BusinessMirror
three-time rotary club of manila journalism awardee 2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. Media Award 2008
A broader look at today’s business
www.businessmirror.com.ph
Life
Encounter with Pope Francis
LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
OSCARS TELECAST MAY GET LOWER RATINGS »D3
BusinessMirror
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Well-told tales of travel
Thursday, January 22, 2015
How did you pick these 35 pieces—and how did you find them? I drew up a wish list of writers I would love to work with and sent e-mails to them, their agents, their publishers. That’s how I got almost half the writers. I also have a pretty good stable of writers whose work I love; that was maybe another 15 stories or so. I then opened the theme up to the world at large, inviting travelers and travel writers via social media; four or five came from that. One piece appeared in an online publication but hasn’t been in print. All the others were written for this anthology. TRAVEL enthusiast Rovilson Fernandez enjoys an afternoon of water sports with his buddies, CJ Jaravata and Marc Nelson, in SeaBreeze Water-Sports @ Wavehouse Sentosa.
From sun up ‘til sun down FEW places in the world offer the kind and range of experiences like Singapore. Want to go on an epic food trip? Hawker centers, celebrity-chef and Michelin-star restaurants are within walking distance from each other, allowing foodies to start a meal with a bowl of spicy, savory laksa and a plate of hearty chicken rice before indulging in artfully crafted and sophisticated desserts by a celebrity chef. Want to redefine what it really means to shop till you drop? Iconic shopping malls packed to the brim with cutting-edge fashion from homegrown designers and refined haute couture from international labels sit comfortably alongside quirky, almost bohemian bazaars, so even the most sartorially obsessed traveler will find an outfit or two to take home. Only a little more than a three-hour flight away from Manila, Singapore has long been one of Filipinos’ favorite destinations, with airlines like Cebu Pacific offering daily flights from Manila and Cebu. Offering more than just food and shopping, Singapore (www.yoursingapore.com/ph) is also home to literally thousands of concerts, shows and artistic performances every year. From concerts and music festivals by chart-topping superstars to legendary musicals and plays, from avant-garde art installations to A-list parties that end only when the sun begins to rise in the horizon, the country has no shortage of things to see or do any time of the year. This dynamic range is exactly what celebrities, travel enthusiasts and The Amazing Race alumni Marc Nelson, Rovilson Fernandez and CJ Jaravata came to experience in Singapore during their most recent trip. The trio enthusiastically shared their favorite destinations and top activities from their barkada trip. “It’s cosmopolitan but traditional, modern but timeless, laidback but high-energy. Singapore is a study of contrasts,” says model, sportsman, and television host Nelson, who shares that he enjoyed a variety of activities ranging from flying 30 feet into the air with the JetLev Water-Propelled JetPack at SeaBreeze Water-Sports @ Wavehouse Sentosa, to appreciating the vibrant Singaporean art scene at the Arnoldii Art Club, and to savoring an authentic Italian lunch by the waterfront at SolePomodoro Trattoria Pizzeria in Quayside Isle, a new dining and lifestyle destination at Sentosa Cove. “Singapore is many things, but boring is the last thing anyone would call it.” Television host and media personality Fernandez, in turn, says, “There’s really so much to do in Singapore, but the great thing about it is that even over a weekend, you’ll be able to experience so many things.” Counting Singapore as one of his favorite places to visit, he raves about Hidden Finds, an annual three-day pop-up market by Public Garden featuring over 120 local vendors. His mustvisits on every trip to Singapore also include feasting on a delicious spread of hawker fare at Makansutra Glutton’s Bay while taking in a fantastic view of the Marina Bay skyline; knocking back drinks at the world’s highest rooftop bar and multiexperience lifestyle joint, 1-Altitude; and exploring the interactive Alive Museum Singapore. Model and actress Jaravata shared the two guys’ excitement during the trip, saying, “Food, shopping, art, entertainment.... What more could you want? Singapore just has so many layers that you’re sure to find interesting places to go and things to do that you’ll inevitable fall in love with the city.”
