Widodo leads ASEAN chiefs in rebuking Myanmar JAKARTAâMyanmarâs military must restore democracy and stop committing violence against citizens, Indonesian president Joko Widodo said after crisis talks with junta chief leader Min Aung Hlaing and Southeast Asian leaders Saturday. The strongly worded statement followed a meeting in Jakarta of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), which marked the senior Myanmar generalâs first foreign trip since security forces staged a coup that ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi in early February. Min Aung Hlaing has become the focus of international outrage over the coup and a subsequent crackdown on dissent
FACING ASEAN. This handout photo taken on April 24 and released by the Indonesian Presidential Palace shows leaders attending the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit on the Myanmar crisis in Jakarta. Inset shows Myanmar junta leader Min Aung Hlaing (left) being greeted during his arrival at Jakartaâs Soekarno-Hatta international airport in Tangerang, to attend the summit. AFP
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EU opposes unilateral action in S. China Sea T
HE European Union (EU) on Saturday opposed any unilateral actions in the South China Sea (SCS) as it cited the recent swarming of Chinese vessels at the Julian Felipe Reef, an area located within the Philippine exclusive economic zone (EEZ).
The bloc, through a statement by EU spokesperson for foreign affairs and security policy Nabila Massrali, said tensions in the South China Sea, including the recent presence of large Chinese vessels at Julian Felipe Reef, also called the Whitsun Reef, âendanger peace and stability in the region.â âThe EU reiterates its strong opposition to any unilateral actions that could undermine regional stability and the international rules-based order. We urge all parties to resolve disputes through peaceful means in accordance with international law, in particular UNCLOS (United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea), including its dispute settlement mechanisms,â it said in a statement. It also renewed its recognition of the landmark 2016 Permanent Court of Arbitration award in favor of the Philippines, which invalidated Beijingâs expansive claim called the nine-dash line on the South China Sea. âThe EU is committed to secure, free and open maritime supply routes in the Indo-Pacific, in full compliance with international law, in particular the UNCLOS, in the interest of all,â it said. The bloc said it also looks forward to a binding Code of Conduct in the South China Sea and asked all parties to produce a document that does not prejudice the rights of other states outside the region. âThe EU supports the ASEAN-led process towards an effective, substan-
tive and legally binding Code of Conduct, which should not prejudice the interests of third parties. The EU urges all parties to pursue sincere efforts towards its finalization,â it said. Apart from the European Union, the Philippinesâ long-time ally, the United States, along with countries such as Japan, Australia, United Kingdom, and New Zealand have called on China to leave and cease raising tensions in the area by pulling out of the West Philippine Sea. A maritime law expert also said Saturday the Philippine government must sustain its diplomatic protests against China over the latterâs illegal presence in Philippine waters through continuing maritime patrols. âWe should continue issuing protests until the Philippines is satisfied and the protests achieve their purpose,â said Prof. Jay Batongbacal of the University of the Philippines Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea. But despite repeated calls and protests from the Philippines, Chinese militia vessels continue to linger in the area and have even been spotted in other parts of the Kalayaan Island Group in the municipality of Kalayaan, Palawan off the countryâs northwestern waters. âThe continued swarming and threatening presence of the Chinese vessels creates an atmosphere of instability and is a blatant disregard of the commitments by China to promote peace and stability in the region,â the Department
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of Foreign Affairs said as it filed two new diplomatic protests against China over the presence of 160 Chinese vessels in some features and islands in the countryâs EEZ. In a diplomatic note dated April 21, 2021, the DFA said the presence of these vessels in the West Philippine Sea âblatantly infringe[s] upon Philippine sovereignty, sovereign rights and jurisdiction.â âThe vessels were observed within the territorial sea of high tide features in the Kalayaan Island Group, in the Philippine Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), and in and around the territorial waters of Bajo de Masinloc,â the department said. The DFA cited five Chinese Coast Guard vessels with bow numbers 3103, 3301, 3305, 5101, and 5203 that were sighted within the vicinities of Pag-asa Island, Bajo de Masinloc and Ayungin Shoal. âThrough these protests, the DFA reminded China that Bajo de Masinloc, Pag-asa Islands, Panata, Parola, Kota Islands, Chigua and Burgos Reefs are integral parts of the Philippines over which it has sovereignty and jurisdiction. The Philippines exercises sovereign rights and jurisdiction over Julian Felipe Reef and Ayungin Shoal,â the DFA told China. Manilaâs discovery of the boats deepens a decline in Sino-Philippine goodwill that peaked after Duterte took office five years ago, analysts including Batongbacal told Voice of Americaâs online news site in a recent interview. The Chinese vessels are âdefinitely having an impact,â said Batongbacal. âFor sure many in government, even among many Duterte supporters, are not as enamored with China because of this,â he said. The flotilla reminds many Filipinos
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THE year 2020 caused a shift in lifestyle for homeowners and homebuyers everywhere. Previous trend reports revealed a shift towards fringe cities and other booming regions south of the metro, while faster growing pageviews for properties such as land and houses indicated a leaning for listings with larger floor areas.
