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Sexual violence and victim-centered approach: A transitional justice perspective

Let us understand something: sexual violence is not about sex alone — it is about power that one forces over another and uses sexual advances to achieve their goal. As argued by Susan Brownmiller, author of Against our Will (1975), “a conscious process of intimidation by which all men keep all women in a state of fear.” Thus, rape is about power through the use of sexual violence.

WAR TIME RAPE
Rape and pillage have historically been seen as a part of warfare. Women’s bodies served as a battlefield of men’s victory, on the one hand, and their enemy’s failure to protect their women and property, on the other. The inevitability of “spoils of war,” as commonly known — all done by perpetrators with impunity, all suffered in silence by the victims.

Horrific sexual and gender-based violence, atrocities, crimes — where various forms of sexual violence, including the use of rape as a weapon of war — have punctuated armed conflict as in the case of the Rape of Nanking; abduction, sexual slavery, and enforced prostitution of so called “comfort women” across East and Southeast Asia during World War II; rape and forced impregnation of women during the 1971 Bangladeshi independence war; sexual slavery and forced impregnation during the Yugoslav war; genocidal rape in Rwanda, and, most recently, claims of the same happening with the Rohingya. The list goes on.

But it is not only during war that women are atrociously violated. Even during protest movements, women are sexually assaulted, as in the case of the Arab Spring and, quite recently, committed against women protesters in South Sudan.

At the macro level, standards and commitments to prevent rape and sexual violence in war time and armed conflict situations have been institutionalised. This has been the discursive and practical agenda of the United Nations Security Council Resolutions on Women, Peace and Security (UNSCR WPS) — namely, 1325 and 1820 and the subsequent resolutions. But even more so is the guidance provided by the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women General Recommendation (CEDAW GR) 30. Furthermore, the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) mandates that war-time rape and sexual violence are war crimes, crimes against humanity, and crimes constitutive of genocide.

GENDER AND TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE: SEXUAL AND MASS ATROCITY CRIMES AGAINST WOMEN
From the lens of transitional justice, a “victim-centered” approach simply means putting the interests, concerns, and aspirations of the victims as the focus of redress and interventions, be they reflective of the right to truth, right to justice, right to reparation, and guarantee of non-recurrence.

For example, in the case of massive conflict-related rape and sexual violence, it is a must that gender- and culture-sensitive strategies are applied in data collection and in dealing with women victims. The whole point of the matter is not to re-victimize these women who already are experiencing a “fate worse than death.” Strategies to draw out narratives as not meant for sensationalization (which is highly likely when sexual violence is politicized in partisan politics or in ideological advocacies) — rather, they are intended to address the violence and victimization of women. The imperative of a gender is applied to transitional justice.

As such, several truth commission reports — namely, South Africa, Peru, Timor Leste, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Morocco, Guatemala, and Haiti — have included sexual and gender-based violence in specific chapters. The Transitional Justice and Reconciliation Commission (TJRC) on the Bangsamoro in the Philippines also included a particular section on sexual violence against women. Narratives of violence against women with both gender and cultural underpinnings surfaced in the form of attacks by the Ilagas; state forces were also said to have committed sexual and gender-based crimes. In fact, the TJRC Consultation Process “suggest that violence against women was used systematically against the Moro and indigenous population” before, during, and after Martial Law. And it is in this regard that the TJRC called for investigations on sexual- and gender-based atrocities during this period.

FURTHER SILENCING THE SILENCED
And yet, there have been moves at historical revisionism — self-proclaimed robust research of decades hence in order to provide a self-written truth against community narratives. Why in the world would rape and sexual violence victims invent their stories? In communities where these issues are considered taboo, one would rarely find someone who will openly talk about violence committed against them. And when they do decide to speak, it is usually in secret spaces, far from stigmatization and ostracization. But here comes men who speak about hoaxes with no due regard for damaged and pained lives; who have no way of knowing what it means to be sexually violated, the kind of self-blame that one goes through in a lifetime, the trauma that further silences the silenced. These men are political operatives who know nothing about victimization.

