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Tuesday, November 18,2015 2014 Vol. Vol.10 10No. No.93 40 Saturday, January 10,
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‘TRASLACIÓN’ The Black Nazarene, a life-size statue of Jesus bearing the cross en route to His crucifixion on Calvary, is surrounded by devotees as it goes through the annual traslación, or the procession through the streets of Manila, starting from the Quirino Grandstand to the Minor Basilica of the Black Nazarene, also known as the Quiapo Church. The procession attracts millions of devotees from all over the country, who, walking barefoot as a sign of humility, jostle each other for a chance to touch it. More photos on A2. See story below. ALYSA SALEN
UNCERTAINTIES CONTINUE TO HOUND MAJOR MARKETS FOR LOCALLY MADE GOODS
PAPAL VISIT 2015
Slower 2015 export growth seen
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he National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) said on Friday that lingering uncertainties facing the country’s major markets could temper export earnings in 2015.
5 DAYS INSIDE
backlash against muslims feared across europe B3-4 Saturday, January 10, 2015
Jackie Chan’s son sentenced to 6 months for drug offense
Hong Kong actor Jaycee chan poses during a premiere of his film Break Up Club in Hong Kong in this June 14, 2010, photo. AP/Vincent Yu
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EIJING—The son of actor Jackie Chan pleaded guilty in a Beijing court on Friday to providing a venue for drug users and was sentenced to six months in prison, following a major crackdown on illegal drugs in the Chinese capital. Jaycee Chan, 32, also was ordered to pay 2,000 yuan, or about $320, the Dongcheng District People’s Court in Beijing said on its microblog account. Police detained Chan, Taiwanese movie star Ko Kai and several others in August in Chan’s Beijing apartment. Chan and Ko tested positive for marijuana, and police seized more than 100 grams (3.5 ounces) of marijuana from Chan’s home, the official Xinhua News Agency said. “I violated the law. I deserve to be punished. When I return to society, I won’t do it again,” Chan said in courtroom footage aired on state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV). Police arrested more than 7,800 people last summer in Beijing over illegal drug use, police said in August. Other celebrities, including actor Gao Hu, were also among those detained in what was described as the biggest such crackdown in two decades. Illegal drug use has ballooned in China in recent decades, after being virtually eradicated following the 1949 communist revolution. Xinhua said the maximum sentence for the charge against Chan was three years in prison. The trial and sentence were especially sensitive for Jackie Chan, who was named an antidrug ambassador in 2009, and sits on China’s top national political advisory panel—the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference. The actor has told Xinhua that he did not use his connections to interfere with the case and that he hopes his singer-actor son will eventually become an anti-drug ambassador. CCTV had aired video of the police raid on Jaycee Chan’s apartment, in which Chan was shown identifying marijuana in his possession. Ko testified on camera that he had used drugs at Chan’s home. CCTV also said Chan told police that he has been using drugs for eight years. Ko, whose real name is Ko Chen-tung, has been released after a 14-day administrative detention for drug use. AP
The World BusinessMirror
Backlash against Muslims feared across Europe P
ARIS—Gun and grenade attacks outside at least two French mosques heightened fear on Thursday of an anti-Muslim backlash after a military-style assault on a newspaper that satirizes Islam. The attack on the newsweekly came as far-right parties have been gaining in popularity not only in France but also in Germany, Britain, Greece and elsewhere, feeding the anti-immigrant sentiments on which they thrive. With tension building, Muslim community leaders advised veiled women to avoid going out alone and urged their members to join in a national minute of silence for the victims of Wednesday’s attack on the offices of Charlie Hebdo in Paris. “Anyone who associates this criminal act with Islam is mistaken. It is an act of terrorism. The perpetrators of this act should be arrested, condemned and eradicated,” Abdallah Zekri, president of the National Observatory Against Islamophobia, told reporters at the Grand Mosque of Paris. While expressing sympathy for the victims, he noted that it is often Muslims who suffer after such
attacks. “Whenever something like this happens, we are on the front lines as scapegoats,” he said. “There have been a number of attacks already this year.” The incidents outside mosques in Le Mans, southwest of Paris, and in Villefranche-sur-Saone, near Lyon— neither of which caused injury—suggested that anti-Muslim retribution had already begun, he said. Although President François Hollande called for national unity, leaders of the far-right National Front demanded that he step up measures to tackle Islamic fundamentalism and bring back the death penalty. “The time for denial and hypocrisy is no longer possible,” party leader Marine Le Pen said in a video on her party’s web site. “The absolute rejection of Islamic fundamentalism must be proclaimed loudly and clearly.” The National Front and other
