twitter.com/ MlaStandard
facebook.com/ ManilaStandardPH
S
manilastandard.net
Missed your copy of Manila Standard? Call or text our Circulation Hotline at 0917-8848655 or email: circulation@manilastandard.net
PH ranks 5th worst in impunity index THE Philippines had the largest number of unsolved killings of journalists with 41, followed by Mexico with 30; Somalia with 25; and Syria and Iraq with 22 each, a New York-based media watchdog said Wednesday. The Committee to Protect Journalists said 13 countries accounted for 222 of the 318 deaths in the last 10 years, with many of the cases linked to war and civil unrest. “In the past decade, armed militant groups such as Al-Shabaab, Boko Haram and the Islamic State group have most
often targeted journalists with complete impunity,” the CPJ report said. “However, criminal groups have become a major threat, killing large numbers of journalists and routinely escaping justice. Mexico, to date this year’s deadliest country for journalists, has seen its impunity rating worsen nearly every year since 2008, as criminal cartels waged a campaign of terror against the media.” Other countries making up the 13 worst were South Sudan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Brazil, Bangladesh, Russia, Nigeria and India.
The Palace denied there is a culture of impunity against media workers in the country, despite a New York-based press freedom watchdog listing the Philippines among countries with the worst record of prosecuting killers of journalists. The Committee to Protect Journalists said the Philippines has landed in the World Impunity Index list nearly every year since the index was first published over a decade ago, partly due to the deadly ambush of 58 individuals, including 32 journalists and media workers, in Ampatuan, Maguindanao in 2009. Next page
VOL. XXXIII • NO. 259 • 3 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2019 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com
Quake casualties mounting Nine dead; 394 injured; 94 schools closed
Meat producers shun ASF-prone Bohol, Cebu
By Francisco Tuyay and Rio N. Araja
THE Philippine Association of Meat Processors Inc. urged its members to refrain from making deliveries to customers who may want to bring processed meat products to Cebu and Bohol to avoid being blamed in case the African swine fever breaks out in the two island provinces. The two provinces are highly susceptible to ASF due to the large number of daily arrivals of local and foreign visitors from ASF-infected areas in Luzon, China, Hong Kong, Vietnam and South Korea. There are daily flights to Cebu from Clark in Pampanga as well as international flights from China, Hong Kong, South Korea and Vietnam. Travelers have been identified by the World Organization for Animal Health and by the Bureau of Animal Industry as among the major carriers of the ASF virus. To ensure no-risk status, travelers need to undergo quarantine disinfection procedures when they enter the airport or seaport in the two provinces. Aside from travelers, also listed by animal disease experts as potential carriers of the ASF virus are infected animals, swill feeds, ticks and flies as well as contaminated vehicles, equipment and clothes. Processed meat products are not among the listed carriers. Both OIE and
T
HE number of fatalities from the magnitude 6.6 tremor that jolted Southern Mindanao has reached nine while those injured rose to 394 as disaster workers labored to rescue two missing persons pinned beneath the rubble in a landslide.
The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said the powerful quake damaged 133 buildings, including 94 schools, 11 health centers, seven public structures, and church and 20 private commercial establishments. Davao City authorities said the quake damaged some 60 public and privately owned buildings. Among the new fatalities were two men, both aged 33, buried in a landslide in Barangay Tagaytay, Magsaysay, Davao del Sur. Police Cpl. John Nahine, spokesman of the Magsaysay police station said efforts to retrieve the bodies were hampered by rain. “For now we have yet to start our search and recovery operations to retrieve the two bodies. What our local disaster responders are doing right now is conducting reconnaissance using a drone... to identify safe routes towards the landslide area,” Nahine said. Power has been restored in quake-hit areas in Cotabato province, Davao del Sur, Cagayan de Oro City, Maguindanao. South Cotabato, Sarangani and Sultan Next page Kudarat.
Next page
Extra tax eyed on salty food By MJ Blancaflor THE Health department said Tuesday it is considering to propose an additional tax on salty products including processed food, a move similar to taxing sweetened beverages. Health Undersecretary Eric Domingo said the proposal was aimed at encouraging consumers to buy healthier food. “The effect will be to increase the price of food with high amounts of salt, so people will buy healthier options because they’re cheaper,” Domingo told reporters. “And another possible effect of this is that food manufacturers will consciously reformulate their products. They will use less salt so the price will decrease also, and then the products in the market would become healthier.” The Duterte administration’s Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion law Next page
QUAKE BACKWASH. Evacuation, rescue and relief operations are in high gear in North Cotabato and Maguindanao, after a 6.6 magnitude shock hit Tulunan and Makilala (top photo), with the rubble (above from left) of a mosque in Datu Paglas in Maguindanao, an evacuee baby lulled to sleep by the mother at the Matalam municipal gym, while two victims wait for help, unable to stand up on their own. The number of dead is now 9, with injured now at 394. AFP, Mark Navales
Manila, Beijing take on details of oil-gas deal By Rey E. Requejo THE Philippines and China held their first meeting to tackle all issues surrounding the proposal for both countries to conduct oil and gas exploration despite the unresolved dispute over maritime areas in the South China Sea. The Department of Foreign Affairs on Wednesday said Philippine and Chinese officials met Oct. 28 in Beijing on the
Rody’s Halloween mask sells for $33 By MJ Blancaflor MALACAÑANG on Wednesday said it was amused by the sale of Halloween masks inspired by President Rodrigo Duterte, adding it showed the Chief Executive had “arrived.” Turn to A3
proposed cooperation on oil and gas exploration by both nations. However, the DFA provided only general details on what transpired during the meeting. Nonetheless, a joint statement of the Philippines-China Inter-Governmental Joint Steering Committee on Cooperation on Oil and Gas Development was released, saying that the two sides had a “candid, in-depth and friendly exchange”
By MJ Blancaflor
on cooperation arrangements under the memorandum of understanding they signed last year. Officials led by Philippine Foreign Undersecretary Enrique Manalo and Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Luo Zhaohui “agreed to further push forward communication and coordination on oil and gas development, with a view to achieving progress in accordance with the MOU.”
Game of Thrones prequel teased A PREQUEL series to global TV phenomenon “Game of Thrones” has been ordered, WarnerMedia announced Tuesday, as it set out launch details for its new HBO Max streaming Turn to A3 service.
Vaping teems with risks—DOH
Next page
THE Health department on Wednesday called for prohibiting vaping products, citing the health risks of using electronic cigarettes and other heated tobacco products. Health Undersecretary Eric Domingo said the department will support a proposed legislation to ban the use of e-cigarettes, which are being marketed as healthier alternatives for tobacco products. Next page
Lizards’ diet, warm weather JUST two degrees of warming causes lizards to change their eating habits resulting in less healthy adult reptiles, according to research published Wednesday. Lizards generally live on a diet Turn to A3