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Doncic latest addition to Jordan Brand endorsers

HAVING A solid start to his second year in the National Basketball Association, Dallas Mavericks sensation Luka Doncic recently added Jordan Brand ambassador to his growing list of accomplishments in his young NBA career.

One of the front-runners for the NBA most valuable player award early in the season with norms of 29 points, 9.5 rebounds and 8.9º assists to date for the Mavericks (21-12), Slovenian Doncic continues to fortify his place in the NBA-dom, enhanced further by the Jordan Brand endorsement.

Twenty-year-old Doncic, who currently leads the league in triple-doubles with nine, joined fresh additions to the brand’s family, which include Jayson Tatum of the Boston Celtics, Rui Hachimura of the Washington Wizards and Zion Williamson of the New Orleans Pelicans.

“It is exciting to join such a talented roster and being given the privilege of defining the next generation of the Jordan Brand,” said Mr. Doncic, last year’s rookie of the year, in a statement.

“Michael Jordan was a hero of mine growing up, so being able to represent this iconic brand, especially as a kid from Slovenia, is an honor,” added the Mavericks star, who spent some time in the Euroleague before taking his talent to the NBA in 2018.

For the Jordan Brand, having a talent like Mr. Doncic is a no-brainer since the latter embodies the qualities that they look for in an endorser, including his big-game mentality especially when the game is on the line.

“We’re very pleased to welcome Luka to the Jordan Brand,” said Craig Williams, Jordan Brand President.

Adding, “He is an undeniable talent, and he’s already demonstrated a fearlessness in the clutch that we prize in the Jordan Brand family.”

Mr. Doncic’s addition was also supported by no less than Michael Jordan himself, who has been impressed by the showing of the Dallas player despite his young age.

“Luka is a phenomenal player, and at such a young age. He’s demonstrating skill it takes many guys years to develop. It will be incredible to watch him continue to advance in the league,” said Mr. Jordan.

“We are excited to welcome him to the Jordan Brand family. He rounds out a roster of incredible new talent united to represent Jordan Brand for the next generation,” he added. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Nationwide round-up

DoLE warns vs e-mail scam asking for cash donations

DoLE
PHILSTAR

THE DEPARTMENT of Labor and Employment (DoLE) has issued a warning against a fraudulent e-mail claiming to be associated with the agency and asking for cash donations. In a memorandum released on January 1, Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III said the e-mail address administrativeservice@gmail.corn is not affiliated with the DoLE. “This e-mail is fake and completely bogus. Everyone is directed to disregard the same and to inform our transacting public, as necessary, to be forewarned of this scam,” Mr. Bello said. The e-mail, with the subject “Donation 2019/2020,” asks for a cash contribution of at least $100 that will supposedly be donated to leukemia patients. DoLE said the public should exercise caution when receiving these bogus e-mails and should report them for further investigation. — Gillian M. Cortez

Filipino Pacatiw triumphs, makes history in Brave CF

JEREMY PACATIW saved the night for Filipino fighters in Saudi Arabia as he came out victorious against former title contender Felipe Efrain at “Brave CF 33” on Dec. 27, which took place at the Prince Abdullah Al Faisal Stadium, in Jeddah. In the biggest victory of his young career, “The Juggernaut” marked an extremely important landmark, as he is now the first-ever BRAVE CF fighter with 10 fights for the promotion.

Mr. Pacatiw has moved further away from Brave CF’s current welterweight world champion Jarrah Al-Selawe, who has eight bouts for the organization, with seven wins. His sixth victory means he’s closer to tying “The Jordanian Lion” in number of Brave CF wins.

The win marked only his second knockout victory for Brave CF and the first one since August of 2017, when he beat another Brazilian, Thiago dela Coleta, back at Brave CF 8, in Curitiba, Brazil.

This time around, however, the win was a big one for his career, as Mr. Efrain is widely seen as one of the top fighters in the bantamweight division. The Brazilian striker gave reigning bantamweight champion Stephen Loman the hardest fight of his reign, almost submitting “The Sniper” at Brave CF 18.

The victory was also important for his fellow Filipino fans, since the country had gone 0-2 in the night before he fought. Harold Banario lost to Gamzat Magomedov, while Rolando Dy was defeated by Anzor Abdulkhozaev.

Brave CF 33’s main event ended in victory for Russia, as Ikram Aliskerov had a successful return to middleweight by stopping a tough Diego Gonzalez with strikes in the third round, as BRAVE Combat Federation’s final event of the year had in total five KOs, four submissions and only two decisions.

Street parking fees in Davao City take effect

PARKING FEES took effect Jan. 1 along seven roads in the central part of Davao City. The initial streets covered under the new public pay parking zones are: San Pedro, Ilustre, Pelayo, Iñigo, Villa Abrille, Monteverde, and Duterte. The policy, implemented by the City Transport and Traffic Management Office (CTTMO), is contained in City Ordinance No. 052-13, Series of 2013. It is in effect from 6:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m., Monday to Saturday. The parking rates are: Trucks and buses, P100 for the first two hours and P20 for every succeeding hour; light vehicles, P20 for the first two hours and P10 for every succeeding hour; motorcycles, P5 and P1; and bicycles, P2 and P1. The CTTMO hired and trained 80 parking fee enforcers.

