VOL. XXIX NO. 286 3 Sections 32 Pages P18 WEDNESDay : NOVEMBER 25, 2015 www.thestandard.com.ph editorial@thestandard.com.ph
3 more held for bullets at Naia
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MAR: WHO WANTS ‘FOREIGN’ LEADER? By John Paolo Bencito and Macon Ramos-Araneta
ADMINISTRATION candidate Manuel Roxas II took a swipe Tuesday at presidential survey frontrunner Senator Grace Poe by insinuating that she was not a natural-born citizen, just a few months after he failed to convince her to be his running mate.
“Without any specificity, none of us would want a foreigner as president, right?” Roxas said Tuesday. “The issue here is being a natural-born Filipino, which is stated in the Constitution.” “And in the end, the rule of law should prevail because if there is no law, then it will already be might is right—those who have the money, those who have the guns and those who have the loudest voice would prevail in our country,” he added.
POE
Road rage killer Ivler draws life in prison
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Roxas spoke up on Poe’s citizenship status after Davao Mayor Rodrigo Duterte joined the presidential race to protest the Senate Electoral Tribunal’s dismissal of a petition to unseat her as a senator because she was a foundling and could not prove she was a naturalborn citizen, a requirement for being senator or president. “If you want an American president, choose Grace [Poe],” Duterte said. Previously, Roxas had refrained
from commenting on the challenges against Poe and denied allegations that he was behind the petitions filed against her before the Commission on Elections and the Senate tribunal. A spokesman for Poe, Valenzuela Mayor Rex Gatchalian, reacted sharply to Roxas’ statement. “How can they say she is a foreign national when they even tried to draft her as their vice presidential bet?” Gatchalian said. Next page
ROXAS
Be on alert vs terrorists, Palace insists By Sandy Araneta and Vito Barcelo THE Palace said Tuesday that even without any specific threat, the public must be vigilant against possible terrorist attacks. Communications Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr. made this state-
ment during a radio interview on dzRH after the military played down the possibility of a terrorist threat, which seemed to contradict Presidential Spokesman Edwin Lacierda’s call to the public to avoid malls and other public places where crowds gather. “Maybe, we should put this in the right context. What Secretary Laci-
erda said [was that] even when there is no serious threat monitored… it is still better to be vigilant. Maybe, that’s what he meant, and that we need not worry,” Coloma said. Coloma cited as an example the recently concluded Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Next page