BusinessMirror March 01, 2024

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STRIKE ON PALESTINIANS WAITING FOR AID IN GAZA CITY KILLS AND WOUNDS DOZENS

THE slow deployment of the Philippine Identification System (PhilSys) was assailed by a veteran legislator on Thursday amid increasing complaints that the national ID is effectively useless as a proof of identity due to the absence of the bearer's signature.

Surigao del Norte Rep. Robert Ace Barbers, chairman of the House Committee on Dangerous Drugs and one of the principal authors of Republic Act 11055, or the PhilSys, expressed

THE national government’s sovereign wealth fund aims to raise about $1 billion in investments for the energy sector alone towards the end of the year, according to Maharlika Investment Corporation's (MIC) top official.

MIC President and Chief Executive Officer Rafael D. Consing, Jr. confirmed that the MIC is targeting by the end of the year to generate $1 billion or approximately P56 billion in investments for the energy sector.

The MIC, he added, has been offered investments, particularly in solar energy as of the moment. At the sidelines of the GermanPhilippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry economic forum on Wednesday night, Consing said he has spoken to sovereign wealth funders to raise the billion-dollar target. However, he did not disclose who are the wealth funders.

According to him, the funding for the energy sector will also include MIC’s contribution apart from those coming from the sov -

ereign wealth funders.

“My concept is in order for us to be able to spend our risk limits more than one turnover, [it] is by actually coming up with a fund where that’s going to be our contribution,” Consing said.

The MIC’s risk limit, which is the sectoral limit, will be their contribution to the fund, added Consing.

“But if you create a fund, and in which case, our sectoral limit is going to be our contribution to that fund, then we’re able to increase our spending effectively,” he said.

Earlier, the MIC said that it is looking into investing in the energy sector, its priority sector, in the last quarter of the year. (See: https:// businessmirror.com.ph/2024/02/20/maharlika-funds-priority-is-in-energy-q4timeline-eyed/).

In making the investments in the energy sector, Consing said the hurdles would be the kind of returns they can generate from these products that are deemed acceptable.

bUIlDIng brIDgES DOwn UnDEr

Pr ESIDEnt ferdinand Marcos jr. delivers an address to members and senators at Parliament house in canberra, australia, on thursday, february 29, 2024, emphasizing the importance of the strategic partnership between the two nations amidst regional challenges. he underscored the need for collaborative efforts between australia and the Philippines to maintain peace and stability in the region, drawing parallels to their cooperation during world war II. Story below and in Second Front Page, A14 LUKAS COCH/AAP IMAGE VIA AP

frustration that six years after its enactment, many applicants are still waiting for their IDs.

“It’s been almost six years since the National ID was enacted into law, and I was one of those lawmakers who first filled out the PSA forms to have one. I’ve all but given up on waiting for my national ID. It seems like it has been forgotten,” he said.

Barbers said he has received complaints about the national ID's non-acceptance as valid identification due to the lack of a specimen signature.

“Without a specimen signature on it, the Philippine Na -

tional ID has apparently been rendered useless as a proof of identity for its owner because it does not bear the holder’s signature,” he said.

While there are penalties for those who will not honor the national ID as a valid proof of identity, the solon from Surigao del Norte pointed out that the “simple inconvenience of a missing signature—as against those that can be found in passports, driver’s licenses, or other valid IDs—makes the national ID an inferior form of proof of identity.”

“And with the absence of

that signature, we really cannot blame those who require more valid forms of identification,” he said. “As a result, PhilSys bearers have had to also present their passports or driver’s licenses as proof of identity to comply with most business or government requirements.”

Under RA 11055, signed into law on August 8, 2018, the PhilSys national ID shall serve as a valid proof of identity that can be used to transact business with the government and the private sector.

Anomic security.

For its part, Australia sees the Philippines as its gateway to tapping the growing economic opportunities in Southeast Asia.

During his meeting with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Marcos said he

discussed expanding Manila’s economic partnership with Canberra.

“We anticipate greater bilateral economic cooperation that will allow us to withstand shocks, to be resilient against economic coercion, and to provide an enabling environment for our respective businesses and labor markets to further flourish under the ambit of our Strategic Relationship and Partnership,” Marcos said in his joint conference with Albanese in Canberra on Thursday.

PESO E xchangE ratES n US 56.1870 n jaPan 0.3729 n UK 71.1608 n hK 7.1778 n chIna 7.8063 n SIngaPOrE 41.7468 n aUStralIa 36.4991 n EU 60.9067 n KOrE a 0.0421 n SaUDI arabIa 14.9816 Source: BSP (February 29, 2024) COSTLIER FOOD ITEMS TO FUEL FEB INFLATION A broader look at today’s business www.businessmirror.com.ph n Friday, March 1, 2024 Vol. 19 No. 138 P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 22 pages | 7 days a week BusinessMirror 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 2021 Pro Patria Award 2018 Data Champion EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS BUSINESS NEWS SOURCE OF THE YEAR (2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021) DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 2018 BANTOG MEDIA AWARDS MIC eyes $1-B investments just for energy See “MIC,” A2 See “Costlier,” A2 See “PHL,” A2 See “Slow,” A2 PHL looks to Australia for easing supply chain worries SlOw PacE Of natIOnal ID rElEaSE, flawED fEatUrES hIt By Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinario
HE rise in commodity prices could be higher in February due to more expensive food items, according to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). On Thursday, BSP said inflation could average 2.8 to 3.6 percent in February due to more expensive food items such as rice, meat, and fish. The BSP also said the increase in petroleum prices and electricity rates were also primary sources of upward price pressures in February. “Going forward, the BSP will continue to monitor developments affecting the outlook for inflation and growth in line with its data-dependent approach to monetary policy decision-making,” BSP said. By Samuel P. Medenilla @sam_medenilla
MID ongoing disruptions in the global supply chain, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. said he wants greater economic cooperation with Australia to ensure the country’s eco -
WORLD | A11

PHL…

Continued from A1

Among the sectors which can be covered by such partnerships, Marcos said, are environmentally sustainable investment, mineral resources development and climate and energy transition.

Last week, Marcos expressed concern on the local impact posed by the international supply chain disruptions due to issues in the Red Sea, Black Sea and the Panama Canal.

Albanese said Australia is also keen on strengthening its ties with the Philippines due to its strategic location in South East Asia.

“For many years, Australians spoke about the tyranny of distance from the great economies and markets of America and Europe. Now we speak about the proximity of opportunity.

Located as we are at the heart of the fastest growing region of the world in human history,” Albanese said.

“And that presents such an opportunity for us. A strategic partnership with the Philippines is a key pillar of that commitment to building those relationships in our region,” he added.

Based on data from the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), the country’s total trade with Australia has been rising since 2020 from US$1.2 billion to US$4.1 billion last year.

Budget gap in ’23 narrows 6.3% to P1.5T; 6.2% of GDP

THE Philippines’s budget deficit last year fell by 6.32 percent to P1.512 trillion, lower than the P1.614 trillion recorded in 2022.

Official government data indicated that the 2023 budget deficit stood at 6.2 percent of GDP, lower than the 7.3 percent deficit-to-GDP ratio recorded in 2022.

According to a report from the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) released on Thursday, the budget deficit was slightly wider than the P1.499 trillion program by 0.85 percent or P12.7 billion.

“The narrower fiscal gap for the year was attributed to the 7.86-percent increase in revenue collection,

surpassing the 3.42 percent growth in government spending,” the Treasury said in a statement.

Total revenues collected by the national government rose to P3.8 trillion last year, up by 7.86 percent or P278.6 billion recorded in 2022, based on Treasury data.

The data also showed that the national government surpassed its programmed revenue collection for 2023 pegged at P3.729 trillion, driven primarily by overperformance of non-tax collections, the

BTr said. “Broken down, 89.68 percent or P3.429 trillion was taxes which grew by 6.49 percent [yearon-year],” the Treasury added.

Non-tax sources accounting for the remaining balance of 10.32 percent or P394.8 billion similarly topped the previous year’s outcome and represented more than double the program for the year, according to the Treasury.

The Treasury said the national government's revenue effort for 2023, which measures the total collections against the country’s GDP, dipped to 15.7 percent from 16.1 percent in 2022 but surpassed the 15.2 percent program for 2023.

The national government’s tax efforts also dropped to 14.1 percent from 14.6 percent a year ago and were below the 14.4 percent target. Collections by the Bureau of Internal Revenues in 2023 rose by 7.76 percent year-on-year to P2.517 trillion but fell short of the P2.639 trillion target set by the national government of the bureau last year. Tax revenues attributed to the Bureau of Customs grew 2.41 percent on an annual basis to P883.2 billion from P862.4 billion, according to the Treasury.

“BOC’s strong performance may be attributed to its enhanced revenue collection efforts, intensified anti-smuggling measures as well as digitalization projects for trade facilitation,” the Treasury explained.

The Treasury said the income it collected and generated surged P227.6 billion last year, 47.09

percent higher than its 2022 revenue performance of P154.8 billion.

The Treasury said it also outperformed its P58.3-billion full-year income target for 2023, crediting the higher remittances of dividends from GOCCs, income from investments, and interest on NG deposits, and the government's share in Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation’s (Pagcor) profit.

Meanwhile, the national government’s total expenditures last year expanded to P5.336 trillion, P176.6 billion higher than the P5.159 trillion recorded in 2022. It is also above the P5.228-trillion program for 2023.

The Treasury also cited higher primary expenditures which increased by 1.10 percent to P4.708 trillion from 2022’s P4.657 trillion, and was 1.95 percent above the target of P4.618 trillion.

“The lower National Tax Allotment shares of Local Government Units for 2023 weighed down on the overall growth of spending. Nonetheless, other productive expenditures, particularly infrastructure and other capital outlays, as well as personnel services expenses, helped buoy government disbursements in 2023,” the Treasury added.

Lastly, interest payments (IP) last year reached P628.3 billion, up by 24.95 percent or P125.5 billion. The Treasury said this was caused by the tightening of global funding conditions and the impact of higher borrowing to provide stimulus during the pandemic.

Barbers also noted that, in several national IDs shown to him, the registration number indicated was actually not the “randomly generated 12-digit permanent identification number that is assigned to every citizen or resident alien upon registration to PhilSys.”

“If you examine the card that has been issued, what you find is a set of 16 numbers situated above the bearer’s photograph. Where is the Philsys number?” Barbers asked.

As such, Barbers said he was going to seek clarification from the PSA, which is the agency handling the rollout of the Philippine Identification System, in the absence of the signatures and the 12-digit permanent identification numbers from the IDs being issued. He would also seek from PSA an update on the actual registration and distribution numbers with regard to the national IDs.

In a press statement issued in July 2022, the PSA announced it aims to issue a total of 50 million PhilSys IDs by the end of 2022. But there appears to be no update or data available on its compliance.

“A national ID means all Filipinos should have these IDs. But where are we now with regard to the rollout of this system? Because our people are now asking, where did all those billions of pesos go to fund this project?” Barbers said.

Costlier…

Continued from A1

In January, inflation averaged 2.8 percent. However, rice prices averaged 22.6 percent, the highest in 15 years. (See: https://businessmirror.com.ph/2024/02/06/riceinflation-highest-since-2009-psa-data/).

Data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) also showed meat and Other Parts of Slaughtered Land Animals posted a deflation of 0.7 percent; while fish and Other Seafood posted an inflation of 1.2 percent.

However, this estimate is still within the 2 to 4 percent target of the BSP. This is largely due to the slowdown in the increase in key commodities.

“The lower prices of vegetables, fruits, and sugar could contribute to downward price pressures,” BSP said.

PSA data showed vegetables, Tubers, Cooking Bananas and Pulses posted a deflation of 20.8 percent and sugar, Confectionery and Desserts, 1 percent in January 2024.

The data, however, showed Fruits and Nuts posted an inflation of 10 percent in January 2024.

In February, the Monetary Board, the highest policymaking body of the BSP, has left the Target Reverse Repurchase (RRP) Rate unchanged for the second time in a row.

With the decision, the country’s key policy rate was maintained at 6.5 percent. The interest rates on the overnight deposit and lending facilities were kept at 6 percent and 7 percent, respectively.

BSP Monetary and Economic Sector In-Charge Iluminada Sicat said the monetary authorities would rather take a “more prudent monetary policy stance” given upside risks to inflation.

The latest inflation outlook of the BSP, the baseline forecast for inflation is at 3.6 percent in 2024 and 3.2 percent in 2025. The new baseline forecast for 2024 was lower than the 3.7 percent made in November 2023 while the forecast for 2025 was maintained.

The risk-adjusted forecast for 2024, meanwhile, was at 3.9 percent for 2024, lower than the 4.4 percent estimate in November 2023; and for 2025, it is at 3.5 percent, higher than the 3.4-percent projection last year.

MIC…

Continued from A1

Apart from investing in power projects, Consing said they are also eyeing to put capital in airports, particularly regional airports, such as those in Bohol, Iloilo, and Puerto Princesa, among others.

“We’re interested [in participating] in the airports that are being offered amongst the flagship infrastructure projects of the government,” Consing stated.

The corporation's priority sectors for investments include physical, digital and social infrastructure; food security; aviation and aerospace; mineral processing; transportation; and tourism.

The MIC president said the corporation is speaking to everyone to be able to invite private capital.

“We think that we can be a vehicle [to] be able to accommodate foreign direct investments into the Philippines so they can invest through us. So either with us or through us,” Consing said.

The MIC is the sole vehicle for mobilizing and utilizing the MIF for investments in transactions aimed at generating optimal returns on investments created through Republic Act (RA) 11954 (An Act Establishing the Maharlika Investment Fund).

The MIC shall have an authorized capital stock of P500 billion, of which the P125 billion seed capital will come from the LBP and DBP. The P75 billion collectively remitted by the two staterun lenders is still P50 billion short of what is required by law.

An additional P50 billion will come from the Bangko ng Sentral and Pilipinas and the national government’s share in the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. and government financial institutions. Reine Juvierre Alberto

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Slow… Continued from A1

DOJ files criminal raps vs three suspects linked in Ayala Alabang kidnap-slay case

HE Department of Justice (DOJ) found probable cause to indict three individuals—suspected to be behind the killing of four Chinese nationals at the posh Ayala Alabang Village in Muntinlupa City last

October 30, 2023—with kidnapping, serious illegal detention, homicide, and car theft charges.

In a resolution dated February 15, 2024, the DOJ panel of prosecutors recommended the filing of four counts of kidnapping and serious illegal detention with homicide, four counts of kidnapping and serious illegal detention, one count of slight

No hindrance to holding polls, plebiscite, Comelec chief says

THE Commission on Elections (Comelec) assured Thursday it is ready to conduct the plebiscite on economic charter change, whether it occurs co ncurrently with or separately from the 2025 mid-term elections.

Comelec Chairman George Erwin Garcia made this assurance during his visit to the House where the ongoing Register Anywhere Program (RAP) is being conducted. Another RAP event is slated for March 21 at the House at 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

“We are ready to follow whatever directives are given. That is the truth. Whatever Congress mandates, and whatever the Senate and the House agree on, whether the plebiscite is held simultaneously with the midterm elections or separately, the Comelec is fully prepared. There is no additional cost to that. It will only slightly extend the ballot,” he said.

“However, we also suggest studying it because it’s good for our citizens to focus on the issue of changes to the Constitution. The Constitution is not an ordinary

law. Therefore, there’s a legal issue not to combine them. But we are ready, whether it is separate or combined, to conduct the plebiscite,” Garcia added. Earlier, the lower chamber expressed its intention to forward approved economic charter amendments to the Comelec before the Holy Week recess this March. Garcia refrained from commenting on the economic charter change proposed in both the House of Representatives’ Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) No. 7 and the Senate’s RBH No. 6, emphasizing that such matters are best left to the discretion and wisdom of Congress, given their constitutional authority to amend the Constitution through a Constituent Assembly.

“I may have a personal opinion, but I cannot give it because it’s too political, and it is best left to the discretion and wisdom of our Congress, especially since they are the ones endowed with the power to make changes under our Constitution, including through a Constitutional Convention and a People’s Initiative,” Garcia explained.

Sen. Imee reminds critics to heed SC ruling on PDAF

SOn Thursday, Senator Imee Marcos noted the extreme dismay of the Department of Public Works (DPWH) after foreign-assisted flagship projects for the first time lost a chunk of their allocations, and “tinambak na lang sa unprogrammed [these were relegated to unprogrammed parts of the budget, meaning, contingent on availability of funds].”

This was a result of the insertion, allegedly by House members of the bicameral conference committee on the 2024 General Appropriations Bill, of a suspect allocation for yet another State assistance program called “AKAP,” which required a P26.7-billion allocation.

Sen. Marcos has come under attack from certain members of the House after she drew attention to the Ayuda Para sa Kapos ang Kita Program (AKAP) insertion. Guesting at the weekly Kapihan sa Senado, Sen. Marcos, however, counseled caution in rushing into another Senate investigation. She appeared satisfied with the assurance given by the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), where the P26.7 billion was lodged, that there will be no releases of the money until the implementing rules and distribution guidelines are finalized.

Sen. Marcos wondered aloud how the project can proceed when “both the DSWD and the DBM [Department of Budget and Management] are uncertain as to how to implement this project.” Meanwhile, she gave unsolicited advice to lawmakers to underscore why senators are bothering themselves with the controversies involving alleged misuse of government assistance funds—whether for those with medical crisis, or displaced workers, or simply

Mall guard faces animal cruelty charges for throwing puppy off a QC footbridge

Tillegal detention and one count of carjacking against Edgar Catapang Abarca, Eduardo Catapang Abarca and John Oliver Villanueva.

The charges stemmed from the complaint filed before the DOJ by the Philippine National Police-Anti-Kidnapping Group Luzon Field Unit (PNP-AKG) last December 29, 2023.

Meanwhile, he expressed gratitude to the House for supporting the RAP, particularly for providing ample space at the Belmonte Hall for registration.

“We decided to bring Register Anywhere and late registration to Congress because we know there are a lot of our fellow citizens here, especially the staff of congressmen. We are excited to see the large space allocated by the House for our registration,” he said.

As of February 28, Garcia said more than 780,000 people have registered under the RAP since, or a third of the 3 million new voters the poll body is targeting to register before the 2025 National and Local Elections (NLE).

Garcia said he was surprised by the sudden high turnout, especially since they just started the latest round of voter registration on February 12, 2024. The deadline for registration is on September 30, 2024.

“This is highly unusual and extraordinary. We were surprised because in the previous registration, during the first few days there were few applicants,” Garcia said in Filipino.

“Now, many of them [applicants] are going to our registration sites,” he added. Jovee Marie N. Dela Cruz and Samuel P. Medenilla

for the ultra poor.

She said lawmakers should heed the lessons from Belgica v. Ochoa, the Supreme Court ruling involving the pork barrel or Priority Development Assistance Fund.

Congress, she stressed, must be sure to observe the rules on implementation of projects; and follow the SC in the PDAF ruling, which she summed up thus: “legislators must not be involved” in the post-enactment implementation of projects.

Thus, the recent branding of socialservice endeavors as a “joint initiative” of certain congressmen and the Executive might be in breach of Belgica v. Ochoa, she said.

Sen. Marcos agreed with fellow senators, like Minority Leader Koko Pimentel and Sen. JV Ejercito, that it might be time to review certain programs like the “Pantawid” or 4Ps, which could be misused and are not resulting in self-reliant households.

Ejercito earlier showed senators a video of a San Juan City resident complaining that a certain councilor’s aide had instructed him to withdraw his P7,500 allowance under the Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating Disadvantaged/ Displaced Workers (TUPAD) program for displaced workers—an initiative begun in the pandemic by the Labor department—but to plow back to them P6,500 and get only P1,000 as his share.

felt something sharp touched his skin.

Thinking that it was the teeth of the puppy and that he might have been bitten, he forcefully pushed away the hand of the teenager, causing the puppy to fall off the bridge.

The prosecutor, however, gave weight to the narration of witness-complainant Janine Santos in relation to the incident.

“Santos has clearly narrated what happened and submitted proof of the same. She saw Malicden grabbed an object and threw it outside of the railing of the footbridge. Said object turned out to be the puppy,” the resolution read.

“There can be no doubt that the object thrown was the puppy as there was no other object seen in the photograph picked up or held by another person,” it added.

The resolution was recommended by Senior Assistant City Prosecutor Diovie Macaraig-Calderon and approved by Senior Assistant City Prosecutor Chief Division V Jaime Villanueva. Joel R. San Juan

Based on the complaint, three Filipinos were kidnapped along with the six Chinese nationals but they were released by the suspects in Calauan, Laguna a day after the abduction.

The three Filipinos immediately reported the incident to police authorities that led to a series of operations.

However, only the remains of four of the six Chinese nationals were recovered, while the remaining two are still missing up to this date.

Investigators were able to identify and track down the accused after reviewing available CCTV footage of the incident.

Justice Secretary Jesus

Crispin Remulla directed the

prosecutors handling the case to ensure the filing of airtight cases against the accused.

“Assure airtight cases are filed and show no mercy in prosecuting those behind these senseless crimes,” Remulla said.

“Let’s bring to justice those responsible for these crimes,” he added.

PHL and Australia sign pacts on maritime, tech cooperation and competition law enforcement

NEW agreements on maritime security cooperation, cyber and critical technology and competition law were signed during the visit of President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. in Australia this week.

During his joint news conference with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Thursday, the Marcos disclosed the three new memorandum of understanding (MOU) would strengthen cooperation and interoperability among concerned Philippine and Australian agencies.

“The three agreements add to the more than 120 agreements that our two countries have signed through the decades,” Marcos said.

Among those signed is the

MOU on Enhanced Maritime Cooperation to promote civil maritime security, marine environment protection, maritime domain awareness, and promoting respect for international law.

Also signed are the MOUs for Cyber and Critical Technology to facilitate open and secure use of cyberspace as well as the enhanced cooperation between Philippine and Australian competition commissions.

Albanese lauded the signing of the said agreements, particularly on competition policies since it will have market implications.

“Highly relevant issues in both of our countries given the cost of living pressures that our people are facing,” Albanese said.

Marcos said he is hopeful more Philippine-Australia accords will be signed under the strategic partnership of both countries.

“The Prime Minister and I both agreed to continue to look for ways to explore every option possible, to bring our countries closer than ever and collectively, with optimism and hopeful outlook, to be a force of good, unity, stability, and prosperity in our region,” Marcos said.