What else do their tales share? Ignorance at the start, definitely. And they grab you from (the) first few paragraphs and take you on incredible journeys. What’s the humor-tragedy mix? I’d say maybe 80 percent have moments of mild or possible tragedy that end up being happy. The rest are sad but moving and meaningful. One is about a guy traveling through Sri Lanka, just before the civil war began in the 1980s. He was in a charming village with charming kids. Later, he was reading news reports about revolutionaries who swept through that area and pretty much destroyed the village and killed the villagers. One night, back home, he looks up at the constellations—as he had during his wonderful trip to South Asia—and was thinking that the people he had such a good time with are probably no longer there. Which story has the least travel? There’s one by a guy who lives in California and who spent his life traveling around the world. His story takes place in Nevada, at the annual Burning Man event. Of all his life-changing experiences, he chose this place just hours from his home to write about. Of course, Burning Man is like an alternative universe in other ways. The story I chose to end the book was by an Australian who traveled around the world. She writes about coming home, and how home was so incredibly different than it had been. It’s poignant in a way—full circle—that symbolically everything changed. I think that’s what travel is all about: You have incredible experiences, come home, and because you’re now different the world you return to is different. Your own story is the book’s introduction. It’s about when I went to Europe after graduating from college: I went there thinking I’d take a year off, kind of live there, see what it was about, then go back to grad school, get a PhD in Comp Lit and become a tweedy professor. That was the plan. I went to Paris for three months and then had a fellowship to teach in Athens for a year. I took the Orient Express there and by the end of that year had fallen in love with the experience of being out in the world and how you learn so much every day when you’re living abroad. I realized that for me the classroom was the world, and vice versa. Rather than go for a musty, ivy-clad brick building I’d much rather be out in bazaars, marketplaces and temples. This really changed my life. Later, I lucked out and became a travel writer. ■
Mövenpick Cebu supports PAL new flights from Cebu to Osaka, Nagoya THE flight crew of PR 480 bound for Nagoya, Japan.
FLAG carrier Philippine Airlines (PAL) and Mövenpick Hotel Mactan Island Cebu, one of the province’s fivestar hotels, forged a partnership to further promote tourism in Cebu and provide excellent service to tourists. The partnership commenced in late December when PAL, responding to clamor for more routes to Japan, inaugurated new flights from Cebu to Osaka and Nagoya. Known for its excellent flight service, PAL lives up to its high standards by tapping Mövenpick Hotel Mactan Island Cebu as its premier partner hotel in Cebu. Mövenpick Hotel Mactan Island Cebu revolutionizes the hospitality industry by providing exceptional service, comfortable and soothing accommodation, the best in food and drinks, and world-class entertainment.
The alliance kicked off last month, with Mövenpick participating and extending its service to the passengers of PAL’s maiden flights from Cebu to Osaka and Nagoya. The hotel provided the passengers with refreshments before boarding. An array of sushi, fruit and chocolate muffins, cheesecakes and chilled juices were served. Completing the experience in style was the serving of the award-winning Manny O. bubbly to the passengers and VIPs who attended the inauguration rites. The event was attended by the Consul of Japan in Cebu Shoji Otake; Department of Tourism Regional Director Rowena Montecillo; PAL Senior Assistant VP for Philppine Sales Harry Inoferio; and PAL Head of Cebu Sales Christopher Lebumfacil. Also present during the
D1
NE of the more unusual travel books out this year is An Innocent Abroad: Life-Changing Trips From 35 Great Writers. Great includes Tim Cahill (a founding editor of Outside magazine), Jan Morris (war correspondent, author of 19 travel books, notably Venice), Jane Smiley (Pulitzer-winning novelist of A Thousand Acres), nonfiction best-seller Simon Winchester (The Professor and the Madman) and thriller novelist David Baldacci (The Innocent). But this Lonely Planet anthology also features pieces by stellar storytellers you never heard of. The tales, all short, were assembled and edited by Don George, long-time travel writer and currently an editor-at-large for National Geographic Traveler, and editor for the BBC’s travel web site. We talked to him recently about the book.
