Manila Standard - 2017 March 06 - Monday

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Duterte’s men visit US warship VOL. XXXI • NO. 24 • 4 SECTIONS 20 PAGES • P18 • MONDAY, MARCH 6, 2017 • www.thestandard.com.ph • editorial@thestandard.com.ph

YOUTH SUMMIT. Youth students from various countries and SM Cares officials join a photo session during the opening of the Global Youth Summit 2017 at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay City. Now on its fifth year, Global Youth Summit is a celebration of youth leadership that aims to engage and inspire the world’s future experts. EY ACASIO

Soldiers recover German’s corpse By Florante S. Solmerin and Sandy Araneta THE body of an elderly German hostage who was beheaded by Abu Sayyaf bandits has been found, the government said on Sunday. The Abu Sayyaf, which has pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group, murdered Jurgen Kantner, 70, last week after its demand for P30 million was not met. Military officials said Marines found Kantner’s body on Saturday evening in the militants’ remote stronghold of Sulu. Capt. Jo-Ann Petinglay, spokesperson of the Western Mindanao Command, said it was 6 p.m. when the troops found the decapitated body. Presidential Spokesman Ernesto Abella said in a statement Next page

DEFENSE Secretary Delfin Lorenzana on Saturday visited a US aircraft carrier patrolling the South China Sea, hailing the “strong relationship” with Washington despite President Rodrigo Duterte’s pivot away from Manila’s traditional ally. The US Navy said the USS Carl Vinson had been engaging in “routine operations in the South China Sea” since last month to assert freedom of navigation in the strategic waterway claimed by Beijing, Manila and a host of other Southeast Asian nations. Lorenzana said he and other top officials in Duterte’s administration had a “very interesting and informative” visit to the aircraft carrier. “We have a strong relationship with the US on account of our mutual defense treaty,” he added, referring to the cornerstone 1951 agreement. Duterte has thrown the Philippines’ 70-year-old alliance with the US into question, threatening a “separation” from Washington last year and calling for the withdrawal of American troops from his country. Next page

Gina L. charged with P1-b graft Troops kill 4 more ASG amid clashes FOUR more Abu Sayyaf bandits were killed after ground troops stumbled on the terrorist group on the outskirts of Talipao in Sulu early Sunday morning, an official said. Col. Cirilito Sobejana, Commander of Joint Task Force Sulu, said the four were killed during a firefight in Lumipad village around 5:45 a.m. He made the statement even as President Rodrigo Duterte’s ongoing campaign against extremism and terrorism got a much needed

boost after the descendants of sultans and royal clans in Mindanao expressed their support for the government’s campaign against the two security menaces. That resulted from the first-ever Mindanao Sultanate Summit on Peace and Security hosted by the Defense and Interior departments on March 2 to 4 that was attended by around 500 participants. The death of the four bandits brought to 16 the number of slain terrorists after a series of military

operations against the Abu Sayyaf, which started after the group beheaded 70-year-old German hostage Jurgen Kantner in Igasan, Sulu, on Sunday last week. Sobejana said troops of the 64th Marine Company were mobilized after a group of Abu Sayyaf bandits was reported in Lumipad village, where they arrived and engaged the bandits in a firefight. Sobejana said soldiers found the bodies of the found bandits as Next page

By Christine F. Herrera

E

NVIRONMENT Secretary Regina Lopez is facing criminal and administrative charges before the Office of the Ombudsman for allegedly covering up past wrongdoings of her trusted lieutenants who favored a supplier involving a questionable project worth P1 billion.

The charges were among the grounds used to oppose Lopez’s confirmation by the Commission on Appointments, which meets Wednesday to decide if Congress will approve her say in President Rodrigo Duterte’s Cabinet.

Rodolfo Javellana Jr., president of the United Filipino Consumers and Commuters, and Manuel Galvez, managing partner of Airboard Co., accused Lopez, her consultant Leo Jasareno, Department Next page

Food chief faces ouster for defying rice policy By Anna Leah E. Gonzales NATIONAL Food Authority Administrator Jason Aquino faces disciplinary sanctions that could lead to his removal over his repeated defiance of the orders of the NFA Council, Cabinet Secretary Leoncio Evasco Jr. said Sunday. In a statement, Evasco, who is also the ex- officio chairman of the NFA Council, said Aquino’s disregard of the Council’s deci-

sion to extend the rice importation under the Minimum Access Volume was offensive to the country’s food security. “The NFA administrator has actively refused to implement the lawful orders of the NFAC and directives of the [Cabinet Secretary] to publish and has even released a press statement countering the NFAC’s decision that the MAV has been extended to March 31,” Evasco said. Next page “

TEMBLOR. Workers arrange crates of soft drinks that fell after an earthquake struck Surigao City in Mindanao on March 5, 2017. One person was killed and several others injured when a powerful aftershock hit the city still recovering from a quake last month, authorities said. AFP

Aftershock jolts quake-hit Surigao; 1 dead, 29 hurt By Rio N. Araja ONE person was killed and several others were injured Sunday when a powerful aftershock hit Surigao City, which is still recovering from a quake last month, au-

thorities said. The 5.9-magnitude quake struck Surigao and surrounding areas, causing some walls to collapse, government seismologists and civil defense officers said. The quake was felt as far as San

Juan and San Francisco in Southern Leyte, and General Luna, Surigao del Norte and Ormoc City. One 65-year-old woman, Socoro Cenes, a resident of Surigao City, died of a heart attack while at least 29 people were injured, local

television reports added. The new earthquake was just one of over 100 aftershocks to hit Surigao City since a 6.5-magnitude quake on Feb. 10 left eight dead and over 250 injured, mainly due to falling objects. Next page

Plunder may still be included in death bill—solon By Rio N. Araja CONGRESS has omitted plunder, rape, treason and other heinous crimes from the death penalty bill but there is still a chance

to include them once the measure reaches the bicameral conference committee, Rep. Reynaldo Umali said Sunday. He said the heinous crimes that had been omitted from the bill

could also be added especially if President Rodrigo Duterte made an appeal to include them. “Everything is possible during the bicam, but I don’t want to preempt the decision of the panel,” said

Umali, the chairman of the House committee on justice and the sponsor of the death penalty bill. That bill is set for approval on the third and final reading on Next page Tuesday.

POWER UP. Meralco workers replace old wirings from electric posts in Tondo, Manila. Power rates are bound to go up by P1.44 per kilowatthour, a little higher than earlier projections this March following the 20-day Malampaya shutdown, according to Meralco. NORMAN CRUZ


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