As we move into the 18-Day Campaign on Violence against Women this year, there is a need to go beyond administrative political rhetoric and clearly map out actual actions and redress for women who have been victims of conflict-related sexual and gender-based violence. In the case of the Bangsamoro, the TJRC recommended that an investigation into emblematic cases such as that of sexual- and gender-based crimes must be undertaken as imperative action.

If we are not able to do this for past atrocities, then how can we meaningfully advance a gender-just society? Maybe we are just all talk after all…

 

Ma. Lourdes Veneracion-Rallonza, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, Ateneo de Manila University. She currently serves as the Program Director of the Gender and Atrocity Prevention, Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect.

mrallonza@ateneo.edu

Remembering Manila Bay

By Joan Orendain

MAMA LOVED SOFTBALL. Sunday afternoons, whenever Papa was busy writing speeches for President Manuel Roxas (he was the Philippines’ first Press Secretary in 1946), Mama would drive us to Dewey Boulevard by the bay after lunch on Sunday. There, we would play catch (three girls and two boys — the third boy had not yet been born), eat popcorn, and watch the blazing sunset.

Then we would drive over to the Luneta to listen to Antonio Buenaventura’s Philippine Constabulary band play Sousa Marches and Philippine folk songs. Walter Loving had formed the band in 1902 and taken it to the 1904 St. Louis World Fair where during a blackout, he simply tied his handkerchief to his baton, and the band played on. (Jesus Cabarrus, briefly conscripted at the Manila Hotel, in 1945, witnessed Loving bayoneted to death by a Japanese soldier on the staircase leading to the second floor.)

As teenagers, my sister Jane and I together with Carmita Francisco, Josine Loinaz, Bibsy Carballo, Marica Aragon, and maybe two or three other young ladies, water-skied at Connie and Hank Pascal’s beach in Parañaque next to Jale Beach (Jale was notorious for naughty evening happenings.) The girls all had to wear two-piece bathing suits — a one-piece would have gotten waterlogged as we skied, causing one to sink.

On a sunny day when we were towing Bibsy on waterskis, we must have run over an armada of jellyfish which leapt up to Bibsy’s face to sting her. She screamed bloody murder. We loaded her into Rom Vildzius’s station wagon and rode to the Manila Doctor’s Hospital where we (five girls still in their two-piece bathing suits) were gawked at standing in the lobby in our almost naked state, with Bibsy crying loud enough to wake the dead.

All the beaches are now the Coastal Road.

Also sometime in the early 1960s, six of us — the brothers Dado and Pete Roa, Ben Cervantes (before he added the “h” to Ben), Lino Brocka, Jane, and I would listen to jazz at Pete Alfonso’s Café Indonesia on Dewey Boulevard. We ordered two beers, three to a beer, and nursed them for the next two or three hours. We then clambered up to the open upper deck of a Matorco bus flying the Boulevard route from end to end. By the time we approached Baclaran church, we all had to get off to pee. But where to pee? Dado said, “Simple. Let’s jump into Manila Bay.” The boys jumped in in their skivvies, and Jane and I jumped in in our dresses.

Dripping wet, we trudged onward to Ben’s yellow house in the Chinese Compound on Harrison St. (it is now Henry’s Hotel and in the same compound are the Avellana Art Gallery and Joji Lloren’s boutique where he designs high-fashion gowns). Ben and Lino scrambled all the eggs they could find in the cupboard, which at 3 a.m. tasted awfully good.

In 1990, long after Dewey had been renamed Roxas Boulevard, the engineering giant F.F. Cruz planned to reclaim Manila Bay. Toni Serrano Parsons, Bambi Harper, Doris Ho and other women demonstrated by the bay day after day.

Odette Alcantara, always brimming with far-out ideas, brought a rocking chair, wrapped a shawl around her shoulders, and sat on the rocking chair feigning old age infirmity.

Gabriel Besa was a toddler then; his mother Olga would push him in his stroller bearing the sign “Manila Bay is mine. Leave it alone.”

On one of those days, four green trucks parked along the Baywalk had begun to work on the reclamation project. The drivers had taken off on their lunch break, giving creative boys from a nearby Catholic high school the chance to purloin the keys and pitch them into the bay.

