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Solons upbeat on ‘next Speaker’ By Maricel V. Cruz
VOL. XXXIII • NO. 39 • 3 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 • THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 2019 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com
LAWMAKERS have expressed confidence that former Leyte Rep. Martin Romualdez, whom presidential daughter Sara Duterte-Carpio declared will be the next Speaker, will be able to steer “a more productive and responsive” House of Representatives. “Undoubtedly he [Romualdez] is very
much competent to lead the House given his track record as lawyer and public servant,” House Minority Leader and Quezon Rep. Danilo Suarez said. “He is going to be a good Speaker,” he added. On Wednesday, Duterte-Carpio introduced Romualdez as “the next Speaker of the House” during a campaign caravan Next page
Palace to water execs: Shape up or ship out By Vito Barcelo PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte berated officials of the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System and the two private concessionaires at a meeting in the Palace Tuesday night, threatening to fire regulators for failing to anticipate and do something about the water supply problem in Metro Manila. Duterte was supposed to discuss possible solutions to the water crisis with officials from the MWSS, Manila Water Co. and Maynilad Water Services, but the meeting turned out to be a “presidential monologue,” as the President told them he was not going to listen to their explanations or excuses, Presidential Spokesman Salvador Panelo said Wednesday. Water officials knew of the problem leading to the service interruptions, but did nothing to prevent it from happening, Panelo said. “They simply did not do their job. All they care about is [getting] profit from the water,” Panelo said. For the last two weeks, some 1.2 million households in the east zone of Metro Manila serviced by Manila Water have suffered service interruptions
Bello
Arellano
Sarmiento
Trinidad
Rody opts for localized talks; Reds unyielding
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By Joyce Pañares, Francisco Tuyay and Vito Barcelo
El Niño deals blow to rice, corn crops THE Agriculture department reported Wednesday that P1.33 billion worth of crops has been lost due to the ongoing dry spell. The department’s Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Operations Center said the loss figure as of March 18 was significantly higher than the P464.27 million in losses reported a week earlier. Some 78,348 metric tons in rice and corn production were lost due to drought in the Cordillera region, the Ilocos region, Central Luzon, Calabarzon, Mimaropa, Bicol, Western and Eastern Visayas, Zamboanga Peninsula, Northern Mindanao, Davao region, Soccsksargen and the Bangsamoro region. The losses affected 84,932 corn and rice farmers, the department said. The weather bureau announced a weak El Niño in February, and warned that it would intensify toward the end of March and last until June. Flaviana Hilario, the weather bureau’s deputy administrator for research and development, said the weak El Niño phenomenon is likely to become more severe, and could cause a delay in the rainy season that could threaten Metro Manila’s water supply. Benison Estareja, a weather forecaster, said over 95 percent of the country is getting only “way below normal” rainfall.
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RESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte has abolished the government’s peace panel for negotiations with the Communist Party of the Philippines-National Democratic Front to pave the way for localized peace talks.
HELP ALWAYS. Aiding hands were everywhere when an informal settler’s house in Quezon City’s Barangay Damayan Lagi was being gobbled up by flames, ironically during the Fire Prevention Month. But it was never clear how many might have been affected by the fire, how much was the damage, or what caused the fire. Manny Palmero
House retrieves budget version to break impasse By Maricel V. Cruz and Macon Ramos-Araneta THE House of Representatives through its Office of Secretary General on Wednesday “physically retrieved” the books containing the items that congressmen had sent to the senators in a bid to put an end to the budget impasse.
Despite the budget impasse, President Duterte has signed Executive Order No. 76 directing the Budget department to find and recommend a measure to fund the pending fourth tranche of salary increase for state workers. “The President does not want to prolong the overdue salary increase that our public servants, who have been working tirelessly and silently for the last two months, have been looking forward to,” Presidential Spokesman Salvador Panelo said.
“This is in line with the Speaker’s instruction to allow a lastditch effort to break the budget impasse,” Camarines Sur Rep. Rolando Andaya, Jr., appropriations committee chairman, said. This developed as Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman, leader of the House independent bloc, defended Next page
‘P1-b shabu from Golden Triangle’ By Rio N. Araja THE Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency on Wednesday said the 166 kilos of shabu worth P1.1 billion seized in separate operations in Muntinlupa City could have come from the Golden Triangle. PDEA Director General Aaron Aquino said the confiscated drugs at the Ayala-Alabang Village and those previously seized in anti-drug operations in Mindanao had the same packaging method. “We have seizures somewhere in Mindanao that have the same packaging. That is why we come up with an assessment that these drugs passed through our
coastlines. This could be a case of shipside smuggling coming from the Golden Triangle Region,” he said. “Such is the signature of the Golden Triangle Region. There were seizures having the same [signature] of drugs coming from Malaysia, Vietnam, Myanmar. There is a big possibility that they also came from the Golden Triangle Region.” • Senator Panfilo Lacson was baffled how the P1.1 billion worth of shabu that was later seized in Muntinlupa City on Tuesday passed the Bureau of Customs. “How the hell did that volume pass through Customs and the police check points?’’ Lacson wrote on Twitter on Wednesday. Next page
Fake wall fools NY vandal PRESIDENT Donald Trump has struggled to convince lawmakers the US needs a wall along its southern border. But in New York, police heeded his advice to catch a pro-Trump graffiti artist: Yes, they built a wall. Next page
“The termination of the appointments of the members of the government negotiating panel will pave the way for the creation of an inclusive panel that will supervise localized peace engagements,” presidential adviser on the peace process Carlito Galvez said. The composition of the new panel will follow the Colombian model to include representatives from different sectoral groups, local government units, and the military, whose presence, Galvez said, are “essential” to the peace talks. NDF chief negotiator Fidel Agcaoili, however, immediately rejected the prospect of localized peace negotiations. “The leadership of the revolutionary movement has firmly decided against engaging in localized peace talks. Every command of the New People’s Army has reiterated this decision in their statements and actions,” Agcaoili told Manila Standard in an interview. “They [government] should not be disappointed when no command of the Next page
Trillanes fails to block trial By Rey E. Requejo
HAPPINESS DAY. SM Mall of Asia officially kicks off the International Day of Happiness with the first ever SMDC MOA Happiness Run with Happiness Stations inside the village and Inflatable Obstacle, Foam Tunnel and Bubble Station along the route.
Shop online via Instagram FACEBOOK-OWNED Instagram on Tuesday made a move into potentially lucrative e-commerce by adding an option to buy products shown off in posts by selected brands. A new “checkout” button for instant Next page
OPPOSITION Senator Antonio Trillanes IV has failed to get an immediate relief from the Court of Appeals to stop his trial for rebellion, a case earlier revived by the Makati City Regional Trial Court. In a three-page resolution, the appellate court’s Ninth Division ruled that to grant Trillanes’ plea for the immediate issuance of a temporary restraining order or a writ of preliminary injunction would be tantamount to deciding on the merit of the petition, which seeks the reversal of the trial court’s order issued on Sept. 25, 2018, which granted the Department of Justice’s motion to reopen the rebellion case and to order Trillanes’ immediate arrest. • Trillanes’ trial before a Makati Court will proceed as the Court of Appeals has turned down his plea to stop his indictment for rebellion. In a resolution dated March 18, the court’s Ninth Division denied the application for a temporary restraining order filed by Trillanes’ counsel. Next page