Spatting Tycoons Stunt Philippine Infrastructure growth W
hile Philippine tycoons argue over a typing error in a highway bid and whose shopping mall benefits the most from a train station, commuters are paying the price. A 47-kilometer expressway connecting Manila to the southern provinces has been delayed by a San Miguel Corp. (SMC) appeal to President Aquino after its bid was rejected on a technicality. »A9
President Aquino (right) and Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala AP
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PHL’S RANKING UP 13 NOTCHES TO 95TH OVERALL IN 2015WORLD BANK REPORT
INSIDE
Doing business in PHL eases
breast cancer
By Cai U. Ordinario & Catherine N. Pillas
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he Philippines improved its performance in the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business 2015 report, despite the negative health&fitness impact of the truck ban in Manila on the country’s rankings.
Royals force game 7
Sports BusinessMirror
ROYALS FORCE GAME 7 K
By Ronald Blum The Associated Press
ANSAS CITY, Missouri—Lorenzo Cain hit a two-run single and Eric Hosmer lined a two-run double over shortstop in a seven-run second inning as the Kansas City Royals battered the San Francisco Giants, 10-0, on Tuesday to force a decisive Game Seven in the World Series. Yordano Ventura, a 23-year-old rookie pitching with a heavy heart and the initials of late Saint Louis outfielder Oscar Taveras on his cap, allowed three hits over seven stifling innings as the Series drew level at three games each. “This is what we all prepared for. This is why we play the game,” Royals first baseman Eric Hosmer said. As bouncers rolled by infielders and bloops dropped in front of outfielders, the raucous roar at Kauffman Stadium swelled with every hit in the second and then got louder the rest of the night. Lorenzo Cain looped a two-run single—one of eight Royals to get hits in the seven-run burst—and Hosmer chopped a two-run double over shortstop. “Guys stepped up in a big way tonight,” Cain said. Jeremy Guthrie starts on Wednesday night for Kansas City and Tim Hudson for San Francisco in a rematch of Game Three, won by Kansas City, 3-2. Hudson, 39, will become the oldest Game Seven starter in Series history. “We’re confident,” the Royals’ Billy Butler said. “Jeremy, every time out, gives us a chance to win.” Lurking is Madison Bumgarner, ready to pitch in relief after suffocating the Royals on a total of one run in winning Games One and Five. Giants Manager Bruce Bochy elected not to start him on two days’ rest. “This guy is human. I mean, you can’t push him that much,” Bochy said. “He’ll be available if we need him, but to start him, I think that’s asking a lot.” Kansas City can be comfortable in this bit of history: Home teams have won nine straight Game Sevens in the Series since Pittsburgh’s victory at Baltimore in 1979, including the Royals’ 11-0 rout
C | T, O , mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
KANSAS CITY CAN BE COMFORTABLE IN THIS BIT OF HISTORY: HOME TEAMS HAVE WON NINE STRAIGHT GAME SEVENS IN THE SERIES SINCE PITTSBURGH’S VICTORY AT BALTIMORE IN 1979, INCLUDING THE ROYALS’ 11-0 ROUT OF SAINT LOUIS IN 1985. AND THE GIANTS HAVE LOST ALL FOUR OF THEIR WORLD SERIES FINALES PUSHED TO THE LIMIT.