In the end, Cruz gave up in 1992.

However, sometime in the same year, Ping De Jesus, public works secretary, threatened to practically take away the Baywalk to widen the boulevard. He listened to our objection, and gamely walked with Doris and this writer to take away here a meter, there a half meter, all jotted down in a notebook. The Secretary was as good as his word — the Baywalk stayed.

But again, in 2010 or 2011, another proponent threatened to start a reclamation project in Manila Bay. Anti-reclamation folk organized a huge demonstration at Plaza Rajah Sulayman and along the bay. Paolo Alcazaren commissioned a drone to photograph the demonstration from the air, and the famous artist Betsy Westendorp carried her easel to the Baywalk and began painting.

Betsy had long been enamored of Manila Bay. She had moved into the Excelsior Building on Roxas Boulevard in 1982, painting fiery sunsets, houses on stilts over the water just across from her penthouse apartment, and now and again would take boat rides with her daughters, Isabel, Sylvia, and Carmen among the barong-barongs on stilts. She had long been widowed by then. She had been married to Antonio Brias, a vice-president at San Miguel, when they lived in their Forbes Park home. There, she had an atelier where she painted portraits, before moving on to other subjects.

A famous Spanish writer, Elena Flores, called her paintings of blazing sunsets, dark skies, and ominous clouds, “Atmosferografias.” In these, she said, “The firmament turns into a scenario of insurmountable beauty. Here, creation has given to art its most gorgeous miracle of aesthetic spontaneity.”

No one could have felt more robbed of Manila Bay then when it was reclaimed. Doña Conchita Ortol, when taken for a paseo on the boulevard in 2014 at age 101, was happy to recognize the San Juan De Dios Hospital on her right-hand side. A cry of alarm rose from her when she turned to her left.

“What happened to the bay? What are all those ugly buildings doing there?”

House of Representative Deputy Speaker Rosemarie Arenas recently filed House Bill 3169: “An Act Declaring Manila Bay a Heritage Asset Free From Any and All Forms of Further Reclamation and Providing Penalties Therefor.”

At an Oceana symposium sponsored by the Bloomberg Foundation and the Manila Yacht Club held on Sept. 17, Ms. Arenas was the guest speaker. She, together with a UP scientist, Mike Lu of the Wild Bird Club of the Philippines, a representative of the Philippine Ports Authority, gave presentations. Also present were the attorney Armi Corpus representing Senator Cynthia Villar who is striving to protect the Las Piñas-Parañaque Critical Habitat and Ecotourism Area, and members of Save Our Shores (SOS); Emily Abrera, ex-officio Chairperson of the Cultural Center of the Philippines; representing the Sofitel Hotel, Esteban Peña-Sy; and this writer as SOS Convenor among other presenters, offered reasons why the Manila Bay should not be reclaimed.

Dr. Kelvin Rodolfo, Professor Emeritus of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Illinois, had previously presented the strongest scientific reasons why “reclaiming Manila Bay is a very bad idea”

• Subsidence: from so much groundwater being extracted by the city’s dwellers, Manila has sunk two to four inches in recent years and threatens to sink at an even more rapid rate as the population increases.

• Storm surges: Manileños certainly remember Super Typhoon Pedring, a Category 4 typhoon that inundated the US Embassy, flooding it for a week. Floodwater also totally ruined the ground floor of the Sofitel Hotel, which cost over a hundred million pesos in repairs which took over a year to do. Other establishments along the boulevard were similarly affected.

• Liquefaction: during the minute that an earthquake lasts, it violently shakes the sediments and the water that soaks it, mixing them together into a slurry, causing structures above it to sink into it or to tilt or even fall over. Graphic examples are the collapse of the six-storey Ruby Tower in Binondo on Aug. 2, 1968, causing 268 deaths; and the 1990 earthquake in Nueva Ecija that liquefied the ground beneath of Dagupan City 100 kilometers away, causing great damage to many buildings.