anti-immigrant groups have gained ground in Europe, propelled by a moribund economy, high unemployment rates and frustration with mainstream parties. Recent surveys show Le Pen would outpoll Hollande and center-right challengers if the 2017 election were held now. Her party led all French parties in the European Parliament elections, picked up two seats in the French Senate and took power in 11 French towns. Other parties benefiting from seething resentments include Britain’s Independence Party, which has called for tougher controls on immigration, and Germany’s Patriotic Europeans Against Islamization of the West, or Pegida, which rallied an estimated 18,000 marchers on Monday in Dresden. Analysts said such parties would probably use the attack in France to mobilize more support. “This has already started,” said Johannes Kiess, a sociologist at the University of Leipzig, pointing to recent posts on the German party’s Facebook page. “Today in France the Islamists that Pegida has warned you about for 12 weeks have shown that they are not capable of democracy and see violence and death as a solution!” read one post on Wednesday. Los Angeles Times/TNS
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Peru’s Fujimori convicted of corruption in fifth trial
Peru’s former President alberto Fujimori, photographed through a glass window, attends the final sentencing of his embezzlement trial, at a police base on the outskirts of lima, Peru, on January 8. Fujimori, who is already serving 25 years following previous convictions, is being tried for allegedly diverting government funds to finance newspapers that backed his successful run for a third term. AP/MArtin MejiA
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IMA, Peru—A three-judge panel in Peru convicted jailed former President Alberto Fujimori on Thursday of funneling more than $40 million in public funds to tabloid newspapers that smeared his opponents during his 2000 reelection campaign. The conviction was the fifth for the 76-year-old Fujimori. The judges sentenced him to eight years in prison and fined him $1 million. The sentence will run concurrently with the stiffest he has received to date: 25 years for murder in the military death-squad killings of 25 people. He has two additional convictions for corruption and one for abuse of power. During sentencing, Fujimori wrote on sheets of blank paper on a courtroom desk that the money he was convicted of diverting was used to build airstrips and medical posts in towns “infiltrated by the Shining Path” rebel movement. After the sentence had been read,
US eyes new ways to aid Iraq forces
Seoul may deport American over positive N. Korea comments
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UN chief appeals to extremist groups: Free the children
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NITED NATIONS—The United Nations secretary-general is making a personal appeal to the Boko Haram and Islamic State (IS) extremist groups to “immediately and unconditionally” free the hundreds of children they have abducted. Ban Ki-moon spoke out on Thursday during informal remarks to the UN General Assembly and again to reporters afterward. He said he was making the appeal “as a father and grandfather” in addition to his global role. Boko Haram horrified the world last April when it kidnapped 276 schoolgirls, of whom more than 200 remain missing. The group has abducted hundreds of other boys, girls and young men and women. The IS group also has been accused of kidnapping children, especially girls, in its sweep across parts of Syria and Iraq. AP
he rose to his feet and said: “I don’t agree with the sentence, in no way. I am going to appeal.” The tabloids, for which witnesses in a previous trial said Fujimori personally dictated headlines, were sold in Peru’s poorest neighborhoods, where they would be displayed outside kiosks. Typically, the tabloids would carry headlines alternately calling Fujimori opponents crazy, communists and homosexuals. Fujimori initially was hailed for defeating runaway inflation and the Shining Path rebels during his decade in power, but he became increasingly autocratic and stained by corruption. He fled from Peru in 2000 amid a bribery scandal and was extradited in 2007 from Chile, where he was arrested trying to return to his homeland to attempt a political comeback. He is Peru’s most expensive prisoner, costing the state $157,000 a year, authorities say. AP
IslamIc state group militants stand with a captured Iraqi army Humvee at a checkpoint outside Beiji refinery, some 250 kilometers north of Baghdad, Iraq, last June 19. AP
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ASHINGTON—The US is looking at ways to increase its aid to the Iraqi security forces, including help with ways to counter roadside bombs and buildings rigged to explode, Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, the top military officer, said on Thursday. But he said it’s still unclear when the Iraqi troops will be ready to mount an offensive against Islamic State (IS) militants that have control of portions of northern and western Iraq.