During the bilateral meeting, Marcos and Albanese discussed defense maritime cooperation, non-traditional security concerns, trade and investment, development cooperation, multilateral collaboration and people-to-people linkages. Samuel P. Medenilla

A3 Friday, March 1, 2024 www.businessmirror.com.ph
HE Quezon City Prosecutors Office approved the filing of criminal charges for alleged violation of Republic Act 8485 or The Animal Welfare Act of 1988 against a mall security guard who threw a puppy to death from a footbridge in Quezon City last year. The security guard identified as Jojo Malicden is facing trial for violation of Section 9 (3) of RA 848 as amended by RA 10631. The said provision punishes any person who subjects any animal to cruelty, maltreatment, or neglect by either imprisonment or fine, or both. Prosecutors recommended a bail of P12,000 for Malicden’s temporary liberty. In his counter-affidavit, Malicden denied the accusation against him, claiming that what happened was an accident. The guard said that during the incident, he was merely responding for calls from his fellow guards for assistance in removing illegal vendors and beggars from the footbridge as the mall management at North Edsa restricts their presence at the footbridge. When he came to the location, he saw five teenagers begging for money from passersby, one of them holding a puppy. Malicden said he asked the teenagers to leave the area but they refused to heed his request and even pushed him and snatched his identification card. He added that one of the teenagers shoved the puppy to his face. When he pushed the hand of the teenager away from his face, he
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Exporters told to review proposed technical regulations on exports

HILIPPINE exporters and relevant stakeholders were told to review and comment on proposed technical regulations that may affect the country’s exports particularly on agriculture, construction materials and health-care technology sectors, among others, to issuing economies.

In an advisory published on the Department of Trade and IndustryExport Marketing Bureau’s (DTIEMB) website Wednesday, the export marketing arm of DTI unveiled the latest bulletin released by the World Trade Organization (WTO) on Techni -

cal Barriers to Trade (TBT).

According to DTI-EMB, the latest bulletin lists a total of 179 notifications covering various sectors, such as agriculture, aircraft and space vehicle engineering, chemical technology, construction materials, domestic and commercial engineering/equipment, electrical engineering, energy and heat transfer engineering, environment health protection and safety, equipment for entertainment, fluid systems and components for general use, food technology, furniture, health-care technology, jewellery, metallurgy, metrology and measurement, packaging and distribution of goods, petroleum and related technologies, railway en-

gineering, road vehicles engineering, rubber and plastic industries, services, telecommunications, audio, and video engineering, textile, leather technology, and wood technology.

Some of the specific goods listed are construction products to the European Union, electrical equipment and system of industrial machines being exported to China, commercial and industrial fans entering the United States, food products being exported to Qatar, food being shipped to Korea, pharmaceutical products being exported to Japan, and jewellery entering China, among others.

According to the WTO, an international trade organization, which consists of 164 member countries, the

Sen. Go urges agencies to ensure efficient distribution of social programs for poor

SENATOR Christopher “Bong”

Go reiterated Tuesday his call for immediate and politics-free distribution of aid under the government’s social assistance programs.

Go’s statement aligns with Sen. JV Ejercito’s earlier privilege speech addressing the alleged misuse of the Tulong Panghanap-buhay sa Ating Disadvantaged/Displaced Workers (TUPAD) program by the Department

of Labor and Employment (DOLE).

In his speech, Go stressed the importance of impartial aid distribution, emphasizing that assistance should be accessible to all Filipinos in need of government attention without bias.

He also highlighted the significant difference that financial assistance, even as modest as P3,000, can make in the lives of those struggling to meet

basic needs.

Go underscored the urgency of the situation, urging his colleagues in the Senate to also look into the matter of delayed or reportedly corruptionridden aid distribution for the poor and act swiftly to help alleviate the suffering of their constituents.

Go shared that his first hand experiences in disaster-stricken areas have given him a deep understand -

TBT Agreement aims to ensure that technical regulations, standards, and conformity assessment procedures are “non-discriminatory” and do not create unnecessary obstacles to trade.

“At the same time, it recognizes WTO members’ right to implement measures to achieve legitimate policy objectives, such as the protection of human health and safety, or protection of the environment,” it added.

This Agreement recognizes countries’ rights to adopt the standards they consider appropriate, WTO said.  The international trade organization said manufacturers and exporters need to know what the latest standards are in their “prospective” markets.

ing of the plight of those affected by calamities. He then reiterated his appeal to his colleagues, the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) and other government officials to expedite the provision of assistance to qualified beneficiaries.

In an appeal to Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian, whose brother, Rex Gatchalian, is the current DSWD Secretary, Go urged for the expedited processing of aid distribution, especially for intended beneficiaries who were already validated by the department but are still waiting for assistance due to them for almost five months already.

FFCCCII: Govt must focus on luring investments to generate more jobs

THE government should focus on attracting investments to create more jobs, which could lead to higher pay for workers, according to the Federation of Filipino Chinese Chambers of Commerce and Industry Inc. (FFCCCII), a federation of 170 Filipino Chinese chambers of commerce in the country.

“More investments would mean more jobs and as demand for labor increases, wages could also go up,” said FFCCCII President Cecilio K. Pedro.

He said inviting more foreign businessmen to set up shop in the Philippines should be top of mind for government officials and lawmakers instead of pushing for the socalled economic Charter change.

In his speech at a briefing on Thursday, Pedro said the federation “has extended invitations to distinguished foreign business leaders and industrialists from across the

Asia Pacific region, persuading them to deepen their engagement by investing in our country.”

He said they extended invitations to Philippines’s neighbors within Asean such as Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia— and the country’s “significant” trade partners China, Hong Kong, South Korea, Japan, among others.

Celebrating its seven decades, Pedro said FFCCCII has been “at the forefront of catalyzing foreign investments and promoting international trade, technological cooperation, and partnerships to benefit our Philippine economy.”

Despite the economic challenges hounding “global powerhouses,” such as Japan, United Kingdom and Germany, which he said are now in recession, and in the middle of “persisting” international

economic uncertainties, Pedro said FFCCCII remains optimistic for the “robust” economic growth of the Philippines in 2024.

The FFCCCII president said beyond its “economic pursuits,” the group champions socioeconomic development initiatives, such as the “Buy Pinoy” movement, which advocates patronizing Philippinemade products, promoting national industrialization and the modernization of agriculture and aquaculture for Philippine food security and rural development.

“Our conviction lies in the belief that the true strength of our country requires a robust, self-reliant, and globally competitive economy,” said Pedro.

At a trade delegation’s trip to China last December, a board member of the FFCCCII told the B usiness M irror that the Philippines should focus on promoting its aqua and

agriculture sectors.

The FFCCCII, represented among the trade delegates, recognized the other participants in the delegation to China as most of them export durians, mangoes, coconuts, among others. He said these exporters are already putting value to these “traditional products.” Hence, he said, “With value added, we get more and this is our strong point.”

In contrast, the board member of the Federation underscored that the Philippines should look into its tough business environment by reviewing its “restrictive” laws in order to be more competitive within the Asia-Pacific region.

(Full story here: https://businessmirror. com.ph/2024/01/01/tough-biz-climatein-phl-a-hurdle-in-copying-china/)

Andrea E. San Juan

DTI seeks funding to upgrade vape and HTP testing facilities

THE Department of Trade and Industry

(DTI) said it is seeking additional budget to upgrade vape-testing facilities as it aims to enhance its enforcement operations against illegal heated tobacco products (HTP) while it is awaiting the Vape law to fully take effect in June.

In a statement Thursday, the DTI said Trade Secretary Alfredo E. Pascual underscored the importance of having a “well-maintained machinery, up-to-date methodologies, and an efficient laboratory management system to bring vapor products into the market with greater confidence in their safety and performance.”

Currently, DTI said budgetary constraints prevent the testing facilities from covering HTP consumables, e-liquids for vapor products, and nicotine pouches.

With this, the agency said the House Committee on Ways and Means has instructed the DTI and the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) to secure additional funding in the National Expenditure Program (NEP) to expand the DTI’s testing capabilities.

“The additional budget will fund more testing facilities for HTP consumables and e-liquids, and enhance DTI’s certification process, vital for public safety,” said DTI.

DTI said this after its Consumer Protection Group, spearheaded by Assistant Secretary Amanda Nograles, inspected existing vape testing facilities on February 22 at the Bureau of Philippine Standards laboratory in Cavite.

“This inspection evaluated the testing protocols for vapor products and related accessories, including dry cells and secondary batteries,” DTI said.

The Trade department said the team also conducted assessments of various laboratory instruments ensuring the “integrity and efficacy” of the testing process.

By June 2024, the product registration

and other related provisions of Republic Act 11900 or the law regulating the importation, manufacture, sale, packaging, distribution, use and communication of vaporized nicotine and non-nicotine products, and novel tobacco products will take effect, the DTI noted.

Earlier this month, DTI said it confiscated over 18,000 non-compliant vape products worth P5.5 million from online and physical stores.

Further, the Trade department noted it had so far issued notices of violation (NOV) and show cause orders (SCO) to 269 physical stores, while its online monitoring unit inspected over 66,000 online vape stores from February 2023 to January 2024 and of these monitored online stores, the agency said nearly 61,000 were issued show cause orders.

Nograles said the 61,000 online stores that were found non-compliant with violations related to the use of flavor descriptors, failure to implement age verification measures, use of popular/animated characters and violation of graphic health warning, among others.

“Formal charges were filed for violation of the minimum age sales and purchase, sales and promotion within school perimeter, packaging and health warning and point of sale signage,” Nograles told the B usiness M irror earlier this month.

She added that administrative fines range from P100,000 for the first offense up to P400,000 or imprisonment for 3 years or both for third offense.

For violation of the graphic health warning, P2 million and two years imprisonment for the first offense and P5 million and six years imprisonment, the DTI’s consumer protection group official said.

She said in early February that there are no registered vape products yet but there are six applications currently pending.

Noting RE easing bonanza, DOE, utilities back Cha-cha

Continued from A14

She cited the Triconti ECC partnership, a Swiss-German-Filipino joint venture developing 1.6 GW of offshore wind capacity in Luzon and Visayas, potentially creating 3,600 direct and indirect jobs.

Triconti is engaged in two offshore wind power projects in Guimaras, with an initial investment of P221 billion and a total target capacity of 1.2 GW.

Utility organizations

PUBLIC utility organizations welcomed the proposed economic changes in the Constitution at the third meeting of the Committee of the Whole House. Representatives from companies like Manila Electric Company (Meralco), the Philippine National Railways (PNR), Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS), and the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) expressed support, saying these changes could attract investments, promote competition, and enhance service quality across various sectors.

Manila Electric Company (Meralco) Senior Vice President Atty. Jose Ronald Valles said the move to amend Articles XII of the Constitution holds significant potential to attract substantial investments in the country’s power sector, spark greater competition leading to improved service quality and lower prices, and address supply shortages and preparedness for future energy demands.

Article XII, Section 11, of the Constitution governs the ownership of public utilities.

Michael Ted Macapagal, chairman of the Philippine National Railways (PNR), conveyed PNR’s commendation for Congress for pursuing legislative reforms that address the changing needs and demands of the economy.

“The phrase ‘unless otherwise provided by law’ categorically requires Congress to pass

laws that would specifically govern a particular kind of public utility. Through these future legislative enactments, matters concerning a specific public utility can undergo meaningful discussions and deliberation. In turn, this would eventually result in the adaptation of rules and regulations, policies that are responsive to the dynamics of a particular public utility and, on a larger scale, to the changing needs of the economy,” Macapagal said.

The Department of Transportation has already awarded several contracts to foreign corporations for its ongoing railway projects, particularly contracts for civil works in relation to the North-South Commuter Railway Project (NSCR), he noted.

Lawyer Elpidio Vega, chairperson of the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) Board of Trustees, pointed out how the water concessionaires of the MWSS maintain an ownership structure that is below the threshold set by the 1987 Constitution.

“We ultimately submit to the wisdom of the House, and we would like to underscore the flexibility resulting in the inclusion of the phrase ‘unless otherwise provided by law’ which could result in future scenarios wherein the ownership structures of MWSS concessionaires or any other public utility could be fully foreign or provided by the subsequent laws alternatively have Filipino ownership percentage,”Vega said, adding that the percentage “be dependent upon the necessity suitable and favorable to the economy.”

National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) Commissioner Ella Blanca Lopez said her office shall continue to support moves to liberalize the telecommunications service industry in the country, particularly the move of the Congress to amend the economic provisions of the Constitution, confident that the move “will make our legal and regulatory framework more adaptive and responsive to the ever-changing needs of time.”

A4
Vittorio V. Vitug • www.businessmirror.com.ph Friday,
1, 2024
Editor:
March
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BusinessMirror A5 www.businessmirror.com.ph Friday, March 1, 2024

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TUAN,

SHI,

Republic of the Philippines DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT Regional Office No. IV-A 4th Flr. Andenson Bldg. II, Brgy. Parian, Calamba City Telefax No.: (049) 545-7362 March 1, 2024 NOTICE OF FILING OF APPLICATION/S FOR ALIEN EMPLOYMENT PERMIT/S (AEP/S)
is hereby given that the following companies/employers have filed with this Regional Office application/s for Alien Employment Permit/s:
ESTABLISHMENT NAME OF FOREIGN NATIONAL, POSITION AND BRIEF DESCRIPTION QUALIFICATION AND SALARY RANGE
Notice
NO.
BO CHENG RUBBER PHILIPPINES INC. Phase 3, Block 5, Lot 3, Lima Technology Center, San Fernando, Malvar, Batangas
LIN-SHENG Quality Vice President Brief Job Description: Assess project and resource requirements and determine quality control standards Basic Qualification: Bachelor’s degree in Engineering field and with working knowledge in quality control Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999
D.J.T.Y. TEXTILE CORPORATION Block 3, Lot 2, J.P. Rizal St. Corner E. Jacinto St., Rizal Technopark, San Juan, Taytay, Rizal SHI, CHUNPEI Chinese Speaking Quality Control Brief Job Description: Analyze the maintenance planning and program area while optimizing systems and/or structures maintainability, availability and safety Basic Qualification: Must have proven experience as Chinese Speaking Quality Control Salary Range: Php30,000 –Php59,999
D.J.T.Y. TEXTILE CORPORATION Block 3, Lot 2, J.P. Rizal St. Corner E. Jacinto St., Rizal Technopark, San Juan, Taytay, Rizal
CHUNXIAO
Speaking Quality Control Brief Job Description: Strategize and lead to steer the company to the most profitable direction Basic Qualification: Must have proven experience as Chinese Speaking Quality Control Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999
Chinese
EMD TECHNOLOGIES PHILIPPINES INC. 1 Ring Road, Light Industry and Science Park II, La Mesa, City of Calamba, Laguna KAWAZOE, SO Section Manager in Quality Assurance Department Brief Job Description: Responsible for setting customer service standards and assessing customer requirements and ensuring that these are met. Monitor the inhouse quality procedures, standards, and specifications Basic Qualification: Proficiency in Japanese language, preferably more than 10 years experience in Process Engineering and Quality Control. Must have background in the Automotive Industry Relation at least 5 years Salary Range: Php150,000Php499,999
GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite AUNG KHAING Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999
GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite AUNG THEIN Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 7 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite AUNG ZAW MIN Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 8 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite FAR YOE Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 9 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite NANG MWE LAO Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 10 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite PA PA WIN Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 11 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite SAN LI AUNG Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 12 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite SHWE FANE Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 13 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite SOE SANDAR WIN Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 14 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite THAN HTAY AUNG Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 15 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite YAN HAN SOE Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 16 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite ZAY YA Burmese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 BusinessMirror A6 www.businessmirror.com.ph Friday, March 1, 2024
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GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite NGUYEN HUU QUYNH Chinese Customer Service Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999
GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite NGUYEN THI YEN Chinese Customer Service Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 19 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite NGUYEN VAN LUAN Chinese Customer Service Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 20 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite NGUYEN VAN THAO Chinese Customer Service Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999
GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite PHAM THI MAI Chinese Customer Service Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 22 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite PHAM TRONG NAM Chinese Customer Service Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 23 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite WINDY WARDHANI Chinese Customer Service Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 24 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite LI, FANLONG Chinese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 25 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite WEI, FACAI Chinese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 26 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite YANG, JUN Chinese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 27 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite CUNHA LIMA, ARTHUR ANGELO Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Brazilian language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 28 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite DA SILVA, GUSTAVO HENRIQUE Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Brazilian language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 29 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite HNIN NU NU NAING Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Burmese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 30 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite HO TRONG TRINH Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 31 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite HOTON DA SILVA, EMANUEL Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Brazilian language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 32 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite LUONG VAN DUNG Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 33 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite RODRIGUES MORAES JUNIOR, JOSE Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Brazilian language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 34 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite ANDREA KARDINA RUMASINGAP Indonesian Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Indonesian language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 35 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite ANDRIANA RUMASINGAP Indonesian Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Indonesian language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 BusinessMirror A7 www.businessmirror.com.ph Friday, March 1, 2024
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GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite MERRY SULIANI Indonesian Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Indonesian language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 38 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite SUSAN Indonesian Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Indonesian language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 39 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite CHEAH MOI KIEW Malaysian Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Malaysian language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 40 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite CHUANG, TIEN-HSIN Taiwanese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Taiwanese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 41 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite DANG, VAN PHUC Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 42 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite DAU, CONG MANH Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999
GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite DUONG THI LIEN Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 44 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite HA, CONG LAM Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 45 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite LE PHU MAI ANH Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 46 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite LE THI CHI NA Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 47 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite LE THI VAN Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 48 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite LY, THUY BINH Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 49 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite LY, VAN TUYEN Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 50 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite MAI, THI NI Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 51 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite NGUYEN THANH DAT Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 52 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite PHAM QUOC TUNG Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 53 GLARION TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Covelandia Road, Binakayan, Pulvorista, Kawit, Cavite PHAN, TUAN ANH Vietnamese Customer Service Representative Brief Job Description: Manage incoming calls and customer service inquiries Basic Qualification: Able to speak, read and write Chinese and Vietnamese language Salary Range: Php30,000Php59,999 BusinessMirror A8 www.businessmirror.com.ph Friday, March 1, 2024
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www.businessmirror.com.ph | Editor:

PHL eyes tie up with S. Africa for SRDP initiative

THEPhilippinesiseyeing a possible partnership with South Africa to boost the former’s ongoing self-reliant defense posture (SRDP) initiative. This seems to be in the works following a meeting between Department of National Defense (DND) Secretary Gilberto “Gibo” C. Teodoro Jr. and South African Ambassador to the Philippines, Bartinah Ntombizodwa Radebe-Netshitenzhe, on Friday, February 23.

“Ambassador RadebeNetshitenzhe welcomed the

initiative as she underscored the need for countries to work together to address common defense and security challenges. Amid global security developments, the two officials stressed the importance of strengthening ties with like-minded states and upholding a rules-based international order,” the DND said in a statement forwarded to the media late Wednesday. In this meeting, Teodoro “highlighted” the possibility of the country having a “logistics and defense industry collaboration could be a potential area of cooperation” with South Africa. He added that this is possible

as the DND is prioritizing the SRDP aside from expediting the capability upgrade of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.

“During the meeting, Secretary Teodoro and Ambassador Radebe-Netshitenzhe reaffirmed commitment to enhance defense and military relations between the Philippines and South Africa. Towards this end, both officials expressed optimism about concluding proposed defense cooperation agreements, which will serve as a framework in formalizing and initiating joint activities in various areas of cooperation,” the DND stressed.

House and DMW craft new guidelines

THE House Committee on Overseas Workers Affairs and the Department of Migrant Workers (DMW) are now crafting new guidelines to ensure the protection and welfare of seasonal Filipino workers abroad after a resolution to look into critical issues surrounding the deployment of Filipino workers to South Korea’s Seasonal Worker Program (SWP) by local government units (LGU) was filed. House Committee on Overseas Workers Affairs chairman Rep. Ron P. Salo said his committee deliberated House Resolution 1343 filed by Rep. Marissa Magsino to address pressing concerns surrounding the deployment of Filipino workers to South Korea’s SWP by LGUs.

During the meeting, Salo said alarming revelations emerged, painting a disturbing picture of alleged illicit practices and human rights violations within the SWP. Instances of purported illegal recruitment, labor exploitation, medical negligence, physical

THE Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) on Thursday finally regained control and access of its Facebook page, three days after still unidentified hackers took over it early in the evening of February 26.

“As of 5:45 a.m. today [Thursday], 29 February 2024, the Coast Guard Public Affairs Service [CGPAS] has recovered full access to its official Facebook Page,” the agency said in a statement. This could be attributed to the combined efforts from the Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center (CICC) under the Department of Information

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. appointed Rogelio V. Quevedo as the new Commissioner of the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG).

abuse, and, tragically, six deaths underscored the pressing need for immediate intervention, he said.

“The SWP was intended to be an employment opportunity for Filipinos, yet it has devolved into a dilemma of hardships endangering their well-being and that of their families,” he said.

Salo shared that during his visit to South Korea in May 2023, he received reports of abuse and maltreatment suffered by Filipino seasonal workers at the hands of brokers and employers. This prompted him to report the matter to the late DMW Secretary Toots Ople in an effort to address the issue.

In response to these distressing revelations, the DMW, under Officer-in-Charge Secretary Hans Cacdac, committed to formulating new guidelines to ensure the protection and welfare of seasonal Filipino workers abroad.

“Standardizing protection mechanisms in the SWP and other similar programs is paramount to safeguarding the rights of seasonal

and Communications Technology (DICT), who worked with the PCG in “conducting backend operations, leading to the discovery and removal of three hackers with Facebook names: Fatima Hasan, Murat Kansu, and Vicky Bates.”

The CICC confirmed that the hackers utilized malware to breach the Facebook page’s security last February 26. The hackers uploaded and shared clips of various foreign movies and television series on the PCG’s Facebook page to demonstrate their control.

Monday’s attack was the third for the agency this year.

Filipino workers abroad,” Salo said.

The Kabayan Partylist representative pushed for incorporating best practices from exemplary LGUs involved in the SWP into the new guidelines.

Salo also called for the establishment of inter-agency guidelines involving the DMW, Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), and Bureau of Immigration (BI) to fortify the protection of Filipino workers’ rights.

Salo expressed gratitude to Cacdac for his swift response and unwavering commitment to protecting Filipino seasonal workers under the SWP.

Cacdac pledged to lift the moratorium on the SWP upon the implementation of the guidelines.

“We shall remain steadfast in our dedication to ensuring the welfare and dignity of seasonal Filipino workers abroad, while ensuring that employment opportunities for them remain,” Salo added.

“Tomorrow, 01 March 2024, the CICC will conduct a comprehensive hardware check on all office laptops and computers CGPAS personnel use to access their official social media platforms to remove remaining traces of malware, if any, and strengthen its overall cybersecurity against potential breaches,” the PCG added.