What do the 35 stories have in common? Transformation. It’s the innocence the writer brought to experience. It’s an alchemical effect—something that changed the writer’s life. In some stories, it’s something small. Jane Smiley’s is about taking a horseriding trip through France. Her horse goes lame and she ends up traveling with her husband, who rents a car and keeps getting lost. But her experience leads to some beautiful, revelatory moments. Then there are bigger stories, where a person’s life is actually changed. One I love is by Anna Vodecka; it’s an amazing story about a youth ministry trip to Europe.
launch were Lapu-Lapu City Tourism Head Hembler Mendoza, Mövenpick Hotel Mactan Island Cebu General Manager Knuth Kiefer and Manny O.’s Richard Miller. PAL operates four weekly flights (Monday/Thursday/Friday/Sunday) between Cebu and Osaka on PR 410,
and three weekly flights (Tuesday/ Wednesday/Sunday) between Cebu and Nagoya on PR 480. Both flights have a total of 199-passenger capacity. Capping off the celebration was a water-cannon salute to the maiden flights.
life
D1
JAPAN WEIGHS RANSOM IN ISLAMIC STATE THREAT TO KILL TWO HOSTAGES The World BusinessMirror
B3-6 Thursday, January 22, 2015
4 men in Paris court are 1st to face terror attacks charges P AR IS—French antiterror prosecutors sought on Tuesday to charge four men in connection with the attacks in Paris that left 20 people dead, which would be the first suspects charged in the country’s bloodiest terrorist attacks in decades. The four men awaited an antiterror judge’s decision early Wednesday on whether to open preliminary investigations against them. The possible charges were expected just hours before the French government was to unveil new measures aimed at helping head off future attacks, giving police more power to tap phones, monitor web sites and force Internet companies to block messages of hate posted online. Prime minister Manuel Valls will present new security measures on Wednesday that will include efforts to increase intelligence-gathering against jihadis and other radicals, block their activities on the Internet, and prevent them from collaborating inside prisons or traveling abroad to fight, President François Hollande said. France is on high security alert after the country’s worst terrorist attacks in decades. The court case and the arrests came as Valls urged his nation to do some soul-searching about the country’s deep ethnic divisions and declared that fighting hatred, anti-Semitism and racism was a top priority, especially in France’s impoverished housing projects.
The street sign near the offices of French satirical publication Charlie Hebdo, where Brothers, Said and Cherif Kouachi killed people in a terror attack is replaced with a poster reading “Place of the freedom of expression,” in Paris on January 20. AP
The Paris prosecutor’s office said the four men in court on Tuesday were suspected of providing logistical support to Amedy Coulibaly, one of the terrorists killed by police, and requested they be detained longer on weapons and terrorism charges. Coulibaly shot a policewoman to death on the outskirts of Paris and then killed four hostages inside a kosher supermarket before being shot dead by police. It is not clear whether the four suspects, all in their 20s, were involved in plotting the attacks or even aware of Coulibaly’s plans. Five others arrested in the investigation were released without charge, prosecutors said. No one has been charged with direct involvement in the January 7 to
news@businessmirror.com.ph
Japan weighs ransom in Islamic State threat to kill two hostages
C
9 Paris terror attacks. Coulibaly claimed allegiance to the Islamic State group, while the two brothers who attacked the Charlie Hebdo satirical weekly said they were backed by al-Qaeda in Yemen. In Bulgaria a court on Tuesday agreed to extradite a Frenchman who knew one of the two Kouachi brothers who massacred 12 people at the newspaper. Fritz-Joly Joachin told the Bulgarian court he was innocent and wanted to return to Paris to clear his name. Five others arrested in the investigation of the terror attacks in France were released without charge, prosecutors said. Meanwhile, France honored a Mali-born employee of the kosher market who saved lives there by granting him citizenship. AP
