DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY
2018 BANTOG DATA MEDIA AWARDS CHAMPION
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Sunday, January 20, 2019 Vol. 14 No. 102
2018 EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS
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A BOY rides his bicycle on a deserted street at Hanjin Village. HENRY EMPEÑO
Hard-pressed at Hanjinville FORMER SHIPYARD WORKERS FACE UNCERTAIN TIMES AS KOREAN HANJIN’S PHILIPPINE FACILITY FACES INSOLVENCY
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By Henry Empeño
outskirts of Castillejos town proper. Also, an elementary school at the housing complex so that workers’ children won’t have to study elsewhere. There was a multipurpose hall for social activities, terminals for free-shuttle buses, even an extension office for the barangay. Most of all, the units were affordable. Then-Vice President Jejomar Binay, who was there at the turnover ceremony as chairman of both Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council (HUDCC) and the Pag-IBIG Fund, impressed upon the workers that they can avail themselves of the housing units through Pag-IBIG Fund’s housing loan designed specifically for the HHIC-Phil project. Binay added that Hanjin employees will not be required to pay down payment or equity, and that Hanjin has already donated the land for the project site.
ASTILLEJOS, Zambales—When South Korean shipbuilder Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Co.-Philippines (HHIC-Phil) turned over a low-cost housing project to workerbeneficiaries in April 2013, there was much cause for jubilation here, a stark contrast to the heavy pall of gloom that has hung over the area since last year, when the job dismissals began. Just over five years ago, Hanjin Village was virtually a haven to the workers who must toil under very tough conditions at the shipyard. The houses, arranged in neat rows and painted cream, looked decent enough for a low-cost project and
it was here where they began to build dreams while building ships at work. Hanjin Village was envisioned to be a model community. The Korean company built a concrete road to the 33-hectare housing site at the
FORMER Hanjin workers Diogreth Mendigorin, Jun Gardoce and Allan Maloon hang around and contemplate the future. HENRY EMPEÑO
Continued on A2
The future of nukes and the next great war SPEND a great deal of my life thinking about nuclear weapons. You can imagine I’m murder at a cocktail party. As the Cold War faded, and the possibility of a nuclear holocaust with it, people like me were considered yesterday’s news. Now, as the world enters a renewed era of great-power competition, I like to think we were simply prescient. PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 52.2880
TATYANA MERKUSHEVA | DREAMSTIME.COM
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By Tobin Harshaw | Bloomberg Opinion
If so, there was a whole lot of prescience on display at the Council on Foreign Relations last month at an event aptly titled “Do Nuclear Weapons Matter?” It featured a lively and intelligent debate between Nina Tannenwald of Brown University and Elbridge Colby, director of the defense program at the Center for a New American Security (CNAS). She took the “no” side and he took the “yes.” While I like to maintain a journalistic objectivity, there may be a clue to my bias in that I decided to interview him. Before Colby signed on at CNAS, he was the deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy and force development in the Trump administration. That convo-
luted title came with a convoluted task: leading the policy process for the first US National Defense Strategy (NDS) in a decade. Here is a lightly edited transcript of our discussion: Tobin Harshaw: The Trump administration has made the decision to pull out of the IntermediateRange Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty with Russia, which banned landbased missiles with ranges between 300 and 3,400 miles. Do you think that that was the right move? Elbridge Colby: Yes. But my reason is bit different than what you often hear, which is Russian noncompliance. That’s an issue—but in and of itself, I’m not sure it would justify Continued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4787 n UK 67.9169 n HK 6.6670 n CHINA 7.7132 n SINGAPORE 38.5975 n AUSTRALIA 37.6264 n EU 59.5717 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.9409
Source: BSP (January 18, 2019 )