Meanwhile, PCG commandant, Admiral Ronnie Gil L. Gavan, thanked the DICT for supporting the CGPAS toward the full recovery of its official Facebook page and its unwavering commitment to strengthening the PCG’s online security. Rex Anthony Naval

News
Vittorio V. Vitug Friday, March 1, 2024 A9 BusinessMirror
The Presidential Communication Office (PCO) made the announcement on its Facebook page on Thursday. “Mr. Rogelio V. Quevedo has been appointed as Commissioner of the Presidential Commission on Good Government, which is under the Department of Justice,” PCO said in Filipino. Prior to his new designation, Quevedo was with the Office of the Government Corporate Counsel, which represents government corporations and financial institutions. As part of the PCGG, he will assist in the recovery of alleged ill-gotten wealth accumulated by former President Ferdinand E. Marcos, his immediate family, subordinates and close associates. His task also includes probing graft and corruption cases assigned by the President and the adoption of safeguards to prevent such illegal activities. He will be joining the other officials of the PCGG, including its chairperson, John A. Agbayani and other commissioners, namely, Rhoderick M. Parayno, Raymond Anthony C. Dilag, Angelito S. Vergel-De Dios, and Marco M. Bautista. Samuel P. Medenilla
to protect overseas
PCG finally regains control of FB page from hackers PBBM names Quevedo as new PCGG commissioner
seasonal workers

Food aid reaches starving northern Gaza amid calls for cease-fire, hostage release

RAFAH, Gaza Strip—Aid convoys carrying food reached northern Gaza this week, Israeli officials said Wednesday, the first major delivery in a month to the devastated, isolated area, where the UN has warned of worsening starvation among hundreds of thousands of Palestinians amid Israel’s offensive.

the march, which is to end near Netanyahu’s official residence.

The plight of the hostages has deeply shaken Israelis, who see in them an enduring symbol of the state’s failure to protect its citizens from Hamas’ assault. In its October 7 attack, the Palestinian militant group abducted roughly 250 people, according to Israeli authorities, including men, women, children and older adults. After the November releases, some 130 hostages remain, and Israel says about a quarter of them are dead.

has taken refuge. They also say a Rafah offensive could collapse the aid operation that has already been crippled in the fighting.

in late November are joining

Israel’s assault on Gaza, which it says aims at destroying Hamas after its attack, has killed more than 29,900 Palestinians. UN officials warn of further mass casualties if it follows through on vows to attack the southernmost city of Rafah, where more than half of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million

Across Gaza, more than 576,000 people – a quarter of the population – are a step away from famine, the UN says. But northern Gaza in particular has been gutted by hunger. The north has largely been cut off and much of it has been leveled since Israeli ground troops invaded in late October. Several hundred thousand Palestinians are believed to remain there, and many have been reduced to eating animal fodder to survive. The UN says one in 6 children under 2 in the north suffer from acute malnutrition and wasting.

A convoy of 31 trucks carrying food entered northern Gaza on

Wildfire grows into one of largest in Texas history as flames menace many small towns

CANADIAN, Texas—A cluster of wildfires scorched the Texas Panhandle on Wednesday, including a blaze that grew into one of the largest in state history, as flames moved with alarming speed and blackened the landscape across a vast stretch of small towns and cattle ranches.

An 83-year-old grandmother from the tiny town of Stinnett was the lone confirmed fatality. However, authorities have yet to make a thorough search for victims and have warned the damage to some communities is extensive.

Known as the Smokehouse Creek Fire, the largest blaze expanded to more than 1,300 square miles (3,370 square kilometers) and jumped into parts of neighboring Oklahoma. It is now larger than the state of Rhode Island, and the Texas A&M Forest Service said the flames were only about 3% contained.

“I believe the fire will grow before it gets fully contained,” said Nim Kidd, chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management.

The largest fire recorded in state history was the 2006 East Amarillo Complex fire, which burned about 1,400 square miles (3,630 square kilometers) and resulted in 13 deaths.

Walls of flames were pushed by powerful winds while huge plumes of smoke billowed hundreds of feet in the air across the sparsely populated region. The smoke delayed aerial surveillance of the damage in some areas.

“There was one point where we

couldn’t see anything,” said Greg Downey, 57, describing his escape as flames bore down on his neighborhood. “I didn’t think we’d get out of it.”

The woman who died was identified by family members as Joyce Blankenship, a former substitute teacher. Her grandson, Lee Quesada, said he had posted in a community forum asking if anyone could try and locate her. Quesada said deputies told his uncle on Wednesday that they had found Blankenship’s remains in her burned home.

Quesada said she’d surprise him at times with funny little stories “about her more ornery days.”

“Just talking to her was a joy,” he said, adding that “Joy” was a nickname of hers.

Hemphill County Emergency Management Coordinator Bill Kendall described the charred terrain as being “like a moonscape. ... It’s just all gone.”

Kendall said about 40 homes were burned around the perimeter of the town of Canadian, but no buildings were lost inside the community. Kendall also said he saw “hundreds of cattle just dead, laying in the fields.”

Tresea Rankin videotaped her own home in Canadian as it burned.

“Thirty-eight years of memories, that’s what you were thinking,” Rankin said of watching the flames destroy her house. “Two of my kids were married there ... But you know, it’s OK, the memories won’t go away.”

The small town of Fritch, north of Amarillo, lost hundreds of homes in a 2014 fire and appeared to be hit hard again. Mayor Tom Ray said Wednesday that an

estimated 40-50 homes were destroyed on the southern edge. Ray said natural gas remained shut off for the town of 2,200.

Residents are probably not “prepared for what they’re going to see if they pull into town,” Hutchinson County Emergency Management spokesperson Deidra Thomas said in a social media livestream. She compared the damage to a tornado.

Authorities have not said what ignited the fires, but strong winds, dry grass and unseasonably warm temperatures fed the blazes. Near Borger, a community of about 13,000 people, emergency officials at one point late Tuesday answered questions from panicked residents on Facebook and told them to get ready to leave if they had not already.

“It was like a ring of fire around Borger. There was no way out ... all four main roads were closed,” said Adrianna Hill, whose home was within about a mile of the fire. She said wind that blew the fire in the opposite direction “saved our butts.”

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott issued a disaster declaration for 60 counties. The encroaching flames caused the main facility that disassembles America’s nuclear arsenal to pause operations Tuesday night, but it was open for normal work Wednesday.

The weather forecast provided some hope for firefighters—cooler temperatures, less wind and possibly rain on Thursday. However, the situation was dire in some areas Wednesday.

Sustained winds of up to 45 mph (72 kph), with gusts of up to 70 mph (113 kph), caused the fires that were spreading east to turn south,

attempted a delivery to the north for the first time in three weeks, but much of the convoy’s cargo was taken en route by desperate Palestinians, and it was only able to distribute a small amount in the north. Two days later, the WFP announced it was pausing deliveries to the north because of the chaos.

Since launching its assault on Gaza following Hamas’ October 7 attack, Israel has barred entry of food, water, medicine and other supplies except for a trickle of aid entering the south from Egypt at the Rafah crossing and Israel’s Kerem Shalom crossing. Despite international calls to allow in more aid, the number of supply trucks entering has dropped dramatically in recent weeks.

Wednesday, the Israeli military office that oversees Palestinian civilian affairs said. The office, known by the acronym COGAT, said nearly 20 other trucks entered the north on Monday and Tuesday. Associated Press footage showed people carrying sacks of flour from the distribution site.

It was not immediately clear who carried out the deliveries. The UN was not involved, said a spokesperson for the UN’s humanitarian coordination office, Eri Keneko. As of Sunday, the UN had been unable to deliver food to northern Gaza since January 23, according to Philippe Lazzarini, the head of UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees that has led the aid effort during the war. On February 18, the World Food Program

threatening new areas, forecasters said. But winds calmed down after a cold front came through Tuesday evening, said Peter Vanden Bosch, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Amarillo.

Breezy conditions were expected again Friday, and firefriendly weather could return by the weekend, Vanden Bosch said Wednesday.

Kidd said the weekend forecast and “sheer size and scope” of the blaze are the biggest challenges for firefighters.

“I don’t want the community there to feel a false sense of security that all these fires will not grow anymore,” Kidd said. “This is still a very dynamic situation.”

As evacuation orders mounted Tuesday, county and city officials implored residents to turn on emergency alert services on their cellphones and be ready to leave immediately.

“We got a great response from the community when they were asked to evacuate. They did,” Kidd said. “We believe that saved lives, and we don’t want people going back if the evacuation orders are still in place.”

The Pantex nuclear weapon plant, northeast of Amarillo, evacuated nonessential staff Tuesday night out of an “abundance of caution,” said Laef Pendergraft, a spokesperson for the National Nuclear Security Administration’s production office at Pantex. Firefighters remained in case of an emergency.

Pantex tweeted early Wednesday that the facility was “open for normal day shift operations.”

Vertuno reported from Austin, Texas. Associated Press reporters Ken Miller in Oklahoma City, Lisa Baumann in Bellingham, Washington, and Christopher Weber in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

“That’s why we’ve repeatedly asked for a humanitarian ceasefire,” he said. The UN has called for Israel to open crossings in the north to aid deliveries and guarantee safe corridors for convoys.

The director of Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza said the number of children who have died in recent days from severe malnutrition and dehydration had risen to four.

Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya said that operations at the hospital will shut off starting Wednesday due to fuel shortages. “Dialysis, intensive care, childcare, and surgeries will stop. Therefore, we will witness more deaths in the coming days,” he said.

COGAT said Wednesday that Israel does not impose limits on the amount of aid entering. Israel has blamed UN agencies for the bottleneck, saying hundreds of trucks are waiting on the Palestinian side of Kerem Shalom for aid workers to collect them.

UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric on Wednesday countered saying large trucks entering Gaza have to be unloaded and reloaded onto smaller Palestinian trucks, but there aren’t enough of them and there’s a lack of security to distribute aid in Gaza. Police in Gaza stopped protecting convoys after Israeli strikes on them near the crossing. There is also “insufficient coordination” from Israel on security and deconfliction, which puts the lives of UN staff and other humanitarian workers at risk.

But the pain from the lack of supplies extends across Gaza. Project Hope, a humanitarian group that runs a clinic in the central town of Deir al-Balah, said 21% of the pregnant women and 11% of the children under 5 it has treated in the last three weeks are suffering from malnutrition.

The Gaza Health Ministry said the death toll from Israel’s offensive had risen to 29,954 people, with 70,325 wounded. The ministry doesn’t differentiate between civilians and combatants, but it says two-thirds of the dead were children and women.

In its attack on southern Israel on October 7, Hamas and other Palestinian militants killed some 1,200 people, mainly civilians.

Magdy reported from Cairo.

Pope Francis admitted in Rome hospital for diagnostic testing after flu symptoms

VATICAN CITY—Pope Francis, who recently had the flu, was brought to a hospital in Rome for diagnostic testing after the papal audience Wednesday, the Vatican said, without giving further details.

The pope arrived at the Gemelli Hospital on Tiber Island in a small white Fiat 500, leaving again under escort in the same car after a short visit.

Earlier in the day, the 87-yearold pope was pushed in a wheelchair into the audience hall at the Vatican, appearing weary as he dropped heavily into his seat. In recent weeks he has walked the short distance to his chair, but he has been struggling with mild flu symptoms the past week.

The pope also canceled appointments Saturday and Monday due to the flu, but appeared as usual for the Sunday blessing from a window overlooking St. Peter’s Square.

Last week, Francis coughed repeatedly as he presided over Ash Wednesday services at a Roman church, and opted not to participate in the traditional procession that inaugurates the church’s Lenten season.

This time of year in 2020, just as the coronavirus pandemic was starting to hit Italy, Francis also suffered a bad cold that forced him to cancel several days of official audiences and his participation in the Vatican’s annual spiritual retreat. The Vatican had already scrubbed the retreat for this year in favor of personal spiritual exercises

The Argentine pope had part of one lung removed as a young man because of a respiratory infection, and in 2021 had a chunk of his colon removed because of an intestinal inflammation. He has been using a wheelchair and cane since last year because of strained knee ligaments and a small knee fracture that have made walking and standing difficult.

The World Friday, March 1, 2024 Editor: Angel R. Calso • www.businessmirror.com.ph A10 BusinessMirror
A TENT camp housing Palestinians displaced by the Israeli offensive is seen in Rafah, Gaza Strip on Tuesday, February 27, 2024. AP/HATEM ALI
increasing alarm over hunger across Gaza has fueled international calls for a cease-fire as the US, Egypt and Qatar work to secure a deal between Israel and Hamas for a pause in fighting and the release of some of the hostages seized by Hamas in its October 7 attack.
hope to reach an agreement before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan starts around March 10. But so far, Israel and Hamas have remained far apart in public on their demands.
pressure on
raeli
Benjamin Netanyahu to reach a deal, fam
ilies of hostages on Wednesday launched a four-day march from southern Israel to Jerusalem to demand their loved ones be set free.
around 100 hostages freed
fire
The
Mediators
Increasing the
Is -
Prime Minister
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Some of the
during a cease-
THE car carrying Pope Francis leaves the Gemelli Isola Tiberina Hospital in Rome on Wednesday, February 28, 2024. Pope Francis, who has been suffering from the flu, was brought to a hospital in central Rome aboard a small white Fiat 500 after the papal audience on Wednesday, leaving again in the same car after a short period. The Vatican had no immediate comment. AP/ANDREW MEDICHINI
Protesting South Korean doctors resist back-to-work orders, risking prosecution

SEOUL, South Korea—As South Korea’s government made a last plea for junior doctors to end a walkout hours before a Thursday deadline, many were expected to defy orders to return to work, risking suspensions of medical licenses and prosecution.

Thousands of medical interns and residents have been on strike for about 10 days to protest the government’s push to boost medical school enrollments. Government officials have warned that strikers would face legal repercussions if they don’t return to their hospitals by Thursday.

As of Wednesday night, about 9,076 of the country’s 13,000 medical interns and residents were confirmed to have left their hospitals after submitting resignations, according to the Health Ministry. It said that 294 strikers had returned to work.

There was no word on any others going back to their jobs as of 6 p.m. (0900 GMT).

Observers say many strikers are likely to defy the deadline, continuing the labor boycott for weeks or months. The government is expected to begin formal steps toward penalties on Monday, as Friday is a national holiday.

“We’ve said that we won’t hold them responsible for leaving their worksites if they return by today,” Vice Health Minister Park Min-soo told a briefing. “Doctors are there to serve patients, and those patients are anxiously waiting for you. This isn’t the way to protest against the government.”

Later Thursday, Park met some striking doctors at a Seoul building but the contents of their discussion weren’t immediately made public. Park earlier said officials had invited 94 representatives of the strikers to the meeting, using a mass text message. It wasn’t known how many doctors took part in the meeting.

Ryu Ok Hada, one of the striking doctors, told reporters that he wouldn’t attend the meeting. He accused the government of treating the striking junior doctors “like criminals and inflicting humiliations on them.”

Starting March 4, the government will notify doctors who miss the deadline that it plans to suspend their licenses, and will give them opportunities to respond, senior Health Ministry official Kim Chung-hwan told the same briefing.

Under South Korean law, the government can order doctors back to work if it sees grave risks to public health. Those who refuse to abide by such orders can have their medical licenses suspended for up to one year, and also face up to three years in prison or a 30 million won (roughly $22,500) fine. Those who receive prison sentences would be stripped of their medical licenses.

Some observers say authorities will probably punish only leaders of the strike to avoid further straining hospital operations.

At the center of the dispute is a government plan to admit 2,000 more applicants to medical schools starting next year, a two thirds increase from the current 3,058. The government says it aims to add up to 10,000 new doctors by 2035 to cope with the country’s fast-aging population. Officials say South Korea’s doctor-topopulation ratio is one of the lowest among industrialized countries.

But many doctors reject the plan, arguing that universities aren’t ready to provide quality education to that many new students. They also say the government plan would also fail to address chronic shortage of doctors in essential but low-paying specialties like pediatrics and emergency departments.

But their critics say the striking junior doctors simply worry about expected lower income because of the sharply increased number of fellow doctors. The government’s plan is broadly popular with the South Korean public, according to a poll.

“Doctors must cure sick people. If they all leave, who’s going to treat them?

Everyone would die,” Kim Young Ja, an 89-year-old housewife, said near a Seoul hospital.

The Associated Press journalists Ahn Young-joon, Yong Ho Kim and Yong Jun Chang contributed to this report.

Strike on Palestinians waiting for aid in Gaza City kills and wounds dozens

RAFAH, Gaza Strip—An apparent Israeli strike on a crowd of Palestinians waiting for humanitarian aid in Gaza City on Thursday has killed and wounded dozens, according to local hospital officials.

Gaza City and the rest of northern Gaza were the first targets of Israel’s air, sea and ground offensive launched in response to Hamas’ October 7 attack. The area has suffered widespread devastation and has been largely isolated from the rest of the territory for months, with little aid entering. Aid groups say it has become nearly impossible to deliver humanitarian assistance in most

of Gaza, in part because of the crowds of desperate people who overwhelm aid convoys. The U.N. says a quarter of Gaza’s 2.3 million Palestinians face starvation.

Dr. Jadallah Shafai, the head of the nursing department at Shifa Hospital, told the Al Jazeera network that around 50 people were killed and 250 wounded. He did not provide a precise toll. Al Jazeera ran footage showing several bod -

ies and injured people arriving at Shifa.

Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, the director of the Kamal Adwan Hospital, said it had received at least 10 bodies and 160 wounded people.

Fares Afana, the head of the ambulance service at Kamal Adwan, said medics arriving at the scene found “dozens or hundreds” lying on the ground. He said there were not enough ambulances to collect

all the dead and wounded and that some were being brought to hospitals on donkey carts.

Dr. Mohammad Salha, the acting director of the Al-Awda Hospital, said it received 90 wounded and three dead, who were transferred to Kamal Adwan.

“We expect a rise in the number killed,” he said. “There are many wounded still at the reception and the emergency room.”

Zelenskyy urgently pleads for more ammunition at Albania summit as Russian advances escalate

IRANA, Albania—

Ukraine’s president pleaded Wednesday for more ammunition to repel Russian advances as he co-hosted a summit with Albania’s government to build further support for Kyiv among southeastern European countries while signs of war fatigue grow.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that increasing the supply of armaments, and especially ammunition, was paramount for Ukraine just over two years since Russia’s full-scale invasion. “I think this is the question of: Will we stand or not,” he said during his speech to the summit. His impassioned plea comes as Russian troops have seized the initiative on the battlefield in Ukraine amid worsening shortages of weapons and soldiers for Ukraine’s military. Western analysts and observers say the Russians are attacking in strength along four parallel axes in the northeast, aiming to press deeper into the Ukraine-held western part of the Donetsk region and also penetrating into the Kharkiv region north of it.

Russia took the strategic eastern city of Avdiivka earlier this month by overwhelming Ukrainian forces with large numbers of

troops and superior air and artillery firepower. Fierce fighting has continued with Russia pushing Kyiv’s forces out of another three villages to the city’s west in the last few days.

Zelenskyy arrived in Albania overnight to join a summit of eleven countries from southeastern Europe, along with officials from the European Union and other international organizations. It was the latest stop in an international tour that saw him in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday to push for a peace plan and the return of prisoners of war from Russia.

Zelenskyy sought to build solidarity among his country and those of the Western Balkans, saying that all of them deserved to be members of the European Union and NATO if they choose.

“The European Union and NATO have provided Europe with the longest and most reliable era of security and economic development, and we are all equally worthy of being a part of the European and Euro-Atlantic communities,” Zelenskyy said.

Securing further support is key to Ukraine’s leader while his country faces battlefield challenges. Zelenskyy on Sunday announced that 31,000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed in action since Russia’s invasion—the first time that Kyiv had confirmed the number of its losses.

He acknowledged, again, in Tirana that “the problems with the supply of ammunition” were impacting the situation on the battlefield.

Russia’s tactics in Avdiivka, including its use of dozens of glide bombs to obliterate Ukrainian positions in the city, has raised concerns it could replicate the same methods elsewhere along the frontline if Western aid to support air-defense systems and supplies of long-range weapons and artillery do not come through soon.

Around Bakhmut, which fell to Russia last May after the longest battle since the full-scale invasion began, Russian troops are trying to push towards Chasiv Yar, according to a spokesman for the operational group over -

seeing the eastern front line. Illia Yevlash said Tuesday that Russia is reinforcing its troops with assault units, using air attacks, and that heavy fighting was ongoing on the outskirts of the city.

Meanwhile, further north on the frontline, Russian troops are pressing forward around Lyman and Kupiansk, in the Kharkiv region that borders Russia.

Ukraine has urged Western leaders to increase the joint production of weapons and ammunition, improve Ukrainian air defenses and put new pressure on Russia via expanded sanctions.

Not all the countries at the meeting are in full support for Ukraine in its war against Russia.

Kremlin ally Serbia is the only European country that has refused

He said Al-Awda is largely out of commission, with no electricity and the operating room running on battery power with only hours left. Gaza’s health sector is under severe strain nearly five months into the Israel-Hamas war.

The Israeli military said it was looking into the reports.

Gaza’s Health Ministry did not immediately provide an official toll from the strike. It says nearly 30,000 Palestinians have been killed since the start of the war, two-thirds of them women and children. Its count does not differentiate between civilians and combatants.

The Hamas attack into southern Israel that ignited the war killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and the militants seized around 250 hostages. Hamas is still holding around 130 hostages, a quarter of whom are believed to be dead, after releasing most of the others during a weeklong cease-fire in November.

Chehayeb reported from Beirut.

to align with EU sanctions following Russia’s invasion. It continues signing cooperation agreements with Moscow.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said he insisted that the summit statement should not include any call for sanctions on Russia and should not include proposed wording about Russia’s negative influence in the Balkan region.

Albania, a NATO member since 2009 and a candidate for EU membership, has voiced its full support for Kyiv against Russia’s invasion. It has provided military assistance in the form of ammunition and training of Ukrainian military. It was among the first countries offering shelter to Ukrainian refugees. It has joined international sanctions against Russian officials and institutions.

As a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council in the last two years, Albania joined the US in initiating resolutions against Russia’s invasion.

Zelenskyy said all of the countries at the summit must remain vigilant over what Russian President Vladimir Putin does next.

“The interaction between us, between neighbors, between neighboring regions, between all partners, has become a factor that along with the resilience of our people in Ukraine, does not allow Putin to prevail,” Zelenskyy said.

UN accuses Nicaragua’s govt of abuses ‘tantamount to crimes against humanity’

MAssociated Press

EXICO CITY—The United Nations accused Nicaragua ‘s government of committing “serious systematic human rights violations, tantamount to crimes against humanity” on Thursday in an investigation into the country’s expanding crackdown on political dissent.

The government of President Daniel Ortega has gone after opponents for years, hitting a turning point in mass protests against the government in 2018 that resulted in violent repression by authorities.

But in the past year, repression has expanded to large swaths of society with a focus on “incapacitating any kind of opposition in the long term,” according to the independent group of UN experts investigating the issue since March 2022.

“Nicaragua is caught in a spiral of violence marked by the persecution of all forms of political opposition, whether real or perceived,” Jan Simon, an expert who headed the investigation, said in a statement. “The Government has solidified a spiral of silence incapacitating any potential opposition.”

Ortega’s government has re -

peatedly said the mass demonstrations against it in 2018 constituted a failed coup attempt orchestrated by the United States, and often responds similarly to criticisms.