Apart from these hazards brought about by reclamation, there will be urban problems to contend with: water shortages, power shortages, and traffic even more horrendous than at present. The Philippine Ports Authority also faces the problem of where to relocate the South Harbor (ocean-going vessels), and the North Harbor (inter-island ships).

Reclamation will also destroy the habitats of dozens of varieties of fish, shrimp, shellfish, and crabs that spawn in and abound in Manila Bay.

Thousands of hectares of nearshore Manila Bay from all along Bulacan through the city of Manila, Parañaque, Las Piñas, Bacoor, and Sangley Point in Cavite are all proposed for reclamation.

Shame on money-grubbing corporations, and shame on the Philippine Reclamation Authority. Wasn’t PRA, once PEA-Amari, notorious for being “The mother of all scams”?

Peso climbs versus dollar

THE PESO strengthened on Thursday amid risk-on sentiment following the passage of a US legislation supportive of Hong Kong’s autonomy.

The local unit closed at P50.705 versus the greenback on Thursday, climbing by 9.5 centavos from the P50.80-a-dollar finish on Wednesday, based on data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines.

The peso opened at P50.82 against the dollar. Its weakest point for the day was at P50.87, while its strongest was at P50.70.

Dollars traded grew to $1.045 billion from the $858.25 million posted on Wednesday.

A trader said there was risk-on sentiment in the market which boosted the peso.

“The peso closed stronger on the back of positive risk sentiment despite the news of US supporting Hong Kong. The market took it as a good news in the absence of a strong statement from the side of China,” the trader said in a phone call.

The said development is a proof of the “resilience” of the peso, according to UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion. He added that the absence of fresh leads due to the US holiday supported the peso.

“There was not much going on due to the Thanksgiving break, but the news that [US President Donald J.] Trump has signed the Hong Kong bill increasing the US’ scrutiny of the city-state’s trade status with the biggest economy in the world. This was essentially negative to the market, but the peso was resilient..,” Mr. Asuncion said in a text message.

Reuters reported that the legislation backing Hong Kong by requiring the State department to certify at least annually that the special administrative region keeps “enough” autonomy to justify favorable trading terms with the US which aided it in maintaining its position as a financial hub.

Aside from this, the law, which was unanimously approved in the US Senate and by all except one in the House of Representatives, also provides sanctions for human rights violations in Hong Kong which has been in the midst of political unrest for the past four months.

“I signed these bills out of respect for President Xi [Jinping], China, and the people of Hong Kong. They are being enacted in the hope that Leaders and Representatives of China and Hong Kong will be able to amicably settle their differences leading to a long term peace and prosperity for all,” Mr. Trump said in a statement, according to the Reuters report.

Before this, Mr. Trump had been vague on whether he would sign or veto the law, while trying to strike a trade deal with China.

For today, the trader gave forecast range of P50.65-50.85, while Mr. Asuncion sees the peso playing around the P50.70-50.90 band. — L.W.T. Noble with Reuters

Stocks drop as Trump signs bills supporting HK

By Vincent Mariel P. Galang, Reporter

PHILIPPINE SHARES failed to sustain its recovery on Thursday, reflecting the downward performance of Asian markets after the US decided to sign a bill supporting protesters in Hong Kong, which could negatively impact developments in the US-China trade war.

The 30-member Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) fell 68.23 points or 0.87% to close at 7,768.66, while the broader all shares index was down 34.05 points or 0.72% to reach 4,650.95.

“With regional markets downed, local market corrected today as China replied that they will retaliate on US passage of the Hong Kong Bill that tend to side on the protesters. This may negatively affect the on-going passage of the phase 1 agreement in the US-China trade negotiations,” Diversified Securities, Inc. Equity Trader Aniceto K. Pangan said in a text message on Thursday.

On Thursday, US President Donald Trump signed two bills, the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019, which reaffirms and amends the US-Hong Kong Policy Act of 1992. These show support to pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong. This is seen to complicate the US-China negotiations.

Asian markets were sluggish following the recent action of the US government.

AAA Southeast Equities, Inc. Research Head Christopher John Mangun noted the same sentiment and said, “China’s foreign Ministry promptly warned of unspecified “firm counter measures” in response and summoned the US ambassador in Beijing. On the other hand, Western equities markets hit fresh highs ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday.”

