Manila Standard - 2019 November 2 - Saturday

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ISIS replaces Baghdadi with his close aide, warns revenge

Over 8k to take 2019 bar exams at UST 4 Sundays from tomorrow Story on A2

Panic hits quake areas New 5.5 tremor, 968 aftershocks sow fear among Mindanaoans

‘ADEU LANA. Residents of earthquake-hit Tulunan town in Cotabato ask for assistance as it reels from the third powerful tremor in two weeks. It is among three most devastated areas in Cotabato province aside from Makilala and Kidapawan City, according to Cotabato 2nd District Provincial Board Member Philbert Malaluan. At left, Luayon, Makilala evacuees arrive at Malasila Elementary School. Photo courtesy of Cathlyn Aba Sernal, ABS-CBN

Dominguez, Pimentel balk at ‘salt tax’ plan

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ALL SAINTS’ DAY VICTIMS. This handout photo, released Friday, by the Conner, Apayao police station, shows

relatives of at least 19 farmer-victims of a transport accident where a truck carrying them and sacks of rice seeds plunged backwards into a ravine, which coincided with All Saints’ Day, a solemn day in the area. AFP

By Vito Barcelo and MJ Blancaflor FILIPINOS poured into cemeteries by the millions on Friday for a rite to remember their dead, blending expressions of grief and faith in a party-like ambiance. Vendors hawked cartoon-themed balloons and police seized karaoke machines at graveyard checkpoints, while inside families swept tombs clean and prayed before candles as part of All Saints’ Day. The ritual, celebrated on Nov. 1, stretches back centuries to ancient Rome and honors saints. But in the

VICE President Leni Robredo said Friday she would not allow herself to be used as a scapegoat for the Duterte administration’s shortcomings in its war on drugs. “VP Leni is always willing to help before and now. If the President is asking for help when it comes to [the issue of the] ‘drug

The 69-year-old Pastor Apollo C. Quiboloy, head of the Kingdom of Jesus Christ religious group based in Mindanao, claims he blurted out in Filipino when the third major shock was rumbling underneath the island three days ago―told is the term used by other media―“Earthquake, stop, and it stopped.” Quiboloy, not joking, added in Filipino: “You should be grateful to me because if I did not direct the earthquake to stop, a lot of your homes would be destroyed and you would have died. I am not saying this without a witness. There were a lot of witnesses around me.”

“People are not allowed to go back to buildings,” Mark Timbal, a spokesman for the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council, told the ANC news channel. Timbal said this would keep them from getting buried under if another earthquake hits and the building collapses on them. The NDRRMC warning came as a magnitude 5.5 earthquake rocked the province of Sarangani on Friday at 10:33 a.m. Of tectonic origin, the tremor had a depth of 33 kilometers and was located Next page

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war,’ say it in a formal way, and not through text and statement to the media,” Robredo’s spokesman, Barry Gutierrez said, referring to the President’s challenge that she take charge of the war on drugs. “What she will not stand for is being made a scapegoat for all the shortcomings of the drug war for the past three and a half years,” he added. Next page

AT LEAST 19 farmers were killed in mountainous Apayao province in the Cordilleras when a truck carrying them and sacks of rice seeds plunged backwards down a deep ravine, police said Friday. The victims were on their way home from collecting government subsidized seeds late Thursday in the town of Conner, more than 540 kilometers north of Manila, when the driver lost control of the vehicle, in the latest tragedy on the country’s perilous roads. Either the engine or brakes failed as the truck made its way up an incline. The vehicle, with some 40 people in its bed, then plunged back down the hill into a 20-meter ravine. “The truck fell on its rear first and the passengers were crushed,” local police official Manuel Canipas told AFP. He added another 20 more people on the truck were injured, but will survive. Canipas said the weight of the seeds may have made

Where have all the traffic gone?

Rody needles Leni on drug czar, VP retorts: Won’t be ‘scapegoat’

By Rio N. Araja and MJ Blancaflor

P

ANIC gripped residents in quake-hit areas in Mindanao as they were told to remain in open spaces or evacuation centers as tremors could still strike, disaster officials said Friday, even as another earthquake was recorded in Sarangani province.

19 die as truck plows down Apayao ravine

By Julito G. Rada

THE Health department’s proposal to impose an additional tax on salty products must be studied carefully because of its impact on the poor, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said Friday. “I have to discuss this thoroughly with them,” Dominguez said in a very short response to reporters when asked to comment on the Health department’s proposal. Senator Aquilino Pimentel III said the Health department’s proposal must be studied thoroughly. “The tax might be imposed on the food items consumed by the poorer sections of our society,” Pimentel said. Senate President Vicente Sotto III said it was okay to impose taxes on cigarettes and alcoholic drinks, but not on “what to eat and what not to eat.” “Too much,” he said, adding the proposal was “silly.” Senator Joel Villanueva said many people would go hungry if the prices of food like daing and tuyo suddenly went up. Anthony Leachon, co-convenor of the Sin Tax coalition, said the proposal to tax salty foods should be studied well. The Health department earlier this week said it was considering to

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VOL. XXXIII • NO. 261 • 3 SECTIONS 16 PAGES • P18 • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2019 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com

LOOK MA, NO TRAFFIC. A stretch of the

nearly 24-kilometer Epifanio delos Santos Avenue in Metro Manila, which stretches from Caloocan City to Baclaran is devoid on All Saints’ Day of vehicular traffic which daily chokes commuters in the capital, with throngs of surviving kin (right) filling a section of South Avenue leading to the Manila North Cemetery during Undas. Manny Palmero, Norman Cruz

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