AIRO—The Islamic State (IS) group threatened to kill two Japanese hostages within 72 hours, demanding a $200-million ransom in a video posted online on Tuesday that showed a knifebrandishing masked militant standing over the two kneeling captives. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who was traveling in the Middle East, vowed to save the men. But with his military only operating in a self-defense capacity at home, Abe faces a hard choice: openly pay the extremists or ask an ally like the US to attempt a risky rescue inside Syria. Tuesday’s video, released via militant websites associated with the IS group, mirrored other hostage threats the extremists have made. In it, the captives, 47-yearold Kenji Goto and 42-year-old Haruna Yukawa, were shown in orange jumpsuits with a rocky hill in the background, a black-clad militant standing between them. The scene resembles others featuring five hostages previously beheaded by the IS group, which controls a third of Iraq and Syria. Speaking in English with a British accent, the militant demanded $200 million for the men’s release and appeared to link the ransom to a pledge Abe made on Saturday of nonmilitary aid to help the government of Iraq and to assist Syrian refugees who have fled the IS’s brutality. “To the prime minister of Japan... you willingly have volunteered to take part in this crusade,” said the masked man, who looked and sounded like the militant shown in other filmed beheadings. “And to the Japanese public: Just as your government has made the foolish decision to pay $200 million to fight the IS, you now have 72 hours to pressure your government in making a wise decision, by paying the $200 million to save the lives of your citizens,” he said. “Otherwise, this knife will become your nightmare.” Japanese officials said they would analyze the video to verify its authenticity, though Abe offered no hesitation as he pledged to free the men. “Their lives are the top priority,” the Japanese leader told journalists in Jerusalem as he wrapped up a 6-day visit to the Middle East. “Extremism and Islam are completely different things.” Abe and others in his government declined to say whether they would pay a ransom, though
Abe dispatched his deputy foreign minister, Yasuhide Nakayama, to Jordan to seek the country’s support in resolving the hostage crisis. Agreeing to the IS group’s demands would run contrary to allies like the US and Britain, which have a strict policy of not paying ransoms. The State Department had no immediate comment on whether the US was urging Japan not to pay. Secretary of State John Kerry planned to speak later with Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida on the hostage crisis, spokesman Jen Psaki said. In a statement, she said the US “strongly condemns ISIL’s [Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant] threat to murder Japanese citizens,” and called for the immediate release of all hostages. “The US is fully supportive of Japan in this matter. We stand in solidarity with Japan and are coordinating closely,” the statement said. UN Secretary-General Ban Kimoon also called for the immediate release of the Japanese hostages and all other captives. Though Abe has said he wants a more-muscular Japanese military, he has ruled out sending troops overseas and Japan’s constitution, drafted during the American occupation following World War II, commits the country to pacifism. That would put the onus on partners like the US to attempt any hostage rescue. In early July US special forces launched a secret raid into Syria to try to free American hostages held by the IS group, killing several militants, but finding no captives. The two Japanese hostages said nothing during the video. Goto is a respected Japanese freelance journalist who went to report on Syria’s civil war last year.” I’m in Syria for reporting,” Goto wrote in an e-mail to an Associated Press journalist in October, before he was abducted. “I hope I can convey the atmosphere from where I am and share it.” Yukawa, the founder of a private security company, was kidnapped in Syria in August after going there to train with militants, according to a post on a blog he kept. Nobuo Kimoto, an adviser to Yukawa’s company, told Japanese
television station NHK that he had worried “something like this could happen sooner or later.” Tuesday’s video marks the first time the IS group has publicly demanded cash. The extremists requested $132.5 million from hostage James Foley’s parents and political concessions from Washington, though neither was granted, US authorities say, and Foley was subsequently beheaded. They asked for a similar amount for two other American hostages, authorities have said. The IS group has suffered recent losses in US-led air strikes, and with global oil prices down, their revenue from selling stolen oil has dropped. The extremists also have made money from extortion and robbing banks during its August offensive