Manila Standard - 2017 March 30 - Thursday

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Satellites over Benham eyed By Macon Ramos-Araneta

VOL. XXXI • NO. 48 • 4 SECTIONS 20 PAGES • P18 • THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017 • www.manilastandard.net • editorial@thestandard.com.ph

A TOP security official on Wednesday recommended the procurement and use of satellites to better monitor marine activity in Benham Rise, an undersea region 250 kilometers east of the northern coastline of Dinapigue, Isabela. “When you have an exclusive economic

zone [EEZ] that is as big as what we have, then we would require... awareness of everything that’s going on there,” National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon said during a Senate panel hearing on the proposed creation of a Benham Rise Development Authority. Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, the Philippines Next page

Du30 sees vigilantes’ rise Vows protection for cops against drug syndicates By John Paolo Bencito

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RESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte on Wednesday said more vigilantes are likely to spring up in the coming days as he vowed to grant absolute pardon to cops implicated in drug killings. “These vigilantes, they exist. They got it from me,” Duterte said in Filipino during a speech at the People’s Day Celebration at Socorro, Oriental Mindoro. Duterte said that more vigilantes are likely to rise because not all Filipinos will let the country fall to illegal drugs. “Really, if I will not do it, there will be people who will do it for me. Because not all Filipinos are afraid and [will] let the country be crippled because of drugs. Believe me, there will be many others who will come out,” he said. While he denied operating the socalled Davao Death Squad, Duterte said he is ready to kill vigilante-style if his loved ones are killed by drug addicts or contaminated by narcotics. “If my daughter gets raped, I won’t have a choice but to buy a gun and a silencer. I will walk down the streets and

find you. If I see you, bang, bang, bang. Even if I’m not President, I will do that,” he said. He also warned drug syndicates to stop peddling drugs or die. In the same speech, the President reaffirmed his support for police who were just following his instructions. “It is within the power of the President ... I will grant absolute pardon. They will have my protection. You can charge them with anything,” he said. Human rights groups accused Duterte of encouraging vigilante killings of drug suspects and condoning police misconduct. Criticism however, of police conduct and alleged vigilante groups committing extrajudicial killings came to a head earlier this year, after it was discovered that police officers were responsible for the Next page

Feud over House control spills into legal system By Christine F. Herrera and Maricel V. Cruz

HEAT NEUTRALIZER. Children at the Baseco compound in Manila’s Port Area compete with their rhythm in gliding as they dive for a dip in the roily waters to quickly address the summer’s scorching heat, which registered 33 degress Celsius at 1 p.m. Wednesday. Norman Cruz

Gina’s order makes mines govt milking cow By Christine F. Herrera ENVIRONMENT Secretary Regina Lopez was accused of milking the suspended mining firms by requiring them to put up multi-million-peso trust funds amounting to P2 million per hectare of “disturbed land” before they could be given a permit to remove or ship out of the country their nickel ore stockpiles.

The trust fund that could run up to billions of pesos would be assigned to nongovernment organizations of Lopez’s choosing to do the rehabilitation. Lopez issued a memorandum allowing the suspended mining firms to remove their stockpiles from the affected areas. The new fee was separate from and on top of the existing rehabilitation trust fund set up by the government as required un-

der the law. Dated Jan. 30, 2017, Lopez’s memorandum, a copy of which was furnished the Manila Standard, shows that all suspended mining firms were ordered to each open a trust fund account in the amount of P2 million forr every hectare of disturbed land before they can be allowed to remove their stockpiles from mining areas Next page and given export permits.

DAVAO del Norte Rep. Antonio Floirendo Jr. said Wednesday he is ready to face the graft case filed against him by Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez over an allegedly anomalous lease contract between his company and the Bureau of Corrections. “I welcome any complaint to be filed against me and I am ready to face them with a clear conscience,” Floirendo said in a statement on Pantaleon Alvarez Wednesday, after a row between two of Duterte’s biggest Davao-based allies, allegedly spurred by their bickering paramours, spilled into the court system Tuesday. Floirendo, President Rodrigo Duterte’s biggest campaign contributor, is on the board of Tagum Agricultural Development Company Inc., which has a 25-year lease contract with BuCor for its 5,308-hectare banana plantation within the Davao penal colony. Floirendo denied any wrongdoing. “Admittedly I am hurt [by] the action of Next page

Bishop wary of barangay appointees

Machine keeps Rody ‘energized’

By Vito Barcelo, Macon Ramos-Araneta and Sandy Araneta

By John Paolo Bencito PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte on Wednesday admitted using an oxygen concentrator to help him get a good night’s rest following the ill effects of smoking on his body. Duterte, who marked his 72nd birthday on Tuesday, said that he was using a machine that concentrates oxygen from a gas supply after netizens observed that he has the machine beside his bed. “I cannot smoke. Iyong pinost diyan, iyong oxygen ko. Kasi matulog ako, ganoon lang. Oxygenation ko hindi maganda because of smoking,” Duterte said in a speech in Socorro, Oriental Mindoro. He lamented not being able to eat or drink everything he wanted because of his disease. “I am 72 yesterday. I cannot eat na gusto ko. Sabihin, ‘Cholesterol, mataas. Sugar mo, bantayan mo kasi six na.’ Wala na. Hindi na makainom kasi may Barrett.” Photos shared by Duterte’s son-in-law, Manases Carpio, revealed that Duterte is using the device that is beside his Matina Next page bed in Davao.

Antonio Floirendo

ANTI-DRUG WAR. This picture, taken Tuesday night, shows an alleged drug dealer killed by an unidentified assailant in Manila as the Duterte

administration continues its campaign against illegal drugs, while the President confirms the presence of vigilantes, adding he will grant absolute pardon to cops implicated in drug killings. AFP

Reds go for young blood; younger cadres take over By John Paolo Bencito YOUNGER cadres took over the leadership of the Communist Party of the Philippines’ central committee as the rebel’s armed wing, the New People’s Army,

celebrated its 48th anniversary on Wednesday. The CPP in a communique said that, after more than 50 years, it held its Second Party Congress on Oct. 24 to Nov. 7 last year with more than 120 attending and non-

attending delegates―the first since the revolutionary organization was founded by reaffirmists led by its founder Jose Maria Sison. With 60 percent of the delegates at 45 to 59 years old, more than half of the newly elected central

committee members are from the young and middle-aged cadres of the party, the communiqué said. “[This is] ensuring that the Party leadership will remain vibrant, tightly linked with the lower levels Next page

A CATHOLIC bishop warned Wednesday that appointing barangay officials nationwide would lead to an authoritarian rule, and that the barangay captains’ loyalty will remain with the appointing authority and not with their constituents. Novaliches Bishop Emeritus Teodoro Bacani said allowing the President to appoint thousands of barangay leaders all over the country could signal the start of authoritarian rule. He made his statement even as Senator Sherwin Gatchalian urged the filing of charges against the barangay captains involved in illegal drugs as he branded as “alarming” President Rodrigo Duterte’s remarks that 40 percent of all barangay captains across the country are involved in drugs. He said it was important to remove the 40 percent in the system. “I believe that if the 40 percent is indeed involved in illegal drugs, he [political candidate] can use what he got from illegal drugs in his campaign activities,” Gatchalian said. Next page


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