Speaking to reporters in his office, Dempsey said the US will help with “some kind of broad counteroffensive” when Iraq is able to conduct the military assault and any needed reconstruction afterward. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke after meeting with Israeli military chief Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, for more than an hour. “We’re working with Iraq’s military and civilian leaders to determine the pace at which we will encourage them and enable them to do
a counteroffensive,” Dempsey said. “So when the government of Iraq finds itself ready not only to conduct the military operations necessary to recapture their territory, but also to follow it with the humanitarian and reconstruction efforts, then they will, with us, initiate some kind of broad counteroffensive.” In the meantime, he said, the coalition has kept up “a drumbeat, a steady, building pressure” on IS insurgents. The US has kept up a persistent
bombing campaign against militant targets in Iraq and Syria, launching air strikes on seven locations in Iraq on Wednesday. Asked about Iran’s military operations in Iraq, which have included air strikes, Dempsey said Iraqi leaders have kept the US informed about Iranian activities against IS. So far, he said, those operations haven’t threatened US troops or their mission. But, if that changes, he said the US will adjust its military campaign plan. AP
EOUL, South Korea—South Korean officials said on Friday they were considering whether to deport a Korean-American woman accused of praising rival North Korea during a recent lecture. Prosecutors on Thursday asked the Korea Immigration Service to deport California-resident Shin Eun-mi after determining her comments violated South Korea’s antiPyongyang security law, according to immigration officials who spoke on condition of anonymity citing office rules. The Korean Peninsula remains in a technical state of war, split along the world’s most heavily fortified border since the 1950-1953 Korean War, which ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty. In South Korea, praising North Korea can be punished by up to seven years in prison under its antiPyongyang security law. Critics have called for the security law to be scrapped, saying it infringes upon freedom of speech. Supporters argue that the law is needed because of constant threats from North Korea. Past authoritarian leaders in South Korea frequently used the law to suppress political rivals. Shin regularly posted stories about her trips to North Korea on OhmyNews, a popular South Korean online news site. During a November lecture in Seoul, she said that many North Korean defectors living in South Korea had told her they want to go back home and that North Koreans hope new leader Kim Jong Un will bring change. She also praised the taste of North Korean beer and the cleanliness of North Korea’s rivers. Shin has said she had no intention of praising the country and was only expressing what she felt during her travels in North Korea. AP
world
By Cai U. Ordinario
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Neda Deputy Director General Emmanuel F. Esguerra said demand for locally produced goods in major economies could slacken early this year. “Slack demand by the start of 2015 may soften the demand for Philippine exports, in addition to the uncertainties still lingering in many big economies,” Esguerra said in a statement. “Considering that exports of goods comprise around 40.7 percent of the country’s GDP [gross domestic product], vulnerability to external shocks through the trade channel can pose downward risk to growth,” he added. Neda issued the pronouncement after the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) released the November exports data, which showed that export earnings rose 19.7 percent year on year to $5.17 billion. Export earnings growth in November was the highest since
PESO exchange rates n US 45.0640
ESGUERRA: “Slack demand by the start of 2015 may soften the demand for Philippine exports, in addition to the uncertainties still lingering in many big economies.”
June 2014, when receipts grew 21.3 percent. Esguerra said the country’s export earnings last November placed the Philippines as the “highest export performer” among East and Southeast Asian economies for the third time this year. The Philippines outperformed Vietnam, whose export earnings growth hit 10.8 percent last November; the People’s Republic of China, 4.7 percent; Taiwan, 3.7 percent; and Hong Kong, 2.8 percent. See “Export,” A8
Black Nazarene devotees TOLD: Turn to God, BE SPIRITUAL AND HUMBLE
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anila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle told devotees who trooped to the Quirino Grandstand on Thursday night for the pahalik sa Poong Nazareno to be spiritual and humble. “I challenge you to turn to Jesus and bow down to Him. Strive to live a spiritual life,” Tagle said in the vernacular. In his message, Tagle also told the devotees of the Black Nazarene to be compassionate. “Those who will turn to Jesus will gain eternal life. True devotees are those who will bow down to Jesus because they know that, without Jesus, they are nothing,” he said. The traditional pahalik sa Poong Nazareno started at 1 p.m. and lasted until 11:30 p.m. on Thursday. On Friday the traslacion, or the annual procession of the image of the Black Nazarene back to its home in Quiapo Church, started at 8:07 a.m.
A 34-year-old devotee died, while hundreds of others were injured, as a sea of humanity joined the procession for the revered Black Nazarene on Friday that marked its feast. Police and Red Cross officials expect the number of injured or treated to further increase, as devotees flocked to the carriage of the centuriesold black statue of Jesus Christ. Chief Insp. Lerma Tirana, spokesman of the National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO), identified the fatality as Renato Gurion, who was from Dimasalang, Manila. Gurion suffered a heart attack before he fell from the carriage bearing the image of the Black Nazarene. She said Gurion, who was a member of the hijos for the Black Nazarene or “protectors” of the religious image during procession, was later pinned down by the carriage, which was being pulled by hundreds Continued on A2
Toyota, Ford post higher sales in 2014
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oyota Motor Philippines Corp. (TMPC) and Ford Philippines recorded higher sales last year due to sustained demand for vehicles in the country. TMPC reached a milestone when vehicle sales in 2014 grew by 41 percent to 106,000 units, from 75,161 units posted in 2013. This marks the first time that sales of the Japanese carmaker breached 100,000 units in a single year. The company, however, could not yet provide details on which vehicle segments drove sales last year. Toyota was able to register record sales monthly, breaking the 8,000-unit mark for the first time in March and selling more than 10,000 units in July and October. Toyota launched four models last year—the All-New Altis, Innova, Yaris and the Wigo. TMPC sells a total of 18 models in the Philippines. Meanwhile, Ford Philippines also enjoyed higher sales last year. The company sold 20,341 units in 2014, 53 percent higher than the 13,286 units sold in 2013. See “Toyota, Ford,” A8
n japan 0.3766 n UK 67.9926 n HK 5.8110 n CHINA 7.2514 n singapore 33.7305 n australia 36.6225 n EU 53.1485 n SAUDI arabia 12.0059 Source: BSP (09 January 2015)