in Iraq. Before the oil price drop, the IS group made as much as $2 million a day selling pilfered oil, and used the funds to pacify as many as 8 million people living in its selfdeclared caliphate, said Greg Ohannessian, an analyst at the Dubaibased Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis. “Now with oil dropping by 60 percent, that is going to be cutting into their income,” Ohannessian said. “That is definitely going to have an impact on their capacity to maintain the population.” The group released some 200 mostly elderly Yazidi hostages in Iraq over the weekend, fueling speculation by Iraqi officials that the group didn’t have the money to care for them. Besides Foley, the IS group has beheaded American hostage Peter Kassig, Israeli-American Steven Sotloff, and British captives David Haines and Alan Henning. The group has also shot dead hundreds of captives—mainly Syrian and Iraqi soldiers—and has celebrated its mass killings in graphic videos. The extremists still hold British photojournalist John Cantlie, who has appeared in other extremist propaganda videos, and a 26-yearold American woman. US officials have asked that the woman not be identified out of fears for her safety. This is Abe’s second Mideast hostage crisis since becoming prime minister. The first came two years ago when al-Qaeda-affiliated militants attacked an Algerian natural gas plant, killing 37 foreigners, including 10 Japanese. Seven Japanese workers survived. What Abe and others in Japan fear is a replay of 2004, when followers of Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi beheaded a Japanese backpacker, Shosei Koda, over the country sending troops to Iraq to do humanitarian work. A video by al-Zarqawi’s group, which later became the IS group, showed Koda begging Japan’s then-prime minister to save him. AP
Egypt’s el-Sissi says protest rights secondary to stability
C
AIRO—Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi said on Tuesday that those questioning his government about human rights and freedom of expression are ignoring the fact that his country of 90 million lacks development, investment and desperately needed stability. Speaking during celebrations of national Police Day on Tuesday, el-Sissi said he respects human rights but that his country—with a massive segment of Egyptians living in poverty—is facing exceptional circumstances and some violations are inevitable. El-Sissi focused, in particular, on critics of a controversial protest law
passed by the government last year which punishes all unauthorized demonstrations with up to five years in prison and hefty fines. These critics says the law aims to quell all forms of dissent amid an intense government crackdown against Islamists and other dissidents—including secular activists who led the 2011 uprising that ousted longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak. They also point to the irony that el-Sissi wouldn’t be president if not for massive 2013 demonstrations against Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, that prompted el-Sissi—then the defense minister—to oust Morsi.
El-Sissi’s government has repeatedly dismissed those criticisms, saying the law doesn’t ban demonstrations but rather regulates them. On Tuesday and only days before the January 25 anniversary of the uprising against Mubarak, el-Sissi repeated his depiction of protests as a force for distraction and instability. “Ninety million want to eat, drink, live and be reassured for their future,” he told a room packed with police officers and public figures. “I am not saying protests are rejected, never. But I am saying that we gave the issue of the protest such a space...but those 90 million want to eat.” AP
WORLD
B3-6
narrow escape Sports BusinessMirror
C1 | Thursday, January 22, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
Sharapova SaveS 2 match pointS, advanceS at auStralian open
NARROW ESCAPE By John Pye The Associated Press
M Maria Sharapova watches her return to alexandra panova during their second round-match at the australian open. AP
