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Thursday 18, 2014 Vol.1,102015 No. 40 Tuesday, September Vol. 10 No. 327
P25.00 nationwide | 7 sections 32 pages | 7 days a week
Islamic banks can fill PHL financing needs By Genivi Factao
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he World Bank said the Philippines is in a position to partake of the trillion-dollar global Islamic financing market, as interest in the instrument has risen sharply in recent years.
INSIDE
the edison bulb exposes a hunger for nostalgia Mental peace
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EAR Lord, when in trouble, be it physically, mentally or spiritually, grant us mental peace, so we can have a full control of the gift of mind You gave us. Let tranquillity and hope prevail in our whole system. We reach out to You for strength against our weaknesses. Teach a searching heart that Your love is unchanging; that human love begins and grows by touching. Keep us closer to You, by way of mental peace. Amen. DAILY PRAYERS, THOMAS A. NELSON AND LOUIE M. LACSON
Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
B L L The Orange County Register
HEN Irene Conable moved from her 1927 historic home into a sleek condo last year, both in Riverside, Washington, she alighted upon compatible accents for her mother’s 19thcentury furnishings and antiques. She looked to the hottest trend in home illumination, the Edison, vintage or nostalgia globes, a nod to Thomas Alva Edison, who’s considered the father of incandescent lighting. Resurrected as reproductions of the inventor’s first bulb, the Edisons now shimmer from coast to coast. Manufactured in hundreds of designs, the exposed bulbs are celebrated as
hip throwbacks to more rustic times. “I wanted to continue the modern version of Victoriana steampunk through the plumbing and lighting,” said Conable, 70, a retired school librarian. “That’s why I chose these bulbs.” In the past three years, these improbable luminaries in the interior design world have jumped the grid from commercial to home décor, said David Gray, a spokesman for Chatsworth, California-based Lamps Plus, the nation’s largest specialty lighting retailer. Coiled, twisted, crisscrossed, laced, separated or bunched, the visible filaments—or threadlike heating elements made of tungsten or carbon— provide much of the bulb’s aesthetic charm. “Any fixture that surrounds these bulbs usually represents some type of industrial function, like pipes or a safety cage,” Gray said.
See “Islamic Banks,” A8
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The Edison bulb exposes a hunger for nostalgia
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which frowns on the acceptance of interest or fees for loans. According to the World Bank, Shariah-compliant financing can enhance investments on such underser ved segments in the Philippines as households, small and medium enter pr ises and agriculture. Islamic finance helps contribute to the World Bank’s program of promoting financial
special report
OWEN WILSON BREAKS OUT OF COMEDY FOR SERIOUS ‘NO ESCAPE’ ROLE »D2
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Dr. Zamir Iqbal, lead financialsector specialist at the World Bank Global Islamic Finance Development Centre (GIFD), bared this development even as the volume of so-called Shariah-compliant instruments expanded at more than 10 percent each year the past many years. The GIFD Center helps World Bank client-countries to take advantage of the rapid growth of financial assets that are compliant with Shariah law,
MODERNIZING PHL MILITARY ON A SHOESTRING BUDGET
Movies such as Skyfall and the TV show Scandal have glamorized these unlikely beacons of beauty as soft, romantic sparkles in subway tunnels, hideouts, basements, clandestine meeting rooms and attic crawl spaces, Gray said. Janice Morell-Bielman used the Edison bulbs in her living room scences and the dining room candelabra in her 1929 Tudor home in Riverside. “Great mood lighting,” she said. “Much better than traditional incandescents.” The Edison bulb works well in contemporary décor, too. “They’re welcome in any design, except glitz and glamour,” Gray said. The consumer’s fascination with industrial chic, inspired by pendant Edison bulbs in restaurants, has fueled the craze, according to
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kerry, obama to raise global warming issues in Alaska The World BusinessMirror
B3-2 Tuesday, September 1, 2015
China gives little credit, or help, to Nationalist WWII vets
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In this June 7 file photo provided by the Alaska Division of Forestry, smoke rises from the Bogus Creek Fire, one of two fires burning in the Yukon Delta national Wildlife Refuge in southwest Alaska. Global warming is carving measurable changes into Alaska, and President Barack Obama is about to see it. Matt Snyder/alaSka diviSion of foreStry via aP
Kerry, Obama to raise global warming issues in Alaska
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NCHORAGE, Alaska—Scientists are “overwhelmingly unified” in concluding that humans are contributing to global climate change, Secretary of State John Kerry said on Sunday night, and the public is slowly getting the full picture. Skeptics who stand in the way of action to respond to climate change will not be remembered kindly, he told Alaska reporters. “I think the people who are slow to come to this table will be written up by historians as having been some of the folks most irresponsible in understanding and reacting to scientific analysis,” he said.
