metro Airport and other American airports, the government announced on October 8. All passengers will closely be observed for signs of illness and given information about Ebola symptoms as they pass through customs and immigration. In addition, the temperatures of passengers will be taken by Center for Disease Control (CDC) officials as they arrive from West Africa into five airports—New York’s JFK, Washington Dulles, Chicago O’Hare, Newark and Atlanta, the White House announced. The measures to protect the American public took on new urgency on Wednesday with the death of Liberian

Ebola patient Thomas Eric Duncan in Dallas. Michigan passengers supported the precaution. “I wouldn’t have a problem if someone took my temperature,” said Kathy Sidebottom of Battle Creek, who was at Metro Airport awaiting a flight to Rhode Island. “I would want to know if someone could be a potential threat.” On October 8 the Department of Homeland Security instructed its agents at all airports and other ports of entry to observe all arriving passengers entering the country for signs of Ebola and “general signs of illness.” Last week the Association of Professional Flight Attendants, which represents 60,000 flight attendants at 19 airlines, urged the government to do more.

Detroit has 16 flights arriving from overseas per day, said airport spokesman Michael Conway, 35 if you count flights arriving from Canada and Mexico. Detroit has no incoming flights directly from West Africa, or even the continent of Africa. However, many passengers from all over the world connect to flights that come through Detroit via Frankfurt, Paris and Amsterdam. For example, in 2009, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, also known as the underwear bomber, flew from the West African nation of Ghana to Amsterdam before connecting to Northwest Flight 253 onward to Detroit. Detroit is one of 20 US airports to have a CDC quarantine area in its international arrivals area. If someone is sick, he or she is observed and treated in this

area by trained paramedics. In addition, Michigan has four vehicle international ports of entry from Canada: two in Detroit (the bridge and the tunnel); Port Huron, and Sault Ste. Marie. Ebola is a virus that has killed about 70 percent of those who contracted it during the latest outbreak in West Africa. It is transmitted by contact with its victims’ bodily fluids—such as vomit, blood or saliva. More than 3,400 people have died of Ebola in West Africa during the current outbreak—the worst on record. The outbreak was first detected in Guinea in March and has since affected Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria and Senegal, where at least one patient has been identified. In addition, a nurse in Spain who treated two Ebola-stricken

missionaries has tested positive for the disease and is in isolation. Hers is the first known transmission of the virus outside Africa. This morning at Metro Airport, arriving international passengers had mixed feelings about the risk of Ebola to themselves or other travelers. “You hate to trample on people’s rights,” said frequent international traveler Brian Schwanitz of Houston, who was in Detroit en route from Moscow via Amsterdam. “Traveling is complicated enough without adding health risks and another level of concern.” However, he supported evaluation of any international patient who appeared ill, “distressed or sweating.”

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DETROIT FREE PRESS/MCT

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) on Wednesday reported that overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) sent home in August $2.053 billion in cash remittances, bringing the total remittances in the first eight months to $15.538 billion. The remittances in August proved 6 percent larger than in the same month last year, having grown largely unchanged from July’s remittance-growth numbers. The cumulative inflows in the first eight months of the year, meanwhile, grew 5.8 percent. This was also unchanged from the June-and-July year-to-date growth rates this year. The central bank remained optimistic on future remittances of the more or less 10 million overseas Filipinos, citing the strong demand for their well-known skills and competence.

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ABU KHATALLAH InDICTeD on BenGHAzI ATTACK ASHInGTon—Ahmed Abu Khatallah, who is suspected of helping direct the September 2012 attack on the US diplomatic mission in Benghazi, was indicted on Tuesday as the “leader of an extremist military group” who conspired to carry out the fiery ambush that killed the US ambassador to Libya and three other Americans. Abu Khatallah, the only person taken into US custody in the assault, could face the death penalty if convicted. He faces a total of 18 charges, including counts of murder “in the course of an attack on a federal facility.” The federal indictment identified Abu Khatallah as the “commander of the Ubaydah Bin Jarrah, an Islamist extremist militia in Benghazi which had the goal of establishing sharia law in Libya.” The group merged in 2011 with Ansar al Sharia, another Islamist extremist entity, and Abu Khatallah became the “Benghazibased leader” of the combined organization, according to the indictment. MCT

ways to prevent and fix air-travel ‘fail’ D

Sept. 30: Tests confirm Duncan has Ebola. Friday: Nina Pham, who cared for Duncan at Presbyterian, discovers she has a fever. She arrives at the hospital and is isolated.