The state has targeted civilians, including university students, Indigenous and Black Nicaraguans, and members of the Catholic Church. Children and family members are now targeted simply for being related to people who raise their voices against the government.

ln December, police also charged the director of the Miss Nicaragua pageant of a “beauty queen coup” plot, saying she

rigged the competition against pro-government beauty queens. In February, the government shut down yet another round of social groups, including the country’s scouting organization and a rotary club.

The report said the crackdown has expanded past Nicaragua’s borders to the hundreds of thousands of people who have fled government repression, largely landing in the United States and Costa Rica. Hundreds of Nicaraguans have been stripped of their citizenship and left stateless, unable to access fundamental rights.

The UN report urged the Ortega government to release “arbi -

trarily” detained Nicaraguans and called on global leaders to expand sanctions on “individuals and institutions involved in human rights violations.”

The World www.businessmirror.com.ph BusinessMirror Friday, March 1, 2024 A11
ISRAELI soldiers stand on their tank in a staging area near the Israel-Gaza border in southern Israel on Wednesday, February 28, 2024. AP/TSAFRIR ABAYOV
Blann reported from Kyiv, Ukraine. Associated Press writer Illia Novikov in Kyiv and Jovana Gec in Belgrade, Serbia, contributed to this report. UKRAINIAN President Volodymyr Zelenskyy hold a press conference with Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama after the summit of Southeastern European countries on peace in Tirana, Albania on Wednesday, February 28, 2024. Ukraine’s president co-hosts a summit with Albania’s government on Wednesday that is meant to encourage further support for Kyiv by southeastern European countries, as signs of fatigue grow two years after Russia’s full-scale invasion. AP/ARMANDO BABANI

APAC employers value human skills in the age of AI

IN today’s rapidly evolving economy, it is no surprise that soft skills are highly valued by employers across the Asia Pacific region. According to the latest research conducted by LinkedIn, communication skills, in particular, remain in high demand among APAC countries. The data, obtained from various APAC markets including the Philippines, Australia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, and Singapore, highlights the increasing importance of human skills in the workplace. (Read the BusinessMirror story: “Demand for human skills still strong in Asia Pacific,” February 28, 2024).

With the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) tools, professionals now have more time to focus on tasks that require uniquely human abilities, such as building relationships and collaborating with others. As a result, 95 percent of Learning and Development (L&D) professionals believe that soft skills have become more critical than ever before. This shift in emphasis reflects the changing nature of work and the need for individuals who can effectively navigate the challenges of the digital age.

Moreover, the research reveals that APAC hiring managers place great importance on an individual’s potential for growth and ability to learn. In fact, 40 percent of hiring managers consider these factors to be the most critical when evaluating both internal and external candidates. This demonstrates a shift away from solely valuing technical expertise and highlights the increasing recognition of the value of continuous learning and adaptability in the workplace.

The top five skills deemed most important by APAC hiring managers in the era of AI are a combination of hard and soft skills. Problem-solving abilities take the lead at 35 percent, followed by communication skills at 27 percent, critical thinking at 25 percent, AI skills at 19 percent, and IT and web skills at 17 percent. This balance indicates the need for individuals who can effectively utilize technology while also possessing the interpersonal skills necessary for effective collaboration and problem solving.

Feon Ang, vice president of LinkedIn Talent Solutions and Managing Director, APAC, acknowledges the challenges faced by businesses in integrating cutting-edge technologies into their operations. The increasing demand for AI expertise reflects the transformative shift that is taking place across industries, with organizations striving to leverage AI to stay competitive. However, this also highlights the importance of upskilling and reskilling efforts to bridge the gap between technological advancements and the workforce’s capabilities.

Fortunately, the research indicates that a large majority of companies in APAC, around 91 percent, are actively focused on preparing their employees for the future world of work. These companies are investing in enhancing their employees’ skills and capabilities, recognizing that this approach leads to increased confidence and job security. Online training programs and internal learning and development sessions focused on generative AI are among the methods employed by APAC HR professionals to facilitate continuous learning. As companies continue to invest in learning opportunities, creating a learning culture has become a top priority for learning and development professionals across all APAC markets in 2024. The research reveals that 91 percent of Southeast Asia employees believe they can demonstrate business value by helping their colleagues gain the skills needed to transition into different internal roles. This highlights the symbiotic relationship between individual growth and organizational success, emphasizing the importance of fostering a culture of learning and development within companies.

The latest research conducted by LinkedIn underscores the significance of soft skills, particularly communication, in the APAC job market. In a fast evolving economy with the rising prevalence of AI, there is a growing demand for professionals who possess strong communication skills, problem-solving abilities, and critical thinking prowess. Employers in the region recognize the value of continuous learning and adaptability, with a focus on nurturing a learning culture within their organizations. By investing in the development of human skills, APAC companies are positioning themselves for success in the dynamic and digitally driven world of work.

The Tatak Pinoy Act–A giant leap towards industrialization

Isonny M. angara

Better Days

T is not often that we see the enactment of a law that was crafted with lofty aspirations and with a potential to be a game changer for our country. After five years of conceptualizing, continuous research and consultations, the Tatak Pinoy or Proudly Filipino bill is now a law (Republic Act 11981). We thank President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. for sharing our vision and supporting this measure as one of his administration’s priority bills.

The backing of the President went a long way in getting this bill moving in the legislative mill. Our gratitude also goes out to all our colleagues in the Senate for their full support to the bill and to the House of Representatives, particularly to Reps. Stella Luz Quimbo and Mario Vittorio Mariño, as the author and sponsor of the counterpart bill respectively.

As a background to the Tatak Pinoy Act, we came up with the concept way back in 2019 after going through the Atlas of Economic Complexity, the seminal work of Drs. Ricardo Hausmann of Harvard University and Cesar Hidalgo, who used to be with MIT and is now with the University of Toulouse in France, which

showed that countries that produce more sophisticated and diverse goods and services enjoyed greater prosperity compared to others. The Philippines actually fared well in the Economic Complexity Index developed by Hausman and Hidalgo—ranking 33rd out of 131 countries in 2021.

The data suggests that the Philippines has a lot of potential that has yet to be unlocked. We are already on our way to be among the ranks of the world’s fastest growing economies and we just have to take the necessary steps to break through.

This is what we aim to achieve with the Tatak Pinoy Act. It is about highlighting the important role of Filipino industries in the long-term economic

development and prosperity of the country. With Tatak Pinoy, they will be provided with the tools necessary to support the ecosystem to compete in the global market. Tatak Pinoy is about pursuing a reinvigorated productive development policy that supports world class and competitive Filipinos and their products.

It is about institutionalizing a multisectoral, programmatic, evidence-based and market-driven policy framework through which government agencies and the private sector work together towards empowering domestic enterprises, making them become globally competitive, and assisting them so they produce more sophisticated products, more exceptional, world-class services. A whole of nation approach is what is needed to achieve these goals—government and the private sector working as one towards progress.

At the center of the law is the Tatak Pinoy Strategy (TPS) that will serve as the roadmap for the government and private sector on empowering targeted “Tatak Pinoy” industries so that they can come up with sophisticated products and services to the global markets. Specific plans and programs under the TPS will be organized according to five pillars: Human Resources, Infrastructure, Technology and Innovation, Investments, and Sound Financial

Preparing to walk the tightrope

1 Tim 5:18: “The worker deserves his wages.”

DISCuSSIoNS on increasing the national minimum wage have now reached a critical juncture. It seems that, from the legislative point of view, it is no longer a question of whether the minimum wage will be increased but by how much. The Senate already agreed to increase it by P100 per day, while the House wants to increase by up to P350 per day.

The last nationally legislated wage hike was in 1989, after which the mechanism of adjusting wages has been given to the regional wage boards. The decision to adjust wages through legislation depends on the felt level of inflation that continues to prevail despite the headline numbers reflecting a sharp slowdown from last year.

Rice prices (about 10 percent of total inflation) have continued their uptick. The regular milled variety has now increased by about 20 percent, from P40/ kilo in June 2023 to P50/kilo this February. Other components of inflation, particularly oil prices, have remained in declining levels from the peak in July 2022 despite the current situation in the Middle East. A two-steps-ahead approach to supply can certainly help assure that inflation will remain on its downtrend for the year.

Meanwhile, current employment figures are encouraging, with unemployment falling to its lowest at 3.1 percent, the lowest in decades. Employment numbers show that there are approximately five million more people working today than before the pandemic. In general, the economy is doing well in terms of managing both inflation and unemployment. Increasing the minimum wage might lead to changing the direction or pace of improvement of these variables. Some facts must be considered. One, the current structure of the economy has remained virtually unchanged from two decades ago, with more than half of employment in retail (20 percent), agriculture (22 percent), and construction (10 percent). The rest are in manufacturing (8 percent), transportation (7 percent), public administration (6 percent), and food and

accommodation (5 percent).

Two, among employed workers, 49 percent are wage earners from private employers. It should be noted that the five million increase in workers are traced to the increase of these wage earners in the private sector. The rest are self-employed (27 percent), government employees (9 percent), and unpaid family workers (8 percent).

Three, in terms of occupations, those employed are mostly in elementary occupations (30 percent), service and sales workers (23 percent), and clerical support (7 percent). Most elementary occupations do not require specialized skills and extensive training and may include cleaners, agricultural workers, and those in the informal sector. An implementation of a national wage increase will affect the private wage earners (about half of the employed population). If all of them are working in formal organizations, the impact will be substantial in terms of increasing purchasing power amid slowing inflation. On the other hand, it can be said that the bulk of job creation in the last two years after the pandemic reopening can be traced to increasing number of enterprises, particularly microenterprises. Latest survey results show that the number of microenterprises increased by 30 percent from 2020 to 2021 and increased the number of employed by 20 percent. However, microenterprises, on average, only have about four workers and are, therefore, exempted from the minimum wage law, which only applies to firms with at least 10 workers. The impact, therefore, of the minimum wage increase will be at the small enterprise level, representing about 27 percent of all

Management. We need to ensure that our people are equipped with the skills needed by the Tatak Pinoy industries so that they will no longer have to find work overseas. To support the development of Tatak Pinoy industries towards becoming “world beaters,” government must provide the infrastructure and facilities that they will require. Innovation and technology transfer will also be key to the transformation of these industries to producers of high-value and complex goods and services. Target sectors and industries will be given all the help that they need to grow, including the grant of relevant fiscal incentives and the budgetary support for expenditure priorities under the fiscal program of the government.

A Tatak Pinoy Council (TPC) will be created, composed of the DTI, Neda, DOF, DA, DBM, DICT, DILG, DOLE, and DOST. The TPC will serve as the policy-making and advisory body to the President. It will be tasked to develop and implement the TPS. The Tatak Pinoy Act will put in place key programs and initiatives that will help the target industries in their growth and development. This includes the establishment of green lanes to facilitate the processing and approval of permits, licenses and other documents required for their operations. The BIR will ensure See “Angara,” A13

enterprises. It should be noted that small enterprises declined by about two percent even after reopening the economy, resulting in a loss of about eight percent of workers.

All these data show that raising the minimum wage will not necessarily benefit all workers and could be a burden to small enterprises. It is also important to note that the purchasing power of the peso stands at 80 percent of its 2018 value. Based on the Occupational Wages Survey 2022, the average monthly wage in the country is P18,423. An increase of P100 per day will roughly translate to an increase of 16 percent in the average monthly wage. It will be able to almost bring the purchasing power back to 2018. A higher level of increase may defeat the purpose, as it will be more than restoring the purchasing power and could lead to higher inflation.

Regardless of what the government decides, careful balancing is essential. This should not lead to inflation expectations, nor justifications for firms to lay off workers. Government must be ready to walk the tight rope, as the desired good can lead either way for the economy.

Ultimately, it would be good to let productivity improvements address issues of purchasing power. This means pursuing reforms towards supporting and improving sectors in the economy that are highly productive, such as manufacturing, and providing pathways for those left behind to be able to shift from low-productivity sectors to higher ones.

Dr. Alvin P. Ang is Chairperson of the Department of Economics at Ateneo de Manila University and Senior Research Fellow at the Ateneo Center for Economic Research and Development.

Friday, March 1, 2024
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WatCH Dr. alvin P.

Katherine Graham, press freedom champion

BoB WoodWARd and Carl Bernstein, the Washington Post reporters covering Watergate, were told by their office guards that a server delivered a subpoena for their notes on a developing story.

They informed their editor, Ben Bradlee, who immediately consulted with publisher Katherine Meyer Graham who owned the responsibility for the story. “They’re not their notes,” she said. “They’re mine. And if anyone’s going to jail, it’s going to be me.”

At the 50th anniversary of the Watergate scandal in 2022, Bernstein called it “one of the great moments in journalism history.”

The Washington Post, a familyowned media company, extensively covered Watergate with Woodward and Bernstein’s dogged reporting. Such persistence wouldn’t be possible without the unwavering editorial support of Bradlee and Graham.

The paper faced risks and threats for publishing the Watergate stories. Graham received criticism even from friends and was advised to tread carefully due to President Richard Nixon’s alleged vindictive reputation. However, the paper stuck to its guns.

The scandal forced Nixon’s resignation, and the Post, according to Graham, “was put on the map, its credibility verified and became a major league player.”

Born into wealth, Graham’s father, financier Eugene Meyer, bought the Washington Post in 1933. In 1940, she married Phil Leslie Graham, a lawyer and former Harvard Law Review editor who became close to her father. Phil took over the company in 1959, following Eugene Meyer’s wishes, which Katherine did not begrudge.

All wasn’t rosy in paradise because Phil allegedly had an affair with Robin Webb, a stringer of Newsweek, which was also owned by the Post. Phil reportedly told his friends in 1963 that he was leaving Katherine for Robin. Tragedy struck when Phil, battling mental condition, committed suicide.

Katherine, lacking publisher experience, took the helm of the Post. Her strengths, however, included a willingness to learn, determination, business acumen, courage and a commitment to telling the truth.

Unlike other publishers motivated by power, Graham entered the role as a majority shareholder in the family business.

In the aftermath of Watergate, Graham never boasted about contributing to Nixon’s resignation. In an interview, she said: “We were pleased at having our reporting vindicated. But I don’t think that anybody wanted to bring him down or thought that the President of the United States having to resign because he would be impeached was a great event for the country. We didn’t.”

Angara

. . .

continued from A12

Cine Margaha: The festival by the sea

THer commitment to editorial independence was a key factor in the Post’s success and surprised many outside the media industry. While some publishers believed they could dictate content, Graham was a cut above the rest.

“Owners and publishers don’t tell editors what to do. We don’t protect friends from scrutiny, nor do we target those we disagree with. Some think I can order the newsroom to attack someone. I can’t, I don’t and I wouldn’t,” she said.

The Post’s editorial autonomy attracted top journalists. Graham believed editors should be free to pursue the news as they see it. “They should have the liberty. Indeed, it is their duty to probe, question and challenge the status quo and conventional wisdom, as someone put it long ago, to afflict the comfortable and comfort the afflicted,” she said.

What she required of herself as the publisher is “to be in on the takeoff as well as on the landing.”

Delegation to competent department heads was crucial for Graham’s success. Her principles in running the Post focused on obligations to readers, advertisers, stockholders and those they reported on. “The Post’s first rule is to do no harm, tell no lies, and print the facts as best we can determine them,” she said.

Graham valued quality journalism, which involved, in her words, “fresh thinking, aggressive reporting, diverse voices, and lively, nonformula writing for a mass audience.”

As the first woman to lead a major media outlet, she proved she was no pushover. She and her reporters faced threats from the Nixon administration, and she had previously published the Pentagon Papers despite risks to the company, which was in the process of going public then. But Graham followed her instincts and went ahead with its publication.

Regarding institutions the Post reported on, she said: “I don’t believe we owe them a piece of our publication. They act as though we should give them a voice, cover their particular activity or cause, and portray them in a certain way. I don’t believe we can ever surrender our editorial judgment and control”.

In 1998, Graham’s autobiography, “Personal History,” won the Pulitzer Prize. This columnist wrote to her about how her story resonated with me, and to my surprise, she replied on September 24, 1998 with the Washington Post’s return address. It remains one of my most-treasured letters, reminding me that I should be fearless amid life’s challenges.

we join the ranks of the world’s fastest growing economies. But with the Tatak Pinoy Act in place, we are ensuring that the entire country will be moving in the same direction while traversing the road towards industrialization.

Tito Genova Valiente annoTaTions

he memory remains: the skies were overcast and the surge has caused the waves to lap up at the bamboo posts of the huge house, part of a complex of structures built by the artist Nunelucio Alvarado.

It was late February and there was chill in the air, a great part of it caused by what could have been the widest expanse of beach in this part of the world and the wind it allowed to pass over the black sand.

The first film festival was about to open in Sagay City, a city some 90 kilometers from Bacolod, the more recognizable name in Negros Occi dental. It was my first time in that charming city and I was not prepared for what would constitute the most daring opening ceremonies for a re gional film festival.

Out there in the sea, a platform was being buffeted by the waves. On top of it were dancers, one was bear ing a pole at the end of which was the Philippine flag. Danger and a sense of daring brought this creativity to such a height it became part of how I would always remember this city, its film artists and the film festival it has since nurtured.

I am back in the city for the fifth time, to judge again a film com petition that, up to this date, has produced more than 35 short films already. Last year, the entries to the Sine Margaha were entered in the bigger festival in Bacolod called Sine Negrense and won major and minor roles. Overnight, Sagay and Sine Margaha became a force to reckon with. Like in the previous edition, the local city officials headed by Vice Mayor Leo Rafael M. Cueva and Councilor Marañon were present to provide support.

honor the artists. A van brought us to the entrance of Barangay Bougainvillea where a community project was initiated by Nune. It was a movement called “Pinta Balay,” which involved practically all the members of the en-

prove to be knowledgeable about the mangroves that proliferated along the way. Such information would eventually reveal what they are: ecology-conscious and environmentally aware individuals.

Less dramatic this time but nevertheless still extraordinary was the program that followed. The platform for the performance was there and although it was on land this time, there were still challenges for the performers who had to dance and the local city officials who had to deliver their addresses. For where the sea had receded there was the soft sand to tread. But the dictum “the show must go on” proved to the protocol for that afternoon.

From afar, we could see a fluvial parade, with a flotilla of boats doing a pass-and-review.

and stepping onto the platform to take a bow. Where would you see such a glorious and gorgeous entrance?

Our table was right up front and had the following jurors: Butch Ybañez who is the current Chair of the Executive Committee on Cinema under the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA), Chai Fonacier, the much admired actor in the foreign film Nocebo, and, Arden Condez, one of the top directors of his generation, with John Denver Trending cementing that reputation, and this writer, a film critic and Vice-Chair of the cinema committee. When Grace Mission came out from behind the Led Wall with a huge bottle of tuba and a grin on her mouth, we knew that delicacy would land on our table.

As the tradition goes, the festival opened at the Margaha beach fronting the home of Nune Alvarado. And as tradition goes, we were once more treated to the most original welcome and hospitality created to

kad (a kind of pedicab) drivers who would be our guide to the village. They were holding a bouquet of bougainvillea blooms, a sign that they would be our hosts for that day. But they were not your regular welcoming committee; they would

crafting trailers. The end of the trail ers was timed with the boat finally reaching the shore. From afar, we could see the filmmakers (usually the director and his or her main actor or cinematographer) wading ashore and surfacing from behind the screen

Grace’s film was Mananguete, a short film about the vanishing tradition of gathering the sap from the coconut tree to produce the muchvaunted tuba. The film would eventually win the heritage award named after Nunelucio Alvarado.

Its citation reads: “What is a good film without its charming commentaries about human kinship? This film reminds us, through its keen observations of the everyday life, that the family can be simply described by two scenes in the film: those of the parents working hard to give their child a good life and the heartwarming assurance that children do go home to take care of their parents out of filial piety and love. The film is also an assurance of that one grand but often forgotten task of filmmakers—the serious documentation of vanishing traditions.”

Another film, Taga-Taga, a Sagaynon name for praying mantis, explored the life of the insect and the nature of the female to kill its male partner. Its citation says: Highly experimental in form and content, this film brings to a world that, while human emotions still exist, are really about different creatures. Different from us, they are part of Nature and we learn more about being human from them than from depictions of how we are superior to them. The film would win the top prize.

Magna Carta of Filipino Seafarers ‘under review’

TE-mail: titovaliente@yahoo.com faster processing of VAT refunds for Tatak Pinoy enterprises. The TPC will facilitate market access and engage in the promotion of goods produced by the Tatak Pinoy industries, both domestically and overseas. The government financial institutions will provide low-interest, flexible loan programs and other instruments for the Tatak Pinoy enterprises. We still have a long way to go before

Senator Sonny Angara has been in public service for 19 years—9 years as Representative of the Lone District of Aurora, and 10 as Senator. He has authored, co-authored, and sponsored more than 330 laws. He is currently serving his second term in the Senate. E-mail: sensonnyangara@yahoo.com| Facebook, Twitter & Instagram: @sonnyangara

Pinoy Marino Rights

he Magna Carta of Filipino Seafarers was not signed into law by President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on Monday, February 26, 2024, and was later withdrawn by the house of Representatives.

There were three bills that were set to be approved by Marcos but instead he only signed the other two: Republic Act 11981, or the Tatak Pinoy (Proudly Filipino) Act, and RA 11982, or the Expanded Centenarians Act.

Presidential Communications

Office Secretary Cheloy Garafil said the bill was “under further review.”

The Magna Carta seeks to implement the standards set by the Maritime Labor Convention of 2006 (MLC 2006), also known as the Seafarers’ Bill of Rights and the fourth pillar of international maritime law.

The MLC 2006 established minimum working and living standards for all seafarers working on ships flying the flags of ratifying countries.

The Philippines was the 30th state that deposited its instrument of ratification on Aug. 20, 2012.

The Magna Carta aimed to ensure protection and welfare of Filipino seafarers by recognizing their rights and instituting mechanisms for enforcement.

The House of Representatives approved on March 6, 2023 its version (House Bill 7325) with 304 affirmative votes against 4 negative votes.

The Senate approved Senate Bill

2221 on second and third reading on September 27, 2023 with 14 affirmative votes, no negative vote, and no abstention.

The bicameral conference committee met to reconcile the provisions of the two versions and to come up with the common bill. The delay in the signing and the withdrawal is attributed to some contentious issues raised by some sectors.

The Philippine Association of Maritime Institutions (PAMI) opposed the education and training provisions under Chapter XVIII on Shipboard Training of Cadets, which mandates maritime schools, among others, to buy a training ship as part of the on-board training (OBT) requirement of maritime students.

PAMI said that this may lead to higher tuition, closure of manning agencies, and reduction of crew members. It added that the Magna Carta should not cover students but only professional seafarers.

The transfer of jurisdiction of disputes from the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) to the International Labor Organization (ILO) was also raised as an issue.

The debate on disability claims centered on the proposed provision

The requirement for an execution bond violates the constitutional guarantee on equal protection, which means that all persons or things similarly situated should be treated alike, both as to rights conferred and responsibilities imposed.

that aimed to amend the Labor Code will have adverse significant impact on the “immediately final and executory” nature of decisions issued by the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) and the National Conciliation and Mediation Board (NCMB).

