Businessmirror June 28, 2020

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ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDS

2006 National Newspaper of the Year 2011 National Newspaper of the Year 2013 Business Newspaper of the Year 2017 Business Newspaper of the Year 2019 Business Newspaper of the Year

BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

A broader look at today’s business

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Sunday, June 28, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 262

EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS

BUSINESS NEWS SOURCE OF THE YEAR (2017, 2018)

DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

2018 BANTOG MEDIA AWARDS

PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY

DATA CHAMPION

P25.00 nationwide | 3 sections 20 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

THE city of Al Khobar in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, currently the largest hirer of overseas Filipino workers, and has the largest Filipino population in the Middle East.

BRING THEM HOME The government’s policy to leave no one behind among hundreds of thousands of distressed OFWs faces yet another challenge—bringing home hundreds of cadavers from Saudi Arabia, including those who died from Covid-19.

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By Claudeth Mocon-Ciriaco

OSING a loved one abroad, and not being able to say good-bye properly, is a most painful experience. Worse than this is learning that there’s no way one can ever pay one’s respects to the dearly departed, because the laws of the foreign land forbid cremation—which would have made it easier to transport the remains. Thus, they will be buried there.

This is the dilemma that has led families of more than a hundred overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in the past week to storm the gates of heaven and of Malacañang, begging the Philippine government to recall its decision not to bring home the remains of 107 such workers who succumbed to Covid-19 in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Instead, the government will focus on bringing home the remains of more than 200 others who died of natural causes, while promising to provide all the benefits due the Covid victims’ fami-

lies, such as those provided by the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA). The Philippine government decision was understandable, given the rigorous arrangements required in bringing home a cadaver—not just one, but 107—of Covid victims, to cut the risk of infection. For one thing, people who die even of just “suspected Covid-19” in the Philippines have been required to be cremated within 12 hours, with no wakes allowed and the families given just brief moments to say their good-byes. A painful thought, indeed, compounding the

earlier anguish of not having been allowed to care for them in the hospital, until their dying moments. Thus, it was not surprising that the Philippine government, through the Department of Labor and Employment, announced that only the non-Covid remains of OFWs will be brought home from Saudi, which hosts the biggest number of OFWs worldwide.

IATF relents

ON Friday morning, however, the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) did a turnaround and an-

nounced that Manila will, after all, bring home even the bodies of the Covid-19 victims. However, in response to a BusinessMirror query earlier on Thursday, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire said that if the Covid dead will be allowed to be transported to the Philippines, these would have to be completely sealed. “It can’t be opened and has to be buried soon, within 24 hours, once it arrives in the country. Relatives can’t open the sealed casket anymore,” Vergeire told the BusinessMirror. Continued on A2

Chinese jets buzzing Taiwan show long-term risk of war with US

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By Samson Ellis |

President Tsai Ing-wen, who views the island as a de facto independent nation in need of wider international recognition.

Bloomberg News

ITH US-China tensions increasing on a number of fronts, the main issue that could spark a military conflict over the long term is still one that is fundamental to their relationship: Taiwan. Chinese fighter jets have entered Taiwan’s air defense identification zone seven times in the last two weeks, prompting the island to scramble warplanes to warn them off. While the total number of Chinese incursions this year is still largely on pace with previous years, the outburst over the past few weeks is unusual and could augur a dramatic escalation if sustained. The military maneuvering reflects the ever-present potential for war over an island that China’s Communist Party has threatened to take by force ever since the na-

tionalist government of Chiang Kai-shek fled the mainland in 1949. For much of the time since, the possibility of US intervention has helped maintain the status quo—even after the Carter administration switched formal diplomatic recognition to Beijing from Taipei in 1979. China views Taiwan as an inalienable part of its territory that must eventually be brought back under Beijing’s control, by force if necessary. While it has long used economic incentives as a carrot to achieve those goals, it cut off all direct ties after the 2016 election of

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 50.0130

‘Pipe dream’

A MAN photographs the Taipei 101 tower, once the world’s tallest building, and the Taipei skyline from the top of Elephant Mountain on January 7, 2020, in Taipei, Taiwan. CARL COURT/GETTY IMAGES EUROPE

HER re-election in January by an even wider margin showed that the two governments are only shifting further apart. At the same time Taiwan is increasing economic links with the US, where it’s increasingly being hailed as a model democracy by Trump administration officials who regularly slam China for increased authoritarianism. “President Tsai’s re-election does not change much in crossStrait relations, but it may have solidified the view in Beijing that peaceful, un-coerced unification is a pipe dream,” said Michael Mazza, a visiting fellow at the Washington-based American Enterprise Institute, who analyzes US defense policy in Asia-Pacific. “We may well see a new crisis in the Taiwan Strait before the decade’s out.” Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4668 n UK 62.1462 n HK 6.4530 n CHINA 7.0865 n SINGAPORE 35.9418 n AUSTRALIA 34.4390 n EU 56.0996 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.3347

Source: BSP (June 26, 2020)


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