Mr. Mangun also noted that “things are back to normal after two days of excitement” as foreign investors continue to leave the market.

“Most investors are still on the sidelines as the general sentiment remains dull. Investors may gain confidence if the main index can end the week above the 7,750-support level,” he said in an e-mail.

Back home, most sectoral counters ended in the red, except from the services sub-sector, which gained 4.31 points or 0.28% to end at 1,545.24.

Losers were led by mining and oil, which fell 242.73 points or 2.87% to end at 8,209.38. Holding firms fell 88.91 points or 1.14% to 7,662.06; financials fell 19.63 points or 1.03% to 1,871.54; industrials went down 98.60 points or 0.99% to 9,785.40; and property fell 22.95 points or 0.56% to 4,026.21.

Some 668.52 million issues valued at P5.44 billion switched hands on Thursday, lower than previous session’s 1.82 billion shares worth P7.68 billion.

Foreigners were sellers for the eighth straight session, with net outflows at P744.16 million, down from previous session’s P1.05 billion.

Losers edged out advancers, 116 to 64, while 52 issues were unchanged.

Duterte says there will be ‘no sacred cow’ in SEA Games ruckus

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte will not spare organizers of the Southeast Asian (SEA) Games from punishment if allegations of corruption against officials including his ally Speaker Alan Peter S. Cayetano are proven.

“There is no sacred cow in this government,” presidential spokesman Salvador S. Panelo said at a briefing earlier. “Those who transgress the law will be accountable.” he added, noting that the Mr. Duterte has been known to fire friends and allies for corruption.

Mr. Cayetano heads the Philippine Southeast Asian Games Organizing Committee.

The palace said Mr. Duterte would investigate the mishaps reported about the SEA Games. The president earlier said during his recent trip to South Korea he wanted to investigate alleged corruption by the organizers.

“The Office of the President will also be conducting a separate probe on the aberrations and irregularities in the administration of our country’s hosting of the SEA Games immediately after the games,” Mr. Panelo said in a statement on Thursday.

The Senate will investigate the alleged irregularities separately.

Meanwhile, Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat on Wednesday met with officials of Metro Manila’s hotel industry to improve the services to SEA Games delegates after reports of logistical problems from foreign athletes.

“It is in situations like this that we are faced with the challenge of making our visitors’ stay in the country one of fun and fulfilling experience,” she said in a statement.

Also on Thursday Mr. Cayetano said he was ready to face a probe by the Senate.

He brushed off criticisms against the event, adding that he was ready to send a letter to the Commission on Audit (CoA) for “an independent special audit of all government funds used for the SEA Games.”

Mr. Cayetano also denied any conflict of interest about his position as Speaker and chairman of the organizing committee. Some congressmen in the past had associated themselves in sports, he said.

Senator Panfilo M. Lacson earlier said the transfer of P1.5 billion in public funds for the games from the Philippine Sports Commission to a private group headed by Mr. Cayetano was cast in the same mold as the P10-billion pork barrel scam.

The lawmaker said taxpayer money was “questionably” lodged in the Philippine SEA Games Organizing Committee, a private foundation created to oversee the country’s preparations and hosting of the biennial sports meet.

Meanwhile Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said he had nothing to do with the P7.5-billion budget for the games that had been inserted in the budget of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA).

On Tuesday, he tweeted that someone had asked him to keep the P7.5 billion in the DFA’s 2019 budget. Mr. Locsin said he ordered the funds returned to the Treasury bureau when he became Foreign Affairs chief in October last year. The SEA Games budget was inserted in the DFA budget for this year because Mr. Locsin’s predecessor, Mr. Cayetano, took on the role of lead organizer. — Gillian M. Cortez and Genshen L. Espedido

Panelo says VP report on illegal drugs made up

PRESIDENTIAL Spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo doubts any of the revelations that Vice President Maria Leonor G. Robredo will make on the government’s deadly war on drugs are real.

Mr. Panelo slammed the vice president because she had yet to divulge her so-called findings during her short stint as President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s drug czar.