Kerry spoke one day before he and President Barack Obama will address the State Department’s Conference on Global Leadership in the Arctic. The purpose, according to the State Department, is to focus world attention on urgent issues facing the Arctic and provide foreign ministers and residents a way to address challenges.
“The president believes this is one of the most important issues we face,” Kerry said. “It is a national security problem.” Warming’s effects on Alaska have been more dramatic than elsewhere in the country as glaciers thaw, coastlines erode and sea ice, the habitat for threatened polar bears, Pacific walrus and ice seals, diminishes. The president is taking steps to address warming, Kerry said, and will advocate strongly for an international pact on cutting carbon emissions at a United Nations conference in December in Paris. Kerry said he traveled to China to negotiate on carbon reductions and the country has set targets. China is taking the issue seriously, he said. “We’ve been urging other countries all around the world to do so,” he said. The president’s climate
action plan involves all carbon sources, from appliances to automobiles to power generators. “So we’re doing as much as we can to try to move people toward sustainable sources of energy and the president will talk about this very much while he’s up here in Alaska. Part of the reason for being here is to underscore this problem.” Environmental groups plan to protest on Monday over Obama’s decision to grant permits to Royal Dutch Shell for exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska’s northwest coast. Kerry said the administration is taking a balanced approach to moving away from carbon sources of energy. “You have to balance it with the fundamentals of your economy and of basic needs. That’s one of the things we’ll talk about here—how fast can we encourage people to switch.” AP
EIJING—Chinese veteran Sun Yibai doesn’t have much time for the Communist Party’s claim to have led China to victory against Japan in World War II. “The Communist Party didn’t fight Japan,” said the sprightly 97-year-old, who once served as a translator with the storied Flying Tigers aviation brigade. “They made up a whole bunch of stories afterward, but it was all fabricated.” That view challenges a basic premise underpinning this week’s lavish celebrations in Beijing of the 70th anniversary of Japan’s defeat: That Mao Zedong’s Communists were the saviors of the nation, battling against Japanese forces that began occupying parts of China in 1931 before launching a full-blown invasion in 1937. Veterans, such as Sun, have long found themselves on the wrong side of that narrative. Their service with the Nationalists led to imprisonment, persecution and often death in the years after the 1949 Communist revolution. Now mostly in their 90s, they’re living out their remaining years shunned and forgotten by all but a few who care to hear their stories. “Nobody cares about veterans like me. Nobody cares. People just forget what happened in the past,” Sun said in an interview in his Beijing apartment stuffed with books and old photos. In a Beijing suburb, Lu Chunshan, 91, held up fingers gnarled and deformed from two decades of hard labor, his sentence for having signed on as a military cadet with the Nationalists in 1942. Following the war, Lu found temporary employment but was dragged before baying crowds during political campaigns in the 1950s and 1960s and denounced as an enemy of the Communist cause. “If you tangled with the Communists, then it was as if you made no contribution at all to speak of,” Lu said. “If you did just what the party said, you’d have a good life.” Despite having faded documentation confirming his national service, Lu receives no pension, surviving mainly on 2,400 yuan ($380) per month provided by a former employer, a state oil company. He and his female companion of the last decade buy their market produce late in the afternoon, when the prices are lowest. Most independent historians agree that it was the forces of the Nationalist Party, or Kuomintang, led by Mao’s archrival Chiang Kaishek, that led the anti-Japanese struggle and suffered the vast majority of casualties. Following the war’s end, the exhausted and
divided Nationalists were defeated by the Communists in a renewed civil war and fled to Taiwan, cementing Mao’s claim to having defeated imperialism, unified the country and overthrown the old feudal order. “This joint victory over the external enemy and the internal one, including the landlord class, is a fundamental component of [the party’s] founding myth,” Harvard University China scholar Anthony Saich said. While the Nationalists’ contribution to the war effort is no longer denied outright, it is heavily minimized, and veterans such as Sun and Lu are largely ignored. “The mainstay role of the Communist Party was the linchpin in the victory of the entire nation in the war of resistance,” top party historian Gao Yongzhong recently told reporters in a reiteration of the party’s basic line. “This conclusion has been long established,” Gao said. Formal 70th anniversary commemorations begin on Wednesday with a ceremony at the Great Hall of the People to honor veterans—at least those whose service has been officially recognized. On Thursday will see a massive military through Beijing showcasing the growing might of the People’s Liberation Army that has unnerved many neighboring countries. China marks the victory over the Japanese on September 3, the day after Tokyo’s formal surrender, though the festivities gloss over the fact that Japan surrendered to the Allies aboard a US naval ship and that