Manila Standard - 2019 March 31 - Sunday

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DESTINATIONS / D1

THE CITY OF GENTLE AND SPORTY PEOPLE

VOL. XXXIII • NO. 49 • 4 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 • SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2019 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com

EUROPE PROBES NGO TIES WITH NPA LET THERE BE DARKNESS.

A combination image shows the Sydney Harbor Bridge, the Opera House and the ferris wheel before (top picture) and after (bottom picture) their lights went out, as seen from the city’s Luna Park for the Earth Hour environmental campaign on March 30, three hours ahead of Metro Manila’s switch off at 8:30 p.m. The lights went out on two of Sydney’s most famous landmarks for the 12th anniversary of the climate change awareness campaign, among the first landmarks round the world to dim their lights for the annual event. AFP

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SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 2019

News

mst.daydesk@gmail.com

DUTERTE TO INCREASE FILIPINO PEACEKEEPERS

George Clooney

CLOONEY BACKS HOTEL BOYCOTT

By Francisco Tuyay THE Duterte administration has committed to increase the country’s peacekeeping operations under the banner of the United Nations. Speaking at the UN Peacekeeping Ministerial Meeting on Uniformed Capabilities, Performance, and Protection in New York City, Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana has committed 90 military observers and staff, one force support unit, and one aero-medical evacuation team for the UN Peacekeeping Capability Readiness System for 2019. “The Philippines is ready to increase its engagement in peacekeeping operations,” he said. “The Philippine government has decided to allow the deployment of military and police area in any area, regardless of the security threat level,” the defense chief added. The Philippines is among the 120 countries that have contributed military, police and civilian personnel to several conflict-torn areas through UN peacekeeping missions. The government has sent Filipino peacekeepers in several Asian nations, in the Middle East and some European countries. One of the critical missions Filipino peacekeepers had encountered took place at the border of Syria and Israel in August 2013 when the troops were trapped for five days in the desert after being surrounded by Syrian rebels during the Golan Heights conflict. The 73-man Filipino contingent, despite facing extreme danger, successfully escape unscathed. Lorenzana stressed the success of peacekeeping operations must be measured by how well peacekeepers are able to protect civilians, especially children, and prevent sexual exploitation abuse. “The Philippines stands in solidarity with the community of nations in fostering shared responsibility for the success of peacekeeping operations,” Lorenzana said.

TEAM TO BEAT. Makati Mayor Abigail Binay and her father, former Vice President and congressional candidate Jejomar Binay lead the proclamation rally of Team Performance in Makati City. Lino Santos

BINAYS VOW BETTER PUBLIC SERVICE

By Joel E. Zurbano and Maricel Cruz

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HE team of Makati City Mayor Abigail Binay and former Vice President Jejomar Binay kicked off their proclamation rally on Friday for the May 13 midterm polls.

The event, held at the stretch of Lawton Avenue from Kalayaan Avenue to J.P. Rizal Extension in Barangay Northside, was attended by 25,000 people, according to the Makati City police department. The mayor is going against her brother, former mayor Jejomar Erwin Binay Jr., while the elder Binay is seeking to represent the city’s first district in the House of Representatives. Reelectionists Vice Mayor Monique Lagdameo, second district congressman Luis Campos and all 16 candidates for city councilors in both districts attended the political rally. Speaking before thousands of supporters from the city’s 33 barangays, the elder Binay, chairman of the United

Nationalist Alliance, formally presented his daughter as UNA’s official mayoral candidate and exhorted her exemplary leadership which he said merits another term in office. Saying it was a great honor to introduce his daughter who will again be“the next mayor of Makati,” Binay described her election in 2016 as providential for the people of Makati. “Alam po ninyo, ang laking pagpapala, pinagpala po tayo ng Panginoon dahil siya po ang nahalal noong 2016. Kung hindi ay hindi matutuloy yung tamang pamamahala,” Binay said. The UNA chairman said he was proud of how his daughter had effectively led the turnaround of the dismal state of public service in Makati under her

predecessor, citing the deterioration of services at the Ospital ng Makati due to neglect and incompetence. In her proclamation speech, Mayor Binay said she has kept her promise to the people of Makati in 2016 when she assured them that she will not only continue but further enhance her father’s legacy of trusted public service with her own innovations. The city chief executive said her ticket was aptly named Team Performance because from day one, her administration has been firmly anchored on performance. “I value performance because it is the pillar of a good administration. I believe in performance because it is the key to a Makati we can all be proud of,” she said. She said her administration will prioritize the establishment of Urgent Care in the city’s barangay health centers, in addition to primary health care services they provide. She said the added service is aimed to provide immediate relief to patients in need of urgent medical attention.