He said Ms. Robredo was likely to make up her report, adding she should have come out with it by now.

The vice president also should have also acted against people she knew were involved in anomalies, Mr. Panelo said.

“It was her duty at the time she discovered that irregularity to reveal that to the public and prosecute the people behind it,” he said.

Mr. Duterte fired the opposition leader whom he put in charge of his deadly war on drugs late Sunday, days after her appointment. Mr. Panelo earlier said Ms. Robredo “had it coming,” citing her missteps including meeting with officials of the United States Embassy and United Nations.

Philippine police have said they have killed about 6,000 people in illegal drug raids, many of them resisting arrest. Some local nongovernmental organizations and the national Commission on Human Rights have placed the death toll at more than 27,000.

Ms. Robredo this month said she had agreed to head the Duterte administration’s anti-illegal drug campaign, which majority of Filipinos support despite international criticism, if only to stop the killings. She accepted the post against the advice of many of her party mates, who said the appointment might be a trap.

The opposition leader has vowed to enforce the state’s anti-illegal drug campaign within the bounds of the law. She said she would treat the drug problem not only as a crime, but also as a health issue.

Police have said Ms. Robredo had not committed “missteps” while she was the drug czar, contradicting the presidential palace.

Ms. Robredo had said she would reveal what she had uncovered while head of the Interagency Committee on Anti-Illegal Drugs.

Human Rights Watch on Monday criticized Mr. Duterte for firing the vice president “on ludicrous grounds.” It said the president was never even remotely sincere, and that his appointment of Ms. Robredo was a “total sham.” — Gillian M. Cortez

Duterte defends drug war against critics

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte yesterday defended his deadly war on drugs against critics, saying the country needs an iron fist to destroy drug lords.

In a speech, the president said he is serious about his campaign, having dealt with drug lords even before he became president by throwing them in various areas to instill fear.

“You don’t know how many I have thrown in Manila Bay,” Mr. Duterte said. “I threw this one drug lord in Laguna de Bay while the other one I threw in the Mountain Province, in a ravine,” he said, without naming them.

Mr. Duterte won the presidency in 2016 based on a platform to rid the country of illegal drugs. He had promised to eradicate the menace in six months.

Philippine police have said they have killed about 6,000 people in illegal drug raids, many of them resisting arrest. Some local nongovernmental organizations and the national Commission on Human Rights have placed the death toll at more than 27,000.

He put Vice President Maria Leonor G. Robredo, an opposition leader, in charge of his anti-illegal drug campaign this month, only to fire her less than three weeks later. He said he didn’t trust her. — Gillian M. Cortez

Duterte orders drive vs illegal recruiters

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte yesterday ordered Labor and Social Welfare officials to combat illegal recruitment of Filipinos to other countries.

“I order you to come up with a structure, a bigger one, to go after [illegal recruiters],” he said in a speech.

Last year, Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III signed an order that set up a task force against llegal recruitment especially of minors, and human trafficking.

Mr. Duterte is also pushing the creation of a Department of Overseas Filipinos that will better address issues affecting overseas workers. — Gillian M. Cortez

China rejects alleged control of Philippine grid

THE Chinese government said it has no control over the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines, belying claims made by an opposition Senator.

“To my knowledge, the State Grid Corp. of China took part in the Transco (National Transmission Corporation) project as a cooperation partner, providing safe, efficient and high-quality electricity services,” Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Geng Shuan said at a Nov. 27 briefing of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, according to a transcript emailed to media.

“The project is now operated, managed and maintained by the Philippine side, with the Chinese partner offering necessary technical support upon request.”

Senator Risa N. Hontiveros-Baraquel earlier filed a resolution seeking a national security audit over concerns that China might be accessing the country’s power grid system.

The State Grid Corp. of China was part of the group that was awarded the 25-year concession agreement to operate Transco’s power transmission facilities.

Ms. Baraquel earlier recalled that during a Nov. 21 hearing on the Energy department’s budget, TransCo President Melvin Matibag said a third party, in this case, China, could disable the power grid.