MORE than 70 beautiful women will wear the shoes crafted by local footwear designer Jojo Bragais after he was tapped as the footwear sponsor for this yearâs Miss Universe pageant happening on May 16 (May 17 in Manila) in Hollywood, Florida.
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of 2012, when Chinese vessels occupied Scarborough Reef, a fishery in the contested South China Sea, sparking a lengthy standoff, Batongbacal said. Officials in Beijing are bristling too. They resent the United States for helping the Philippines militarily, said Carl Thayer, an emeritus professor from the University of New South Wales in Australia. Duterte still allows annual Philippines-US military exercises, despite talk years ago of ending them, and last year his government deferred plans to cancel a visiting forces agreement with the US military, Thayer noted to VOA. The United States periodically sends warships and aircraft to the sea as support for pro-US governments such as Taiwan and the Philippines. China intends its 220-boat flotilla to challenge the US-Philippines military connection, Thayer said. Within the Philippine navy alone now, âpeople express views at odds with Duterte, on China,â said Thayer, who has attended conferences with navy personnel. âTheyâre humiliated and theyâre upset.â Sino-Philippine relations continue, however, as the Philippines needs Chinese COVID-19 vaccines and aid with post-pandemic economic recovery, said Yun Sun, East Asia Program senior associate at the Stimson Center in Washington. China was aiming as of mid-December to send the Philippines 25 million doses of the Chinese-made Sinovac vaccine by this month. âAlthough the relationship between China and the Philippines is rocky currently because of the 220 fishing boats, I donât think weâre at the breaking point just yet,â Sun told Voice of America.
COVID-19 PH AT A GLANCE
(AS OF 4 PM APRIL 24)
989,380 TOTAL NUMBER OF CASES
9,661 89,485 NEW
ACTIVE
16,674
145
DEATHS
NEW
883,221 22,877 NEW RECOVERIES
that has left more than 700 dead. âThe first requested commitment is for the Myanmar military to stop the use of violence and that all parties there at the same time must refrain so that tensions can be reduced,â Widodo said Saturday. âThe violence must be stopped and democracy, stability and peace in Myanmar must be restored.â He also called for the release of political prisoners and for a special envoy to be allowed into the country to âpush for dialogueâ. Singaporeâs prime minister Lee Hsien Loong, meanwhile, called on the military to release Myanmarâs ousted president, as well as democracy icon Suu Kyi who is under house arrest. Saturdayâs meeting follows mass protests which have been met by a brutal crackdown that has left blood on the streets. An estimated 250,000 people have been displaced, according to a UN envoy, with Myanmarâs democratically elected top leaders in hiding or under house arrest. Also at the weekend meeting was the Sultan of Brunei, the current chair of ASEAN, as well as leaders and foreign ministers from most of the 10-country group, including Malaysia, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines and Laos. Small protests outside the blocâs Jakarta headquarters were dispersed by security personnel. âMurderer-in-chiefâ In Myanmar, protesters continued to take to the streets Saturday, including in northern Kachin state, where demonstrators wore blue shirts to symbolise detainees. In commercial hub Yangon, some residents staged a mock funeral for the senior general by smashing saffron-coloured clay pots on the ground, symbolic of cutting ties with the dead. AFP
COVID claims 141 daily amid surge in April By Willie Casas and Maricel V. Cruz AN AVERAGE of 141 people died each day from the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the first three weeks of April amid the current surge of cases, statistics from the Department of Health showed. Deaths totaled 2,968 from April 1 to 21, reaching a daily peak of 401 fatalities on April 9, DOH data as tracked by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University revealed. The DOH reported 145 new fatalities on Saturday, bringing the total death toll to 16,674, which is 1.69 percent of the countryâs total 989,380 coronavirus cases since the pandemic began in mid-March last year. In addition, 105 deaths were reported on Thursday and 159 on Friday, bringing the 7-day average this past week to 113, Johns Hopkins data showed. âWe saw the progression of the COVID-19 and that is part of the course of the disease,â Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire said in the â24 Orasâ TV program.
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