© 2014 MCT Source: Wire reports; Dallas Morning News research Graphic: Troy Oxford, Dallas Morning News

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Late Saturday: A blood test conducted by the state confirms that Pham has the Ebola virus.

Oct. 31: The last day on which those who came in contact with Pham before her isolation will be monitored.

Early Sunday: State officials announce Pham’s illness. It’s thought to be the first case of Ebola transmission in the U.S.

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he strong stream of growth-boosting remittances persisted in August, which brought in another $2 billion during the month, helping provide fresh fuel for the $270-billion economy.

Global economic slump may force Fed to delay hike

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the main threat to the whole Mideast.” The divide in their positions over Ukraine clearly persisted, however. Russia and its allied forces in the country must halt remaining violence in the restive east, pull back forces and weapons and release any hostages, Kerry said, noting that he’d told Lavrov that any independence referendums wouldn’t be recognized by the world. The tone of Kerry’s news conference harkened back to the Obama administration’s first term, when Obama sought to reset ties between Washington and Moscow that were badly frayed by the 2008 war in Georgia and other tensions. The spirit of goodwill yielded a nucleararms reduction pact and some other diplomatic successes, but the relationship became increasingly defined by hostility after Vladimir Putin’s return to the presidency in 2012. The Ukraine crisis sent them to a post-Cold War low. The “bulk” of Tuesday’s talks focused on issues other than Ukraine, Kerry stressed. He highlighted the international campaign against the Islamic State group in particular, saying both countries recognize the group “has absolutely no place in the 21st century.” AP

Nina Pham Sept. 25: He arrives at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas with the fever and other symptoms. He is sent home early the next morning.

A broader look at today’s business

See “Remittances,” A2

ARIS—The United States and Russia vowed on Tuesday to renew cooperation on a broad array of global security matters, including intelligence sharing on Islamic State (IS) militants, even as the two powers remained deeply at odds over the crisis in Ukraine. Although Secretary of State John Kerry didn’t use the term “reset”—a relationshipmending term President Barack Obama coined in his first term to tighten US-Russian ties—he employed familiar language about managing differences and forging a better partnership on matters where they agree. After meeting for more than three hours in Paris with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, Kerry said both sides need to recognize they have “major responsibilities” as world powers, from combating Islamist extremism in the Middle East to dealing with Iran and North Korea’s nuclear programs. As a concrete example of their work together, he said the US and Russia would start sharing intelligence on the IS militants, which the US and allies are fighting in Iraq and Syria. Lavrov, speaking separately, confirmed intelligence-sharing would begin and also spoke positively about improving US-Russian ties. “Mr. Kerry and I don’t represent warring sides,” he said. The nations play a “special role” in the world, he said. “We can cooperate better together to increase the effectiveness of settling problems for larger society. That especially concerns the fight against terrorism, which has now become

Oct. 8: Duncan dies.

By Bianca Cuaresma

health&fitness

STEVE NASH plays well in the Lakers’ exhibition opener, but sits out their second game and pulls himself out of their third exhibition at halftime because he didn’t feel right.

Sept. 28: Duncan returns to Presbyterian by ambulance and is isolated.

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health supplements: to take or not to take

OS ANGELES—Steve Nash has had an incredible career, but the two-time Most Valuable Player (MVP) might have to endure a new role in what is probably his final National Basketball Association season— coming off the bench as a backup. Lakers Coach Byron Scott indicated Jeremy Lin could become the starting point guard because of Nash’s recurring back problems, a switch that made sense because of Nash’s onagain, off-again availability. Nash played well in the Lakers’ exhibition opener, but sat out their second game and pulled himself out of their third exhibition at halftime because he didn’t feel right. Nash, who turns 41 in February, played only 15 games last season and is in the last year of a three-year, $28-million contract. He averaged 6.8 points and 5.7 assists last season. Scott said he hadn’t officially decided on a permanent switch but appeared to lean toward Lin for continuity’s sake.

Sept. 24: Thomas Eric Duncan begins running a fever.

MONEY SENT HOME BY OFWs IN FIRST EIGHT MONTHS INCREASED BY 5.8% TO $15.538B

INSIDE

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Oct. 19: The last day on which those who came in contact with Duncan before his isolation must be monitored.