The House version contains the controversial escrow/execution bond provision while these were omitted in the Senate version.

The bicameral committee omitted the escrow but the bill still contained an equally anti-labor and unconstitutional provision on execution bond.

The seafarer may move for the execution of the monetary award pending appeal upon posting of a sufficient bond for the disputed portion of the award. And if the seafarer ultimately prevails in the case, he will be reimbursed with the cost of putting up the bond.

Sweepingly linked with ambulance chasing, proponents stressed that such a move is necessary to ensure the restitution of monetary awards in case the appropriate appellate court annuls or partially or totally reverses the monetary judgment award.

Under the Labor Code, the posting of bond is imposed only on the side of the employer. Labor is required to

pay only a minimal appeal fee.

The proponents of the execution bond erroneously presumed that the seafarer is in the same economic footing as the employer.

A seafarer seeks payment of monetary benefits because of the fact that he is in financial distress due to his medical condition.

Many are jobless, sick, disabled and infirm who incur huge debts to sustain their medication, while others die before the decision by the Supreme Court is released.

Instead of saving his earnings for his medication, he will be forced to redirect them to the execution bond, jeopardizing further his economic well-being.

The requirement for an execution bond violates the constitutional guarantee on equal protection, which means that all persons or things similarly situated should be treated alike, both as to rights conferred and responsibilities imposed.

It will partake of the nature of class legislation because it singles out seafarer claims from other labor claims, both local and overseas. It is discriminatory against seafarers, as there’s no substantial distinction between the claims of a seafarer and any other laborer.

Seafarers will be “penalized” and that will downplay their rights guaranteed by the constitution instead of protecting their rights and promoting their welfare.

Seafarers must be vigilant against a watered-down magna carta.

Atty. Dennis R. Gorecho heads the seafarers’ division of the Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan law offices. For comments, please e-mail info@ sapalovelez.com or call 0917-5025808 or 09088665786

Friday, March 1, 2024 Opinion A13 BusinessMirror www.news.businessmirror@gmail.com

Noting RE easing bonanza, DOE, utilities back Cha-cha

THE Department of Energy (DOE) and public utility organizations are backing the relaxation of economic restrictions in the 1987 Constitution, anticipating the creation of 1.5 million job opportunities due to the government’s decision to permit 100 percent foreign ownership in the renewable energy (RE) sector from 2022 onwards.

On the third day of the House of Representatives hearing on Resolution of Both Houses No. 7 on Wednesday, DOE Undersecretary Sharon Garin revealed that the RE sector employed approximately 357,459 individuals in 2022.

Extrapolating from this data, she estimated there would be 10 direct jobs and 30 indirect jobs per megawatt (MW), projecting a total of at least 1.5 million positions for 2023 new contracts based on potential capacity.

Garin said the surge in foreign investments in the RE sector would

not only boost job opportunities directly related to RE but also create additional employment in port development, mining (specifically in vanadium), and transmission lines.

“Other than investments in the development of [RE], other components that will come in because of the trillions of investments from foreign investors are port development. We will need at least 10 new ports in order to cater to offshore wind projects,” Garin said.

“In mining, the battery components include rare earth metals

from our indigenous resources, including vanadium and sandium [an aluminum-scandium alloy used in Russian MIG fighter planes, highend bicycle frames, and baseball bats]. The additional transmission lines, including a newly proposed smart green grid, will require more copper,” she said.

Garin observed that in the manufacturing sector, foreign firms have already explored opportunities in the Philippines, seeking sites to manufacture turbines and semiconductor controllers, with the goal of locally producing all manufacturing components, including plates, turbines, and towers.

The DOE official also noted foreign interest in the manufacturing sector, with companies exploring opportunities to produce turbines and semiconductor controllers locally. Since the authorization of 100-percent foreign ownership in RE investments, the government has seen a spike in investment applications, approving 275 service contract applications for 39,000 gigawatts (GW) of capacity valued at approximately P8 trillion.

“A few months after the amendment of the renewable energy IRR (implementing rules and regula -

MARCOS HAILS AUSSIES’ SUPPORT ON SCS ACCESS

tions), CIP, or Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners, became the first foreign investor to be granted site exclusivity in the Philippines to develop a renewable energy project. [In] March 2023, a few months after the issuance of the new IRR, it became the first 100-percent foreign-owned company to be awarded a renewable energy service contract in the country,” Garin said.

“CIP is investing $5 billion to develop three offshore wind energy projects in the Philippines with a potential capacity of 2,000 MW or 2 GW: 1,000 MW in Camarines Norte and Sur, 650 MW in Northern Samar, and 350 MW in Pangasinan and La Union. It will create 4,500 jobs, generate enough power to supply 1 million households, and offset 2.9 million tons of CO2 emissions per year,” she said.  In 2023, the Board of Investments (BOI) approved 52 power projects with a total capacity of 4.7 GW and an aggregate project cost of nearly P1 trillion.  Garin emphasized that 80 percent of the almost P1.3 trillion of foreign direct investments (FDI) registered under the BOI in 2023 were in energy projects. Continued on A4

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. on Thursday called for international cooperation to ensure continued free access to the South China Sea (SCS), which he said is crucial in maintaining global peace.

“The protection of the South China Sea as a vital, critical global artery is crucial to the preservation of regional peace and, I daresay, of global peace,” Marcos said during his address before the Australian Parliament.

“We are called upon once again to join forces, together with our partners, in the face of threats to the rule of law, to stability, and to peace,” he added. The President made the pronouncements amid new reports of a Chinese warship being sighted in the West Philippine Sea (WPS), parts of the SCS within the country’s territory. China has cited “historic right” to lay claim to the entire SCS.

In previous months, Chinese Coast Guard ships also fired water cannons on Philippine Coast Guard ships on a Rotation and Resupply (RORE) mission in the Ayungin Shoal located in the WPS.

Despite the incidents, Marcos said his administration will not yield to any attempts by other countries to take over Philippine territory.

“The challenges that we face may be formidable, but equally formidable is our resolve,” Marcos said.

International deterrence HE thanked the Australian government for extending support to the Philippines in maintaining “unimpeded passage and freedom of navigation” in the SCS.

“And so, on behalf of the Filipino people, I thank you, Australia, for standing with the Republic of the Philippines,” Marcos said.

The country has several security and defense agreements with Australia, including a Visiting Forces Agreement.

Peter Dutton, the leader of the opposition in the Australian Parliament, agreed with Marcos on the need for an “international deterrence” against “emboldened autocrats and belligerent regimes who show utter contempt for sovereignty, law and liberty.”

“Together with our many partners and friends in the region, we must all continue to speak up with courage in calling out acts of intimidation and interference. We must all maintain our strenuous efforts in diplomacy and we must all especially lift our individual efforts to support our collective goal of integrated deterrence,”Dutton said.

He said he hopes the said“defense deterrence” will be further discussed during the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean)-Australia Special Summit.

Marcos concluded his two-day state visit in Canberra, Australia on Thursday.

He will be flying to Melbourne, Australia on March 4 to 6 to participate in the Asean-Australia Summit.

Sinag slams pork importers for warning on ‘restrictions’

THE Samahang Industriya ng Agrikultura has criticized pork importers who warned that prices of the Filipinos’ favorite source of protein could rise if the government curbs imports.

Over the past years, Sinag Executive Director Jayson Cainglet noted in a statement, pork imports have exceeded its commitment to the World Trade Organization (WTO) by at least tenfold, enjoying a substantially lower tariff of 25 percent.

Cainglet stressed that the country’s commitment stipulates a limit of 54,000 metric tons per year for pork imports, subject to a 35-percent tariff.

With this, Cainglet questioned whether there are any actual limitations imposed on their imports.

“Are they being hindered in their imports? Obviously, they are not limited to imports. What are the importers complaining about? Have they run out of grievances?” he said.

Adding to the complexity, Cainglet said there is now a renewed threat of

pork price increases.

“Now, they are dangling pork prices again. We have been under a lower pork tariff regime for four years; have pork prices actually decreased?” he said.

“Previously, the blame for the situation was placed on Covid-19 by the National Economic and Development Authority [Neda] and the importers. Then came the Ukraine war, followed by El Niño. And now, the new concern is the alleged limitation on their imports,” he added. Even with the implementation of Executive Order 50, Cainglet said dissatisfaction persists among the importers.

“It seems that even with Executive Order 50 in place, they are still dissatisfied,” he said.  President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. has issued EO 50, which maintains the temporary modification of rates of import duty on rice, corn, and meat products to ensure affordable prices of the goods amid the looming effects of the El Niño phenomenon and the African Swine Fever.

Also, Cainglet questioned whether the penalties imposed on local producers and the government’s loss of revenue over the last four years have

not been substantial enough.

“Is the penalty on local producers and the loss of government revenues in the last four years not enough?

Yet, consumers have not benefited as pork prices remain high,” he said.

Cainglet is also asking Neda and the importers to clarify the purported benefits of unlimited imports and tariff reductions.

“We again ask Neda and these importers: Where is the supposed benefit of unlimited imports and tariff reductions? ” he said.

Meanwhile, the Sinag officials commended the Department of Agriculture’s (DA) leadership for standing firm against the importers’ demands.

“We laud the DA leadership for rejecting the whims of these importers. No one is stopping them from importing, and the DA has not ceased issuing Sanitary and Phytosanitary Import Clearance (SPSIC),” he said.

“We are happy to help these importers file cases with the WTO. We will support them in their legal battle against the government; so we can all expose their hypocrisy and callousness!” he added.

A14 Friday, March 1, 2024
GLITTERING HISTORY Maria Angelica Santos-Bermejo, a renowned self-taught jeweler and passionate advocate for heritage preservation, unveils her masterpiece, Alahas: Philippine Heritage Jewelry, at the Ayala Museum on Thursday, February 29, 2024 . The book, edited by historian Ambeth Ocampo and Renan Prado, embarks on a captivating journey through time, showcasing the evolution of Filipino jewelry from pre-colonial epochs to the modern era. Santos-Bermejo’s 38 years of expertise in antique collection and design shine through as she revitalizes traditional craftsmanship, offering contemporary women a glimpse into our rich cultural legacy through stunning heritage pieces. 6

Converge CEO to recreate Silicon Valley in Pampanga

Tech tycoon Dennis Anthony h. Uy has unveiled an ambitious plan to build a so-called “Tech city” in his hometown Pampanga, a site that aims to cradle the next generation of tech giants, akin to Amazon, Google, and Facebook.

Uy, the CEO of Converge ICT Solutions Inc., said the planned Tech City—to be built on a 117-hectare land between the cities of Mexico and Angeles—will be implemented under his “personal venture.”

He said the plan is to attract industries that foster innovation and drive growth in technology-led sectors within the country. The Tech City is envisioned as a hub for in-

novation and technology education, with the goal of transforming the landscape of tech-related industries in the Philippines.

“I dream of creating an ecosystem for technology. In this venture and will concentrate on innovation and tech-related sectors. Software programmers, animators, game developers, even semiconductor designers— we want to attract downstream tech

fields in the Tech City. At the same time, we want to nurture the business side of innovation, hence our pitch to start-ups as well.”

Uy has enlisted the expertise of renowned consultants and technical advisers. The Egis Group, a global construction engineering company specializing in intelligent infrastructure and buildings, is among the key collaborators. Other partners include 10Design, EY Philippines-SGV & Co., B-Global, Rurban Strategic Development Planners Inc., GFP Architects, and Colliers.

Drawing inspiration from Silicon Valley, Uy emphasizes that the Tech City will have distinctly Filipino foundations. Education and enculturation will be rooted in local knowledge, with a focus on establishing training institutes that certify Filipinos as IT engineers and professionals.

The project aims to create a workforce equipped with essen -

tial skills in technology and serve as an incubation hub for various industries.

“I want this technology hub to have training institutes that will certify Filipinos as IT engineers and professionals, the education will be from the ground up and produce the workforce with the necessary skills in technology. Tech City will be an incubation hub as well for this industry which encompasses sub sectors like fintech, e-commerce, and digital content creation,” Uy said.

The Tech City will also host the headquarters and data centers of Converge.

“We’re moving into value-added services or products that go beyond connectivity. We have the digital highway in place so in the future, there will be apps like OTT services, software and cloud solutions that need to be housed in our data centers.”

SMIC to grow portfolio investments

SM Investments Corp. (SMIC) said it will expand its portfolio investments in its logistics and geothermal units to drive further growth.

“These are the two key portfolio companies, which we continue to really focus on and we want to grow, because we believe that the potential is there,” Frederic DyBuncio, SMIC’s chief executive officer, said.

DyBuncio said SMIC is increas-

SEC gives nod to CLI share sale

THE Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has approved the plan of Cebu Landmasters Inc. (CLI) to raise as much as P5 billion from the public offering of its preferred shares.

During its en banc meeting, the SEC approved the registration statement of Cebu Landmasters covering up to 3 million series A preferred shares, with an oversubscription option of up to 2 million preferred shares, priced at P1,000 per share.

The listed Cebu-based company could net up to P4.96 billion from the offer, which will be used for project development or capital expenditures (capex) for various real estate projects and for general corporate purposes.

The perpetual, cumulative, nonvoting, non-participating, non-convertible and redeemable Philippine peso-denominated series A preferred shares will be issued from March 19 to April 2, and be listed and traded on the main board of the Philippine Stock Exchange, according to the latest timetable submitted by the company to the SEC.

Cebu Landmasters engaged BPI Capital Corp., China Bank Capital Corp., PNB Capital and Investment Corp. and RCBC Capital Corporation as

lead underwriters for the offer. VG Cabuag

Higher expenses pull down income of Manila Water

Ming the ships of its unit 2Go Group Inc. after the delivery of two new additions in December and January, bringing the company’s fleet to 10 cargo and passenger vessels. He said SM is looking to acquire an additional ship.

On the geothermal business, DyBuncio said unit Allfirst Equity Holdings Inc., which holds interest in the Tiwi and MakBan geothermal steam fields in Albay and in Laguna-Batangas areas, is set to develop six more wells, which could reflect on the company’s bottomline in the next five years.

Allfirst is the holding company for Philippine Geothermal Production Co. Inc. (PGPC), which generates geothermal steam sufficient to produce approximately 300 megawatts of electricity. With the new wells, PGPC is targeting to hit 420 MW dependable capacity in the medium term.

DyBuncio also said SMIC is venturing into the data center business, partnering with a group that has land bank for a huge data center facility in Batangas.

He said the data center venture capitalizes on the boom of artificial

intelligence (AI) that requires massive infrastructure.

“Given the AI coming in, there’s going to be more need for servers to store all of this data. And in a lot of the other countries in the region, and even in Europe, they’re now trying to limit the data centers.”

Last year, net earnings of SMIC’s portfolio investment companies grew 6 percent, driven by buoyant passenger volumes in 2Go’s shipping business, the leisure and entertainment business of Belle Corp. and growth in the earnings of Goldilocks Bakeshop.

Meralco trims list of MMR sites

HE Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) has removed Isla del Provisor, which is right across Malacañang Palace, from its list of possible sites for its planned micro-modular reactor (MMR) energy system in the Philippines.

Meralco Chief Operating Officer and Executive Vice President Ronnie Aperocho said the proposed sites have been reduced to two—Talim Island in Rizal and San Rafael in Bulacan.

He said Isla del Provisor is no longer part of the 3 possible sites for its planned small-scale nuclear facility.

“It’s only in Rizal and Bulacan,” he said when asked if Meralco will still consider the proposed site near Malacañang.

The two possible sites are included in the pre-feasibility study which is now under review, Aperocho said. “We have already submitted the results of a pre-feasibility study and we are reviewing it and they are presenting their delegation here a few weeks from now.”

It can be recalled that Meralco signed a cooperative agreement with United States-based Ultra Safe Nuclear Corp. (USNC) to study the potential deployment of micro-modular reactor energy system.

USNC is a Seattle-headquartered company involved in micro-modular reactors.

The Department of Energy (DOE) has already included nuclear energy

as part of the 2023-2050 Philippine Energy Plan (PEP).

Last July 2023, DOE-Energy Policy and Planning Bureau Director Michael Sinocruz said the 2030-2050 PEP includes the commercial operation of 8×150 MW small modular nuclear reactors and the generation of 1,200 MW from a bigger nuclear power plant in Luzon by 2035.

Meralco’s planned MMR could be deployed in island provinces and cities. Meralco Chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan said MMRs are “actually good for the provinces since you don’t have to build a big, big plant.”

Aperecho added that Meralco will support the DOE in achieving its nuclear capacity target. “We will support the target. Hopefully, the DOE can achieve that target.”

Just recently, the DOE announced it would form a nuclear committee to help achieve its target of 2,400 MW of nuclear capacity as early as 2032.

Under Department Order No.

2024-01-01, DOE Secretary Raphael Lotilla approved the creation of the DOE Nuclear Energy Program Coordinating Committee to ensure its active participation in the in the Nuclear Energy Program Inter-Agency Committee.

Solar plant

M EANWHILE , Greentech Solar Energy, Inc., (GSEI), a subsidiary of MGen Renewable Energy Inc. (MGreen), announced that it broke ground for the 18.75 MWac solar power plant in Bongabon, Nueva Ecija.

The solar power facility is scheduled for commercial operations in the first quarter of 2025.

MGreen Government Relations and Industry Affairs First Vice President Philip Dasalla reaffirmed the company’s commitment to securing a sustainable future by building 1,500 MW of renewable energy projects by 2030.

“As part of One Meralco’s longterm sustainability agenda and as we heed to the call of the government for the attainment of 35 percent renewable energy target mix by 2030, we will ensure, together with our dedicated partners, to efficiently serve the country’s growing power needs with cleaner energy in costcompetitive manner.”

MGreen is the renewable energy arm of Meralco PowerGen Corp. (MGen), the power generation arm of the country’s largest power distribution utility firm Meralco.

Currently, it has three operating solar plants in Luzon. These are PowerSource First Bulacan Solar Inc., PH Renewables, Inc., and Nuevo Solar Energy Corp. with a total gross capacity of 198 MWac.

GSEI, meanwhile, is among the winning bidders in the DOE’s second round of Green Energy Auction Program.

Aside from Dasalla, the groundbreaking ceremony was attended by representatives from MGen and MGreen led by Executive Vice President and Expanding Markets Division Head Dan Neil.

ANILA Water Co. Inc., a utility firm controlled by billionaire Enrique K. Razon Jr., said its income fell 4 percent to P5.87 billion in 2023 from the previous year’s P6.14 billion on higher expenses and losses incurred by its international business.

The East Zone concessionaire said its revenues rose 34 percent to P30.7 billion from the previous year’s P22.79 billion, driven by the continued recovery of customer demand with the resumption of economic activities, as well as implementation of tariff adjustments and several non-East zone businesses in the country.

“In our East Zone business, the implementation of the first set of tariff adjustments has allowed us to continue our projects in compliance with our service obligations. Similarly, we see good results from our non-East Zone subsidiaries, such as Boracay, South Luzon and Calbayog which have posted turnarounds in operations,” Jose Victor Emmanuel A. De Dios, the company’s president and CEO, said.

“For our international businesses, the deliberate view we take on our legacy investments is evidence of our disciplined portfolio management. We will further streamline our investments and look for better growth opportunities. We are hopeful that our hard work will continue to yield positive results for the rest of the year.”

At Manila Water’s East Zone Concession, net income improved by 60 percent to P8.8 billion as higher revenues and effective cost management drove the significant growth in earnings, the company said.

Revenues grew by 41 percent to P24.1 billion with the implementation of the rate rebasing tariff adjustment early last year, as well as the increase in consumption across all customer segments. Meanwhile, cost increases in line with higher production volume and completion of new facilities were offset by non-recurring costs recognized in 2022.

Last January 2023, Manila Water implemented the first tranche of tariff adjustments in line with its approved rate rebasing service improvement plan.

In the said plan, Manila Water committed to invest close to P100 billion over the next five years to continue its water supply and network improvement projects, as well as to expand coverage and capacity of its wastewater system.

The company’s non-East Zone Philippines group continued to strengthen its business trajectory to end the year at P50 million in earnings.

Billed volume grew by 6 percent, coupled with tariff adjustments and higher contributions from several of its key businesses to drive revenues to P5.8 billion.

Meanwhile, cost and expenses rose by 11 percent to P3.5 billion with higher direct and manpower costs.

For Manila Water’s international operations, the positive performance of its Vietnam bulk water businesses and operations in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia were offset by higher interest expenses and the impairment recognized for East Water. These developments led to a net loss of P3.9 billion for Manila Water International for 2023.

The company said it spent some P21.6 billion in capital expenditures last year. VG Cabuag

BusinessMirror
Companies B1 Friday, March 1, 2024
joint
Photo from www.manilawater.com

TBanking&Finance

More Pinoys went cashless in 2023

CASH may no longer be king in the Philippine payment space, a survey conducted by Visa Inc.

Based on the American multinational payment card services corporation’s Consumer Payment Attitude Study, only 87 percent of their respondents used cash for their transactions in 2023 compared to 96 percent in 2022.

Visa Country Manager for the Philippines Jeffrey V. Navarro said the data showed Filipinos’ use of mobile phones, QR codes and cards for payments increased to 87 percent last year.

“What’s very important is really the role of the regulator at the beginning, when they said that they want to transform retail payments to digital,” Navarro told reporters on the sidelines of the briefing last Thursday. “And because that’s part of their national agenda and transformation roadmap, they work(ed) with a lot of the partners, the mo -

bile wallet operators, the financial institutions, to create products and services that can be easily accessed by consumers,” he explained.

In order to sustain these gains, Visa is already working with their partners to reach the “last mile” by creating offline solutions that Filipinos can use.

These offline solutions, which are still being developed, can enable Filipinos living in areas with slow to no Internet connection to make cashless payments.

Navarro said this is something that Visa plans to pilot this year or early 2025 in order to fasttrack digitalization and financial inclusion nationwide.

“So we’re trying to work with some of our issuers and acquirers to see if we can do something that’s offline. But these are very early discussions.

There’s still no concrete solution. But it’s really one of those that we want to do because it, again, supports the national agenda of the government for financial inclusion,” Navarro said.

Based on the data, Navarro said 83 percent of their respondents attempted to go cashless in 2023. This was driven mainly by the younger generation of Filipinos.

Among Generation Z, the attempt to go cashless was 87 percent and among Generation Y, 86 percent. More affluent Filipinos at 87 percent also attempted to go cashless last year.

The data also showed 43 percent of Filipinos carried less cash in their wallets compared to 2022. Visa said Filipinos, on average, can go cashless for 10 days.

Given this, one in three Filipinos believed that the Philippines could already become a cashless society by 2030 or less than a decade.