of Saint Louis in 1985. And the Giants have lost all four of their World Series finales pushed to the limit. “I had a very, very strong feeling that whoever won Game Six was going to win Game Seven,” Royals Manager Ned Yost said. “We have to wait until tomorrow to see if my theory’s correct.” Teams with the home-field advantage have won 23 of the last 28 titles, including five in a row. This Series has followed the exact pattern of the only other all-wild card matchup in 2002, when the Giants won the opener, fell behind 2-1, took a 3-2 lead and lost the last two games at Anaheim. “I can’t wait to get out there tomorrow and have some fun,” Hudson said. There was a moment of silence before the game in honor of Taveras, the 22-year-old killed in an automobile accident on Sunday in the Dominican Republic. Ventura wrote “RIP O.T #18” in silver marker on the left side of his cap and brought a Dominican flag to his postgame interview. “From the minute that I found out about Oscar, I said this game was going to be dedicated to him,” Ventura said through a translator. “I prepared myself mentally and physically for this game, and I’m very proud to be a Dominican, and that’s why I brought the flag.” He escaped his only trouble in the third, when he walked the bases loaded with one out and got Buster Posey to ground a fastball into a double play. Ventura threw fastballs on 81 of 100 pitches, reaching
up to 100 mph (160 kph). Yost was able to rest the hardthrowing back of his bullpen: Kelvin Herrera and Wade Davis enter Game Seven with two days off and closer Greg Holland with four. Kansas City out-hit the Giants 15-6 in another blowout in the first Series in which five games were decided by five runs or more. All nine Royals had hits by the third, matching the mark set by Arizona against the Yankees in Game Six in 2001. Cain drove in three runs and was among six Royals with two hits each. Mike Moustakas homered
YORDANO VENTURA pitches with a heavy heart but allows just three hits over seven stifling innings as the Series drew level at three games each. AP
in the seventh against Hunter Strickland, ending a 36-inning homerless streak in the Series, the longest since 1945. Peavy was charged with five runs and six hits in 1 1-3 innings, leaving with a career Series record of 0-2 with a 9.58 ERA in three starts. His record at Kauffman Stadium is 1-7 with a 7.28 ERA. “It’s hugely disappointing. It’s as disappointing as it can get,” he said. San Francisco had scored 15 straight runs entering the night, but the Royals rocked Peavy and Yusmeiro Petit in the 32-minute bottom of the second. Moustakas grounded an RBI double over the first-base bag, past Brandon Belt and down the right-field line. Alcides Escobar hit a one-out bouncer to Belt. With Peavy yelling “Home!” Belt checked Salvador Perez at third and then tried to out-race Escobar to first base rather than throw to second baseman Joe Panik, who already was at the base. Escobar slid past Belt’s failed tag attempt and into first to reach on the infield hit. “It’s a play you can definitely learn from,” Belt said. “Unfortunately, it happened in the World Series.”
HUDSON VS GUTHRIE KANSAS CITY, Missouri—After long waits to make their World Series debuts, Tim Hudson and Jeremy Guthrie will get another opportunity to pitch on Wednesday night. This time, everything is on the line. Guthrie, who had never reached the postseason before this year, will be on the mound for Kansas City in Game Seven. Once again, he will face the 39-yearold Hudson, who finally made it to the World Series with San Francisco after 16 seasons in the majors. “I’m no different than anybody else. As a kid, you think about it. As a big leaguer, you think about it,” said Hudson, set to become the oldest Game Seven starter in Series history. “You wonder if you’re going to have an opportunity to do it. Sixteen years in the big leagues, I’m finally getting that chance. I can’t wait to get out there and have some fun.” The 35-year-old Guthrie helped pitch Royals to a 3-2 win last Friday night in San Francisco, giving them a 2-1 lead in the Series. But after the Giants rallied to win the next two at home, the teams returned to Kansas City with the Royals needing a victory to force Game Seven. They got it—a 10-0 rout—behind a resurgent offense that relentlessly peppered Giants starter Jake Peavy and reliever Yusmeiro Petit, and a brilliant start by rookie Yordano Ventura. “A lot of guys had this weird feeling it would come to this,” Giants outfielder Hunter Pence said afterward, “and here we are.” Guthrie allowed two runs over five innings in his World Series debut, and Hudson was nearly as sharp, allowing three runs on four hits while pitching into the sixth. But when the Giants were unable to score a tying run off the Kansas City bullpen, Hudson was
stuck with the loss. Now, he has a chance to bag the biggest win possible. “I mean, obviously I’m going to go as deep as I can,” Hudson said. “Hopefully I can give a quality six, seven innings out there and turn it over to those guys in the ‘pen.” That bullpen could be even stronger than normal with ace Madison Bumgarner, who won Game One and pitched a shutout in Game Five, available for a
THIS time, everything is on the line as Tim Hudson and Jeremy Guthrie get another opportunity to pitch on Wednesday night. AP