Candidates lineup

The FIDE Grand Prix concluded last Dec. 23 with the victory of GM Ian Nepomniachtchi in the Jerusalem leg and after that the participant list in the March 2020 Yekaterinburg Candidates Tournament was finalized:

1 Runner-up in 2018 World Championship – Fabiano Caruana

2–3 Two qualifiers from the FIDE World Cup 2019 — Teimour Radjabov and Ding Liren. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (MVL) and Yu Yangyi were the losing semifinalists and they played an elimination match for the 3rd place, won by MVL.

4 Winner of the FIDE Grand Swiss held in the Isle of Man — Wang Hao. Actually, Wang Hao and Fabiano Caruana tied for 1st place but since Caruana already had a slot in the Candidates there were no tie breaks involved anymore and the Chinese GM automatically qualified for the Candidates. There was a six-way tie for 3rd place just half a point behind the winners. In tie-break order: Kirill Alekseenko, Levon Aronian, David Anton Guijarro, Magnus Carlsen, Hikaru Nakamura and Nikita Vitiugov.

5–6 Two qualifiers from the FIDE Grand Prix — Alexander Grischuk and Ian Nepomniachtchi. The 3rd and 4th places were occupied by Maxime Vachier-Lagrave and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov.

7 One qualifier by rating (average of the past year) not otherwise qualified: Anish Giri. The top 3 were Magnus Carlsen (2865), Fabiano Caruana (2819), and Ding Liren (2807). Magnus Carlsen of course is the current world champion while Caruana and Ding Liren already had confirmed seats to Yekaterinburg. Next in line is Anish Giri (2782), Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (2777) and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (2775). The January 2020 ratings still have to be taken into consideration but a lead of 5 points by Giri over MVL is huge when you consider it is a 1-year average. No one expects the ratings order to change.

8 One Organizer’s wild card – Kirill Alekseenko. The rule is that the organizer of the Candidates tournament can nominate one player to participate who meets at least one of the following criteria:

The player from the top-10 players by average FIDE rating. This is Maxime Vachier-Lagrave

The player placed 3rd in the 2019 FIDE World Cup. This is Maxime Vachier-Lagrave

The best nonqualifying player from the 2019 FIDE Grand Swiss. This is Kirill Alekseenko

The best nonqualifying player from the 2019 FIDE Grand Prix Series. This is Maxime Vachier-Lagrave

The organizer, the Russian Chess Federation, of course chose the Russian player, Kirill Alekseenko from St. Petersburg, as their nominee. A perfectly legal choice.

The French GM, Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, is appealing the choice of the wild card and requests that he be allowed to play a match against Kirill Alekseenko for the last candidates slot. He has some valid points:

Maxime Vachier-Lagrave topped three of the four criteria (given above) for the wild card choice.

The FIDE Grand Swiss is a new criteria. Under the old rules the Top 2 qualifiers by rating get automatic slots. Thus MVL would have been an automatic qualifier.

The wild card rules are also new. Under the old regulations the organizers can name any wild card so long as his rating is at least 2725. Alekseenko currently has a rating of 2704. He would not have even be considered if we were to follow this rule.

The Candidates Tournament already has two Russian participants and MVL argues that it makes more sense to choose world number four Vachier-Lagrave instead of Alekseenko, who is number 37.

I do not believe this appeal has any chance of success, though.

The wild card is an incentive given to prospective organizers of FIDE qualifying events. They have every right to choose Alekseenko.

It is not that MVL did not have the same opportunities as Alekseenko to qualify. In fact, he had everything in his hands, but lost 3 key matches in this cycle, to Radjabov in the World Cup, to Grischuk in Hamburg GP and to Nepom in Jerusalem GP.

This is not to say that Maxime Vachier-Lagrave is not a deserving candidate. Obviously, he is. But the rules for qualifying were approved and published before the competitions and the World Chess Federation (FIDE) cannot be taken to task for simply following the criteria they announced would be used.

Vachier-Lagrave’s best game from Jerusalem.

Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime (2780) — Topalov, Veselin (2737) [C67]
Jerusalem FIDE Grand Prix
Jerusalem (3.1), 13.12.2019

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 4.0–0 MVL is also a regular practitioner of the Anti-Berlin line 4.d3.

4…Nxe4 5.d4

Do you remember not so long ago I wrote about attacking the Berlin? If you don’t recall then please go back and review it as that is one column that I was really proud about. Anyway, the stem game was a beauty from the attacking genius Rashid Nezhmetdinov: 5.Re1 Nd6 6.Nxe5 Be7 7.Bd3 0–0 8.Nc3 Nxe5 9.Rxe5 Bf6 10.Re3 g6 (the natural 10…b6? falls instantly to 11.Bxh7+! Kxh7 12.Qh5+ Kg8 13.Rh3 Bh4 14.Rxh4 f5 15.d4 White is clearly winning) 11.Qf3! (Yup, Black still can’t develop his bishop via b7–b6) 11…Bg7 12.b3 Ne8 13.Ba3 d6 14.Rae1 Nf6 (the Black knight wants to go Nf6–g4–e5) 15.h3! Nd7 16.Nd5 f5 (It turns out that the black knight can’t go to e5 because of 16…Ne5 17.Rxe5! dxe5 [17…Bxe5 18.Rxe5 dxe5 19.Be7 wins the queen] 18.Ne7+ Kh8 19.Nxc8 White has two pieces for the rook) 17.Nxc7! Qxc7 18.Qd5+ Kh8 19.Re8 Nf6 20.Rxf8+ Bxf8 21.Bb2 Bg7 22.Bc4 Bd7 23.Bxf6 Bxf6 24.Qf7 Qd8 25.Re8+! An amazing tactical sequence. 1–0 Nezhmetdinov, R. — Kotkov, Y. Russian ch Krasnodar 1957.