ELBOURNE, Australia—Maria Sharapova had a narrow escape in the second round of the Australian Open on Wednesday, saving two match points with big forehand winners before beating No. 150-ranked Alexandra Panova 6-1, 4-6, 7-5. Roger Federer dropped the first set, and asked for medical advice on his sore right pinkie finger, before beating Simone Bolelli 3-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 to reach the third round. The No. 2 seeds didn’t get it entirely their way on Day Three. Sharapova made 51 unforced errors as she went for the lines, but kept swinging hard and saved some of her best ground strokes for when she needed them. She faced two match points in the 10th game of the third set, stepping into a return winner on a weak second serve and later ripping a forehand winner deep into the corner against fellow Russian Panova, a qualifier who entered the Australian Open without a single match win at five previous majors. Sharapova, who won the 2008 Australian Open and has five Grand Slam titles, struggled with her serve in the second and third sets as the match extended to two hours, 32 minutes in a temperatures topping 33 degrees Celsius (91°F). “I’m just happy to get through—I was one point away twice today from being out of the tournament,” Sharapova said, who started the season by winning the Brisbane International title. “I was not playing my best tennis today. “I think she played a pretty inspired match. She came out here with not much to lose and swinging freely and going for her shots.” Sharapova raised her intensity in the final set, screeching loudly as she fought to control rallies and clenching her left fist as she prepared to receive. She is the only Grand Slam champion remaining in her half of the draw. In earlier second-round matches, No. 10 Ekaterina Makarova beat Roberta Vinci 6-2, 6-4; No. 21 Peng Shuai had a 6-1, 6-1 win over Magdalena Rybarikova; No. 22 Karolina Pliskova beat Oceane Dodin 7-5, 5-7, 6-4; and Carina Witthoeft defeated Christina McHale 6-3, 6-0. Federer was bothered by pain in his right hand, and took a medical timeout after the first set, before recovering to beat No. 48 Bolelli. “It felt like a bee stung me. I was like ‘This can’t be possible—I never had this pain before.’ It was disturbing me,” Federer, a four-time Australian Open champion, said. “I knew that to tape it wasn’t an option.” Three-time finalist Andy Murray didn’t let the parochial crowds in Margaret Court Arena bother him as he beat Australian Marinko Matosevic 6-1, 6-3, 6-2, while No. 10 Grigor Dimitrov beat Lukas Lacko 6-3, 6-7 (10), 6-3, 6-3.
EStEr Satorova watches his fiancée tomas Berdych plays against Jurgen Melzer. Satorova and Berdych announced their engagement. AP
BERDYCH GETS ENGAGED WITH CZECH MODEL MELBOURNE, Australia—Tomas Berdych popped the question at the beach. And his now-fiancée, Czech model Ester Satorova, has tweeted a picture of the ring. The couple announced their engagement at the Australian Open, where the 29-year-old Berdych advanced to the third round on Wednesday and said he had proposed during a holiday late last year. “It was simple,” said the No. 7-ranked Berdych, when asked for details about the proposal. “It was after dinner on the beach.” His fiancee offered a bit more color. “Our secret from last year holiday is OUT,” she tweeted, with the hashtags “Maldives” and “engagement ring.” She attached a picture of her hand inside a heart etched in white sand, a large diamond on her ring finger. The ATP said in a statement announcing the engagement that the couple started dating in late 2012. Berdych, a 2010 Wimbledon finalist, said he feels a good balance between his personal life and tennis career. “I can talk with my partner about basically everything.... I can just completely switch off from the tennis,” he said. “Then once you step back on the tennis side, then you are absolutely focused [on] whatever you do...so for me, I think it’s a great combination.”
Matosevic’s first-round opponent, Alexander Kudryavtsev, accused boisterous Australian fans of behaving like “animals” after losing in five sets to the Melbourne resident. After Wednesday’s match, Murray laughed as he said: “It was a fun atmosphere to play today. Even if not everyone was supporting me.” Seventh-seeded Tomas Berdych advanced with a 7-6 (0), 6-2, 6-2 win over Austrian qualifier Jurgen Melzer, moving into the third round along with No. 14 Kevin Anderson and No. 24 Richard Gasquet. Berdych, a Wimbledon finalist in 2010, lost to eventual champion Stan Wawrinka in the semifinals last year at Melbourne Park, where he
has reached the quarterfinals or better ever since 2011. Three of the men’s seeds were beaten, with 2006 Australian Open finalist Marcos Baghdatis defeating No. David Goffin 6-1, 6-4, 4-6, 6-0; Viktor Troicki beating No. 26 Leonardo Mayer 6-4, 4-6, 6-4, 6-0; and No. 32 Martin Klizan retiring after one game in the fourth set against Joao Sousa. Doubles play opened on Wednesday, without some regular starters. Serena and Venus Williams withdrew from their first-round match, but tournament officials did not immediately specify a reason. Both of the Williams sisters have secondround singles matches on Thursday.