Mr. Geng dismissed the concern, citing the closeness and friendship of the two countries.

“The allegation of China’s control over the Philippines’ power grid or threat to the country’s national security is completely groundless,” he said.

“The Philippines is China’s close and friendly neighbor as well as an important partner.”

He also noted that China fulfills its social responsibilities through the “Brighten Up” project, which seeks to provide electricity to far-flung areas. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Let the Games begin

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

THE 30th edition of the biennial Southeast Asian Games officially kicks off this weekend with opening ceremonies happening at the Philippine Arena in Bocaue, Bulacan.

This marks the fourth time that the Philippines will be hosting the regional sporting meet, but first since 2005.

In this year’s SEA Games, happening from Nov. 30 to Dec. 11, participants of as much as 9,000 from the 11 member nations will pit their skills in 56 sports involving 530 events.

Ten new sports are set to make their Games debut, namely E-sports, skateboarding, kurash, sambo, modern pentathlon, kickboxing, surfing, underwater hockey, jiu-jitsu and obstacle course.

The events will take place in four designated clusters — Clark, Subic, Metro Manila and “Other Areas,” which include Batangas, Cavite, La Union and Laguna.

Among the venues to be used is the P9.5-billion world-class New Clark City Sports Complex located in Capas, Tarlac, which will host the athletics and aquatic events.

The Philippines will parade 1,094 athletes who will try to give the country the overall championship it last tasted in 2005.

In the 2017 SEA Games in Kuala Lumpur, the Philippines finished sixth overall with a haul of 24 gold, 33 silver and 64 bronze medals, its worst placing in the history of the Games.

Host Malaysia topped the last staging of the Games with a medal haul of 145-92-86, followed by Thailand 72-86-88, and Vietnam 58-50-60.

With the event happening on home soil, local sports officials are hopeful that it will inspire the Filipino athletes to deliver the overall championship.

“I think we have a realistic shot at finishing at number one. The athletes are coming in prepared and determined and we like our chances,” said Philippine chef de mission William Ramirez in the lead-up to the Games.

Mr. Ramirez is also the chairman of the Philippine Sports Commission.

He was echoed by Philippine Olympic Committee president Abraham Tolentino, who said, “Playing here at home should work to our advantage. We can be number one again.”

OPENING CEREMONIES
Taking cue from the Filipino spirit of bayanihan (community), organizers said the opening ceremonies set for 7 p.m. at the Philippine Arena will be a collaboration of local and international talent and an exposition of Filipino culture and contemporary music and dance.

Among those involved in the production of the opening are Palanca-award winning writer Floy Quintos, National Artist for Music and Ramon Magsaysay Awardee Maestro Ryan Cayabyab, United States-based Emmy-award winning live content creator FiveCurrents, and Filipino companies Video Sonic and Stage Craft International, Inc.

Performers are Lani Misalucha, Christian Bautista, Aicelle Santos, Jed Madela, Elmo Magalona, KZ Tandingan, Iñigo Pascual, The TNT Boys, Ana Fegi, and Robert Seña, and international rap artist Apl d Ap.

“This year’s opening ceremonies are envisioned as a showcase of the enduring aspects of Philippine traditional and contemporary culture,” said Mr. Quintos.

Adding, “The production’s aim is to show how aspects of culture reflect the energy, physical dexterity and competitive spirit of the Filipino.”

PROBLEMS ADDRESSED
Meanwhile, after being hit by criticisms over a number of issues and problems that hounded the early activities of the Games this week, the Philippine Southeast Asian Games Organizing Committee (PHISGOC), the main coordinating body for the event, said these have already been addressed.

Speaking at a press conference on Wednesday at the PHISGOC Sub Press Center at the World Trade Center, PHISGOC chief operating officer Ramon Suzara said issues that hounded preliminary activities this week have been resolved.

“We have tackled the issues raised by the different chefs de mission and we want to put a rest on this. What happened here was normal and we have solved them,” said Mr. Suzara.

PHISGOC was on the receiving end of strong criticism after issues on transportation, accommodation, food, accreditation and unfinished venues, among other things, were brought to the fore by athletes and officials from the competing teams.