5…Nd6 6.Bxc6 dxc6 7.dxe5 Nf5 8.Qxd8+

Someone once asked me why White shouldn’t avoid the queen exchange with 8.Qe2. This question is actually addressed by GM Priyadharshan Kannappan in his new book on The Modernized Berlin Wall Defense. According to him “this move should not be taken seriously”: 8…Nd4 9.Nxd4 Qxd4 10.Rd1 Bg4! (the queen trade favors Black, thanks to his bishop pair and the overextended pawn on e5 — Kannappan) 11.Rxd4 Bxe2 12.Nc3 Bh5 13.Bg5 h6 14.Bh4 g5 15.Bg3 Bc5! 16.Rc4 (16.Rd2 Rd8 17.Rxd8+ Kxd8 18.Ne4 Be7 19.f3 Bg6 Black is slightly better) 16…Be7 17.Ne4 0–0–0 18.a4 Rd5 Kannappan: “the misplaced rooks, weak pawns and bishop trapped on g3 make White’s life miserable.” Akatova, E. (2260)-Slugin, S. (2440) St. Petersburg 2010 0–1 51.

8…Kxd8

We have here on the board the Berlin Wall end game. Let us review some basic rule of the thumb stuff on this end game:

In this end game the uncastled king is not necessarily a handicap. If the rooks are exchanged it is going to come into action very quickly. Therefore Black should strive to exchange all the rooks.

Exchanging the knights is also in Black’s favor as he obtains the excellent f5–square for his bishops.

If White manages to exchange the dark-square bishops then Black can encounter problems fighting for the d-file. Best to keep both his bishops.

Black should never enter a king and pawn ending(5) Another thing, Black should not indiscriminately advance c6–c5 without good preparation, this can enable White to deploy his knight on d5 with powerful effect.

9.h3

Previously the main line was 9.Nc3 but in the past few years the text move has become very popular with MVL in particular being one of its main promoters.

9…Bd7

Currently 9…Ke8 10.Nc3 h5 is Black’s main path to equality. The move weakens the g5–square, but fights against the advance of White’s pawn majority on the kingside.

10.Rd1 Be7

Black prevents White’s knight from going to g5.

11.g4 Nh4 12.Nxh4 Bxh4 13.Nd2 Kc8 14.Nf3 Be7 15.Bg5

Going for a swap of the dark-squared bishops, as per rules of the thumb outlined earlier.

15…Bc5 16.Rd3 b6 17.Be3

Basically forcing the exchange of bishops.

17…Bxe3

If Black insists on retaining his bishop then 17…Be7 18.Rad1 Be6 19.Nd4 Bd5 20.Nf5 Bf8 21.c4! Bxc4 22.Rd8+ Kb7 23.Rxa8 Kxa8 24.Rd8+ White is playing for a win while Black can just wait around to see what his opponent does. A sample line is 24…Kb7 25.b3 Be6 26.Bg5! g6 27.Nd4 Bg7 28.Nxe6 fxe6 29.Rxh8 Bxh8 30.Bf6 White wins the bishop and has a decisive advantage.

18.Rxe3 h6 19.Rd1 c5 20.Nh4

Intending to push his f-pawn.

20…g5 21.Nf5

Strongly threatening 22.Ne7+ Kd8 23.e6!.

21…Bxf5?

Nothing looks good. Perhaps 21…Be6 22.Ng7 Kb7 (22…Bd7 23.Rf3 Be6 24.Nxe6 fxe6 25.Rf6 wins a crucial pawn) 23.Nxe6 fxe6 24.Rd7 Rad8 25.Red3 Rxd7 26.Rxd7 Kc6 27.Re7 is the best defense although even here White is for choice.

22.gxf5 <D>

POSITION AFTER 22.GXF5

Is White already winning here? Maybe.

22…Kb7 23.Kg2 Rad8 24.Rxd8 Rxd8 25.Kf3! c4 26.Re4 b5 27.Kg4! Kc8 28.e6 fxe6 29.fxe6 Rh8 30.Kf5 Kd8 31.e7+ Ke8 32.Kg6 1–0

Topalov gives up. After the forced 32.Kg6 Kd7 33.Kg7 Re8 34.Kf7 White will simply move his rook up and down the e-file waiting for Black to use up all his moves, after which Black has to move away his rook and allow his opponent to queen the pawn.

 

Bobby Ang is a founding member of the National Chess Federation of the Philippines (NCFP) and its first Executive Director. A Certified Public Accountant (CPA), he taught accounting in the University of Santo Tomas (UST) for 25 years and is currently Chief Audit Executive of the Equicom Group of Companies.

bobby@cpamd.net

Mindanao business leaders cheer martial law-free 2020, but calamity fright seen as headwind

By Maya M. Padillo, Correspondent

DAVAO CITY — With the lifting of martial law effective Jan. 1 after blanketing Mindanao for over two years, business leaders are optimistic of a more robust growth, but at the same time stressed the need for strengthening disaster resilience following the series of earthquakes that struck parts of the southern mainland in the fourth quarter of 2019.