The optimism stems from the increse in the acceptance of cashless transactions nationwide. This includes those made through mobile phones at 87 percent; cards, 63 percent; and contactless cards, 52 percent

Cashless payments were made in supermarkets at 88 percent; food and dining, 86 percent; bill payments, 82 percent; retail shopping, 80 percent; and convenience stores, 75 percent.

Meanwhile, based on the 2022 Annual Poverty Indicators Survey results, online buying transactions was the most common online transaction made using the internet by families with 59.7 percent.

The data released by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) was followed by bills payment at 27.2 percent and banking at 18.2 percent; others, 11.7 percent; and selling, 8.8 percent.

The majority or 73.1 percent of families living in urban areas used the Internet in the last six months while it was more than half or 56.9 percent in rural areas. For urban areas, PSA said 67.5 percent of online transactions were made to buy items while 35.3 percent was for bills payments; 24.7 percent for banking; 10.5 percent, others; and 10.1 percent, selling. For rural areas, the APIS data showed almost half or 49 percent of online transactions were for buying items; 16 percent for bills payment;

13.3 percent, others; 9.3 percent, banking; and 7 percent, selling.

Earlier, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) disclosed the central bank may have reached the 50 percent of its digital payments target last year.

BSP Deputy Governor Mamerto E. Tangonan said given this, the central bank remains bullish about the growth of digital payment technologies. Tangonan added the BSP is committed to facilitating the efficient delivery of financial services to the unbanked and micro-sized, small-scale and medium-sized enterprises.

The head of the central bank’s Payments and Currency Management Sector credited the significant strides in digital payments to the implementation of the BSP’s 20202023 Digital Payments Transformation Roadmap with the support of its public and private sector partners.

The BSP said the Bills Pay Ph has also been launched to unify the country’s fragmented bills payment system and allow users to pay their bills whether or not they have an account with their billers’ payment service provider.

Leveraging on commercial thinking Easing inflation helped SECB hit ₧9.1B income

Ttion.He explained that a producer needs to pay three types of taxes for each film: a 10-percent amusement tax; value added tax; and, an income tax.

These made “us the most heavilytaxed movie industry in the world,” Reyes said emphasizing that the 3-year moratorium of amusement tax will mean survival for the industry.

Local movie industry players have voiced out this concern to Interior and Local Government Secretary Benhur Abalos during the screening of the inaugural Manila International Film Festival held last January. In a roundtable discussion, Abalos has presented ease of doing business initiatives in the country to the producers, film makers, actresses and actors. He also emphasized the support of the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) to bring back “the glory of Philippine cinema.”

“The DILG is in full support to reinvigorate the Filipino filmmaking industry and help them by bringing back the local moviegoers into watching in cinemas again,” he said.

The moratorium on the imposition of amusement taxes excludes the period of the MMFF, which is from December 25 of every year until January 7 of the following year. Amusement taxes during the said period are waived by LGUs of Metro Manila in favor and in support of MMFF beneficiaries such as the FDCP, the Movie Workers Welfare Foundation (Mowelfund), the Film Academy of the Philippines, the Motion Picture AntiFilm Piracy Council and the Optical Media Board.

HE Philippine Council of Associations and Association Executives (PCAAE) recently kicked off its first webinar this year, “Revenue Generation and Diversification for Associations.” The presenter was Deanna Varga, CEO and founder of Australia-based Mayvin Global and an adjunct associate professor at the University of Technology of Sydney. Varga’s presentation was based on her white paper, “Diversifying Revenue: An Association’s Guide to Kick Start Commercial Thinking.”

“Commercial thinking” refers to a mindset that emphasizes a businessoriented perspective when analyzing situations, making decisions, or solving problems. In the context of associations, commercial thinking revolves around applying businessoriented strategies to enhance financial sustainability. Traditionally, associations rely heavily on membership dues and sponsorships. However, the changing dynamics of funding sources necessitate a shift towards a more entrepreneurial and commercially savvy approach. Here are Deanna’s eight strategies to boost revenue:

1. Mission-focused. Clearly understand the overarching mission of the association and recognize that commercial thinking is a means to support and enhance it, not compromise it. For example, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) issues licenses that identify products that have considered the welfare of animals, and assures the public the items they consume or use meet a standard that RSPCA set.

Octavio Peralta Association World

2. Insurance. Offer exclusive benefits to members, such as discounts on industry-related products and services, that can be a source of non-dues revenue. Commercial thinking involves negotiating partnerships with businesses that offer valuable products or services and can provide discounts or special offers to association members. A tailored insurance program for your association is one example.

3. Collaboration. Consider a 3-year horizon in undertaking mission-aligned and mutually beneficial collaborations. The Records and Information Management Practitioners Alliance collaborated with its global sister association for additional benefits and access to a global network.

4. Self-regulation. Develop a regulation or an educational product to help members understand what it is and how to comply. When the Australian regulator was no longer going to provide advertising regulation services, the Consumer Healthcare Products Australia saw the opportunity to step in.

5. Partnerships. Build strategic partnerships with businesses that align with the association’s mission which can lead to sponsorships, advertising opportunities, and mutually beneficial collaborations. These are usually multiyear, multi-faceted contracts that give the most value to

By Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinario

THE Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. (Metrobank) raised a billion dollars from its recent foray into the international debt market with the longest senior dated bond issued by a Philippine bank.

In a statement on Thursday, Metrobank said it concluded its offering of a dual tranche, 5-year and 10-year US dollar denominated bonds amid overwhelming demand.

Metrobank said the proceeds of the bond issuance will be used to diversify the bank’s funding sources and establish a benchmark for Philippine bank credit in the international capital markets.

“We are positively overwhelmed with the high interest we received from global investors for this issuance. It shows their strong confidence on Metrobank’s credit and

both parties.

6. Brand leveraging. Use influencers or known personalities who can “sell” their endorsement to gain commercial advantage for the association. The Professional College Licensing Association, with a strong reputation as the only source of providing certain education credentials, licenses its education portfolio of courses to other entities.

7. Education and certification. Develop and commercialize educational programs, workshops, and certifications related to the association’s industry or field of expertise. Price these programs competitively, ensure they meet industry standards, and promote them effectively to attract participants.

8. White labeling. White labeling occurs when the producer of an item uses the branding requested by the purchaser or marketer instead of its own. For example, an association can develop a job board and other third-party services that support revenue diversification.

Other strategies to boost revenue include leaseholds, investments (property or finance), merchandising, publications/journals/thought leadership articles, research, consulting, social media platforms, and advertising opportunities. The options are endless; however, you need to find the right fit for your association.

Octavio Peralta is founder and volunteer CEO of the Philippine Council of Associations and Association Executives, the “association of associations.” The views he expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of the BusinessMirror. E-mail: bobby@ pcaae.org.

track record in the Philippines. This offering will fund the bank’s key growth initiatives as we continuously develop innovative financial solutions to serve our clients,” Metrobank President Fabian S. Dee said.

The 5-year and 10-year bonds were priced at 110 basis points and 130 basis points above the benchmark US Treasury notes, carrying fixed coupon rates of 5.375 percent and 5.5 percent, respectively.

The final order book was more than 11 times oversubscribed, reaching $5.6 billion from investors globally. Metrobank is the first private bank to issue a long-dated 10-year bond.

Metrobank said Moody’s gave the 5- and 10-year bonds an investment grade rating of Baa2, at par with the Republic of the Philippines sovereign dollar debt.

“We are grateful for the support shown by global investors in our re-

THE slowdown in inflation that boosted consumption allowed Security Bank Corp. (PSE: SECB) to post a net income of P9.1 billion in 2023.

In a statement last Thursday, the lender said total revenues grew 8 percent year-on-year to P43 billion. The bank also saw its net interest income increase by 19 percent to P34.7 billion.

SECB said its total non-interest income reached P8.2 billion. Service charges, fees and commissions grew 15 percent to P6.1 billion, led by increase in fees from credit cards, remittances (which include Instapay fees) and bancassurance.

“The economy is adjusting to moderating levels of inflation and continued elevated interest rates. Our growth for 2023 in both loans and deposits was evident across our retail and SME segments,” Security Bank President and CEO Sanjiv Vohra was quoted in the statement as saying.

“In turn, our wholesale teams successfully secured key mandates to support client growth initiatives. We will accelerate that growth in 2024 and continue to deliver on our Transformation goals,” Vohra said.

The lender said its operating expense was 14 percent higher, driven by investments in manpower and technology. Cost-to-income ratio was 60.8 percent, higher than the 57.8 percent in 2022.

Pre-provision operating profit was P16.9 billion, up 1 percent yearon-year. The bank also set aside P4.8

turn to the international bond market after a three-and-a-half-year hiatus. The results of this note offering is a clear indication of investors’ trust and confidence in the strongest bank in the Philippines,” said Fernand Antonio A. Tansingco, head of the lender’s Financial Markets Sector.

Metrobank said by geographical allocation, majority or 86 percent of the investors came from Asia Pacific (APAC) and 14 percent from Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA).

By investor type, the data showed 73 percent was allocated to fund managers; 14 percent to banks/financial institutions; and the remaining 13 percent were allocated to insurers, corporations and private banks.

The Bank of America Securities and UBS Group AG were the Joint Global Coordinators and Joint Bookrunners for the transaction, Mitsubishi UFJ Securities Co. Ltd. and

billion as provisions for credit and impairment losses in 2023. This was a 69-percent increase versus year-ago level of P2.8 billion given the impact of provisions releases in 2022 and elevated costs for credit cards in 2023. Gross non-performing loan ratio was 3.36 percent and NPL reserve cover was 82 percent. Return on shareholders’ equity was 6.95 percent. Return on assets was 1.06 percent.

Meanwhile, for the period October 1 to December 31, 2023, net income was P1.5 billion.

Fourth quarter revenues increased to P11.8 billion, up 15 percent year-on-year and up 11 percent quarter-on-quarter. Driving Q4-2023 revenue growth was net interest income, which increased 38 percent year-on-year and 11 percent quarter-on-quarter to P10 billion.

Net interest margin in the last quarter of 2023 increased to 5.2 percent, up 128 basis points year-onyear and up 34 basis points quarteron-quarter.

In the fourth quarter 2023, service charges, fees and commissions increased 29 percent year-on-year and 17 percent quarter-on-quarter to P1.8 billion.

Pre-provision operating profit for the quarter was P4.6 billion, up 18 percent year-on-year and up 13 percent quarter-on-quarter.

The bank set aside P2.2 billion as provisions for credit and impairment losses in the last quarter of 2023.

Cai U. Ordinario

First Metro Investment Corp. acted as Joint Bookrunners.

This issuance is part of the Metrobank’s $2-billion medium-term note program approved by its Board of Directors on March 22, 2017. Metrobank last tapped the international bond market in July 2020 when it raised $500 million from the issuance of 5.5-year bonds, which carried a fixed coupon of 2.125 percent, payable semi-annually.

Metrobank posted record earnings of P42.2 billion in 2023, 28.9 percent higher year-on- year.

The bank’s performance prompted the Board of Directors to approve a total cash dividend of P5per share for the year. The regular dividend was raised from P1.60 to P3 per share to be paid out on a semi-annual basis at P1.5 per share. In addition, a special cash dividend of P2 per share was also declared.

BusinessMirror
Estopace • Friday, March 1, 2024 B3 www.news.businessmirror@gmail.com
Editor: Dennis D.
Local films not to be taxed for next 3 yrs
HE policy-making body of the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) announced it passed a resolution suspending the collection of amusement taxes for the screenings of local films in Metro Manila for the next three years. MMDA Acting Chairman and Metro Manila Film Festival (MMFF) Overall Concurrent Chairman Romando S. Artes said that the resolution will soon be adopted by each local government unit in Metro Manila. “In support of the resolution, they will amend their respective local revenue codes to waive the amusement tax for Filipino movies exhibited in Metro Manila from January 8 to December 24 of every year for the next three years,” Artes said. The resolution of the Metro Manila Council (MMC) stated that the imposition of amusement tax in Filipino films “adds a financial burden to local film producers, potentially affecting the sustainability of the Filipino film industry.” During the MMC meeting last Wednesday, the Film Development Council of the Philippines through Film Director Jose Javier Reyes said that the state of the Philippine film industry is dismal and has declined significantly. Reyes said that during the pandemic, the film industry faced streaming platforms, content piracy and heavy taxa-
NEW US spot Bitcoin exchangetraded funds are shaking up the market for the original cryptocurrency after widening demand for the token and attracting more than $7 billion of net inflows in less than two months. The most visible change is a surge of over 45% in the price of the largest digital asset this year to about $63,000, bringing the pandemic-era record high of almost $69,000 into view. A looming reduction in Bitcoin’s supply growth, called the halving, has also stoked the rally. The ETFs are shifting the center of gravity for Bitcoin trading toward the US, and encouraging leveraged bets that lifted the cost of bullish wagers via perpetual futures to levels last seen in 2021. “The supply-demand imbalance here is really profound,” Coinshares Advisor Meltem Demirors said on Bloomberg Television. The charts below show how the impact of the ETFs is filtering across markets. Bitcoin’s rally since the turn of the year has topped stocks, extending a pattern seen in 2023. The momentum is attracting traders hunting for volatility. The new ETFs calculate their net asset value against dedicated benchmarks at the US close each weekday, a process that helps with Bitcoin price discovery. Trading volumes in the token are now jumping around that time. Overall trading volume in the spot Bitcoin ETFs—including products from titans BlackRock Inc. and Fidelity Investments—increased sharply to almost $8 billion last Wednesday as the token made a run toward a record. Bloomberg News
ETFs shake up crypto market
Wall
Metrobank raises $1B from issuance of dollar bonds
Bitcoin
after storming
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‘Dune’...sa bahay

PRIOR to the pandemic, I was an inveterate moviegoer. I would gleefully wait for the latest films, especially those which received good reviews, the epic franchises, and those offering quiet, thoughtful (or thought-provoking) moments.

But the closure of so many businesses, which ensued when Covid-19 began wreaking havoc on our lives, led to movie theaters becoming relics of a distant past. I don’t even remember what was the last film I watched in a movie theater. I want to say Avengers: Endgame, but that was shown in mid-2019, so it was probably a less grandiose movie, or some film festival feature shown toward the end of that year. (The beginnings of 2020 is a complete blank in that regard; forgive me, my brain had been completely taken over by anxieties over the spreading deadly virus.)

When pandemic restrictions finally eased, and movie theaters reopened, the first movie I wanted to watch was Dune. I have been a fan of the Frank Herbert series of novels since the 1980s, and on a regular basis over the years, I make it a point to read the first book on which this Timothée Chalamet-Zendaya-starrer has been based. But by the time I managed to haul my ass to the theater near me, it was no longer showing, an abruptly-ended run apparently due to the lack of patrons.

In 2021, when Dune: Part One was shown, everyone was understandably still unsure about going back to the theaters. Even theater managers were tentative, requiring patrons to wear masks, and forbidding eating. What?!?! No popcorn and other munchies while watching movies? Whattajoke. So we all stayed home and watched Dune instead on HBO Go (it is now on Netflix too), or your favorite bootleg movie site.

The smaller screen regardless, Dune was epic. Directed by Denis Villenueve (Blade Runner 2049), to me it is the best film version of the book so far, and believe me I’ve watched all its silver screen iterations. The most popular prior to the 2021 version was directed by David Lynch (Eraserhead, Blue Velvet, Twin Peaks) and released in 1984. It starred Kyle MacLachan as Paul Atreides, Patrick Stewart as Gurney Halleck, and Sting as Feyd Rautha. (I must confess, I was partly moved to watch it because of Sting.)

But I guess technology has finally caught up, so Villenueve has been able to give us a film that captures the richly imaginative scenes and creative sequences that the book has provided its many readers/fans over the years, along with the brilliant writing of Herbert. It shows the massiveness of the sand worms, which can grow as large as 450 meters or about as long as four football fields, and the seeming delicate-as-a-dragonfly but powerful transporter that is the ornithopter, along with the beautiful and breathtaking desert.

Of course, there are some details that are different between the film and book. For instance, on print, Paul’s mother, Lady Jessica, actually gets swallowed up by the sand as they try to cross the desert in search of the Fremen, a hardy and fierce community of desert-dwellers. It was a detail that stressed the intense Bene Gesserit training of Lady Jessica, which was really not needed in that portion of the film. In the film, the audience readily accepts that Lady Jessica is trained in the mysterious ways of the mystic, religious sisterhood as soon as she asks Paul to use The Voice to force her to give him a glass of water

at the breakfast table, or when she talks about his training with the Bene Gesserit Mother Superior who has come to visit them.

Now that Dune: Part Two is playing in local theaters, I was planning to go and watch it on the big screen. Publicist and fellow columnist Philip Cu-unjieng encourages everyone to watch the movie in IMAX, and so of course I quickly went to try and buy a ticket online. But good Lord! An IMAX ticket is now P750 per person, up from the pre-pandemic P480. That the IMAX format is only available at SM Cinema immediately cuts down a patron’s choice where to watch it.

And when I checked non-IMAX theaters, a ticket with good choice seating, like at Ayala Vertis North Cinema, is now P520! (I remember when I just paid P350 for a ticket there and because of the quality of seating, and placement of spaces in between the seats, I didn’t have to hear the people at the back talking and bickering over the movie’s plot.) The cheapest seats I found is P380 per person (SM), while at the regular Ayala cinema, it is P390 per person (prior to the pandemic it was P200-250, and regularly bought tickets via Sureseats). Yikes!

I’m not sure how many of you have gone back to watching movies on the big theater screen, but at these prices, my streaming services seem to still be the more intelligent choice. I’ve watched big-ass films, like Dune: Part One and Top Gun: Maverick on my streamer, snacking on a family bag of popcorn (barbecue with two pumps of butter) from Tater’s,

which was delivered to my home (P190 + delivery fee).

When I’m not being lazy, I make the popcorn myself. So far, Coles Popping Corn Kernels cooked the traditional way—not those brands with microwaveable popcorn, which can cause popcorn lung—then sprinkled with sour cream and chives flavor is my go-to snack at home during movie time. It costs just P118 for 400 grams. (I used to buy a local brand of corn kernels, but its quality has deteriorated, with more unpopped kernels than popped.)

I currently pay for three streamers—Netflix (P249 a month), HBO Go (P199), and Disney Plus that is shared with other family members (P48)—and have access to excellent content ranging from addicting TV series, absorbing movies, to insightful documentaries.

All that, for less than P500. So unless FOMO gets the better of me, I suppose I’ll be watching Dune: Part Two at home as well. Aside from being more cost-effective, at home there are no idiots talking out loud on their mobile phones while everyone is anxiously waiting for Greta Lee’s character in Past Lives to leave her husband, nor pa-cute girls asking their boyfriends to explain what a gom jabbar is. At home, I can pause Michelle Yeoh flying through the air in Everything Everywhere All At Once to get a drink of water or go to the bathroom. Best of all, I can watch these popular TV and cinema fare over and over again until I get tired memorizing everyone’s dialogue (not that I’m a nerd who does it). So, tell me, why should I go back to the theater to watch movies again? ■

CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS

DAY: Justin Bieber, 30; Kesha, 37; Lupita Nyong’o, 41; Ron Howard, 70.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Set yourself up for success. Put a financial plan in place, and monitor your liabilities versus your assets. A hands-on approach to conducting your daily expenses, routines and lifestyle will give you the power you need and want to reach your target this year. Revisit contracts, adjust agreements and promise only what you know you can deliver. Stabilize your position. Your numbers are 6, 13, 17, 24, 32, 37, 45.

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Take it upon yourself to do the legwork. Keeping busy will help you stay out of trouble. Live up to your promises, but don’t deny yourself the time you need to soothe your soul. Balance and equality are the paths to personal happiness. ★★★

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Accidents happen when you are worn out and overly emotional. Focus on pampering yourself and rethinking your strategy and what’s in your best interest. Examine your professional or domestic situation, and prepare to make positive adjustments.★★★

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t be fooled by what others say. Get your facts straight before you participate in something that may have consequences. The time spent on personal growth and self-improvement will encourage better decisions and rewards. ★★★

CANCER (June 21-July 22): A receptive attitude will allow your imagination to morph into something promising. It’s not the cost of things that makes them better; it’s the ingenuity and simplicity that makes them great. ★★★★★

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Don’t feel you have to make a move or follow in someone else’s footsteps. Consider your options and what makes sense, and you’ll discover a manageable path. Keep the peace; position yourself better to ensure you get what you want. ★★

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Ignore outside influences and carry on with your plans. The changes you want to implement will open doors to new beginnings. Attend events or reunions that enable you to address questionable issues. A partnership will improve your chance to achieve your long-term goal. ★★★★

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Physical activity will clear your head. Decisions regarding joint ventures will cost you if you let your emotions call the shots. Spend more time mastering the art of doing things yourself rather than relying on others to prop you up. ★★★

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You’ll face tough choices. Forward-thinking is essential if you want situations to turn favorable. Take the blame for your mistakes and the credit for successes. There is no shame in learning as you go, but there is if you continue to fall short due to waffling.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Distance yourself from pushy, relentless individuals eager to mislead and make you look bad. Trust in yourself and what’s tangible. Avoid unfamiliar places and people, or situations that befuddle and leave you feeling vulnerable. Don’t broadcast your every move. Aim for secrecy and stability. ★★★

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Sidestep controversy and avoid a precarious position that keeps you from mastering the skills you need to reach your goals. Take a unique approach to how you use your disposable funds to invest in yourself. ★★★★

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Keeping up will require ingenuity and well-thought-out plans. If you muscle your way forward, you will make mistakes or run into opposition. Patience and moderation will deter unnecessary change that can result in overpaying. ★★

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Don’t waste time; set your sights on your goal, and refuse to let anyone lure you off track. Show your strength and courage by ignoring temptation and embracing what makes you feel alive. Your happiness lies within.

BIRTHDAY BABY: You are dedicated, authentic and empathetic. You are amendable and philanthropic.