SISTERS VENUS, SERENA PULL OUT OF DOUBLES EVENT MELBOURNE, Australia— Serena and Venus Williams have pulled out of women’s doubles at the Australian Open, where they’ve won four titles. The Williams sisters were scheduled to play their first-round match on Wednesday against Anabel Medina Garrigues of Spain and Yaroslava Shvedova of Kazakhstan. A tournament official confirmed the Williams sisters had withdrawn, but did not specify a reason. Both sisters won their first-round singles matches in singles on Tuesday.
FOOTBALL STAR RONALDO BREAKS UP WITH GF portugal’S Cristiano ronaldo (right), irina Shayk end their five-year relationship. AP
By Barry Hatton The Associated Press
LISBON, Portugal—Portugal and Real Madrid soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo confirmed on Tuesday he has broken up with his longtime girlfriend, Russian model Irina Shayk. “After dating for five years, my relationship with Irina Shayk has come to an end,” Ronaldo said in a written statement sent exclusively to the Associated Press. “We believed it would be best for both of us to take this step now.” Ronaldo said he was making the statement to end speculation about their relationship, and to end recent rumors about his private life. He did not specify the rumors, but media in Portugal have reported that Shayk fell out with members of Ronaldo’s
family, and that he was seeing another woman. “I wish Irina the greatest happiness,” Ronaldo said. He gave no further details in the brief statement. The couple, both 29, has had huge international success, and their relationship has featured in newspapers and magazines worldwide. They were not believed to be living together, as Ronaldo was based in the Spanish capital, while Shayk traveled extensively. Ronaldo recently picked up the Ballon d’Or after being voted the world’s best player, but Shayk did not accompany him to the ceremony in Zurich. Her absence triggered rumors that their relationship was over. The couple remained silent despite days of intense media speculation. Ronaldo retained football’s
highest individual honor after scoring 61 goals last year. His record tally of 17 in a Champions League season helped Madrid win an unprecedented 10th European Cup title. Born in the Portuguese island of Madeira, Ronaldo played as a teenager for Sporting Lisbon before moving to Manchester United in 2003. He transferred to Real Madrid in 2009, building his reputation and his wealth through endorsements and sponsorships. He has millions of followers on social media. Ronaldo has a 4-year-old son, called Cristiano Junior, but he has never disclosed the mother’s identity. Shayk won international fame as a Sports Illustrated swimsuit model, and a lingerie model. She made her acting debut last year opposite Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson in the film Hercules.
sports
By Lenie Lectura
T
B J B The Charlotte Observer
O
P25.00 nationwide | 6 sections 30 pages | 7 days a week
Plant shutdowns thin power supply
Well-told tales of travel D
Tuesday, 18,2015 2014Vol. Vol.1010No. No.105 40 Thursday,November January 22,
D.O.E. SAYS COol WEATHER KEEPING DEMAND LOW, BUT SUPPLY ALREADY CRITICAL
INSIDE
EAR Lord, the moment the plane of Pope Francis was visible, our hearts were in deep jubilation. We thank God that at last, he landed in Philippine soil for the first time. The well-planned activities for him were exceptionally realized. The unending routes were all filled with thousands of people from all walks of life. Many braved the sun and rain just to be around to see the pope even from a distance. Many were teary-eyed because of joy; many felt a breeze that swept all over their skin. Many say the pope’s holiness was indeed the cause of many unexplainable experiences. This encounter with Pope Francis will forever be remembered by all the people who witnessed his presence in our beloved country. Amen.
nn
c1
U.S. FIRMS WANT PPP POLICIES IMPROVED
he Department of Energy (DOE) could only hope for now that no more power plant will conk out anytime soon, as latest data indicate that a total of 2,532 megawatts (MW) of power have already been shaved off from the Luzon grid due to forced and scheduled shutdown of power plants.