“During the Davao ICon (Investment Conference) 2019 last June, the lifting of martial law was one of the issues raised by the foreign diplomats and delegates to Mayor Sara (Duterte-Carpio) during their dialogue because of their interest to explore opportunities to invest in Davao and Mindanao,” Arturo M. Milan, past president of the Davao City Chamber of Commerce and Industry Inc. (DCCCII), said in an interview.

Martial law in Mindanao was first declared by President Rodrigo R. Duterte on May 23, 2017 at the start of the Marawi City siege and was extended twice.

In 2018, economic growth rate slowed down in four of the six regions in Mindanao compared with the 2017 performance.

Only Zamboanga Peninsula and Northern Mindanao posted higher gross regional domestic product (GRDP) growth rates to 6.3% from 2.4%, and 7% from 5.8%, respectively.

Those with slower GRDP growth rate were: Davao, 8.6% from 10.7%; SOCCSKSARGEN — composed of the provinces of South Cotabato, Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat, Sarangani, and General Santos City — 6.9% from 8.3%; Caraga, 3.2% from 3.6%; and the former Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), 7.2% from 7.5%.

Aside from investments, Department of Tourism Davao Regional Director Tanya Rabat-Tan said taking away the negative image of military rule over Mindanao and the expected lifting of travel warnings by foreign governments would attract more visitors.

“We affirm the positive effect of this event for the region… We target to balance the marks of domestic and foreign tourist arrivals by 2020 given that we have diverse tourism destinations with unique experiences and offerings,” she said.

Ms. Tan cited that tourism’s contribution to the Philippine economy is currently at 12% and Davao Region, along with the rest of Mindanao, could give this a boost if it maximizes its tourism potential.

She also noted that tourism is a driver for rural development, especially if community-based, and micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) are made part of the sector’s value chain.

Honorary Consul of Bangladesh for Mindanao Joji Ilagan-Bian, a former Mindanao Business Council (MBC) chair, said improved credit access for MSMEs would be crucial to ensuring that development reaches the countryside.

“With this we will be able to largely reduce poverty also,” she said in an interview.

DISASTER RESILIENCE
Mr. Milan also gave a pragmatic view that the destructive earthquakes in October and December could deter investors and consumers, especially in the condominium sector, from planned ventures and purchases.

The calamities can also dampen tourist enthusiasm, he added.

“Expectedly, there will be a shift of preference to subdivision development and other low rise property development. Second to be affected is tourism. I expect less people to travel for leisure to Davao and Mindanao for fear that they might be caught by the ‘Big One’ during their stay. While this fear do exist… I strongly believe this is very temporary and will prevail in the first half of the year until the situation stabilizes,” he said.

John Carlo B. Tria, this year’s DCCCII president, said in a separate interview that developing disaster resilience, especially among MSMEs, will be one of their priority programs.

Mr. Tria stressed that despite the headwind, they remain upbeat given the national government’s infrastructure program.

Several big-ticket projects in Mindanao are included in the Build, Build, Build program, such as the ongoing Panguil Bay Bridge connecting Misamis Occidental and Lanao del Norte, and the still pending Digos-Davao-Tagum segment of the Mindanao railway and the Davao-Samal bridge.

“Increased public spending on infrastructure and services with the 2020 budget will keep our growth strong and create further opportunities,” Mr. Tria said.

He added that the implementation of programs in the new Bangsamoro ARMM (BARMM) will prompt more economic activities and create new opportunities.

MBC Chair Vicente T. Lao, also the honorary consul of New Zealand for Mindanao, said with the southern islands being a major agricultural and fisheries area, “Mindanao will be thrust into global significance as food security and climate change becomes global issues.”

Nation at a Glance — (01/02/20)

News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.

Nation at a Glance — (01/02/20)

More than mere spoilers

The Raptors simply met expectations in winning yesterday, but it was a welcome development all the same. Not that preying on the lowly Cavaliers in and of itself constituted progress; for all their trials, they couldn’t but have walked out of Scotiabank Arena with victory in their grasp. Still, the fact that they managed to preserve their unblemished run against opponents deemed below their talent level four-tenths into a supposedly lost season speaks volumes of their resiliency. Their roster may be absent Finals Most Valuable Player Kawhi Leonard, but it remains proud of — and, more importantly, revels in showing — its championship pedigree.

Indeed, the Raptors have no business being in the thick of things, not with Leonard gone and key figures, including early MVP contender Pascal Siakam, downed by a cacophony of ailments. They are, though, and how. Were the playoffs to begin today, they will enjoy homecourt advantage courtesy of a hard-earned Top Four seeding marked by overachievement and outstanding coaching. It helped, of course, that astute front-office management courtesy of hoops operations head Masai Ujiri mitigated the ill-effects of heavy turnover and highlighted intrinsic strengths, and to the point where all and sundry can keep reaching for the stars with feet planted firmly on the ground.

