Manila Standard - 2021 April 16 - Friday

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DUTERTE LIFTS 9-YEAR BAN ON MINING DEALS; GROUP CHEERS DECISION Rody tells nation: Don’t lose hope; gov’t has the solution By Joyce Pangco Pañares PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte has rallied Filipinos not to lose hope as COVID-19 cases continue to surge and vaccine supply remains tight, assuring the public that the government is not inutile

VOL. XXXV • NO. 60 • 3 SECTIONS 12 PAGES • P18 • FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2021 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com

in addressing virus-related concerns. “Do not be afraid. Government is working. Government is busy doing everything, not nothing. Government is trying to get things to fix all of us. You might think we do not have any solution – Next page

‘China marks all over SCS’ Online news service bares Chinese massive claims on disputed areas

By Maricel V. Cruz and Rio N. Araja

C

HINA has registered trademarks over hundreds of land features scattered throughout the South China Sea, a move opposed by other claimants to the disputed waters, BenarNews, a Washington-based online news service, reported Thursday.

BenarNews said records show that Sansha City – which is responsible for administering China’s claims in the South China Sea – filed thousands of domestic trademark applications covering 281 specific rocks, reefs, shoals and other contested features as well as entire regions of the South China Sea. Each of these trademarks is composed of the feature’s name in stylized Chinese calligraphy and

is categorized under one of 45 international trademark classes, which cover everything from musical instruments to legal services. Many also include an English transliteration of the feature’s name and an illustrated logo that offers a colorful view of the feature as seen from above. Next page

SEA PATROL. These handout photos were taken on April 14, 2021 and received from the Philippine Coast Guard on April 15 after holding maritime patrols in the West Philippine Sea, where several Chinese maritime assets still lingered at Whitsun Reef (Julian Felipe reef) in the Spratly Islands. PCG personnel aboard rubber boats and displaying a Philippine flag, patrolled the area using BRP Cabra (MRRV-4409), joined by two smaller boats from the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources that were manned by BFAR personnel. The area is within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone (EEZ) in the South China Sea, a huge part of which is being claimed by China despite a July 2015 UN tribunal ruling voiding the Chinese claim. PCG/AFP

Clinton, ex-DFA chief worry over PH becoming China subject By Rey E. Requejo and Vito Barcelo

FORMER US secretary of state Hillary Clinton is worried that the Philippines will become a vassal state of China. In an exclusive interview with the online news service Rappler, Clinton said

there was a real danger that the Philippines would find itself increasingly unable to act without Chinese approval, no matter who is in charge of the government. “I worry about the Philippines becoming basically a subject of China through financial investments, through the buying of influence, through the un-

dermining of institutions,” Clinton told Rappler. “I think that there’s a real danger that, left unchecked, the Philippines – no matter who the leader is – would find itself increasingly unable to act without Chinese approval. I don’t think that’s the kind of future that the Philippines would like.” “I think if you care about the future of the Philippines, about the independence of the Philippines… then you need friends and the US, I hope, is the premier friend to stand with you and protect you against further incursions by

COVID-19 PH AT A GLANCE

Joint PH-US military exercises now include training on how to fend off an attack from a third party once the Mutual Defense Treaty is invoked, Balikatan exercise director Maj. Gen. Edgard Arevalo said. the Chinese to basically dominate Filipino society,” she continued. “I mean, I think that’s what you want. And I hope that’s what the Biden administration will be able to achieve.” Next page

JAPAN PM ALL SET FOR BIDEN GAB

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(AS OF 4 PM APRIL 15)

904,285 TOTAL NUMBER OF CASES

11,429 183,527 NEW

ACTIVE

15,594

148

705,164

856

DEATHS

RECOVERIES

NEW

NEW

Duterte lifts nine-year ban on new mining deals By Vito Barcelo and Maricel V. Cruz PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte has lifted a moratorium on new mineral agreements, allowing the government to enter into new mineral agreements, provided that these would comply with the country’s mining laws, Malacanang said.

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By Othel V. Campos

• FDA: AstraZeneca gets go-ahead • 2 Miss U pageant bets test positive THE Philippines can continue using AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine after experts reviewed it amid blood clot reports, the Food and Drug Administration said on Thursday. “I wrote to Health Secretary Francisco Duque to tell him, to reiterate that the benefit outweighs risk and we

try to contribute to socio-economic growth has been removed,” COMP said in a statement. “We welcome the lifting of the moratorium on new mining projects – in place for nearly nine years – in this time of great national difficulty as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic,” the miners group said.

P180b foregone during two-week ECQ, says Lopez

LOCAL ROUNDUP

By Willie Casas and Rey E. Requejo

The Chamber of Mines of the Philippines, the umbrella organization of mining, mineral quarrying and processing companies in the country, cheered the lifting of the nine-year ban on new mining projects through Executive Order No. 130 signed on April 14. “A major roadblock to the huge potential of the Philippine mining indus-

should continue using the vaccine,” FDA Director General Eric Domingo said during a Palace briefing. Domingo said the World Health Organization, Vaccine Expert Panel, and the adverse events committee were “unanimous” in saying that the AstraZeneca vaccine’s overall benefit outweighed the known and potential risks. “Here in the Philippines, our adverse Next page

PENDING the findings of a study on the effects of the latest lockdown to the economy, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said initial estimates from lost business opportunities during the two-week ECQ period amounted to at least 1 percent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) or about P180 billion. He said an ongoing survey would determine the actual losses during the lockdown period and another survey which would be launched soon, would assess the impact of modified ECQ to the economy. Citing pre-lockdown figures, Lopez said the number of closed businesses went down to 4.6 percent, but the numbers were expected to scale up as restriction measures forced companies to temporarily close or, for many, permanently halt

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ROMUALDEZ TAKES OATH AS PCG AUXILLIARY COMMODORE

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