VOL. XXXIII • NO. 185 • 4 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 • SUNDAY, AUGUST 18, 2019 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com
CHINA TOLD: EXPLAIN SIBUTU INTRUSIONS
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ALACAÑANG, miffed by the unflagging passing of Chinese warships through Sibutu near the Philippines’ southernmost province Tawi-Tawi without clearance from the Philippines, wants to know the reason for the ceaseless crossing.
Sibutu Passage, a deep channel some 29 km wide that separates Borneo from the Sulu Archipelago, has a deep sill allowing entry of deep water into the Sulu basin while connecting the Sulu Sea with the Sulawesi Sea that feeds from the Pacific Ocean by the Mindanao Current. Military sources noted that Sibutu, which is only 1,103 kilometers from Manila, is 3,915 kilometers from Beijing. Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana had described the recent movement of Chinese vessels through Sibutu, as reported by the Western Mindanao Command, as an “irritant.” Presidential Spokesman Salvador Panelo himself told a weekend media forum: “We want to know why [the Chinese warships] are passing through [Sibutu].” But he could not ascertain if President Rodrigo Duterte, who would be meeting up with Chinese President Xi Jinping later this month, would raise the issue regarding the Chinese warships incursion. “That’s the call
of the President, whatever issue he wants to take with the President Xi,” Panelo said. “But I suppose taking that up will also be important because, as Mr. Lorenzana said...the incident has been repeatedly done and, therefore, it is becoming an irritant, and we have to know exactly why they’re passing through that strait when the shortest route going to China can be done on a different route,” he added. On Thursday, Malacañang expressed its concern over the military’s report that five more Chinese warships sailed in Philippine waters of the Sibutu Strait without informing Manila, saying it was not“an act of friendship.” Panelo at that time said the actions of the Chinese warships might be a violation of the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which only allows innocent passage of ships through the territorial sea of a coastal state provided that it will be “continuous and expeditious.” Panelo, however, said Duterte would raise the issue on the landmark Turn to A2
UNFALTERING PASSAGE. One of five Chinese warships monitored as passing through the Sibutu Strait by the Western Mindanao Command, described by Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana on Saturday as an 'irritant.' WestMinCom Photo
DOJ TIGHTENS UP ON VISA RULES FOR SINO TOURISTS THE Duterte administration is pulling together visa rules for visiting Chinese nationals, permitting the arrivals to a maximum of 30 days and blacklist overstaying aliens, Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said Saturday. “We intend to limit the maximum permissible period to 30 days, blacklist overstaying aliens, ensure non-convertibility to work visas, and impose sanctions on travel agencies breaking the rules,” he said. Under current rules, the Visa Upon Arrival or VUA is good for 30 days but may
be extended for up to six months. In a statement, Guevarra said the Department of Justice and its attached agency the Bureau of Immigration “are tightening up the rules on the issuance of VUA”—just weeks after officials raised concern over the influx of travelers from China, with National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr. saying the arrivals were a security risk. Guevarra added the VUA was supposed to have been “non-convertible ever since.” “But if it’s a regular tourist visa is-
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sued by our consular offices abroad, it may be converted to a work visa upon compliance with all legal requirements,” he said. The VUA program allows Chinese tourists to apply for visa upon arrival in the country, instead of applying beforehand at the Philippine embassy and consulates in China. First implemented during the time of then Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II in 2017, the move was initiated by the Tourism department to lure in more Chinese tourists and investors. Turn to A2
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UNRESTRAINED ENTHUSIASM. Children—joining Big Bird, Elmo and the gang—run through the Sesame Street Fun Run Philippines at the SM by the Bay in Pasay City Saturday. It is promoted as the world’s first run to celebrate 50 years of Sesame Street and Counting! The five-kilometer family fun run caters to all ages, from first timers to seasoned athletes. Norman Cruz
METRO NEARING DENGUE EPIDEMIC SCALE—HEALTH METRO Manila, the national capital region where 12,900,000 live, faces the risk of a dengue epidemic after surpassing the alert level threshold, according to the Department of Health. In a report on GMA News TV’s Balitanghali, beamed nationwide, the DOH said it had recorded 11,123 dengue cases in Metro Manila as of Aug. 10, adding 856 of these cases were recorded in just one week, most of them among children aged 5 to 9. The highest number of cases had been recorded in Quezon City’s Greater Fairview, with 160 cases, including one dying, recorded there as of August 3. Earlier on, a DOH official urged residents in the congested metropolis and the Ilocos region to be more vigilant in fighting dengue as both areas were close to hitting the “epidemic
RULING PARTY NOTCHES KEY HOUSE POSTS By Maricel V. Cruz THE Partido Demokratiko PilipinoLakas ng Bayan is confident it can push the legislative agenda of the Duterte administration for the next three years with the allocation of key positions and chairmanships to its party members in the House of Representatives, a party stalwart said Saturday. Rep. Lord Allan Velasco, the party leader in the House, made the statement after he and Senator Emmanuel Pacquaio were named as the party heads in ther respective chambers of Congress. Turn to A2
threshold.” In a TV interview on Monday, DOH Undersecretary Eric Domingo said the department was closely monitoring the two regions because they were now “above the alert level and nearing the epidemic threshold.” “Alert level meaning, you’re seeing cases more than the average cases in the past five years and there’s a higher threshold, this is the epidemic, this is way higher than we’re expecting for that area. For the past few months, they were below the alert threshold, but now the cases are going up,” Domingo added. He said Region 4-A (Calabarzon), Region 4-B (Mimaropa), Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, and Regions 5 (Bicol), 6 (Western Turn to A2