PALACE TO RESSA: DON’T PLAY PRESS FREEDOM CARD By Vito Barcelo

THE COUNTRY’S FUTURE. Young Muslim children look through the window of a madrasa (Islamic school) in Baseco, Tondo on March 30. Since 2007, Ummahat Baseco has raised funds for the operation of the Mahad Baseco Madrasa in a bid to ensure that the enclave is resilient to the lure of illegal activities and extremist ideologies and recruitment. Norman Cruz

SENATORS URGE GOV’T TO ADOPT CLIMATE RESILIENCY MEASURES By Macon Ramos-Araneta AMID the prevailing water crisis in some parts of the country, Senator Loren Legarda said authorities must take necessary measures to adapt to climate change impacts, such as increasing temperatures, sea level rise, and changes in rainfall pattern. She warned these could further intensify the effects of El Niño and jeopardize the long-term water supply in the country. On the other hand, Senator Grace Poe said it is critical at this point to provide immediate relief to the consumers.

By undertaking their commitment to adjust its charges, Manila Water has shown good faith to the public, Poe said, but stressed that state regulator Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System must be vigilant in ensuring consumers are not shortchanged in the computation of the bill reduction. “Manila Water can absorb it—their income will not dry up. It is a drop in their bucket of profits. An apology is best expressed monetarily,” Poe said. “Manila Water should not be reaping profits even if the taps have run dry,” she added.

MALACAÑANG on Saturday criticized Rappler chief Maria Ressa for hiding behind the issue of press freedom and using it attack the Duterte administration. In a statement, Presidential Spokesman Salvador Panelo said Ressa cannot forever hide behind the freedom of the press “every time she commits what probably is a transgression of law as determined by the investigating prosecutor and the judge handling her case.” “She cannot be using her arrest as a violation of the freedom of the press and make it as an excuse to attack the government. She wants a special treatment owing to her being a journalist,” Panelo said. “She wants her profession to shield her from accountability of a wrongdoing that she could be guilty

of,” he added. Ressa was arrested upon her arrival at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport on Friday but was released after posting P90,000 bail at the Pasig City Regional Trial Court. Ressa, executive director of Rappler, described the arrest as “harassment” and “travesty of justice.” “The executive department respects the independence of the judiciary, including how it handles cases pending before its courts,” Panelo said. The arrest warrant was issued against Ressa in connection with the Philippine Depository Receipts Rappler issued to Omidyar Network Fund, LLC in 2015, a year before President Rodrigo Duterte assumed office, Panelo said. “Once again Ressa is peddling her repudiated accusation that the administration is behind her criminal prosecution and arrest,” he said.

WASHINGTON—American actor George Clooney has called for a boycott of nine Brunei-owned hotels over the sultanate’s imposition of the death penalty for gay sex and adultery. “Every single time we stay at or take meetings at or dine at any of these nine hotels we are putting money directly into the pockets of men who choose to stone and whip to death their own citizens for being gay or accused of adultery,”Clooney wrote on website Deadline Hollywood. “I’ve learned over years of dealing with murderous regimes that you can’t shame them. But you can shame the banks, the financiers and the institutions that do business with them and choose to look the other way,”he added. The nine hotels are located in the US, Britain, France and Italy. Brunei will implement the harsh new penal code—which also mandates amputation of a hand and foot for theft—starting next Wednesday. Homosexuality is already illegal in the tiny sultanate, but it will now become a capital offense. The law only applies to Muslims. AFP

Janet Jackson

NEW ROCK & ROLL FAME INDUCTEES NEW YORK—Genre-bending acts Radiohead and The Cure led a British invasion into Brooklyn Friday night to take their spots in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, while pop icon Janet Jackson entered the shrine in an induction many industry insiders consider long overdue. American folk rock legend Stevie Nicks became the first woman inducted twice—having already earned a spot in the rock pantheon as a member of band Fleetwood Mac—during a gala concert at New York’s Barclays Center in Brooklyn to celebrate the seven 2019 honorees. Heavy metal group Def Leppard, pop experimentalists Roxy Music and English psychedelic rock harmonists The Zombies rounded out the fivestrong class of British inductees. The inclusion of Jackson—whose socially-conscious, sexually provocative and eminently danceable tracks made her a household name in the 1980s— comes as the Hall of Fame increasingly expands its definition of rock to include the likes of R&B. AFP