Make no mistake. The Raptors aren’t primed for a title defense. Heck, they may not even emerge as the beasts of the East when the battlesmoke clears. The Bucks, starring reigning MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo, are just too good, the Celtics are inspired anew, and the Sixers present the biggest upside. Nonetheless, there can be no writing them off at any given time. Their workmanlike approach to their schedule makes them a tough out regardless of circumstance. It’s certainly why fans believe they’re far more than mere spoilers.

When Siakam gets back along with Marc Gasol and Norman Powell, the Raptors will finally be able to work on the best version of themselves. The trade circuit offers tantalizing prospects, but the wise choice is to stand pat and hold on to chips — and, yes, salary cap space — until Antetokounmpo becomes available in 2021. Ujiri will want to limit his moves to those that extract coin for, and pay off in, the short term. He may have gambled heavily when he took Leonard in, but that was a time when he had no hardware to show and needed to go all in as a result.

The Raptors have nothing to prove now. They’re the reigning titleholders. No one doubts their capacity for success both on and off the court. They don’t need to, and certainly can’t, be desperate. And if there’s anything they’re underscoring every single day, it’s that they’ll leave nothing in the tank no matter the odds.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing the Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Body doubles

MMFF Movie Review

Sunod

Written and directed by Carlo Ledesma; co-writer Anton Santa Maria

Sunod is unusually sophisticated for the Filipino horror genre. Its terrors subtly operate along several levels. There is the stock opening nightmare scene in the graveyard, replete with howling winds, swirling black veils, and snakelike tree roots. It’s not real, but what follows is still hair-raising — not your grandmother’s Shake, Rattle En Roll. Cineastes agree that it was downhill there, after the very first in the series, or post-1984.

Olivia Sason, a.k.a. Liv’s (a coolly restrained Carmina Villaruel) very existence is already a horror story: she is an unemployed single mother with a seriously ill 12-year-old daughter, facing mounting hospital bills all alone. No one, not her daughter’s father, nor her own family or any friends are around to help her. Her desperation is palpable as she applies to work at a call center known as LGO (Liboro Global Outsourcing) at a job recruitment fair in a downtown university. She is accepted solely on her spoken English skills. She swallows the humiliation of being at least 20 years older than most of her fellow agents in training, and not as tech savvy as them. Her maturity serves her in good stead, however, when she successfully projects the authority of a supervisor (which she is not), thus retaining a valuable client. The fire-breathing, dragon lady CEO, Karen Liboro (Mylene Dizon) even fast tracks her regularization. Being a casual or endo contractual is a living nightmare for most of our work force.

Sunod was touted as the only horror film entry for the 2019 Metro Manila Film Fest (MMFF). However, each of the short student-made films which opened every main features, did have a horror theme derived from our traditional lower mythology — aswang, manananggal, multo, etc.  This film’s production polish has much to teach our student filmmakers. There are ever so subtle shifts in the lighting with each scene change: from the lighter blues and greys of the hospital, which segue into the darker steely shades of the call center, where one never knows whether it is night or day, and everything is mechanically scripted and constrained. There is an ambience of death and decay in the moldering yellows and mysterious shadows of the Liboro Building, where LGO occupies the top floor, and a washed out, shabby weariness to the small home with its worn furnishings, which Liv and her young daughter Anelle (Krystal Brimner who like her character, is also 12 years old ) share. The tall Gothic statues of dramatically backlit dark angels in the foyer of the Liboro Building, on whose top floor the call center holds office, are pure camp. They could be props from Hammer Studios. The music is brazenly manipulative, too obviously prompting us to cringe, and triggering the racing of our pulse rates, but this is a minor annoyance given the film’s otherwise outstanding production values.

This tale of possession is reminiscent of the classic The Exorcist (1973, by William Friedkin). The girls in both films are around the same age, and are both being raised by single mothers. In The Exorcist, it is a supernatural demon who takes over Regan (Linda Blair). In Sunod, another child, Nerissa (13-year-old Rhed Bustamante, looking like she belongs in Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children), who happens to be the resident ghost of the Liboro Building, enters Anelle. The dramatically negative personality changes which may come with adolescence make child-raising a real-life, terrifying experience for many parents, and doubly so for a single parent going it alone.

But it is not just Anelle and Nerissa who are not whom they appear to be. Even Liv’s supervisor Lance (J.C. Santos) whom she initially took to be her knight in shining armor as his full name Lancelot implies, turns out to be just another prick. From his perspective, one might call it a fair quid pro quo, since he does ante up for Liv’s enormous debts. After kneeing him in the groin, she still deposits his check.

Liv’s barely concealed indignation when the LGO call center human resources department refuses her request for a huge advance on her salary, as well as her earlier flash of temper when the job recruiter was about to turn her away, hint at why she might be all alone in facing her problems. It seems she has used up whatever good will she might have had with her child’s father, her family or other friends.

There is only Liv’s officemate and new-found confidant Mimi (Kate Alejandrino) for now (no spoilers about what happens to Lance), who’s available to drive her and Nerissa/Anelle, so that Nerissa can find her long-lost mother Perla (Susan Africa making crazy eyes), and finally be at peace, then leave Anelle’s body for good. The delightful Ms. Alejandrino as Mimi, ably serves up the film’s few moments of levity. She frankly admits to being a professional call center trainee, simply so she can collect the training allowance, without the accountability, stress, and aggravation of actual BPO employment. Nerissa/Anelle transforms into a human Waze as she directs Mimi through the winding slum alleys. Mimi glances in her rearview mirror at the literal whites of the possessed Anelle’s eyes, and deadpans, “No, she’s not scary, but this is so-o-o crazy.”