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SUNDAY, AUGUST 18, 2019
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HONG KONG’S DIVISIONS DEEPEN WITH RIVAL RALLIES
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popular with mainland tourists. cord-breaking rallies in June and July ONG KONG democracy activists kicked off a Some protesters targeted the that saw hundreds of thousands of weekend of fresh rallies on Saturday in a major test offices of the staunchly people hit the streets. for the movement following criticism over an airport local pro-Beijing Federation of Trade Businesses under pressure protest earlier this week—and as concerns mount over Unions, pelting it with eggs and The protests were sparked by Beijing’s next move. spraying graffiti. opposition to a plan to allow extraThe new marches came as thousands of pro-government supporters—many waving Chinese flags—gathered in a park to condemn their opponents and support the police, a stark illustration of the polarization now coursing through the city. Ten weeks of demonstrations have plunged the international finance hub into crisis, with communist-ruled mainland China taking an increasingly hardline tone, including labeling the more violent protester actions “terrorist-like.” Democracy activists are billing the weekend rallies as a way to show Beijing and the city’s unelected leaders that their movement still enjoys broad public support, despite increasingly violent tactics deployed by a minority of hardcore protesters. On Tuesday, protesters blocked passengers from boarding flights at the city’s airport and later assaulted two men they accused of
“The government has yet to respond to a single demand and has escalated force through the police to suppress the people’s voices,” a 25-year-old protester, who gave his first name Mars, told AFP. “If we don’t come out, our future, our next generation will face even more suppression,” he added. But across the harbor at the proBeijing rally, where a giant screen showed recent clashes with police, 60-year-old retiree Irene Man had a very different take as she rounded on democracy protesters. “Their acts are not human, they have all become monsters. They are rioters, with no reason, no thinking,” she said. The biggest pro-democracy rally is Rival rallies Saturday’s rallies began with thou- expected to take place on Sunday on sands of teachers marching through the main island. Billed as a “rational, non-violent” torrential rain in support of the largely protest, it is being organized by the youth-led protests. In the afternoon, thousands also Civil Human Rights Front, a group that marched through Hung Hom and eschews confrontations with police To Kwa Wan, two harborside districts and was the driving force behind re-
being Chinese spies. The images damaged a movement that until then had largely only targeted the police or government institutions, and prompted some soulsearching among protesters. China’s propaganda apparatus seized on the violence, with state media churning out a deluge of damning articles, pictures and videos. State media also ran images of military personnel and armored personnel carriers across the border in Shenzhen, prompting the United States to warn Beijing against sending in troops, which analysts say would be a reputational and economic disaster for China.
ditions to the mainland, but have since morphed into a wider call for democratic rights in the semi-autonomous city. Millions of people have hit the streets while clashes have broken out between police and small groups of hardcore protesters. Battles between police firing tear gas and rubber bullets—and hardcore protesters using rocks, Molotov cocktails and slingshots—have since become routine in an international finance hub once renowned for stability. Beyond suspending the extradition bill, Beijing and city leader Carrie Lam have shown no desire to meet key demands such as an inquiry into police violence, the complete withdrawal of the bill and an amnesty. But protesters remain unbowed, despite the arrests of more than 700 people and 11 consecutive weekends of rallies that have won few concessions. AFP
(Left) An anti-extradition bill protester holds a sign against police brutality during a gathering at Chater House Garden in Hong Kong on Aug. 16. (Right) On Saturday, a pro-Beijing supporter displays a sticker with China’s national flag on her face as she takes part in a progovernment rally at Tamar Park in Hong Kong. AFP
P18M PAID FOR PWDS, SENIORS’ FREE MOVIES By Joel E. Zurbano THE Makati city government paid a total of P18 million to its five partnercinemas for free movie tickets given during the first six months of the year to 82,035 senior citizens and 9,896 persons with disability. Mayor Abigail Binay said the unparalleled perk provided by the city government is available to some 110,780 elderly citizens and 12,080 registered PWDs of Makati. “Our meaningful partnership with cinema owners in Makati has been giving joy to our senior and PWD Makatizens for over two decades now. It is our pride and pleasure to make them happy and young at heart through this privilege,”Binay said. “We are heartened to learn that other localities have followed suit and granted the said perk to their elderly and PWD residents, although with certain limitations, such as designating certain days of the week for the free admission to selected cinemas,” she added. The elderly and PWD Makati residents can watch movies for free at any time and day in cinema-partners in Glorietta and Greenbelt, Century Mall, Power Plant Mall, Cash and Carry, and Waltermart. In his report submitted to the Office of the Mayor, city chief accountant William Dayrit said the city paid a total of P18,146,284.00 to five cinema-partners for movie tickets issued for the first two quarters of the year. Of this, P16,595,131.75 went to movie tickets of senior citizens and P1,551,152.25 to movie tickets of PWDs. The amount represents the 25-percent share of the city government in the cost of movie tickets used under the program The Sangguniang Panlungsod of Makati also recently enacted City Ordinance No. 2019-A-023 which grants a P10,000 cash gift per year for senior citizens aged 90 to 99 who have been Blu Card holders for at least five years.