be Wednesday night, Bumgarner gave a predictably preposterous answer. “I said maybe 200. No, I don’t know. I don’t even know if I’m going to be called on. But if you are, as long as you’re getting outs and you’re not hurting...” he said. First things first, though: Bumgarner is excited for his friend Hudson. “There couldn’t be a better story for Huddy. I know he’s going to be ready,” Bumgarner said. As for playing a Game Seven, “if you want to be a baseball player, that’s what you think about.” The Royals will also have a fresh bullpen after Ventura’s sublime start. Kansas City Manager Ned Yost has even said his star trio of Kelvin Herrera, Wade Davis and All-Star closer Greg Holland would be available to pitch two innings apiece if needed. “That keeps all of our big guns fresh and ready to go,” Yost said. The Royals also will have a bit of history on their side. When they were last in the World Series in 1985, they also faced a 3-2 deficit returning home against Saint Louis. They won Game Six, made famous by umpire Don Denkinger’s blown call at first base, and then took Game Seven in an 11-0 rout for their only championship. The Giants, meanwhile, had a 3-2 lead this year for the third time in franchise history. Just like in 1924 and 2002, they lost Game Six. Both of those years, they lost Game Seven as well. “We’ll take any win. Close, blowout, any win,” Royals outfielder Lorenzo Cain said. “Guys stepped up and we definitely needed everyone in our lineup. We needed to swing the bats and have a good outing from our starter. We need that again. I hope the entire team gets hot.” AP
sports
relief stint on Wednesday night. Bumgarner has allowed one run over 16 innings in his two starts against Kansas City. “We’ll see where he’s at and how he’s doing out there,” Giants Manager Bruce Bochy said. “I can’t tell you exactly how far he could go or how many pitches he could go. I think you read him and see how he’s doing out there.” Asked what his pitch limit might
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kurds cross turkey B3-6 Thursday, October 30, 2014
The World BusinessMirror
Girls trying to join jihadis confused
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ENVER—One of three girls who authorities say tried to join Islamic State militants in Syria was confused about what her role would be if she had actually made it there, the girl’s father said on Tuesday. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) says a 16-year-old Somali girl and her friends, 15- and 17-yearold sisters of Somali descent, were headed toward Turkey en route to Syria when authorities stopped them on October 20 at the Frankfurt, Germany airport. They sent them back to Denver, where FBI agents again interviewed them before releasing them to their parents without pressing charges. “She told me they were going to get there and somebody is going to contact them,” said the father of the 16-yearold, who spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because he is concerned for the girls’ safety. “I ask her, ‘Who’s that person?’ She actually didn’t have a clear idea about what’s going on. They’re just like, you know, stupid little girls.
They just want to do something, and they do it.” They’re safe now, but the father said he is still troubled by lingering questions about their intentions, who recruited them online and how they were so easily able to board a plane and head overseas. The FBI is focusing on what contacts they had in Syria, having searched the girls’ computers for clues. “What they did is unacceptable, and they changed their lives, and they changed our lives,” the father said, adding that he pulled his daughter out of school. She hasn’t had contact with her friends. She told her father she was afraid to talk to him about going to Syria because she knew he would oppose it. “She realizes she made a mistake.” He said he became concerned on October 17, when his daughter’s high school called to say she had not shown up for classes. He texted her, and she responded that she was just late, but she didn’t return home, and her brother mentioned a disturbing Twitter conversation from her account. “She asked her friends to pray for
her because she and the other two girls...and at that time, I just knew that something really bad was going to happen,” he said. Then, he noticed her passport missing. He called the FBI and his state lawmaker, Rep. Daniel Kagan, for help. Authorities said the girls had saved their money and stole from their parents to buy their tickets in cash at a Lufthansa counter at Denver International Airport. Their overseas trip raised no red flags. The US government doesn’t have any restrictions on children flying alone, domestically or internationally. Most US airlines allow children 12 and older to fly alone but often with restrictions on international flights. The girl left behind her laptop, which showed she had been researching whether minors could travel alone and if an entry visa to Turkey was required. The father wasn’t sure how his daughter, a typical high-school girl who likes going to the movies and the mall, was lured to terrorism online. Officials have said one of the girls had planned the voyage and encouraged the others to come along. AP
Militias vow to repel assault in eastern Libya
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AIRO—Islamist militias in Libya’s war-ravaged Benghazi have vowed to repel advancing pro-government forces who have been fighting them for nearly two weeks for control of the eastern city. In a Tuesday statement, The Shura Council of Benghazi Revolutionaries, an umbrella group for the city’s
hard-line militias, vowed “it’s time for the battle.” They were addressing supporters of the former Libyan Gen. Khalifa Hifter, who unilaterally led an offensive against the militias in the spring. Hifter and allied army units were forced to leave much of the city in
August after militias overran army barracks. However, on October 15, he, along with the internationally recognized government, joined ranks and led an anti-Islamist offensive to retake the city. Over the past days, the army units have been advancing inside Benghazi. AP
Iraqi Kurds cross Turkey to fight militants in Syria
In this image taken from video, people welcome peshmerga soldiers as they arrive at the Ibrahim Khalil border entrance in Zakho, Iraq, on Wednesday. AP/APTN
RBIL, Iraq—A group of Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga troops arrived in Turkey early on Wednesday and headed toward the border to help their Syrian brethren fight Islamic State (IS) extremists in the embattled town of Kobani.
