Manila Standard - 2016 November 12 - Saturday

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FRESH PROTESTS ERUPT OVER TRUMP VICTORY C4 SWEEPING REFORMS LOOM VS US ALIENS DONALD Trump won the presidency campaigning on a promise of a far-reaching immigration crackdown, and early indications are that he intends to execute it. The immigration section of Trump’s presidential transition website reaffirms his plans to “cancel unconstitutional executive orders”—which his advisers have said includes President Barack Obama’s 2012 program that has protected from deportation 750,000 young people brought to the US illegally. Next page

VOL. XXX • NO. 273 • 4 SECTIONS 20 PAGES • P18 • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2016 • www.thestandard.com.ph • editorial@thestandard.com.ph

DIFFERENCES ASIDE. President Barack Obama welcomes President-elect Donald Trump to the White House Thursday (Friday in Manila), as both men put past antagonisms aside in a time-honored ritual epitomizing the peaceful transfer of political power while demonstrators in Denver, Colorado (below left) continue to protest Trump’s stunning upset of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. AFP

Viet ship hijacked off Basilan; 5 held ZAMBOANGA CITY—Gunmen abducted at least five crewmen of a Vietnamese cargo vessel in southern Philippine waters Friday, authorities said, an area where Islamic militants are on a kidnapping-for-ransom spree. The attack brings to at least eight the number of people abducted from vessels in the region over the past week, including an elderly German sailor, raising fears authorities are unable to control the worsening piracy problem. The MV Royal 16 was sailing less than 20 kilometers (12 miles) from Basilan island, a stronghold of Abu Sayyaf militants, when it was attacked on Friday morning. Two crew members, one of

whom was wounded, escaped and were rescued by a local cargo ship in the area, authorities added. “Sea and naval assets [were] already deployed to search and rescue the said kidnap victims,” said regional military spokesman Filemon Tan. The nationalities of the five crewmen and the identity of the kidnappers were still unknown. In recent months, the Abu Sayyaf has been accused of kidnapping dozens of Indonesian and Malaysian sailors in waters off the southern Philippines. On the weekend, an Abu Sayyaf commander claimed responsibility for abducting a 70-year-old German sailor and murdering his wife. Next page

Du30 eyes best of both worlds Keeps US ties, but leans toward China

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RESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte declared Friday that he would continue to shift the Philippines toward China despite Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidential election.

At an early morning briefing in Davao, Duterte said that while the US would remain a friend and ally, the Philippines’ foreign policy was now geared toward China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. “I will pursue what I’ve started,” Duterte said following his

return from a state visit to Malaysia. “My partnership with China and the rest of Asean will remain. I am not in the habit of reneging on my word.” Duterte called himself “just a small molecule in the planet” compared with Trump. “He is now president of the most pow-

erful country in the world,” Duterte said. “What we share in common is the passion to serve.” In a state visit to China last month, Duterte announced a formal “separation” from the US and said he wanted to pivot to China and Russia -- widening a split with his nation’s biggest security ally. Since being sworn in as president in June, Duterte has vowed to end joint military exercises with the US, called for American soldiers to leave the southern island of Mindanao, and told President Barack

Nuke plant revival bid approved

Rody buys cops’ tale of jail raid

By Alena Mae S. Flores PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte has given the Energy Department the go-ahead to look into the possibility of powering up the 620-megawatt Bataan Nuclear Power Plant, which was mothballed over safety concerns during the late 1980s. At the inauguration of the 414-MW San Gabriel and 97MW Avion natural gas plants in Batangas, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said he had talked to the President to seek clearance to proceed. The President gave him the go-signal to look into the possibility of powering up the plant, giving full consideration to the safety and security of such an undertaking, he said. “I gave him assurance that we will not do it recklessly…We are going to follow the strict measures of the IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency],” Cusi said. Only recently, Duterte said he did not want to pursue nuclear power during his term. “He [President Duterte] did not change his mind. I explained to him what the country needs. As DoE, it is our responsibility to look [into] all of these… We have to look at it [based] on the future of the country,” Cusi Next page added.

Obama to “go to hell.” Even so, with the two countries still bound by several agreements including a mutual defense treaty, Duterte said the Philippines would maintain its cooperation with the US. “It is still part of trying to play off the United States against China,” said Segundo Romero, a professorial lecturer in development studies at the Ateneo de Manila University. “His anti-US stance is a mix of sentiments against country and against its leadership.” Next page

By F. Pearl A. Gajunera DAVAO CITY—President Rodrigo Duterte has assumed full responsibility over the killing of Albuera Mayor Rolando Espinosa inside the Baybay City provincial jail. Duterte, who just arrived from his visit to Malaysia, said that he tended to believe the statements of the police unless there is evidence gathered against them. “Let me state my case as the Chief Executive of the Executive branch. I believe in the version of the police. If they have evidence Next page

SINGING A SONG. Visiting President Rodrigo Duterte and host Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak go ‘shalala lala in the morning/in the

sunshine/in the evening’—popularized by the Dutch Eurodance group Vengaboys—as they sing to the high nines, having fun together with the intermission number during the state banquet hosted by the latter at the Perdana Putrajaya Thursday.

Marcos bucks court ruling that favored Comelec THE camp of defeated vice presidential candidate Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has asked the Department of Justice to overturn the resolution of the Office of the City Prosecutor in Manila dismissing the case for violation of the Cybertwitter.com/ MlaStandard

crime Prevention Act of 2012 filed against officials of the Commission on Elections and Smartmatic officials. In his petition for review, former Abakada party-list Rep. Jonathan dela Cruz, who served as

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Marcos’ campaign adviser in the May elections, said the panel of Manila prosecutors committed an error in dismissing the case against Marlon Garcia, head of the Smartmatic technical support team; Elie Moreno, Smartmatic project direc-

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tor; Neil Baniqued, Smartmatic team member; and Rouie Peñalba, Comelec information technology officer, for lack of evidence. The panel of prosecutors also dismissed the case against Smartmatic Next page

Top cop’s Vegas trip stirs probe THE Office of the Ombudsman is looking into the possible administrative culpability of Police Chief Ronald dela Rosa for accepting an all-expense paid trip to Las Vegas to watch Senator Manny Pacquiao’s bout with World Boxing Organization welterweight champion Jessie Vargas, an official said Friday. “Yes, the Ombudsman is conducting a fact-finding investigation Next page

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