Hazing suspect gives up Claims no role except to aid already ‘half-dead’ victim
VOL. XXXI • NO. 221 • 3 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2017 • www.manilastandard.net • editorial@manilastandard.net
SUSPECT BOOKED.
WIRETAPPING. President Rodrigo
Duterte has admitted ‘tapping’ telephone lines of narco-politicians, which he said has helped him trace their transactions, and named Iloilo Mayor Jed Patrick Mabilog and the deceased Ozamiz City mayor Reynaldo Parojinog.
‘IS extremist threat spilling over to other parts in south’
Taxi driver in EJK case now suspect By Rey E. Requejo TOMAS Bagcal, the taxi driver who claimed he was robbed by Carl Angelo Arnaiz and Reynaldo “Kulot” de Guzman before the former UP student was killed by police in a supposed shootout, has been included as principal suspect in the killing of the two teenagers. Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II made the disclosure after Bagcal suddenly changed his testimony, claiming that Arnaiz and De Guzman used a knife when they robbed him
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including some 9,000 from Nestlé products—the most frequently-seen brand, according to a tally kept by the group. “These corporations are the missing piece in the global fight against plastic pollution,” Greenpeace campaigner Abigail Aguilar said in a statement. Greenpeace said plastic waste was a particularly serious problem in “sachet economies” like the Philippines and other developing countries, where people on limited incomes are pushed to buy cheap goods in small quantities. In the Philippines, a country of 103 million people with high levels of poverty, products sold in single-use sachets include instant coffee, shampoo, cooking oil, food season-
ing and toothpaste. These low-value disposable sachets usually end up in landfill or as litter or marine debris, according to Greenpeace. Nestle provided Aguilar details of its “environmental sustainability projects” on Friday, she said. Unilever, number two on the Greenpeace list, and number five Procter & Gamble did not respond to the group’s correspondence, said regional Greenpeace spokeswoman Angelica Pago. The solutions proposed by Nestlé were “still promoting incineration and end-of-pipe solutions, while Greenpeace advocates for waste reduction and the banning of single-use plastics altogether,” Pago added. Next page
Trillanes sues Mocha for libel over fake news
POLICE SEND-OFF. Northern Police Director Chief Supt. Clifton Empiso leads the send-off
ceremony Monday—in this picture released only Friday—for 300 cops from Malabon, Navotas and Valenzuela City to the Caloocan City Police Station where the entire police force was sacked following a spate of killings where Caloocan policemen were involved. Andrew Rabulan
Nokor calls Trump ‘deranged,’ hints nuke test SEOUL, South Korea— US President Donald Trump is “mentally deranged” and will “pay dearly” for his threat to destroy North Korea, Kim Jong-Un said Friday, as
his foreign minister hinted the regime may explode a hydrogen bomb over the Pacific Ocean. In a rare personal attack published hours after Washington announced twitter.com/ MlaStandard
“We strongly condemn the senseless killing of Horacio Castillo III,” Presidential Spokesman Ernesto Abella said. * The Taipei Economic and Cultural Office clarified that Ralph Cabales Trangia, one of the suspects in Castillo’s killing, did not enter Taiwan as some reports said, but went directly to Chicago as he transited from one airline to another at Taoyuan Airport. “In other words, Mr. Trangia did not enter Taiwan. He was only one of the millions of transit passengers who had passed through Taiwan’s busy airport and departed for North America,” a TECO statement said, adding it did not know Trangia’s current whereabouts. * Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II on Friday urged the witnesses in the hazing of Castillo to come forward, assuring them of admission to the government’s Witness Protection Program if Next page they would tell the truth.
US survey group: Duterte’s war on drugs gets 57% broad support
Cheap plastic in PH 3rd worst sea pollutants WESTERN consumer giants are polluting the oceans by selling products packaged in cheap, disposable plastic to Filipinos, Greenpeace has claimed and named Nestlé, Unilever and Procter & Gamble among the worst offenders. The environmental group ranked the Philippines as the “third-worst polluter into the world’s oceans” after China and Indonesia in a report released Friday in Manila. Single-use plastics from products sold by conglomerates, such as bags, bottle labels and straws stood out during a week-long Greenpeace cleanup campaign held on Manila Bay this month, it said. More than 54,200 pieces of plastic waste were recovered from the bay in total,
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But Solano said he could not be sure about the true condition of the 22-yearold Castillo because he is not a doctor, but said Castillo had been unconscious. “I did give CPR and then when I could not do anything else, I brought him to the hospital,” Solano told reporters following his surrender to the Office of Senator Panfilo Lacson on Friday. Solano, a member of the Aegis Juris Fraternity, was met by UST Civil Law dean Nilo Divina, Lacson, and the police past 2 p.m. on Friday in Lacson’s office at the Bonifacio Global City in Taguig. In other developments: * Malacañang condemned Castillo’s killing on Friday, more than a week after the freshman law student at the University of Santo Tomas died after the initiation rites of the Aegis Juris Fraternity in the university.