BABY DUGONG DIES IN THAILAND
FILIPINOS IN LIBYA ADVISED TO BE VIGILANT FILIPINOS planning to travel abroad or to other parts of Libya are advised to be vigilant in the wake of the frequent shelling of Mitiga International Airport, the sole functioning airport in Tripoli. “The incidents of shelling during the past several days have not only resulted in the suspension of flight operations but have also endangered the lives of hundreds of civilians using the only functioning airport in Tripoli for inbound and outbound travel,”the Philippine embassy in Libya said in a statement. “Filipinos flying to and from Mitiga are advised to take these factors into consideration when
making their travel plans,” it added. While the more than 1,000 Filipinos in Tripoli are still covered by restrictions under Alert Level IV, chargé d’affaires Elmer Cato said many of them still travel abroad for their vacations. “Some of those exempted from the Level IV restrictions also use the airport as a transit point to other places in Libya where they work,” he added. The Alert Level IV, which is still in place in Tripoli, prohibits Filipinos who have gone back to Manila from returning to Libya. Meanwhile, Cato said the repatriation efforts of the embassy is still ongoing, with 12 applications
being processed at present. The embassy had been using Mitiga to repatriate Filipinos from Tripoli. It is also used by members of the augmentation teams from the Department of Foreign Affairs. With the current state of the Mitiga International Airport, Cato said the embassy will most likely evacuate future repatriates first to Tunis by land. The ongoing conflict began when units loyal to the Libyan National Army advanced toward Tripoli to capture the capital from forces aligned with the United Nations-backed Government of National Accord in April. PNA
BISHOP CALLS FOR ‘PRAYER POWER’
BEAUTY AND BRAWN. Miss Universe 2018 Catriona Gray (left) paid a courtesy call on Armed Forces chief of staff Lt. Gen. Benjamin Madrigal Jr. Manny Palmero
“PRAYER power” is a new form of resistance to that will bind Filipinos together in overcoming the challenges faced by the country, said Caloocan Bishop Pablo Virgilio David, who himself is battling sedition charges filed by the Philippine National Police over his alleged involvement in the creation of a series of viral videos that cast the President in a negative light. “I call this new form of resistance prayer power. We don’t call it people power, we call it ‘prayer’ that binds people together, in solidarity together,” David, vice president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, said in a radio interview on Saturday. David is among the many religious leaders charged over their supposed hand in the “Ang Totoong Narcolist” viral video that featured an alias Bikoy, who eventually surfaced and identified himself as Peter Joemel Advincula. “Our solidarity does not require physical manifestation. We can express our solidarity
spiritually that is why I call it prayer power,” he said. “My appeal is for our prayer warriors to grow in number so that we can achieve peace and we can overcome this difficult challenge that we are facing,” David added. In his counter-affidavit filed before the Department of Justice, the bishop admitted meeting Advincula once, but not to plan any ouster plot against the President. “Contrary to the accusations leveled against me, I will be the last to resort to any kind of activity designed to undermine the administration or oust the duly elected officials in government,”he said in his counter-affidavit. “Such assertions is nothing but a blatant lie, an orchestrated move to ruin my name and reputation as a Roman Catholic Bishop through false innuendos, malicious inferences and speculations which are doubly libelous, grossly vilifying and obviously defamatory,” David added.
BANGKOK—A sick baby dugong whose fight for recovery won hearts in Thailand and cast a spotlight on ocean conservation has died from an infection exacerbated by bits of plastic lining her stomach, officials said Saturday. Mariam washed up in shallow waters off southwestern Thailand months ago and photos of her nuzzling playfully next to rescuers quickly went viral. The discovery soon after of another orphaned dugong brought the sea cows celebrity status, the attention of a Thai princess—who named the second one“Jamil”—and round-the-clock webcasts giving viewers a front-row seat to feedings and treatment. But Mariam died just after midnight after going into shock and efforts to resuscitate her failed, Chaiyapruk Werawong, head of Trang province marine park, told AFP. “She died from a blood infection and pus in her stomach,” he said, adding they found small amounts of plastic waste in her intestinal tract. An autopsy showed the plastic had caused obstructions in the animal’s stomach, leading to inflammation and gas build-up, veterinarian Nantarika Chansue posted on Facebook. AFP
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