Earlier, they received a rousing send-off from thousands of cheering, flag-waving supporters as they left the Iraqi Kurdish capital of Irbil by plane for Turkey. The unprecedented mission by the 150 fighters to help fellow Kurds in their battle with the IS group came after Ankara agreed to allow the peshmerga to cross into Syria via Turkey—although the Turkish prime minister reiterated that his country would not be sending any ground forces of its own to Kobani. The peshmerga forces landed early Wednesday at the Sanliurfa airport in southeastern Turkey, according to the Associated Press video journalists. They left the airport in buses escorted by Turkish security forces and are expected to travel to Kobani through the Mursitpinar border crossing. Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told the BBC that sending the peshmerga was “the only way to
help Kobani, since other countries don’t want to use ground troops.” The IS group launched its offensive on Kobani and nearby Syrian villages in mid-September, killing more than 800 people, according to activists. The Sunni extremists captured dozens of Kurdish villages around Kobani and control parts of the town. More than 200,000 people have fled across the border into Turkey. The US is leading a coalition that has carried out dozens of air strikes targeting the militants in and around Kobani. The deployment of the 150 peshmerga fighters, who were authorized by the Iraqi Kurdish government to go to Kobani, underscores the sensitive political tensions in the region. Turkey’s government views the Syrian Kurds defending Kobani as loyal to what Ankara regards as an extension of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK. That group has waged
a 30-year insurgency in Turkey and is designated a terrorist group by the US and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Under pressure to take greater action against the IS militants— from the West, as well as from Kurds inside Turkey and Syria—the Turkish government agreed to let the fighters cross through its territory. But it only is allowing the peshmerga forces from Iraq, with whom it has a good relationship, and not those from the PKK. A separate Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga convoy of Toyota Land Cruisers and trucks carrying cannons and machine guns crossed into Turkey early on Wednesday at the Ibrahim Khalil border crossing at Zakho in northern Iraq en route to Kobani. Peshmerga soldiers carrying Kurdish flags were atop some of the vehicles as they headed from Irbil to the border crossing. The troops made the victory sign for the cameras. An ambulance and government vehicles blaring their sirens accompanied the convoy. Scores of people waited by the side of the road in villages for the troops to pass. Thousands of people awaited them at the border. The crowd sang and chanted traditional peshmerga songs and had to be pushed back by every vehicle that tried to make its way through the masses. Many people carried colorful Kurdish flags and portraits of the Iraqi Kurdish regional President Massoud Barzani. AP
Kerry expresses solidarity with Canada
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TTAWA, Ontario—The United States and Canada vowed on Tuesday to step up already close counterterrorism and border security cooperation as US Secretary of State John F. Kerry paid condolences to the Canadian people following last week’s terror attacks. On his first trip to Canada since taking office, Kerry flew to Ottawa and went immediately to the National War Memorial to lay a wreath in honor of Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, the Canadian soldier killed there by a gunman believed to have been inspired by the Islamic State group. The attack on Wednesday was the second in three days in Canada, after an earlier incident in Quebec. “There is nowhere safe for those who would pervert the teachings of a great religion, betray their neighbors and line up on the side of such pernicious groups such as al-Qaeda and ISIL [Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant],” Kerry told reporters after meeting Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird. “Together, on this side of the Atlantic and where necessary overseas, we will defeat the advocates and practitioners of terror, expose their hypocrisy and we will win the battle of ideas,” he said.