At least in Sunod, the laughs are intended, unlike in such ineptly made horror films, particularly of the slasher sort. Think of Topel Lee’s Bloody Crayons, (2017, based on the Wattpad novel by Josh Argonza) where the audience is ROFL (rolling on the floor laughing) each time there’s a victim. The horror of Sunod unexpectedly grows on one with the appearance of the red ball of thread. In the film’s first part, Liv threads beads into necklaces and bracelets with innocuous clear nylon, as she keeps vigil by Anelle’s hospital bed. Here, the red thread ominously recalls the tik-tik’s tongue, which slithers through gaps in poor peasants’ pawid (nipa thatch) roofs, to vacuum up embryos in uteri, through the pregnant woman’s navel. Lonely Liv’s greatest fear is her daughter’s dying, but there’s more than one way to lose a child.

The color red and the idea of tethering might be an homage to Jordan Peele’s Us (2019). In astral travel, there is said to be a silver thread which tethers or connects one’s etheric or astral body to the physical body on this earthly plane. This ensures that one does not remain in whatever worlds one might encounter elsewhere, but be able to return to this planet. However hellish life here might be, the astral plane may not be all that great, as this film shows. In fairness, the world in which Liv temporarily finds herself in does resemble an art gallery installation.

The red thread also brings to mind the Fates in Greek Myth: Clotho who spins it, Lachesis who decides upon the length each living being might have, and Atropos who with finality, cuts the thread. In the end, Liv is doomed, though exactly how her end might come about, and whether she will take her beloved only daughter with her, we may never know. Now for her at least, that is scary.

Southern discomfort

MMFF Movie Review

Mindanao

Directed by Brillante Ma. Mendoza

Mindanao, Brillante Ma Mendoza’s latest Metro Manila Film Festival (MMFF) entry, humanizes as well as mythologizes the second largest island in our archipelago. We can all relate to its great themes: serious illness and death, the suffering of little children, families riven by war. Admittedly though, we, the so-called Christian lowland majority, are largely ignorant about our “Muslim brethren,” or the Moro, which is how the Islamic societies in the Philippine South now call themselves.

Here, they are all too human. Saima (Judy Ann Santos) helps her cancer-stricken daughter Aisa’s (Yuna Tangog) cope with her pain through the re-telling of the saga of the brothers Raja and Sulaiman, and their battle with the enemy dragon spouses Ginto at Pula. The Princess Aisa is a character in this tale, shown through animation, just as the little girl might imagine it. The battle cry for these fragile children to be brave and keep fighting against their dread diseases, is repeated by the other parents at the House of Hope Transient Patients Home and Hospice. Aisa and her mother stay there, in between treatments at the Southern Philippines Medical Center.  When death comes for one so young, you do not give up that easily.

Ms. Santos’ Best Actress awards are well-deserved. One senses Saima’s strength as well as her infinite sorrow. She is helpless – she cannot protect her child against the cancer which is her death sentence – but she must remain strong for her. She sniffs at the empty strawberry ice cream container — that was Aisa’s favorite flavor — as the scent is a way to remember her. Little Yuna Tangog was utterly convincing as a retinoblastoma patient. That is an especially cruel cancer which first eats away at the eyes. It usually afflicts toddlers and preschoolers. Often the only way to stop its nefarious progress is to remove the cancerous eyes, while continuing other treatments.

The celebration at the House of Hope and the testimonies of the survivors sympathetically depict the community among the poor who look out for one another in their suffering. It is to be hoped though, that after they saw the conditions there, a big star like Ms. Santos or the successful director Mendoza himself, might donate at least two sets of institutional size cookware (one for halal, and the other not) to the House of Hope. That way, these poor mothers, already burdened with having to care for their patients, would be spared the inconvenience and expense of having to bring their own cooking pots and utensils. It would definitely make for a smaller carbon footprint and a greater sense of community, for them to pool their resources and cook just one big pot of rice and two large batches of halal and non-halal food, rather than kaniya-kaniya (every man for himself).

Saima’s husband Malang (Allen Dizon) is an army medic who must be away in battle while his child is dying. The director Mendoza has declared, “Whether we like it or not, when we say ‘Mindanao,’ people relate it to the conflict there. Therefore, you cannot just make a film about Mindanao and not mention the conflict.”

The Maguindanaoan public intellectual, Datu Gutierrez “Teng” Mangansakan, curator/director of the Salamindanaw Asian Film Festival differs: “We do not deny that conflict is part of our history, but Mindanao is more than that. At a time when we are faced with tragedy and disaster, we rise beyond our differences and see our common humanity.”

What we Christian Lowlanders would take as simply a moving film about family tragedy which just happens to be set in Mindanao, apparently has other far-reaching reverberations, especially among the Maguindanaon, the ethnolinguistic group to which the protagonist Malang belongs. Mindanao has 13 distinct ethnolinguistic groups of Moro with their own cultural practices and traditions. Mr. Mendoza was called out for “ignorance of the dynamics and peculiarities of Bangsamoro geopolitical reality and experience.” A respected personage from Basilan has endorsed Mindanao and a Tausug academic was the production consultant.  However, it was pointed out that those worthies are not authorities on Maguindanaon or mainland reality and cultural specificity. Cotabato City’s Alnor Cinema, the only movie house in the Bangsamoro region and in Maguindanao, where this film is supposedly set, did not screen Mindanao The Movie during the Christmas holidays.