Among the power plants that are on scheduled maintenance shutdown include Malaya Unit 1 (300 MW), GN Power Unit 2 (300 MW), Masinloc Unit 2 (315 MW) and Quezon Power (460 MW). Malaya 1, which was shut down since March 31, 2014, due to high turbine vibration, is expected to be back on line in July; GN Power 2, which went on a planned outage since December 30, 2014, will be back on line in March; Masinloc 2, which is on a scheduled annual maintenance outage since January 1 this year, will be restored by the end of January; and Quezon Power, which also underwent a scheduled maintenance since January 17, is expected to resume operation by February 25. Meanwhile, the power plants that went on forced outage include the Limay 6 (60 MW), due to high turbine vibration; Limay 8 (100 MW), due to undetermined cause; Malaya 2 (350 MW), due to main fuel heater leak; GN Power 1 (300 MW), due to actuation of generator fault problem; Tiwi 2 (27 MW), due to low vacuum; Ilijan A, due to undetermined cause; and BacMan 2 (20 MW), due to stillundetermined cause. Continued on A2
PESO exchange rates n US 44.6790
By Cai U. Ordinario
T
based on a nine-dash line drawn on a 1940s map that loops down like a cow’s tongue to a point about 1,800 kilometers (1,119 miles) south from China’s Hainan island. The area overlaps claims from Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines, Brunei Darussalam and Taiwan. The HS 981 oil rig episode last year illustrates the tensions. When it was first deployed for exploration work in 2012, China National Offshore Oil Corp. Ltd. (CNOOC) Chairman Wang Yilin described deepwater rigs as “our mobile national territory and strategic weapon for prompting the development of the country’s offshore oil industry.”
he government needs to structure the country’s key public-private partnership (PPP) deals better to get the interest of American companies, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Kurt Tong of the US Department of State Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs said. Tong recognized that structuring PPPs is not simple because of the careful balancing act involved in designing the projects. The PPP deals, he said, need to be viable on the revenue side for the private investor. It must also be practical and have clearer rules and plans. “I think they [American investors] are [interested] but I think these partnerships need to be structured in a way that will work for private business. I think your government is putting a lot of effort into that,” Tong said. “I think that if structured well, foreign investors could be quite interested in this and not just Americans.” Tong said the US government has a few facilities that can help improve project design and implementation. These government agencies include the Trade and Development Agency (TDA), which can extend grants to help design projects either for public or private financing. Another agency, Tong said, is the Overseas Private Investment Corp., which can help American firms hedge their risk when participating in overseas projects. US-based firms, he said, would be keen on participating in PPP
Continued on A2
See “US firms,” A8
See “Oil,” A2
bringing back the grove A boy in Bacolod wades through a mangrove area that is being rehabilitated by the local government. NONIE REYES
All about the base: Oil drop unlikely to ease tensions in South China Sea
W
hen it comes to territorial tensions in the South China Sea (West Philippine Sea), it’s more about what goes through it than what lies beneath it. Oil last week dropped below $46 a barrel to more than five- year lows. The biggest collapse in energy prices since the 2008 global recession has prompted companies from Royal Dutch Shell Plc. to Norway’s Statoil ASA to scrap projects not considered viable at current prices and drawn attention to the future of costly deepsea exploration. Yet in the South China Sea, where Chinese and Vietnamese boats clashed last May after China parked
an oil rig in disputed waters, political and security considerations will keep territorial tensions simmering, fueling military spending by countries that border the area. The South China Sea contains some of the world’s busiest shipping lanes and is a vital artery for China’s energy supplies from the Middle East. “The South China Sea dispute is not some struggle for energy,” said Shi Yinhong, director of the Center for American Studies at Renmin University in Beijing and an adviser to China’s State Council. “This is a dispute for maritime territory and there is no compromise over claims.” China says it is entitled to about four-fifths of the South China Sea,
n japan 0.3761 n UK 67.6663 n HK 5.7630 n CHINA 7.1898 n singapore 33.4274 n australia 36.7124 n EU 51.6221 n SAUDI arabia 11.8986 Source: BSP (21 January 2015)