Standing beside Kerry, Baird stressed Canada’s resolve in fighting extremism. “We cannot allow there to be a safe haven for this medieval savagery, or a launchpad for attacks on our home soil,” Baird said. The pair of attacks in Canada have prompted concerns among some in the US over security along the world’s longest undefended border. But Baird noted that there has never been a successful terrorist attack across either border and officials traveling with Kerry said that while there is always room for improvement, Washington is satisfied with the current state of cooperation with Ottawa on the matter. That said, Kerry pointed out that the US and Canada “are always looking at ways to cooperate more” and would “continue to intensify our law enforcement, border security and intelligence sharing.” He did not elaborate. The officials with Kerry said there were virtually no areas of disagreement between the neighbors on big international issues, including the fight against extremism, the effort to halt the spread of the deadly Ebola virus and the crisis in Ukraine. Indeed, on Ukraine both
Kerry and Baird commended the country on its recent parliamentary elections and demanded that Russia halt any intervention in the east, where Kerry said the US would not recognize planned upcoming elections in areas held by pro-Russian separatists. During his brief visit, Kerry also met with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and with members of Parliament. One area of US-Canadian friction—delays and uncertainty in the Obama administration’s decision over the Keystone XL pipeline—was raised in Kerry’s meeting with Baird, both men said. But each played down dissension on the matter. Kerry said a State Department review of the project was still pending and that while he would like to make a decision on it “sooner rather than later,” he would not do so until due diligence had been paid to its pros and cons. The pipeline, much wanted by Canada and supported by conservatives in the US, is fiercely opposed by many environmental groups. Baird said the pipeline issue was “important” for Canada and that he appreciated the seriousness with which the review was being taken. AP
world
borders; enforcing contracts; and resolving insolvency. This year the Philippines ranked high, 16th out of 189, in getting electricity; and ranked 50th out of 189 in resolving insolvency. Despite being ranked relatively high at 65th out of 189 in trading across borders, the World Bank noted that the imposition of the truck ban was having a reverse impact on the country’s performance in this indicator. The change, the bank said, “was making it more difficult to do business” in the country. The truck ban, however, has recently been lifted by the City of Manila, and this has improved the flow of goods nationwide. “In the Philippines trading across borders became more difficult because of a new city ordinance restricting truck traffic in Manila,” the report stated. See “Doing business,” A12
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PURISIMA: “Total revenues amounted to P154.7 billion in September, higher than last year’s comparable figures by 21.4 percent and exceeding the program by 1.8 percent. Year-to-date total revenues reached P1.425 trillion, a growth of 12.5 percent year on year.”
saint moritz Our destiny
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EAR Lord, inspire our thoughts for they become our words. May we speak Your words for they become our actions. Lead our actions for they become our service to You. Let our good habits become our character for in turn lead us to our destiny. Amen. YETTA L. CRUZ AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
Thursday, October 30, 2014
Saint Moritz: Where the world’s wealthy go in winter
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By David Cagahastian
BETWEEN THE LINES... »D4
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B J B | The Charlotte Observer
IF you’re looking for the ultimate winter getaway, visit the Badrutt’s Palace Hotel in Saint Moritz, Switzerland.
VES GARDIOL is general manager of Badrutt’s Palace Hotel (www. badruttspalace.com), the famous resort in Saint Moritz, Switzerland. Gardiol, a 53-year-old native of Lausanne, Switzerland, has been at the Palace for a decade.