Chiang Kai-shek was the Allied commander for mainland China at the time. The Communist claim to have led China to victory against Japan is rooted in a hazy assertion that the party was the first to call for fighting against Japan, at a time when the Nationalists were biding their time to build up China’s strength for the coming conflict with Tokyo. That Mao spent the war well behind the lines in remote Shaanxi province is little mentioned. Gao, the party historian, puts the Communists’ wartime losses at 450,000 dead and injured. Independent historians put the Nationalists’ losses at around 3.2 million troops suffered in more than 1,000 engagements with Japanese forces ranging from the cities of the east coast to the southwestern province of Yunnan. The Nationalists also worked closely with the US and Britain, contributing forces to the fight in Burma and hosting air bases in the interior of China used in bombing missions against targets as far away as the Japanese home islands. AP
By Rene Acosta
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Mothers, students join Japan’s Tony Blair cautions Labour party over Corbyn leadership protests over security bills T
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okyo—Mothers holding their children’s hands stood in the sprinkling rain, some carrying antiwar placards, while students chanted slogans to the beat of a drum against Prime Minister Shinzo abe and his defense policies. Japan is seeing new faces join the ranks of protesters typically made up of labor-union members and graying leftist activists. tens of thousands filled the streets outside tokyo’s parliament on Sunday to rally against security legislation expected to pass in September. “no to war legislation,” ‘’Scrap the bills now!” and “abe, quit!” they chanted in one of the biggest protests in recent memory. the bills would expand Japan’s military role under a reinterpretation of the country’s war-renouncing constitution. in Japan, where people generally don’t express political views in public, such rallies have largely diminished since often violent university student protests in the 1960s. the 2011 fukushima nuclear plant disaster, however, prompted a spurt of antinuclear protests that brought mothers out of their homes. now at least some seem to be shifting their focus to the security debate. the demonstrations started earlier this year and grew sharply after July, when abe’s ruling coalition pushed the legislation through
the more powerful lower house despite polls showing a majority of Japanese opposed. Whether the protests signal wider social change remains to be seen. the antinuclear protests have faded somewhat, and these could too, once the summer holiday is over and the legislation passes, as expected. But grassroots movements among typically apolitical groups, such as mothers and students—aided by social media— appear to be growing. a group called Mothers against War started in July and gained supporters rapidly via facebook. it collected nearly 20,000 signatures of people opposed to the legislation, which representatives tried unsuccessfully to submit to abe’s office last friday. etsuko Matsuda, a member of the group, said she has seen too many things going in the wrong direction, including the recent return to nuclear power in postfukushima Japan. “i think there are a growing number of people like me who realized our lives have only turned worse under abe’s government,” said the 40-year-old mother of two from Sendai city in northern Japan. “i hope more people would be interested in politics and speak up.” AP
ONY BLAIR, the most successful leader in Labour history who led the party to three consecutive wins starting from 1997, cautioned his party on Sunday against electing Jeremy Corbyn, the candidate tipped to win the leadership poll on September 12. Blair, who previously criticized Corbyn and his growing band of supporters for their hard-left posture that, according to him, would make the party unelectable, wrote in The Observer that his politics were fantasy, just like Alice in Wonderland. Corbyn has attracted much criticism from past and current leading lights of the party, including Gordon Brown and Neil Kinnock. Blair’s former aide, Alistair Campbell, voiced the apprehensions of many about Corbyn: “ABC: Anyone But Corbyn”. However, the more trenchant the criticism, the more supporters Corbyn has won. The other three candidates— none of whom has so far stood out with their policies--are Andy Burnham, Yvette Cooper and Liz Kendall. Blair, who admitted that
TOnY BlAIR, former United Kingdom prime minister ChriS ratCliffe/BlooMBerg
criticism led to more support for Corbyn, wrote: “Anyone listening? Nope. In fact, the opposite. It actually makes them more likely to support him. In the Alice in Wonderland world this parallel reality has created, it is we who are backward looking for pointing out that the Corbyn program is exactly what we fought and lost on 30 years ago, not him for having it.” According to Blair, Corbyn’s rise
is similar to trends of “parallel reality” in other countries, such as Donald Trump leading the field of Republican candidates in the US; Alexis Tsipras winning in Greece; or Marine Le Pen riding high in France. “There is a politics of parallel reality going on, in which reason is an irritation, evidence a distraction, emotional impact is king and the only thing that counts is feeling good about it all. So when
people like me come forward and say elect Jeremy Corbyn as leader and it will be an electoral disaster, his enthusiastic new supporters roll their eyes,” Blair wrote. B l a i r ’s i nt e r v e nt i o n w a s promptly flayed by Corbyn supporters, like Tessa Jowell: “I don’t think there is any point in people who are no longer engaged in frontline politics giving their view from afar. I really don’t.” TNS