Datu Mangansakan found strong elements of the Maguindanao ethos in the film, eg., of alamatan (foreboding or premonition) and of mulka and bagkiyas (retribution). He cites the sequence where Malang’s best friend, the soldier whom he calls “Buddy,” (Ketchup Eusebio) visits Aisa in the hospital, and brings her pansit which he jokingly tells her is for long life, although he knows she’s dying of cancer. Later, on the way to a military operation, Eusebio’s character gets a loving call on his cellphone from his son who’s celebrating his birthday. Datu Mangansakan explains that in Maguindanaon, this is an instance of ‘kaalamatan sikanin’ or the foreboding of a dread event. In the next scene, “Buddy” is killed. ‘Nabagyasan nu wata’ for his insensitive remark to the dying child Aisa. Datu Mangansakan goes on:

“In an earlier scene, the Maguindanaon soldier Malang (Allen Dizon) performs the sagayan (the Maguindanaon war dance) wearing both his military uniform on and the tiered skirt of the sagayan dancer, embodying both the hero and the antihero. Towards the film’s end, he is wounded in the military operation, and misses his daughter’s funeral. ‘Nabagkyasan nu bangsa nin’ or in Filipino ‘na-karma’ (got his comeuppance) for bastardizing his own tradition.”

Datu Mangansakan has written about how when the Bangsa Moro resisted the American Colonial presence, cinema was used to represent them as ‘The Other’: “Because the studios were some 300 miles from Mindanao, the construction of images of the Moro has been marred by misrepresentation rooted in ignorance of cultural traditions, as well as religious prejudice and discrimination that mirror the prevailing political, historical and social climate, rendering the Moro as a subaltern: unable to speak, voiceless.”

Still, to have big stars such as Judy Ann Santos in this film, Cesar Montano in Bagong Buwan (2001, Marilou Diaz-Abaya), and Nora Aunor in Thy Womb (2012, Brillante Ma Mendoza) portraying Muslims, has been a cause for elation among the Bangsa Moro. Even Datu Mangansakan recalled how when Bagong Buwan was shown, for so many Moro, “It was as though our identity, our struggle and our very existence have been validated via the big screen. Suddenly we have become larger than life, our narratives made part of the national consciousness.

“Mainstreaming of Moro narratives gives us a positive jolt and that is totally understandable. But we must be able to discern beyond the cosmeticism provided by our exotic culture and traditions, and the portrayal of armed conflicts that have been our truths for many Ramadans past. We must also be able to determine the intention why the same narratives of our people are perpetuated, thereby cementing them in the national imagination. We Moros should not be passive players in the hegemonic business of appropriating the Moro image and narrative. Mga pagali ko, the subaltern can now speak! We must endeavor to create the Moro image and narrative ourselves.”

CPA Australia designation: A passport to the future

The Professional Regulatory Board of Accountancy (BOA), Philippines Institute of Certified Public Accountants (PICPA), and CPA Australia are collaborating to advance the interests of Philippines-based accountants. Here, TOA Global Senior Director of Finance, Ma. Coreen Laureano Atencio, explains why she applied for CPA Australia Associate membership and the career benefits it can offer all Filipino accountants.

As a finance professional with more than 10 years’ work experience and more than five years in a senior role, CPA Australia first gained Ma. Coreen Laureano Atencio’s (Coreen) attention during the November 2017 PICPA Annual National Convention in Manila.

“I was already in the last semester of a Master of Management degree at the University of the Philippines and after that planning to seek a certification that would help me to become globally recognised as a technical expert in my field and at the same time broaden my overall professional value,” Coreen says.

Fast forward to December 2018 and she applied for the CPA Program via PICPA Pathway 1 under the membership pathway agreement (MPA) and has already successfully completed one subject; Ethics and Governance.

“CPA Australia’s collaboration with PICPA was a big help,” she says. “It literally opened the CPA Australia door for me.”

From your own professional standpoint, what, to date, have been the most rewarding and career-wise, direct benefits of becoming an Associate member of CPA Australia?

“Being globally recognised has a lot of benefits,” Coreen notes. “Leading a team of high-performing finance professionals has a lot of responsibilities and to me, one of them is to consistently motivate each member of my team to aim for continuous learning and development. Being an Associate member of CPA Australia is proof that I’m all for continuous improvement and aligned with dreaming big and achieving more. The most rewarding part is to see each member of my team consistently improve and unleash their inner desire to continuously learn as well.

“Career-wise, I am probably looking at a minimum of two more decades, and after I finish [the CPA Program] I see it is a passport that, in the longer term, is going to be very rewarding.”

Given you already hold a senior finance position, where do you see the benefits of the CPA designation taking you in the future?

“Because the Philippines has blossomed to be a top shared service, offshore business process outsourcing [BPO] solutions provider, global exposure and [relevant] expertise has become essential for Filipino accountants to be on top of the game. After completing the CPA Program, I envisage myself being ready for new opportunities in my profession that will continue to grow as more foreign and global companies do business in the country.