How about a little background about the hotel? Saint Moritz is in the Swiss Alps, and this year marks 150 years of winter sports here; Saint Moritz has hosted the Olympics twice: 1928 and 1948. The hotel was built in 1896 as a winter destination, and the Palace itself has always been the place to be for celebrities and rich people of the world. C D
life
ebola-ready Government health workers practice wearing Ebola protective suits on the
first day of training on hospital management for Ebola virus disease at the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine in Alabang, Muntinlupa City, on Tuesday. The Department of Health and the World Health Organization have teamed up to conduct training for government health workers, private hospitals and local government units to prepare and help prevent the spread of the Ebola virus. The country remains to be Ebola-free. AP/Bullit Marquez
9-month budget U.S. AIRLINES KEEP FARES Palace gives cryptic shortfall widened DESPITE FUEL-COST DROP reply to Calax uproar to ₧31.1 billion A
news@businessmirror.com.ph
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In the Ease of Doing Business 2015 report, the Philippines ranked 95th out of 189 countries, a considerable jump from last year’s ranking of 108th overall. “In the Philippines improvements in resolving insolvency, getting electricity, registering property and paying taxes enhanced the country’s ranking from 108 in 2014 to 95 in 2015,” the World Bank said. “Measured against global best practice or distance to frontier [DTF] in business regulations, the country’s performance [62.08] puts the Philippines in the same range as Vietnam [64.42] and Indonesia [59.15],” it added. The Doing Business report has 10 indicators: starting a business; dealing with construction permits; getting electricity; registering property, getting credit; protecting minority investors; paying taxes; trading across
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he government incurred a P5.2-billion budget deficit in September, or P13.4 billion lower than the budget shortfall incurred in September 2013, the Department of Finance (DOF) said on Wednesday. Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima said the lower fiscal deficit for September was due to the improved efficiency in the collection activities of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR). The P5.2-billion budget deficit in September brought the total budgetary shortfall for the first three quarters of the year to P31.1 billion, or P70.2 billion lower than in the same period last year. “Total revenues amounted to P154.7 billion in See “Budget shortfall,” A12
PESO exchange rates n US 44.7810 n japan 0.4140
ir travelers filling planes in the US at a record pace are missing out on the fuel savings that motorists are finding at the pump. Even as jet kerosene heads for its first annual decline since 2008, airlines are relying on strong ticket demand to hold the line on prices. US carriers have no incentive to start offering fares for less—and they say they won’t. “Just like gasoline prices drop for the consumer, why not airline prices?” said Hank Levenson, who was flying this month to Orlando, Florida, from Dallas for his law-enforcement training business. “Coming from the same refinery, the same source, why not pass it on to the consumer? That’s what good customer service is all about.” Crude oil’s worldwide slide in 2014 has cut jet fuel by 22 percent, a boost for US carriers because it’s their largest cost. At the same time, one-way domestic coach flights averaged $466 this year through September, 1.7 percent more than for all of 2013, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence. “You were willing to pay that price yesterday, so what’s different?” said Bob Mann, a former American Airlines executive who is now president of aviation consultant R.W. Mann & Co. in Port Washington, New York. “Airlines have the pricing power. Why are they ever going to give it up?”
Shares surge
Spending less and charging more has been good for airline earnings—and share prices. Excluding some onetime items, the six largest US carriers posted more than $3.96 billion in third-quarter profits. The Bloomberg US Airlines Index surged See “U.S. airlines,” A9
By Butch Fernandez
M
alacañang on Wednesday reacted cautiously to moves by local and foreign business groups questioning President Aquino’s “inclination” to reopen the bidding for the P35.2-B CaviteLaguna Expressway (Calax) project. In separate statements earlier this week, various trade groups warned that the government’s pronouncement to rebid the toll-road project was “ill-advised,” and could dampen investors’ confidence in doing business in the country. On Wednesday, however, Palace officials gave cryptic replies to the BusinessMirror’s queries, when asked about concerns raised by worried business groups that rebidding the Calax deal could also derail the Aquino administration’s flagship Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Program, covering mostly big-ticket infrastructure projects. “The case will be decided on the merits in accordance with law and in consonance with the national interest,” Communications Secretary
Herminio B. Coloma Jr. said. For his part, Palace Chief Spokesman Edwin Lacierda would only say that “the President already mentioned his inclination [to rebid Calax]” during Mr. Aquino’s appearance at a forum hosted by the Foreign Correspondents Association of the Philippines (Focap) last week. At the Focap forum, President Aquino indicated he was inclined to order a rebidding of the Calax road project, initially won by the AyalaAboitiz Team Orion consortium with an P11.65-billion premium offer, after the disqualified bidder, San Miguel Corp.’s Optimal Infrastructure Development Inc. (OIDI), was found to have submitted a much higher P20.1-billion offer. Both the Ayala-Aboitiz group and San Miguel’s OIDI have assured Mr. Aquino they would not go to court if the President decides to go ahead or abort a planned rebidding, whose date has yet to be set by the Department of Public Works and Highways. Continued on A12
n UK 72.2631 n HK 5.7728 n CHINA 7.3252 n singapore 35.2135 n australia 39.6257 n EU 57.0331 n SAUDI arabia 11.9359 Source: BSP (29 October 2014)