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Pinoys mourn Kobe’s passing Palace leads tribute to frequent PH visitor By Riera U. Mallari and MJ Blancaflor
VOL. XXXIII • NO. 348 • 3 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 2020 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com
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HE Palace on Monday led the country in expressing condolences to the loved ones and fans of NBA Star Kobe Bryant, who died in a helicopter crash. Bryant was a frequent visitor to the Philippines and was loved by his Filipino fans, Presidential Spokesman Salvador Panelo said. “On the hard court, he was a sight to behold with his dexterity and accuracy in sinking that ball in the ring. He was a master of his craft,” Panelo said. “The Office of the President is saddened after learning about the tragic news of the death of the NBA superstar and legend.” Bryant died Sunday when a helicopter he was riding in crashed and burst into flames in thick fog, killing all nine people on board including his teenage daughter, and plunging legions of fans around the world into mourning. Bryant, 41, was traveling with his 13-year-old daughter Gianna and seven other passengers and crew when their Sikorsky S-76 helicopter slammed into a rugged hillside in Calabasas, west of Los Angeles. There were no survivors. Senator Sonny Angara said because he was bringing his daughter to a basketball tournament, it could be said that Bryant died with his sneakers on. He said during the prime of Bryant, he was a superstar waited on by a staff of hundreds. In retirement, he was happiest as a coach-cheerleader. Filipino fans adored Bryant, who visited the country six times—the first in August 1998 and the last time in June 2016, just two months after he retired from the NBA. “I love it there [Philippines],” he said in a previous interview. “It’s amazing,” he said of his prior visits, “I have such a great time, aside from the food. Amazing,” added Bryant, whose favorite Filipino food was lumpia or deep-fried spring rolls. Bryant’s first visit to the country will be remembered most for his iconic photo taken with then President Joseph Estrada and his Next page “Tinikling” dance.
50 OFWs in Wuhan homesick—Bong Go By MJ Blancaflor, Macon Ramos-Araneta, Rey E. Requejo, Vito Barcelo and Willie Casas UP TO 50 out of the 150 Filipinos in Wuhan, the Chinese city at the epicenter of the new coronavirus outbreak, want to come home, Senator Christopher ‘‘Bong’’ Go said Monday. Go, talking to CNN Philippines, said their plight was discussed at a meeting he attended with officials of the departments of Health and Foreign Affairs. “We are ready to send an airplane if we need to take them home from China. The problem is if China will allow it,” Go said in Filipino. He added that it was important to make sure that the Filipinos are clear of the coronavirus before they are allowed to reenter the Philippines. The Philippine Embassy in Beijing confirmed that none of the 150 Filipinos in Wuhan has been infected by the 2019 novel coronavirus that already killed 81 people in China. Next page
Interview with an icon By Jimbo Gulle City Editor
Virus death toll hits 81; draconian measures eyed
IN TRUTH, I am not a huge fan of Kobe Bryant, the effervescent global basketball icon who passed away Sunday (Monday in Manila), stunningly in a helicopter crash in California. But the year was 1998, the month was August, and I was a greenhorn 21-year-old sportswriter for the Manila Standard. I was waiting patiently in line along with other media types to ask the budding Los Angeles Lakers star—who, incredibly, was a year younger than me—what his thoughts were of visiting the Philippines for the first time as a bona fide National Basketball Association professional. The press conference was at a hotel in Mandaluyong City, next door to the mall where he would grace a 3-on-3 Next page
CHOPPER CRASH SITE. Los Angeles County Fire Dept. firefighters and coroner staff (left below) check the wreckage at the scene of a helicopter crash in Calabasas on Sunday (Monday in Manila). Nine people were killed in the crash which claimed the life of NBA star Kobe Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter Gianna, carried on his shoulders in the 2014 file photo (above) at the start of the friendly game between the United States and China during a friendly match in Qualcom Stadium in San Diego, California. Inset above, in 1998, during Bryant’s courtesy call on the 5’6” President Joseph Estrada in Malacañang. The latter playfully tries to stop the ball from the 6’5” shooting guard in his impeccable Barong Filipino. AFP
Further lowering of Taal danger level seen By Rio N. Araja and Macon Ramos-Araneta THE Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology on Monday said it may downgrade Alert Level 3 to Alert Level 2 in Taal Volcano, Batangas, should the decline in volcanic activity continue for two more weeks. “We have to observe within two weeks
as our stand-down procedures in lowering the alert,” PHIVOLCS director Renato Solidum told a TV interview. “We can shorten that if the continued downtrend is very definite.” In its 8 a.m. bulletin Monday, PHIVOLCS said Taal Volcano’s sulfur emission plunged to 87 tons per day compared to Jan. 13’s 5,299 tons per day. Next page
THE death toll due to the new coronavirus strain has spiked to 81 in China despite unprecedented quarantine measures and travel lockdowns. A team of experts mapping the outbreak said Monday governments need to impose “draconian” travel restrictions to stop the coronavirus in China from becoming a global epidemic. Scientists at the University of Hong Kong presented a briefing warning that the spread of the deadly SARS-like virus that first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan was accelerating. “We have to be prepared that this particular epidemic may be about to become a global epidemic,” said Gabriel Leung, head of the team. “Substantial, draconian measures limiting population mobility should be taken sooner, rather than later.” Leung leads a group of researchers who are mapping the virus, which has so far infected more than 2,700 people in China and killed 81 people. Next page