‘PRIORITIZE FILIPINO WORKERS’—VILLANUEVA By Joel E. Zurbano SENATOR Joel Villanueva on Saturday urged Filipino traders and employers to give fellow countrymen preferential treatment over foreign workers amid the reported influx of foreign nationals in the labor market. Villanueva, chairman of the Senate Committee on Labor, Employment and Human Resources Development, said the Labor Code of the Philippines should be amended to ensure that 80 percent of Filipino employers’ collective workforce are Filipinos. “Since 2016, incidents of illegal foreign workers entering our special eco-

nomic zones caused an uproar due to the grave disproportionality of foreign workers to Filipino workers,” Villanueva said in a statement. The senator has filed Senate Bill 1508, or an “Act Mandating the Requisite Proportion of Filipino Laborers to Foreign Workers.” “This mandatory protection will guarantee that Filipinos will always have a fighting chance despite the rapidly shrinking global economy. The State must always uphold and uplift the rights of the Filipino laborer,” Villanueva said. The Philippines, as a member-country of the International Labor Organization,

is mandated to maintain open borders in allowing foreign workers to partake in the country’s labor force. “However, in a world where unprecedented opportunities exist for global citizens to work in foreign countries, the need for substantive protection for Filipino citizens to meaningful opportunities remains,” Villanueva said. According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, the unemployment rate of the Philippine working population stood at 5.2 percent as of January 2019. For foreign employees to work in the country, they must secure an alien employment permit from the Department of Labor and Employment.

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EARTH HOUR: LESSEN USE OF PLASTICS MALACAÑANG on Saturday called on Filipinos to cut down the use of plastics as the world celebrated Earth Hour, with this year’s theme focusing on the issue of single-use plastics. “A United Nations report shows the Philippines as one of the top five contributors of plastic waste in the world’s oceans. We therefore call on everyone to cut down the rampant use of plastics as we continue to aspire for a clean, safe and healthy environment,” Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo said in a statement. “March 30 tonight, we will join the rest of the world in switching off our lights for Earth Hour,” he said. Earth Hour 2019, with its campaign “#Connect2Earth,” aims to build mass awareness on why nature is important and create an unstoppable movement for nature similar to when the world came together to tackle climate change. The Earth Hour, which started as a symbolic lights out event in Sydney in 2007, is now the world’s largest grassroots movement for the environment, inspiring millions of people to take action for our planet and nature. Since then, it has grown to engage more than 180 countries and territories worldwide. Turn to A2

PINOY FISHERS URGED: AVOID SCARBOROUGH ALLEGATIONS of harassment of Filipino fishermen by the Chinese Coast Guard at the Scarborough (Panatag) Shoal had returned to the limelight, prompting the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources to advise the fishermen to avoid sailing to the area. In an interview on Super Radyo dzBB, beamed nationwide, BFAR National Director Eduardo Gongona said the fishermen should keep away from the area, both separately disputed by the Philippines and China. Gongona told the fishermen to concentrate on the country’s municipal waters to check what could be a rising tension between Manila and Beijing. This followed a purported campaign video of senatorial candidate Neri Colmenares which was circulated online, discussing the alleged harassment against Filipino fishermen by the Chinese Coast Guard. Presidential Spokesman Salvador Panelo earlier urged those behind the documentary to show proof of the harassment before the Philippine government could file a diplomatic protest. The Northern Luzon Command has since clarified that “there were no reports of Filipino fishermen being subjected to the said attack Turn to A2

HE European Union has said an external company would be auditing EU’s grants to non-government organizations in the Philippines that were allegedly funneled to the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army. “The EU now will verify and evaluate these documents. A financial audit by an external company is due to be conducted in April,” the EU Delegation in Manila said in a statement. The Philippine government on March 28 submitted documents and pieces of evidence to EU Program Manager on Governance Louis Dey and Belgian Ambassador Michel Goffin, asking the two parties to“immediately cease”the release of funds. In a related development: • A New People’s Army top facebook.com/ ManilaStandardPH

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commander of the Pulang Bagani Command-2 and his vice commander operating in Eastern Mindanao were presented to President Rodrigo Duterte’s daughter Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio following their surrender to the military last Thursday. NPA commanders “Bong” and “Igong” met the local chief executive shortly after the change of command rites inside the 103rd Infantry Brigade at Purok 9, Barangay Mahayag, Bunawan District in Davao City. Turn to A2 manilastandard.net

WOMEN OF WORTH. Some 237 female inmates of the Iloilo City District Jail breathe life into what is now called 'Bayaning Inday' dolls, now on display at the mid-rise National Commission for Culture and the Arts building in the old 'Walled City' of Intramuros in Manila—properly a cap to Women’s Month, which introduces the story of pain, survival, resistance and resilience of women mothering behind bars. Lino Santos

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