B4 Friday, March 1, 2024
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos www.businessmirror.com.ph
BusinessMirror ACROSS 1 Playful growl 5 “Finally!” 11 Period with later sunsets, briefly 14 Frozen treat with FlaMango and LlamaNade flavors 15 Jane Eyre author 16 Yellowfin tuna 17 Emmy-nominated actress who portrayed Janet in The Good Place 19 Minor issue 20 “Old MacDonald” refrain 21 Not superficial 22 Joe 23 Drinking straw, e.g. 25 “Happy to!” 27 Fanta or Pepsi 30 Carry-___ (small suitcases) 32 Org. opposed to using big cats in circuses 33 In bulk 36 Curly hairstyles 39 Road trip stopover 40 Film in a superhero franchise, or one starring the starred clues’ answers? 42 By way of 43 Chewy Japanese treat 45 Makes more courageous 47 Owns, biblically 49 Grain that may be steel-cut 50 Gives the once-over 51 Supervised 54 Touches on the shoulder 56 Quantum ___ 57 Completely fascinated 59 “Here I am!” 63 Pot top 64 Portrayer of James Bond and Benoit Blanc 66 Unwell 67 Cantankerous 68 Aware of 69 Language suffix 70 Town crier’s cry 71 Hurl, in slang DOWN 1 Roller coaster or Tilt-A-Whirl 2 South American palm 3 Used to be 4 Piano performance 5 The Golden Bachelor network 6 Corporate identity 7 Oral tradition 8 Aconcagua’s range 9 Rise to the occasion 10 This clue’s number 11 SNL alum who played Garth Algar 12 Jewish mourning period 13 Saturn’s largest moon, or a mythical giant 18 “I know ___ are, but what am I?” 22 Ballet jump 24 Pear pick 26 Push away 27 Sink’s alternative 28 “That’s terrible!” 29 Actor who narrates the Wonder Years reboot 31 Replay speed 34 Revises 35 Source of green juice? 37 “I call dibs!” 38 Fresh talk 41 Greek I 44 Instrument that may be taller than its player 46 Leave in ruins 48 Zimbabwe’s capital 51 Skate park trick 52 Pillbox hat attachments 53 “Should we?” 55 Snapshot, for short 58 Docking platform 60 Rational 61 Tiny speck 62 Award quartet for Viola Davis 64 Verbal facepalm 65 Soapmaking ingredient Solution to today’s puzzle: ‘distinguished citizens’ BY REBECCA GOLDSTEIN The Universal Crossword • Edited by David Steinberg/Anna Gundlach/Jared Goudsmit/Andrian Johnson
★★★
★★★★★
TODAY’S HOROSCOPE
BY
By Eugenia Last PHOTO
WINSTON CHEN ON UNSPLASH

DONNA SUMMER ESTATE SUES YE, TY DOLLA $IGN SAYING THEY ILLEGALLY USED ‘I FEEL LOVE’

LOS ANGELES—The estate of Donna Summer sued Ye and Ty Dolla $ign on Tuesday for what its attorneys say is the “shamelessly” illegal use of her 1977 song “I Feel Love” in their collaboration Good (Don’t Die).

The copyright infringement lawsuit was filed in federal court in Los Angeles by Summer’s husband Bruce Sudano in his capacity as executor of the estate of the singer-songwriter and “Disco Queen,” who died in 2012. The suit alleges that when representatives of Ye, formerly Kanye West, sought permission for use of the song they were rejected because the Summer estate “wanted no association with West’s controversial history.”

The suit contends that the album instead “shamelessly” includes re-recorded parts of the song that were “instantly recognizable.”

“In the face of this rejection,” the suit says, “defendants arrogantly and unilaterally decided they would simply steal ‘I Feel Love’ and use it without permission.”

An e-mail seeking comment from representatives for Ye was not immediately returned.

“I Feel Love,” cowritten by Summer, Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte, is a hugely influential track off Summer’s album I Remember Yesterday that is considered one of the first instances of electronic dance music. The concept album had songs representing different decades. “I Feel Love,” with Summer’s ecstatic moans and minimalist lyrics, was meant to represent the future.

Good (Don’t Die) was released on February 10 on Ye and Ty Dolla $ign’s collaborative album. The lawsuit names as defendants both artists and Ye’s record label Yeezy. The estate first publicly alleged the copyright violation in an Instagram post on the official Summer account on the day of the album’s release. It seeks a judge’s injunction stopping any further circulation of the song, and money damages to be determined at trial.

The song does not currently appear on the version of the album available on Spotify and other streaming services. AP

NEW ROMANCE

THE starlet was dumped by her then politician-boyfriend in favor of a bigger star. We all know that in politics, this is very important. But she may have the last laugh since she is reportedly being wooed by one of the sons of a very powerful man. The powerful man’s son is said to be very smitten with the starlet, who is very pretty of face and is talented to boot. Maybe this new romance is what she needs personal-wise and career-wise. For sure, once this gets out, the starlet will be much talked about.

THEY’RE ALIKE

THERE are reports linking the names of the seasoned actor and the newcomer. It’s not that they’re a couple although the younger one sees the senior actor as a mentor. They are alike in many ways. The newcomer is said to be the beard of a hot young actress with an interesting love life. The more senior actor also used to be a beard until he got tired of pretending and seemed to have adopted a what-you-see-is-what-you-get attitude. The newcomer looks up to the senior actor in terms of his private life and career management. He wants meatier projects that will highlight his talents and further hone his skills instead of being boxed in a loveteam, as most younger stars are.

NO TO V-DAY EVENT

WHO is the senior star who has priced himself out of the market for what was supposed to be a major Valentine’s Day event? The actor no longer wanted to work with a person from his past, who always seems to want to be controversial. He would rather be in a concert with his close relative, who doesn’t have any box-office appeal. But so far, there aren’t any takers for this concert. But no worries, the actor is still in demand for TV dramas and the shows where he is featured normally do well.

MONEY, NOT GLAMOUR

THE glamorous star likes to say that she is working when she’s actually just flaunting her material wealth. Those who know the goings on in the world she moves in know that she only gets minimal pay (but a lot of freebies) for what she does. Her fans are blinded all the glitz that they see of the glamorous star’s life but her husband is the one who pays for everything. She wouldn’t have all that she has now without her husband’s money. She likes to say she paved the way but other stars were there before her. She’s troubled that her rival gets more engagement on social media these days but that’s because she bought many followers and the algorithm is screwing with her engagement.

A letter to Antonio

DEAR Primo, Did I need to know who you are, Joselito Altarejos?

It would take more films from you before I became certain of your roots, the origin of the myths you tell in your films—Ang Lalaki sa Parola and its whole reference to the diwata—and the loneliness of men who, in search of directions, found not lights but fires.

For another filmmaker, he would have held onto the noir of this story. The filmic decision could have been to allow the sound of the vanished, the lights being out, in other words, a world without words.

Secrets are never held for the sunlight to dry them. Secrets remain in wetlands of nocturnal passions. Secrets thrive in the swamplands of our boyhood; in those furtive—nakatago, nagtatago, tagong tago—areas of memories. That is why we have psychoanalysts who get rich at the expense of our subsistence memory of the past that remains violent at present. And so, Primo, what was your filmic decision? You gave us a village. And a young boy with an ordinary life. We see the life of Antonio. His father is abroad. His mother works for women. She is independent. There are hints of loneliness in the mother but the filmmakers do not want to dwell on that. There is a scene where she has come out of a bath and she walks to the window in her room. She looks down and sees a young man playing a guitar.

It is a fleeting scene but its meaning is continued on to the mirror where she sits down and applies lotion on his arms and neck. There is no sensuality there, just this isolation. And the filmmakers do not seem to want to know what is going on in her mind. It is a crisis in the retelling. Antonio knocks and quickly enters, dissipating the passion and spared us from the embarrassment of witnessing a mother becoming sensual.

If there is one great scene of discomfort in Lihim ni Antonio, that is it—a mother at the edge of sex or its absence. We would never want to think of mothers as sensual. Brave, yes. Hysterical, yes. Suffering, yes. Defender of gay faith and gay hope and gay charity. Yes and yes and yes. Even as a murderer for sons.

Antonio asks questions. And, Primo, you provided the answers. From genetics and to the social nexus of homosexuality. These validations were coming from the youngest of Antonio’s friends. This is positive modeling, telling us that the shift in the perspectives about gender would come not from the older

generation but the younger one. This is your politics, this is your advocacy, Primo.

Of all your films, Lihim ni Antonio is the most conflicted. Celebrating the queer life of a boy, the film comes up with validations that would defend Antonio and what would happen next.

Throughout the presentations, the characters in the film always come from outside. Only those who come in and stay will know the secret of Antonio. The grandparents come and leave. They are judgmental in that they did not know anything real about those living in the household. Even the mother is not there when Antonio goes deeper in his act to know who he is. Certainly, the father is an absentee one, a nod to the migration of labor and parents in the country. This makes the film dense but relevant.

Only those who stay and stay on, till the darkness creeps in, would know the terrible secrets happening there.

In the end, someone dies. Someone is killed. Society intervenes: it cannot announce that a son is being molested by an uncle (a common occurrence in a patriarchal society) and the abuser is a member of a family (a profile present in our homophobic communities).

What are the contributions of the film? To focus on its present rendition, which is in black and white, one immediately senses a default minimalism. We are seeing images in their pure—absence of colors— sense. This results in new perspectives and newer apprehension of the cinema.

In the color version, the ending compelled me to call it a grand opera, with the colors suffusing the violence and overwhelming us. In this edition, the

crime is almost insignificant, an event regular on free TV. Devoid of extra tones, the film enables us to witness two of the most realistic performances onscreen. It is as if the filmmakers this time have opted to purify the presence of the leads. The painters have changed and, to borrow the classic Lilian Hellman’s work, went into a pentimento. We are seeing more as the lack of colors have allowed us to view less.

For the concepts, Lihim ni Antonio is one of the first films to introduce the idea of gender or sexual fluidity even to the point of belaboring such. The examination of the said concept even extended to the more existential and ethical issues of choice.

This makes the film and its filmmakers contributors to the new and radical landscape in Philippine cinema.

And so, Primo, this letter is not yet finished.

Why did you (and your scriptwriter, Lex Bonife) create a young boy to ask critical questions about sexuality? Has he a critical mind?

I do not have any answer and I will not pretend to be any wiser. It is enough to say that you have more films to make and I have more letters to write.

For Antonio (how old is he now?), I offer this poem coming from Federico Garcia Lorca, whose remains have not been found yet by a regime that is closeted: “I pronounce your name,/ in this dark night,/And your name sounds/ more distant than ever./ More distant than all the stars/ And more painful than the gentle rain.”

JO BERRY as Lilet Matias

‘LILET MATIAS: ATTORNEY-AT-LAW’ BRINGS JUSTICE AND HOPE TO VIEWERS THIS MARCH

BEGINNING March 4, witness the story of Lilet Matias: Attorney-AtLaw which will inspire viewers to hold on to their dreams and selfworth despite the hardships and criticisms.

The series is headlined by Jo Berry as Lilet Matias, a little person with a big purpose in life. She will do everything to fight for what is right and defend oppressed people.

This inspirational drama comprises some of the most respected artists in the industry, including Maricel Laxa as Atty. Meredith Simmons, a feisty

lawyer who has a heart for the marginalized sector; Sheryl Cruz as Patricia, a former beauty queenturned-celebrity who cares a lot about her image; Rita Avila as Lorena, a philanthropist whom Lilet looks up to; Bobby Andrews as Ramir, Patricia’s husband and a successful businessman; and Lloyd Samartino as Atty. Constantino De Leon, Lorena’s doting husband. Also joining the powerhouse ensemble are Jason Abalos as Atty. Boni Linao, Lilet’s strong opponent in the law industry; EA Guzman as Kurt, Lilet’s funny and outspoken

colleague; plus Analyn Barro, Glenda Garcia, Ariel Villasanta, Shermaine Santiago, and Troy Montero.

Completing the cast are Joaquin Domagoso, Zonia Mejia, and Hannah Arguelles.

Atty. Lilet Matias strives to bring justice to people belittled by society. While defending the victims of abuse, discrimination, and poverty, Atty. Lilet discovers a case that will reopen old wounds. How will she remain fierce in times of pain caused by her estranged family?

The program is produced by

Rasonable; Cheryl Ching-

the award-winning GMA Entertainment Group headed by senior vice president Lilybeth G. Rasonable; Cheryl ChingSy, Ali Nokom Dedicatoria, Dennis Joi K. Bentulan and Arlende D. Pilapil.

Under the direction of

Under the direction of Adolfo Alix Jr. Lilet Matias:

Attorney-At-Law debuts on March 4 and airs weekdays at 3:20 pm on GMA.

March 4 and airs weekdays at can

Global Pinoys can also catch the program via GMA Pinoy TV.

Everyone’s feeling the love as ‘Bob Marley: One Love’ opens globally at No. 1 with $80M, arrives in PHL on March 13

BOB MARLEY: One Love, a film celebrating the legendary reggae musician, opened at No. 1 across several countries worldwide with an estimated gross of $80 million, including $51 million in North America. The movie broke the record for biggest opening day for a music biopic in several markets, including the UK, New Zealand, and Jamaica, where the film boasts the biggest opening day for a movie ever.

Arriving in Philippine cinemas on March 13, Bob Marley: One Love was made with close guidance and blessing of the Marley family, with two of Marley’s children—Ziggy and Cedella—and his wife, musician Rita Marley, at the helm as producers. Alongside them are executive producers Brad

Pitt, Richard Hewitt, Orly Marley, and Matt Solodky, who assembled a cast that’s led by Kingsley Ben-Adir and Lashana Lynch as Bob and Rita Marley. Watch Ziggy Marley talk about his father in this featurette at youtu.be/dK799Hs15ww. Director and cowriter Reinaldo Marcus Green acknowledges the scale and responsibility of creating a movie based on the icon.

“There are films,” says Green, “and then there are films about Bob Marley.” During the process of making Bob Marley: One Love, Green says people always have a story to tell about the musician. “He had that power. He was everyone’s best

friend, you know? ‘I saw him in concert...’ Or, ‘He changed my life when I was 15...’ People think they know Bob Marley, have a version of him in their mind, because of how we all connect with his music.” With this film, Green hopes to give the audience a side of Bob Marley that not a lot of people have seen, based on real conversations with friends, family and acquaintances. The authenticity that Bob Marley: One Love delivers is the direct result of collaborating so closely with the musician’s loved ones.

In Philippine cinemas starting March 13, Bob Marley: One Love is distributed in the Philippines by Paramount Pictures through Columbia Pictures.

B5 Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • Friday, March 1, 2024 www.businessmirror.com.ph
BusinessMirror
Show
A SCENE from the Joselito Altarejos film Lihim ni Antonio.

B6 Friday, March 1, 2024

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PCCR EXPANDS ACADEMIC OFFERINGS IN FORENSIC SCIENCE, INDUSTRIAL SECURITY MANAGEMENT

THE Philippine College of Criminology (PCCR) kicked off its yearlong Platinum Celebration that marked seven decades in the field of Criminal Justice Education (CJE) in Southeast Asia, and broke new ground in its academic offerings and educational approach.

“We have come a long way,” 6th PCCR President Ma. Angelica Lei G. Bautista said during her speech at the grand celebration at Quirino Grandstand, and proudly stated as the first collegiate body to offer CJE in Southeast Asia since 1954.

With the institution’s founding father, Supreme Court Justice Felix Angelo Bautista (JFAB), the PCCR continues to mold students with passion, integrity, and excellence.

Under Bautista’s visionary leadership, the institution has witnessed a refreshing approach to the “long-standing family legacy” at PCCR. Beyond its flagship

Bachelor of Science in Criminology, the college now offers programs in Forensic Science, equipping students with the skills needed to investigate and analyze evidence in criminal cases, and Industrial Security Management, a program that trains students to handle security risks in various industries, from corporate settings to critical infrastructure.

Moreover, PCCR embraces innovative teaching methods like blended learning, a combination of traditional classroom instruction and online resources, providing students with flexibility and personalized learning experiences.

Meanwhile, gamified learning turns education into an exciting adventure, where students unlock achievements and collaborate in friendly challenges. PCCR also diversified its educational offerings by introducing short courses in emerging fields like Cyber Security and

Technical Vocation that cater to the evolving needs of students and industries alike.

Marking the onset of the 70th celebration of the PCCR, the event commenced with an ecumenical service and a warm welcome extended to LTC Alwin M. Maneja, GSC (SC) PA, Commandant of Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) Unit, who

Celebrate International Women’s Day in the PHL at the Women Lead Conference 2024

Tbe a moderated panel discussion for each segment.

Among the esteemed list of speakers include the Executive Consultant of ABS-CBN, Charo Concio Santos; the CEO of Airspeed & President of the Women’s Business Council of the Philippines (WomenBizPH) Rosemarie Rafael; the CEO of Luxe Slim Beauty & Wellness Anna Magkawas; the CEO of SPD Jobs, Inc. Sarah Deloraya Mateo,

the President of Kaiser International Health Group Dr. Leah Yolo; and the CEO and Founder of Global Educator U, Rayla Allertsen among others.

The sponsors for the Women Lead Conference are Luxe Slim Beauty & Wellness, Accenture, Security Bank, Crif Philippines, Dusit Thani Manila, Airspeed, SPD Jobs, Inc. and Kaiser International Health Group.

Ultimately, the Women Lead Conference aspires to empower, motivate and inspire female professionals to excel in their careers and overcome the challenges that everyday life poses, at the same time pushes the initiative towards the encouragement and advancement of women empowerment not only in the Philippines but throughout the whole world.

For ticket reservation and more information on the Women Lead Conference 2024 you may email info@iccpi.org.ph or call +639175638633.

participated in the arrival honors of the 6th PCCR president.  The festivities unfolded with grandeur as a motorcade, comprising 206 vehicles, found its way from Balut, Tondo to the iconic Quirino Grandstand, and continued with an energetic fun walk activity, where students joined the procession.

DO you find it increasingly difficult to communicate as you get older? Is your loved one struggling with swallowing issues following a stroke, pneumonia, or changes in their dental health? Do they exhibit slow, mumbled, slurred, or difficult-to-understand speech?

As we grow older, our bodies undergo changes that can impact our ability to communicate, eat, and swallow. Articulation may become challenging, making the pronunciation of certain sounds and words difficult. Additionally, we may experience changes in our cognitive function, which can impact our ability to understand and use language.

To help individuals cope with the challenge of difficulty in communication, Sunshine Place is offering Speech therapy for adults every Tuesday by appointment. The program will have 12 sessions.

The program will be handled by Carl Leann Lora, RSLP, a licensed Speech-Language Pathologist (SLP). He graduated Magna Cum Laude with a degree in BS Speech-Language Pathology from the University of Sto. Tomas, Manila.

Realizing the important role of speech language pathologists in this crucial stage for

LEADING the charge in innovation within the swimming pool industry, Crystal Blue Enterprises has cemented its reputation as the premier swimming pool construction company in the Philippines. With over four decades of expertise, the company has continually pushed boundaries to offer unparalleled solutions for pool owners.

At the helm of this groundbreaking endeavor is Richard Cariño, the second-generation swimming pool expert and president of Crystal Blue Enterprises and the genius behind the invention of the Healing Pool System. This innovative system, infused with essential minerals such as copper, potassium, magnesium, sulfur, active oxygen, and nano bubbles, represents Japan’s latest technology in enhancing swimming pool water quality and revitalization.

Crystal Blue’s Healing Pool System stands as a testament to Richard Cariño’s vision and dedication to providing safe and luxurious swimming experiences. By eliminating the formation of harmful disinfection byproducts like chloramines and chloroform, the Healing Pool ensures swimmers can enjoy their experience with peace of mind, knowing their health is safeguarded.

Infused with essential minerals such as copper, potassium, magnesium, and sulfur, Cariño has created a solution that not only protects the skin but also promotes its health and vitality.

Traditional pool treatments often rely on chlorine, a chemical known for its adverse effects on both skin and respiratory health. Chlorine reacts with organic compounds in the water, which unfortunately, includes the human body. This interaction can lead to skin irritation and respiratory discomfort, leaving behind a persistent chlorine odor that is challenging to remove. Recent studies, such as those from Johns Hopkins University and reported by USA Today, have raised concerns about the potential health risks associated with chlorine exposure, including a possible link to cancer.

Furthermore, Crystal Blue’s commitment to sustainability is evident in every aspect of its

More than 3,000 basic cadets marched alongside their battalion, creating a dynamic spectacle that included employees, students, and recognized school organizations.

Among the highlights was the ceremonial welcome of the freshmen batch of 2027, affectionately named “Mandatala.” This acronym, signifying “Mandirigmang may Dangal, Talino, at Lakas,” encapsulates the values that define the new generation of PCCR students.

The Paghirang ceremony marked a significant moment, emphasizing the pride, intelligence, and strength that the Mandatala batch brings to the PCCR legacy. With a rich legacy of excellence and a commitment to shaping future leaders in the field of criminology, PCCR stands poised to set out on new endeavors and milestones in the years to come, fueled by the spirit of celebration and determination.

older adults, he wants to dedicate his practice to helping senior adults with communication, cognitive, or swallowing impairments following illness, trauma, or disease and improve their quality of Speech therapy, a specialized field catering to individuals of all ages, including older adults, addresses communication and swallowing disorders. The goal of speech therapy is to enhance communication skills and overall quality of life. Tailored to individual needs, speech therapy for older adults typically incorporates a blend of exercises, activities, and compensatory strategies.

Speech and language therapy typically involves both assessment sessions and actual therapy sessions. Among others, the therapy recommended for adults with acquired language disorder, (i.e., aphasia), motor speech disorders (e.g., apraxia of speech, dysarthria), cognitive-communication disorder, swallowing disorder (i.e., dysphagia), and fluency disorders (e.g., stuttering).

For more details, kindly contact T. (632) 8564144 / 856-4162, M. (+63917) 515-5656 or email: hello@sunshineplaceph.com.

operations. From solar-powered pumps and heaters to eco-friendly construction practices, the company strives to minimize its environmental footprint while delivering exceptional quality and service.

With a presence in the Philippines, Japan, and China, Crystal Blue Enterprises is dedicated to providing a seamless and hassle-free experience for its clients. Join them on their journey to redefine the swimming pool experience and discover the luxury of chlorine-free swimming.

Crystal Blue Enterprises provides you with peace of mind with our 30-year warranty, ensuring your investment is protected for decades to come. We are the proud recipient of the “Best Earthquake-proof Swimming Pool Contractor” award by World Class Philippines, further highlighting our commitment to excellence and safety.

Experience the Crystal Blue difference today. Visit https://crystalblue.com.ph for more information and swim into a world of extraordinary pool experiences with Crystal Blue Enterprises.

HE Italian Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines is once again spearheading the ultimate celebration of Women in the Philippines to commemorate International Women’s Day with the 2nd edition of the Women Lead Conference in partnership with the Global Women BPW Manila to recognize the social, economic, and political achievements of women. The Women Lead conference aims to foster business relationships, associations and strategic alliances among top-level executives, government officials and businesswomen in the Philippines and young and upcoming business leaders. This event will feature a prominent lineup of 25 leading women of commerce to share their thoughts, ideas and expertise. The conference will have five session speakers each representing a focus sector including (1) Women Leadership, (2) Women Entrepreneurship, (3) Health, Beauty, Wellness, Nutrition and Mental Health and (4) Women in Career and Profession, and (5) The Modern Woman. Following this there will
Sunshine Place now
speech therapy for adults Crystal Blue Enterprises: Pioneering Pool Wellness with Chlorine-Free Innovation Get Up to 79% Discount from XTREME Appliances this 3.3 at Shopee, Lazada M ARCH is going to be a month of shopping sprees for online shoppers as XTREME Appliances, the leading one-stopshop appliance brand, joins two of the highly anticipated biggest campaigns of the year— Shopee 3.3 Mega Shopping Sale and Lazada 3.3 Bonggang Bday Fest! With a huge discount of up to 79 percent off, you can get your hands on high-quality and affordable home appliances from March 3 to March 7, 2024. Low on cash? No need to fret! With Spaylater and LazadaLoan, shoppers can buy now and pay later with easy installment plans minus the credit card requirement. Make sure to shop XTREME Appliances on its official Flagship Store on Shopee and Lazada to steal these price drops from Shopee 3.3 Mega Shopping Sale and Lazada 3.3 Bonggang Bday Fest. To know more about XTREME Appliances, visit us on Facebook, Lazada, Shopee, and XTREME Website.
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Editor: Jun Lomibao

Spotlight on Mindanao players in PAL Interclub Men’s tourney

division the last time the Interclub was held in Cagayan de Oro in 2011. Following a breakthrough in the sen ior event last week, Del Monte is gunning for a rare sweep.