“I look at it as a great way to cement my career further, possibly to the point of achieving a CFO designation. For example, at TOA Global, my current role requires someone who is what they call ‘glocal’ – a globally recognised professional but one who is also a local expert. I believe the CPA designation is going to really help me to climb the corporate ladder as a globally recognised accounting professional.”

Why would you recommend CPA Australia to other Filipinos?

“Now is the best time for every Filipino accountant to become globally recognised. As more global companies do business in the country, there are a lot more opportunities, not just in metropolitan Manila but in nearby provinces and in the countryside as well. Becoming globally recognised helps you stay a few steps ahead of the competition.”

Be this as it may, Coreen says there are still too few local accountants with global designations.

“Not a lot of Filipinos are aware that they could, for example, access CPA Australia without having to go through Singapore or Australia,” she says.

However, given CPA Australia’s online learning platform, which provides ready access to learning materials and technical expertise, this certainly need not be the case.

“This is my first course via an online learning platform, and CPA Australia’s has definitely been adequate in helping me to pass each exam subject,” Coreen says. “Everything you need is there.”

In other words, the door to the CPA Australia designation is well and truly open to all Filipino accountants. Find out more

CPA Australia: Helping Filipinos build exceptional finance careers

As CFO of California Fitness and Yoga Co. Ltd since May 2011, Filipino Rowell Donato Ng Tan CPA (Aust.), who has been working in Vietnam for many years, does not hesitate when recommending CPA Australia Associate membership to all financial practitioners in the Philippines.

Rowell Donato Ng Tan (Rowell) was already working in Vietnam with Deloitte when he first heard about CPA Australia. He had become a CPA right after college in the Philippines and when Vietnam offered a CPA designation for foreigners, he did the same there. Even so, a lack of global recognition left him unsatisfied.

“As soon as I heard about CPA Australia entering Vietnam, I did not think twice about becoming a member,” Rowell says. “Obtaining my CPA Australia designation allowed me to realise my aspiration of having a prestigious designation that is truly acknowledged internationally.”

Although Rowell was a member before CPA Australia’s collaboration with the Professional Regulatory Board of Accountancy (BOA) and Philippines Institute of Certified Public Accountants (PICPA), he believes it now provides an unparalleled new opportunity for his fellow Filipino CPAs.

“Like me, every CPA in the Philippines can now apply for CPA Australia Associate membership by availing the membership pathway agreement (MPA),” he says.

Importantly, CPA Australia is accredited by the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) – CPD (continuing professional development) Council of Accountancy as the first foreign CPD provider. It is working closely with regulatory authorities in the Philippines to constantly improve the competencies of accounting and finance professionals in accordance with international standards of practice.

Members of PICPA can now earn selected accredited CPD hours through discounted online courses offered by CPA Australia.

Resources to get ahead

In particular, Rowell notes that being able to access the vast resources available on the online learning platform of CPA Australia, such as various professional tools, templates, accounting-related literature and specialised courses, has added significant value to his auditing and accounting career.

“For example, the business analysis and financial modelling courses, as well as those on valuations, have been very useful in my present position. Such courses can help you to navigate the complexity of expanding a business and carrying out a fair valuation exercise, whereas reading books and accounting guidelines alone will not make you well equipped to carry out such critical tasks.

“The professional resources section of CPA Australia’s web portal normally comes in handy when there is an accounting matter that I need to understand and be able to apply in my day-to-day work. Without question, the tools and resources available have helped me a lot in building my knowledge and skills, which to date have been instrumental to my career achievements and ability to excel further.”

During his spare time, Rowell says he also listens to CPA Australia’s podcasts, which provide a lot of insights and have helped him to stay up to date with important developments in the profession.

Internationally recognised skill sets

“Being a member of CPA Australia comes with a lot of opportunities,” he adds. Indeed, Rowell’s company recently became part of Fitness and Lifestyle Group [FLG], which is the Asia Pacific’s leading health and wellness group, with headquarters in Australia and regional offices across South East and East Asia.

Accordingly, FLG files its financial statements in accordance with Australian accounting standards, and Rowell says his CPA Australia membership has assisted in terms of ensuring compliance with Australia’s stringent reporting requirements.

“The knowledge I have gained has also been fulfilling in my role as CFO of the group’s subsidiary in Vietnam. In addition, it has opened an opportunity for me to be considered by the group to not only work in Australia but also in other parts of the region where [FLG] has a presence.

“While there are many essential benefits of becoming a member, I can encapsulate them into three of the most significant areas,” Rowell says. “Firstly, if you are looking for ways to be recognised internationally and therefore be able to easily find work opportunities outside the Philippines, becoming a CPA Australia member is one of the answers you can count on.

“Secondly, if you want to fast track your career development and stay ahead of the competition, having the CPA Australia designation behind you is definitely a cut above the rest.

“Thirdly, if you want to keep abreast of all the significant accounting developments in the international arena, or even just intending to pursue CPD, there is a good number of accounting databases, references, and courses readily available once you become a member.

“It is a pathway to being heard and to stand out in the accounting profession, so my advice is to become a member of CPA Australia now.”

Find out more about becoming a CPA by visiting the membership pathway agreement.

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