John Paul Solano, a member of the Aegis Juris Fraternity, is processed Friday by police after being considered the prime suspect in the fatal hazing of University of Santo Tomas law freshman Horacio Castillo III, after he was turned over to the Manila Police District’s homicide section by Senator Panfilo Lacson. Norman Cruz
By John Paolo Bencito SPORATIC fighting between government troops and some Moro groups suggests that the threat of Islamic State-inspired extremists from Marawi City is spilling over to other parts of Mindanao, President Rodrigo Duterte said Thursday night. In Cotabato, Duterte said, Moro Islamic Liberation Front fighters and government troops battled the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, which has aligned itself with the Maute group, the ISISinspired terrorists that overran Next page Marawi City.
OHN PAUL Solano, one of the suspects in the hazing death of Horacio Tomas Castillo III, said Castillo was already “half-dead” when he arrived and rushed him to the Chinese General Hospital in Manila on the night of Sept. 16.
tougher sanctions, the North Korean leader took aim at Trump over his maiden speech to the UN General Assembly in which he branded Kim Next page
facebook.com/ ManilaStandardPH
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OPPOSITION Senator Antonio Trillanes IV on Friday filed three counts of the cybercrime offense of libel and falsification of documents against Presidential Communications Assistant Secretary Mocha Uson before the Office of the Ombudsman, and sought her immediate dismissal for taking advantage of her position to spread fake news. Trillanes also accused Uson of graft, grave misconduct and violation of the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees. “The era of fake news is over. All those spreading fake news will be culpable under the law,” Trillanes said. “I’ve been holding my peace. I have always been badmouthed.... But this one is different. She has been spreading fake information, directly besmirching my reputation and credibility as a public official. She has accused me of having offshore accounts that really did not exist,” Next page Trillanes said.
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MORE than three-quarters of Filipinos support President Rodrigo Duterte’s drug war, despite thousands of deaths and international condemnation over alleged rights abuses, a Pew Research Center poll has found. Some 78 percent of Filipinos approve of Duterte’s handling of the illegal drugs issue, with 62 percent believing the government’s campaign was making progress, according to Pew’s face-to-face surveys of 1,000 adults. The President also remained extremely popular a year after his election, with 86 percent saying they had a favorable view of him, a result in line with domestic surveys. The poll had a margin of error of 4.3 percent. The survey—conducted between Feb. 26 and May 8—predates some recent controversies over Duterte’s administration, including his declaration of martial law on Mindanao and drug-smuggling accusations against his son. Thousands joined protests in Metro Manila on Thurs-
day to mark the anniversary of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos’s martial law declaration 45 years ago. Duterte spokesman Ernesto Abella reiterated the President had no plan to expand military rule beyond Mindanao, where the government has battled Islamist militants. The state “recognizes the fear and indignation of the people against a repetition and perpetuation of such human rights violations,” Duterte said, referring to Marcos’ decade-long martial rule, in a proclamation suspending government work Thursday. Since taking office in June 2016, Duterte has waged a war on illegal drugs that has been condemned by the United Nations, the European Union and human rights advocates. While Duterte administration officials place total deaths at more than 3,400 as of July 26, Human Rights Watch estimated earlier this year that more than 7,000 people had been killed, including at least Next page three mayors.
PH scored 75.6 points in impunity level, highest among 65 countries THE Philippines had the worst level of impunity among 69 countries, the latest Global Impunity Index of the University of the Americas Puebla and the Center of Studies on Impunity and Justice revealed. The Philippines scored 75.6 points in terms of the level of impunity in the country, putting it under nations with “very high impunity index,” followed by India with 70.94 points. Other countries on top of the list were Cameroon, Mexico, Peru, Venezuela,
Brazil, Colombia, Nicaragua, Russian Federation, Paraguay, Honduras and El Salvador. “The Philippines is going through one of its critical moments, due to the increase of violence related with organized crime and increased terrorist activities from local gangs linked with the Islamic State,” the report said. According to the report, countries with high rates of impunity can suffer socioeconomic inequality, legal inequality, rule-oflaw problems, insufficient
economic development, difficulties to attract foreign investment and tourism, as well an increase in human rights violations. In determining the level of “impunity” in the country, two factors were used. First was the functionality of security, justice systems and the protection of human rights, which was scored according to indicators such as the percentage of individuals detained without judgment and the ratio of prosecutors to individuals brought before courts. Next page
FASHION SHOW. The Kasuotang Pilipino Fashion Show 2017 is currently held at the Glorietta at the Makati Center in observance of the Linggo ng Kasuotang Pilipino. The show is an exhibit of authentic Filipino attires of Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao and is participated in by officials of the Makati City government and members of the diplomatic corps. Diana Noche
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