“We are g oing for it,” said Del Monte skipper Yoyoy Velez, one of three senior team members playing in the regular tournament.

Julius Bautista, a member of the 2011 squad, is in Del Monte’s first team as well as top junior golfers Xhylas Luzon and Cliff Nuneza.

South Pacific Davao is playing in the championship division for the first time, fielding the region’s top junior golfers led by Junior Golf Federation of the Philippines Mindanao Open champion Nino Villasencio.

Play in the championship class kicks off at Pueblo before shifting to Del Monte in the next two days. The final round will be played at Pueblo.

Ajido wrests gold in Asian swimfest

AMESRAY MISHAEL AJIDO

Jfinally won for the Philippines its first gold medal as Japan continued to dominate the 11th Age Group Swimming Championships at the New Clark City Aquatics Center on Thursday night in Capas, Tarlac.

Ajido, an eighth-grader at La Salle Greenhills, ruled his favorite 100m butterfly event in 55.98 seconds not only to win gold but also break the meet’s boys’ 12-14 category record of 56.36 set by Chinese Yu Xiang Wang in 2019.

Japan’s Yusei Nishiono took the silver medal with a record-surpassing 56.05 seconds while Chinese Taipei’s Yung-Cheng Kan settled for the bronze medal in 56.79.

squad boasts a starstudded lineup that includes Ryan Monsalve, Lanz Uy, Masaichi Otake, Shinichi Suzuki, Zach Castro, Miko Granada and veteran Junjun Plana.

“We have a pretty solid team, but championships are not won on paper,” Southwoods official Jerome Delariarte said. Eastridge, which placed second in Cebu City last year, and Del Monte loom as the biggest threats to Southwoods’s bid for a ninth championship.

Captained by veteran Gary Sal es, Eastridge has six players who come from Davao—Edison Tabalin, Alexander Bisera, Ronel Tagaan, Jhondie Quibol, Chris Remata and Loyd Labrador. The eighth man, Jeffrey Lumbo, hails from General Santos City. Del Monte won the championship

For the first time in its history, the format has been changed to fourto-play, three-to-count. Competition is also expected to be tight in the Founders division with the return of many-time champion Canlubang after a five-year absence. Expected also to contend are Cebu Country Club, Orchard, Del Monte Team 2, and Wack Wack, among others.

The 75th staging of the PAL Interclub is supported by diamond sponsors Mastercard and Asian Journal.

Platinum sponsors include Airbus, Primax Broadcasting Network and Araw Hospitality while gold sponsors are Tanduay and Asia Brewery. Joining the event as silver sponsors are ABSCBN Global, Radio Mindanao Network and Philippine National Bank.

Visa is a minor sponsor while Must Glow is joining as a donor.

Pueblo

Thursday.

EJ bringing streak to Glasgow indoors

WORLD-CLASS Ernest John

AObiena competes in his first world indoor championships on Monday in Glasgow where world No. 1 and reigning indoor champion Armand Duplantis leads a star-studded cast.

Obiena brings with him a gold medal-winning streak in Croatia and Berlin hoping to clear 6.0 meters indoors to fan his 2024 campaign focused on the Paris Olympics in July.

Duplantis cleared 6.20 meters to win gold in Belgrade 2022, the year Obiena hoped to make an emphatic debut but was barred from competing following his suspension by the Philippine Athletics Track and Field Association (Patafa) to which he had a dispute then.

Duplantis won gold with a record leap of 6.20 meters with the now suspended Brazilian Thiago Braz

da Silva claiming silver with 5.95 3 and American Chris Nielsen bagging bronze with 5.90. Duplantis, with a season best 6.02m, is again the favorite in Glasgow, followed by Nielsen (6.00) and another American, Sam Kendricks (5.95) as third seed.

Obiena’s 5.93m that won him the ISTAF Berlin in Germany last Sunday makes him the fourth favorite, trailed closely by France’s Thibaut Collet (5.92) and US’s Austin Miller (5.90).

Seven others with season best leaps of no more than 5.87 meters make up the elite cast of 13 pole vaulters vying in the event set dawn Monday (Manila time).

Only two other Filipinos are in Glasgow—hurdlers Lauren Hoffman and John Cabang Tolentino. First to compete will be the 24-yearold Filipino-American Hoffman on Friday

PHL bid on for FIVB men’s worlds 2025

HE

T“As they say, teamwork makes the dream work and this meeting is a first major step towards the dream of a successful bid and eventual hosting of the men’s world championship,” said Philippine National Volleyball Federation (PNVF) president Ramon “Tats” Suzara during the Special Briefing of the Philippines Bid to Host the FIVB Volleyball World Men’s Championship 2025 at the Grand Hyatt Manila at BGC in Taguig City.

Present in the special meeting were staunch sports and volleyball advocate Senator Pia Cayetano, Tourism Secretary Christina Garcia Frasco and FIVB brass Volleyball World CEO Finn Taylor and Chief Business Officer Guido Betti.

The Philippine bid rides the heels of the PNVF’s successful staging of the Volleyball Nations League (VNL), which the top FIVB officials praised as the best hosted editions—2022 and 2023—with an enormous local fans reaction never seen elsewhere in the world.

“The VNL last year at the MOA Arena was the best event of the VNL and we had 14 stops around the world,” Finn said. “It shows that the

ERNEST JOHN

OBIENA’S

Esteban zeroes in on Olympic berth as Ivory Coast bet

FILIPINO-IVORIAN Maxine Esteban tries to book a ticket to Paris when she competes in the final Olympic-qualifying tournament in Washington DC on March 15. Esteban, who switched federations after being controversially dropped by the Philippine Fencing Association (PFA), leads the race for direct qualification from the Africa continental zone.

Esteban is also currently the second-ranked Asian female foil fencer in the Olympic qualification ranking.

Interestingly, that means she would have been a solid bet for one of two Asian continental slots to the Paris Games and could have been the

fifth Olympian for the Philippines had she not switched federations because of what she said was an “unfair and unjust” treatment by the PFA. “I will continue to work hard and hopefully take back my dream that people tried to take away from me,” said Esteban, an eight-time Philippine champion and multi-World Cup medalist, who is looking to be the first female Filipino fencer to qualify for the Olympics. A strong showing in the Washington DC qualifier would officially hand Esteban an outright Olympic berth without her having to go through a wild card tournament, which is reserved for countries with no

Philippines has embraced the best of volleyball and we were able to see that not only the fans embraced the players but teams embraced the fans.”

“They can’t wait to come back,” Finn added.

Betti said: “We see a massive potential in the Philippines. We decided to bring the VNL here two years ago and the fandom was crazy. We’re overwhelmed and with that being said, players will be happy to comeback.”

“Love from the people here was unique that all the volleyball players are dreaming for,” Betti added.

The PNVF hosted two weeks— men and women—of the VNL at the Smart-Araneta Coliseum in 2022 and a men’s leg at the SM Mall of Asia Arena last year.

Both major venues are again eyed for next year’s world championship.

Also gracing the important occasion were Philippine Sports Commission chairman Richard Bachmann, Philippine Olympic Committee secretary-general Atty. Warton Chan who represented president Abraham “Bambol” Tolentino, Jennifer Reyes and Monica Mitra representing Senator Alan Peter Cayetano, Erwin Lozano representing Senator Sonny Angara and Sienna Olaso, vice president for Channels and Content at Cignal TV Inc.

Representatives from the Mall of Asia Arena, United Promotions Inc. of the Araneta Group Management and

in the women’s 400 meters which she’ll be testing. If she advances, the semifinals are on Saturday, accoding to Patafa secretary-General Jasper Tanhueco.

“Although Lauren’s main event is the 400 hurdles, the 400 will still benefit her experience-wise and intensify her pursuit of qualifying for the 400m hurdles at the Paris Olympics,” Tanhueco said.   Asian indoor bronze medalist Tolentino will compete in the men’s 60m hurdles heats on Saturday and if he progresses, in the semifinals later that day. Hoffman, competing out of Duke University, was a late addition to the championships.

“I found out about this meet at the last minute, but I’m all good,” Hoffman told BusinessMirror via internet call Thursday. “I know this is going to a tough competition and my main goal is to run a new Philippine record.”

fencers directly qualifying in the sport. It can be recalled that Esteban was excluded from the national team purportedly because she skipped the Philippine qualifiers.

Esteban provided documents showing the PFA had excused her from the national trials because she suffered an ACL injury while representing the country in the World Championship in Egypt.

“Not only was I dropped for a reason they excused me from, but the rule was not applied to everyone in the national team,” she said then. “That’s why I really worked extra hard this past year.”

“I want to repay Côte d’Ivoire for giving me not just a home but a shot to retake the things I worked so hard for that they tried to tear away from me,” added Esteban, who is currently ranked No. 37 in the world.

the Tourism Promotions Board also attended the meeting.

“I’m here to support and express the commitment of our government, specifically the DOT, to ensure that the Philippines’ bid to host this global event is likely successful,” Frasco said. Cayetano gamely shared her experiences as a former varsity and national volleyball player as she committed Taguig City and Senator Alan Peter Cayetano’s support to the worlds.

“I assure that the Senate will do everything in its power for this event. We’ve come a long way and we’re so excited to be part of this journey,” she said. “We know that 2025 is a year that will bring much pride to the Philippines and share the love the Filipinos have.”

The Philippines hasn’t been to the men’s world championship since the 1974 edition in Mexico.

The FIVB and Volleyball World will make a formal announcement of the successful bid in end March.

“I was expecting to win a medal, but I’m not sure what color so I’m happy I won the,” said Ajido, clinched bronze in the 50m freestyle last Tuesday.

Japan, meanwhile, grabbed nine more gold medals—19 in meet record times—to amass a meet-leading total haul of 29 gold, 17 silver and four bronze medals in the tournament organized by Philippine Aquatics Inc. headed by Miko Vargas.

Hong Kong eran second with 14 golds, 10 silvers and 11 bronzes followed by Kazakhstan (14-10-3) and Thailand (14-8-20).

Japan’s Toya Hirata captured the gold medal in 23.21, a new meet record that broke the 24.03 time set by compatriot Yuga Takashima in 2019.

“This is special for me. I am proud to win medals for the Philippines. I dedicate my victory to the Lord and my family,” said Ajido, a double-gold medalist (100 butterfly and 100 backstroke) in the National Collegiate Athletic Association Season 99.

Last year, he won five gold and one bronze medals at the Batang Pinoy National Championships and pocketed two silvers in the Southeast Asia Age Group Championships in Indonesia.

Boracay hosts kiteboarding finale

THE final leg of the International Container Terminal Services Inc.

(ICTSI) Philippine Kiteboarding Tour promises an exhilarating showcase of talent and excitement on Boracay Island when it is held beginning Friday at the Aqua Resort along Bulabog beach. More than 80 kiteboarding athletes—led by top local riders and skilled riders from the US, Middle East, China and Europe-are bracing for a three-day duel of skills, innovation and daring maneuvers against the stunning backdrop of Boracay’s coastline.

Tournament organizer Jay Ortiz, president of the Philippine Kiteboarding Association (PKA), expressed excitement about hosting the final leg in Boracay, renowned for its perfect conditions and breathtaking scenery. He emphasized the event’s significance in highlighting the PKA’s commitment to nurturing Filipino talent for the international stage.

The competition will feature various categories, including

Hangtime, where competitors aim to stay airborne for the longest duration—a gravity-defying spectacle is sure to keep kiteboarding enthusiasts and adrenaline-seekers captivated.

Freestyle events will showcase tricks, spins and flips, providing a visual feast for spectators and judges, while the racing segment, featuring both twin tip and foil boards, will demonstrate competitors’ speed, precision and tactical prowess in navigating the azure waters.

“Our last stop in Santa Fe in Bantayan [Cebu] last month was also a huge success with over 40 local and international riders competing,” said Ortiz, who also thanked local organizers—Santa Fe and Department of Tourism—for their impressive work.

The event ending Sunday will be streamed on PCTV and Arkimagine from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Registration starts on Feb. 29 from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. at Aqua Boracay, accompanied by a welcome program hosted by Malay Tourism Office.

Sports B7 Friday, March 1, 2024 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph
JAMESRAY MISHAEL AJIDO (center) with silver medalist Yusei Nishiono of Japan (left) and bronze medalist Yung-Cheng Kan of Chinese Taipei and Philippine Aquatics Inc. secretary general Rep. Eric Buhain.
|
SENATOR Pia Cayetano and Tourism Secretary Christina Garcia Frasco (third and fourth from left) with (from left) Philippine National Volleyball Federation (PNVF) president Ramon “Tats” Suzara, Volleyball World CEO Finn Taylor, Philippine Sports Commission chairman Richard Bachmann and Philippine Olympic Committee secretary-general Atty. Warton Chan. PNVF PHOTO
Philippines
formalized
its bid to host the prestigious FIVB Volleyball World Men’s Championship 2025 where 31 of the world’s best nations plus the country’s national team will showcase elite action in the sport from September 12 to 28.
has
on Thursday
INDANAO players will be in the spotlight when the 75th Philippine Airlines Men’s Regular Interclub kicks off at Pueblo de Oro Golf and Country Club in Cagayan de Oro and the nearby Del Monte Golf Club in Manolo Fortich on Thursday. Three of four teams entered in the championship division are made up of players who hail from the talent-rich region.
Golf and Country Club in Binangonan in Rizal Province has tapped all but one player from Mindanao, making it a strong title contender.
Monte Golf Club in Bukidnon is also expected to make a strong title run as well as South Pacific Davao which is made up of some of the country’s top junior players.
champion Manila Southwoods, however, remains the odds-on favorite to regain the crown. Led by pro-bound Aidric Chan, the Carmona-based
M
Eastridge
Del
Defending
“EJ”
“EJ” hoping to go 3-0 with emphasis on the world indoor championships. FIL-AM Fairway Hawaii’s Ron Pagurayan blasts out of the bunker on the 18th hole at the de Oro Golf and Country Club in a practice round ROY DOMINGO
MAXINE ESTEBAN:
Philippine fencing’s loss is looking to be Ivory Coast’s gain.

TOYOTA MOTOR PHILIPPINES WELCOMES NEW PRESIDENT

TOYOTA Motor Philippines Corporation (TMP) recently introduced Masando Hashimoto as its new president in a formal turnover ceremony, assuming leadership from Atsuhiro Okamoto.

veloped an in-depth understanding of the Asian market and the specific nuances of the Philippines. He joined TMP in 2023 as the Senior Vice President for Marketing. A year later, he was appointed and became the youngest president in TMP history. Concurrently, Hashimoto is also Chairman of Toyota Mobility Solutions Philippines Inc., TMP’s mobility services arm and wholly-owned subsidiary. Hashimoto is a dynamic leader ready to steer TMP towards continued success. With his rich experience in the Toyota Asia

HA telling critique on electric vehicles

ERE’S an interesting piece on Toyota Motor Corp. Chairman Aikido Toyoda, who is described in a recent Automology.com article as “smart as he looks.” Read on:

“WITH every passing week, there is news of the next best EV [electric vehicle] offering from some manufacturer or another but what the reports are not telling us is that there has been a massive slowdown in the public demand for these vehicles.

“The breaks went on towards the end of 2023 which has resulted

in numerous car manufacturers scaling down their once overly optimistic projections for sales and expansion.

“Notable recent causalities have been over at GM and Honda who were to cooperate on a joint project to produce a cheap EV to satisfy the rank-and-file driver. These plans have now been shelved as Honda believe that it is almost impossible to create a cheap electric vehicle.

“Despite having parking lots full of EVs awaiting a new home— regardless of the tax breaks and other incentives—less and less

Region and extensive industry knowledge, he is poised to further drive the company’s growth and strengthen its position as the leading mobility company in the Philippines.

Okamoto, during his tenure, saw remarkable resilience and growth amidst the most challenging years for the Philippine economy, navigating the impacts of the global health crisis. His exemplary leadership during difficult times.

“Even amidst the darkest days of the pandemic, Mr. Okamoto steered Team Toyota Philippines with unwavering resolve, launching new models, maintaining workforce integrity, and standing in solidarity with our customers, dealers, suppliers, and partners,” Ty shared.

By 2022, TMP has already recovered to pre-Covid operating levels. Ending his four-year term on a high note in 2023, Okamoto led TMP to a new historical record of increased sales, coupled with having one of the highest manu -

motorists are choosing the selfdeclared green option of Electric Vehicles.

Price “IN the US, EV inventories have increased by 506 percent but sit on car lots for an average of 82 days versus the 64 days for an internal combustion engine (ICE) car.

“There are a number of reasons for this lack of infrastructure, low residuals and range anxiety are amongst those reasons but number one on the list is price.

“They are just too damned expensive even after the tax incentives and price discounts offered by manufacturers. As reported last week, there is also the cost of running them which Hertz car rental now says is just too high compared with the cost of an ICE powered vehicle.

Toyoda “AIKIDO TOYODA , the Chairman over at Toyota, is doubling down on

facturing quality and efficiency standards in the Southeast Asian region. Welcoming the new TMP president, Ty underscored Hashimoto’s wealth of experience gained from 24 years in the manufacturing industry, spanning various critical functions such as global sales and business planning, Asia distribution, and human resource management.

Signaling optimism in the auto industry

MEANWHILE , leadership turnover also represents TMP’s continued business growth in new mobility solutions and automotive value chain innovations. The company is also preparing for the local production of the IMV 0 (Zero), the company’s third Completely Knocked Down (CKD) model and game-changing light commercial vehicle, unveiled last year. In his address, Hashimoto urges for more vital collaboration in the automotive industry and seeks to harness the fullest potential of the

his comments he made in 2022 and is now claiming that consumers have at long last seen reality.

“He argues that ‘The enemy is CO2, no matter how much progress EVs make, I think they will only command a 30 percent share of the market, the rest will be taken up by hybrid EVs [those that have an ICE engine as well] and Hydrogen Fuel cell powered cars.’

“Throughout the forced transition to EVs, Toyota has been the one major manufacturer that has not been convinced that EVs should be the mandated future of personal transportation, often to the disappointment of major shareholders.

“With the recent slump in EV sales growth, it would appear that perhaps they had a point. In the US, EV sales have slowed despite record sales of them in 2023.

“China has its own set of problems with massive over capacity factories now being forced to dump their products onto unsuspecting

Philippine human capital. “As CKD manufacturing remains at the core of its business, Toyota can have the best of both worlds of Hardware for production quality and Software for ‘hi-skill’ workforce. One of our goals is to contribute to economic balance, so we will continue to enhance our very own automotive and parts manufacturing capabilities. Yes, we can do it, as proven by the success and impact of Manual Transmission exports by Toyota Aisin Philippines since 1992,” he explained. “As everyone may have been anticipating, the ‘Next Generation Tamaraw’ will be a touchstone for TMP this year. I am excited that it will be the next ‘vehicle of change’ for the small business or MSME sector it aims to support. TMP’s investments [in]this third CKD model have created opportunities for enhancing skills and building expertise in vehicle conversion. Soon, when it rolls off our Santa Rosa plant, just like a real ‘Tamaraw,’ it will respond to specialized

international markets. This is, of course, going to attract a backlash from European governments keen to protect jobs at home.

“Despite all of this doom and gloom, most analysts expect EV sales in 2024 to outstrip 2023.

Toyota though, are still planning to continue with their multipathway approach and hoping that it will pay dividends in the future.”

Indeed, the debate rages on over the wisdom of an electrified mobility for the future. There should be no argument on that as car electrification is a major concern, if not an outright tool, in helping combat the global warming menace. But there is still much to be desired, done, to perfect the EV platform, given that stumbling blocks on its infrastructure structures remain unsolved. Sadly, it will stay that way for a little bit longer.

If Toyoda himself, the helmsman of the world’s No. 1 carmaker that is Toyota, still maintains a

needs and become a partner for [the] growth of Filipinos. With high hopes, I also join TOYOTA’s mission to integrate local manufacturing or even go beyond it with New Mobility Business,” Hashimoto added.

As the automotive industry has fully recovered from Covid-19, it has posted total sales of 430,000 units in 2023, surpassing the 410,000 units recorded in 2019. Given its significant impact on driving the economy, this recovery signals the country’s return to motorization, which was stalled by the pandemic. Toyota, meanwhile, continues to be the Philippines’ most popular car brand for the 22nd consecutive year. The company set a new all-time sales record in 2023, with sales breaching the 200,000-unit mark. In line with the return to normalcy of manufacturing, sales, and distribution operations, TMP’s cumulative contributions totaled P60 billion in taxes and duties.

posture of cynicism over tomorrow’s supposed path to an electrified auto industry, what more with the man on the street?

As my buddy, Ted Failon, loves to say, “Think about it.”

PEE STOP Here’s a glass to Isuzu Makati for achieving a rare back-to-back feat of being chosen “Dealer of the Year.” To Sir Edgard Cabangon, the humble chairman of Makati’s Isuzu Gencars Group, my heartfelt felicitations! Cheers!...Masando Hashimoto has officially taken over as president of Toyota Motor Philippines (TMP), replacing Atsuhiro Okamoto in a recent grand ceremony at Hyatt Manila in BGC.  TMP chair Alfred V. Ty praised Okamoto›s courageous stint in steering the company to “smashing success” amid the brutal challenges of the pandemic years. Okamoto described his tenure as “the best four years of my life.” Sayonara & Kanpai!

Story & photo by Randy S. Peregrino
Editor: Tet Andolong • www.businessmirror.com.ph
BusinessMirror Henry Ford Awards Best Motoring Section 2007,2008,2009,2010 2011 Hall of Fame B8 Friday, March 1, 2024
Motoring
Hashimoto, 46, is a seasoned executive with 24 years of experience in the manufacturing industry. A graduate of Keio University in Tokyo, Japan, he began his ca
reer at Toyota Motor
expertise in global sales
busi
ness planning, Asia distribution, and human resource manage
ment. He also held managerial positions within TMC and became senior division coordinator in 2016 at Toyota Motor Thailand, where he handled distribution operations.
recent years, Hashimoto
-
Corporation (TMC) in 2007 and has honed his
and
-
-
In
de -
TMP former president Atsuhiro Okamoto and new president Masando Hashimoto during the recently concluded formal leadership turnover ceremony. THE new TMP president Masando Hashimoto. TOYOTA MOTOR PHILIPPINES
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