BusinessMirror October 27, 2019

Page 1

ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDS

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

BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

A broader look at today’s business n

Sunday, October 27, 2019 Vol. 15 No. 17

EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS

BUSINESS NEWS SOURCE OF THE YEAR (2017, 2018)

DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

2018 BANTOG MEDIA AWARDS

PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY

DATA CHAMPION

P25.00 nationwide | 3 sections 36 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

WHEN CHILDREN TURN BABY MAKERS

PAWEL TALAJKOWSKI | DREAMSTIME.COM

POPCOM SAYS SURGE IN TEEN PREGNANCY SHOULD PROMPT PRESIDENT DUTERTE TO DECLARE NATIONAL EMERGENCY

T

By Cai U. Ordinario

HE Commission on Population and Development (CPD or Popcom) is optimistic that pending bills in Congress that seek to allow sexually active adolescents to gain access to contraceptives without parental consent will be passed next year.

In a phone interview with the BusinessMirror on Thursday, Popcom Undersecretary Juan Antonio A. Perez III said the bill hopes to address the surge in teenage pregnancies in the country. Perez said the country has the second highest adolescent birth rate in the Asean at 57 per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19 years old, together with Cambodia. Lao PDR has the highest at 75.6. “Only those adolescents with

children [who] are pregnant or had a miscarriage [will be allowed]. That means they are already sexually active, they have a family, so that is what’s on the bill of Senator Risa Hontiveros that those adolescents in that situation may access family planning services directly because they are already parents or mothers themselves. But adolescents who are just sexually active, or not pregnant, they still have to get consent from their

parents,” Perez said.

Sexual education

ONE of the bills filed is Senate Bill 161, or the Prevention of Adolescent Pregnancy bill, which provides “health facilities, goods and services should be known and easily accessible (economically, physically and socially) to all adolescents, without discrimination. Confidentiality must be guaranteed and maintained at all times.”

While this may have some good intentions, some economists prefer that education of adolescents be emphasized in order to prevent the rise in teen pregnancies. Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) Senior Research Fellow Michael Ralph M. Abrigo told the BusinessMirror that there are studies that show education can help delay sexual initiation. Continued on A2

Blood guacamole: In Mexico, avocados bring income, cartels

S

By Mark Stevenson | The Associated Press

AN JUAN PARANGARICUTIRO, Mexico—Small-scale avocado growers armed with AR-15 rifles take turns manning a vigilante checkpoint to guard against thieves and drug cartel extortionists in this Michoacan state, the heartland of world production of the fruit locals call “green gold.”

The region’s avocado boom, fueled by soaring US consumption, has raised parts of western Mexico out of poverty in just 10 years. But the scent of money has drawn gangs and hyper-violent cartels that have hung bodies from bridges and cowed police forces, and the rising violence is threatening the newfound prosperity. A recent US warning that it could withdraw orchard inspectors sent a shiver through the $2.4

billion-a-year export industry.

Worth fighting for

SOME growers are taking up arms. At the checkpoint in San Juan Parangaricutiro, the vigilantes are calm but attentive. They say their crop is worth fighting for. “If it wasn’t for avocados, I would have to leave to find work, maybe go to the United States or somewhere else,” said one of guards, Pedro de la Guante, whose

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 51.0610

IN this October 1, 2019, photo, a farmhand harvests avocados at an orchard, near Ziracuaretiro, Michoacan state, Mexico. Avocado pickers earn an attractive wage for the region but the work is seasonal and so physically demanding that few can continue working beyond the age of 45. AP

small avocado orchard earns him far more than he would get from any other legal—or illegal—crop. Luis, another guard who asked that his last name not be used out of fear of reprisals, lists the problems that came to the town with the avocado boom: extortion, kidnappings, cartels and avocado theft. “That is why we are here: We don’t want any of that.” While Mexican avocado growers have for years lived in fear of assaults and shakedowns, the situation went international in midAugust when a US Department of Agriculture (USDA) team of inspectors was “directly threatened” in Ziracuaretiro, a town just west of Uruapan in Michoacan. While the agency didn’t specify what happened, local authorities say a gang robbed the truck the inspectors were traveling in at gunpoint. “For future situations that result in a security breach, or demonstrate an imminent physical threat to the well-being of APHIS personContinued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4701 n UK 65.6338 n HK 6.5150 n CHINA 7.2227 n SINGAPORE 37.4540 n AUSTRALIA 34.8083 n EU 56.7032 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.6148

Source: BSP (October 25, 2019 )


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
BusinessMirror October 27, 2019 by BusinessMirror - Issuu