World
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f the P331 billion allocated for the implementation of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Modernization Program, Defense Secretary Voltaire T. Gazmin said only P58.4 billion had been released. “It must be mentioned that of this amount, P31.6 billion was provided during the Aquino administration,” Gazmin said. Various factors and the confluence of events
in the West Philippine Sea resketched the country’s overall defense horizon and its current security strategy, which emphasized the need for the military to upgrade its capability. The modernization of the military was made more urgent by China’s expansive maritime claims in the West Philippine Sea, which threaten Philippine sovereignty and integrity. With this external threat, which was described by military planners and strategists as no longer looming but “real and immediate,” the government revised its existing de-
fense plan by signing the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (Edca) with the United States and fast-tracking the military’s acquisition program. Beyond its signing on April 28 last year, the Edca became the country’s temporary, but primary defense plan, or foremost territorial defense strategy, while it was beefing up the armaments of the Philippine military. For the Americans, the agreement, which was signed by Gazmin and US Ambassador Continued on A2
COMPETITION ACT TO BOOST PHL’S ROLE IN SERVICES GVC Esguerra: “We would like to see greater participation of services in various GVCs that will increase productivity and add value to goods produced.”
By Cai U. Ordinario
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he government sees further improvement in the count r y ’s r e v e n u e s from services trade due to the enactment of the Competition Act, with the boost coming from the foreseen increase in the Philippines’s participation in global value chains (GVCs). National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) Deputy Director General Emmanuel F. Esguerra said the level playing field that the new law promotes is sure to attract more investments from companies in the services GVC. With an enabling environment for the flourishing of GVCs in the Philippines, Esguerra said the country will be able to solidify its footing in the global services trade. “GVCs now account for more than 50 percent of global trade. The significant role of GVCs in international services trade creates a sense of urgency to make the services sector more competitive. So it’s very important for us to do further analytical work in the area,” said Esguerra, who is also the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) Group on Services convener. In a paper for the Apec 2015 Research Project, the Philippine Institute of Development Studies explained that GVCs constitute value chains that produce goods and services globally. Esguerra noted the importance of developing innovative services within GVCs and prioritizing services on the development agenda, addressing Continued on A8
Asian currencies record biggest monthly decline in 3 years A sia’s currencies posted their biggest monthly loss in three years, led by Malaysia’s ringgit, after a yuan devaluation heightened the risk of a currency war in the region as the United States prepares to raise interest rates. The Bloomberg-JPMorgan Asia Dollar Index, which tracks the region’s 10 most-active currencies, excluding the yen, retreated 2.6 percent in August, the biggest monthly decline since May 2012. Global funds sold
about $10-billion more equities than they bought in South Korea, India, Taiwan, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines, the latest exchange data show. China’s August 11 devaluation took investors by surprise and sparked concern other Asian countries will favor depreciation to protect exports. The ringgit tumbled 8.6 percent this month, the worst performance since 1998, as a political scandal sapped investor confidence and a plunge in com-
PESO exchange rates n US 46.7050
modities prices dimmed the outlook for Malaysian shipments. Indonesia’s rupiah fell 3.8 percent, the most in 11 months, and the yuan declined 2.7 percent as its one-month implied volatility quadrupled amid a shift to a more market-determined exchange rate. Asian currencies “now have to deal with a new uncertainty in the form of a more market-oriented yuan that is potentially more volatile,” said Koon How Heng, a Singapore-
based strategist at Credit Suisse Private Bank and Wealth Management. “As investor risk aversion has grown, the increasing sell-off in local capital markets and resultant capital flight has added more pressure.”
Malaysian protests
Tens of thousands of people gathered in Malaysia’s capital over the weekend, demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Najib Razak over claims he received billions
of ringgit linked to a troubled state investment fund in his private accounts. Najib has denied the allegations. The furor, coupled with a 23-percent slide in Brent crude over the past two months, has contributed to the ringgit’s decline. The currency’s 17-percent slide this year is the worst in Asia. The rupiah weakened beyond 14,000 a dollar for the first time since 1998 this month, as the country’s stocks entered a bear market. Bloomberg News
n japan 0.3860 n UK 71.9444 n HK 6.0263 n CHINA 7.2916 n singapore 33.3893 n australia 33.4635 n EU 52.5571 n SAUDI arabia 12.4523 Source: BSP (29 August 2015)