Thomas Eric Duncan

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ust as the United States job market has finally strengthened, the Federal Reserve (the Fed) now confronts a new worry: A sputtering global economy that’s spooked investors across the world. The economic slump could spill into the US, potentially weakening job growth and keeping inflation well below the Fed’s target rate. Such fear has led some analysts to suggest that the Fed might wait until deep into next year to start raising interest rates—and then raise them more gradually than expected. “I’m beginning to think that the Fed might delay [a rate increase],” said Bob Baur, chief economist at Principal Global Advisors, an asset-management firm. “If we don’t see a better situation in Europe and better things out of Japan and stability in China, they might hang on just a little bit longer.” Yet, so far, the prospect of continued lower rates —which make loans cheaper and can fuel stock gains—is being outweighed by investors’ mounting fears of weakness from Asia to Europe to Latin America. After shedding 223 points on Monday, the Dow Jones industrial average is now more than 5 percent below its September peak. Americans with stocks in their retirement accounts have taken a beating—at least for now. Continued on A2

PESO exchange rates n US 44.7590

Michael Raeuber (from left), president of the European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines; John Forbes, senior adviser and director of the American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines; and Nobuo Fujii, vice president of the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Philippines, voice their concerns over the port congestion at a news conference in Makati City on Wednesday. NONOY LACZA

Ill-timed, misplaced rules causing supply delays–eccp By Catherine N. Pillas

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shortage in the supply of needed goods and commodities in the weeks leading up to the Christmas season can be avoided if supply-chain bottlenecks within and outside of Manila’s ports are resolved, truckers associations and foreign chambers putting forward a list of proposals for the government to consider said on Friday. “There could be a shortage of some of the goods Filipinos used to have in abundance during the Christmas season. If there is short supply, what does that mean? Prices will go up with importation impaired. We can see more and more of that,”said Michael Raeuber, president of the European Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines (Eccp). The Eccp executive, however, clarified that the shortage will not be realized, and demand for goods and commodities will be met if the government heeds the remedial measures being pushed by the foreign chamber. The supply-bottleneck situation, now emerging in the wake of the lifting of the truck ban and attendant port congestion, is more of a coordination and policy issue rather than a port capacity-related problem, according to Raeuber. “Ill-timed and misplaced regulatory restrictions, the absence of long-term strategic planning and infrastructure development, and the confluence of lack of proper coordination between the national and local governments; all of these now impede the free flow of cargo and create damaging effects to the supply chain and to the economy altogether,” Raeuber said in a statement delivered at a news conference held at the Dusit Thani Hotel on Wednesday. Continued on A2

Ayala Corp. adding P4B to debt-servicing funds By VG Cabuag

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yala Corp. dropped its plan to use the proceeds of its preferred-shares sale to augment the company’s capital spending, and will channel the money instead to its debt-servicing program. The company earlier earmarked the proceeds to fund P4 billion worth of projects under AC Infrastructure. Ayala will be selling 30 million class B preferred shares at P500 apiece. The offer is structured as perpetual equity securities, and will be priced based on the prevailing rate of either the five-year or the seven-year secondary-market bond rate plus a premium. The company added a P5-billion BDO Unibank Inc. loan carrying a floating rate to the list of obligations to be paid out of the share-sale proceeds, while revising the composition of the original debts to be paid. Among the other debts that it will pay off include the P1.46-billion loan from Metropolitan Bank and Trust Co., carrying an interest rate of 6.7 percent; various corporate notes maturing with

an interest rate of 6.8 percent at P1.49 billion; and another P5-billion BDO loan carrying a floating interest rate. At an earlier filing by Ayala, it placed the varying corporate notes at P2.82 billion with the average rate at 7.45 percent. The preferred shares will be offered at an initial tranche of 20 million and the remaining 10 million covering the oversubscription option. Each share will be cumulative and nonvoting. The preferred shares will also have its dividend rate reset on the fifth and 10th anniversary of its issue date. The company earlier said it plans to spend as much as P18 billion in capital spending between this year and the next for its list of power and infrastructure projects. For the first half of the year, it reported profits of P9.8 billion from revenues of P91.16 billion, a 34-percent increase in profit over last year, while revenues were up 22.2 percent. The company already bagged the Light Rail Transit 1 expansion contract, together with the Metro Pacific group, and was the highest complying bidder, together with the Aboitiz group, for the Cavite-Laguna Expressway project.

n japan 0.4182 n UK 71.2250 n HK 5.7709 n CHINA 7.3079 n singapore 35.0968 n australia 39.0704 n EU 56.6738 n SAUDI arabia 11.9319 Source: BSP (15 October 2014)


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Businessmirror 10 16 2014 by BusinessMirror - Issuu