Philippine gymnastics team sees solid outing in SEA Games

World champion gymnast Carlos Yulo leads the 23-man Philippine gymnastics team seeing action at the 30th SEA Games. — PSC-POC MEDIA GROUP

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

RIDING the momentum of the recent success of gymnast Carlos Yulo in international competitions, the Philippine gymnastics team is expecting to do well when competition in the 30th Southeast Asian Games unfurls this weekend.

Fielding in 23 athletes, the Gymnastics Association of the Philippines (GAP) said it is targeting at least 10 gold medals in the competition, believing that the entire team is coming in prepared.

Leading the Philippine contingent is 19-year-old Carlos Edriel Yulo, who recently made Philippine gymnastics history by being the first Filipino to win a gold medal in the World Championship recently held in Stuttgart, Germany.

His strong showing in the Worlds also allowed him to book a spot for next year’s Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan.

Mr. Yulo said he is eyeing a sweep of all seven events he is competing in.

For GAP secretary-general Bettina Pou, it is not only Mr. Yulo who is upbeat of his chances but the entire team as well.

“The team is very positive heading into the Games. There is some nervousness, of course, since we are also playing here at home but the athletes are not allowing it to affect their focus. We are targeting at least 10 gold medals,” said Ms. Pou in an interview.

In the last edition of the SEA Games in 2017 in Malaysia, gymnastics gave two gold medals in the 23-gold medal haul of the country.

Kaitlin De Guzman and Reyland Capellan bagged gold medals in the women’s artistic uneven bar and men’s artistic floor exercise, respectively.

The GAP official said the federation sees the about-to-start SEA Games as a good opportunity to showcase the potential of gymnastics as a sport that Filipinos can really excel in.

“The athletes know that if they do well it will not only benefit them but the entire gymnastics community in the country,” said Ms. Pou.

“They really worked hard in training both here and abroad and determined to put up a good showing. And we’re really behind them all the way and we see them doing well. Hopefully the people would go out and support them as well as the other Filipino athletes,” she added.

Gymnastics events in the SEA Games will all take place at the Rizal Memorial Coliseum, beginning with artistic gymnastics on Dec. 1 until Dec. 4.

Rhythmic gymnastics takes place from Dec. 6 to 7 while aerobics gymnastics is on Dec. 9.

Northport completes PBA Governors’ Cup semifinal cast

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

THE semifinal cast for the Philippine Basketball Association Governors’ Cup is now complete with the Northport Batang Pier the last one to catch the semis bus after completing an upset of the top seeds NLEX Road Warriors with a 126-123 triple-overtime victory in their do-or-die match on Wednesday at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.

Northport, the lowest seed entering the playoffs, showed tremendous determination and big-game mentality in outlasting the Road Warriors in a classic game that resulted in NLEX exiting the tournament earlier than expected after having a solid showing in the elimination round.

The triumvirate of Sean Anthony, import Michael Qualls and Christian Standhardinger led the charge of the Batang Pier, who battled back from double-digit margins at many points in the game.

In winning over NLEX on Wednesday, Mr. Anthony exploded in the fourth quarter and in the extra periods to help will his team to the gutsy win.

Mr. Anthony finished with 30 points and 11 rebounds to win player of the game honors.

His exemplary performance complemented the all-game brilliance of Messrs. Qualls and Standhardinger.

Mr. Qualls had 31 points, 21 rebounds and five blocks while Mr. Standhardinger had 33 points, 23 rebounds and seven assists.

For NLEX it was Manny Harris who led the way with 43 points and 16 rebounds. Kiefer Ravena, meanwhile, had 22 points.

“Credit really goes to the players. This was our fourth knockout game and they showed tremendous desire, composure and commitment. They never gave up,” said a proud and relieved Northport coach Pido Jarencio after the game.

Northport with the win earned a date in the semifinals with the Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings whom it battles in a best-of-five affair following the conclusion of the 30th Southeast Asian Games which the country is hosting.

The PBA, which lent its players to the Philippine team, takes a short break to give way to the biennial sporting meet.

Playing in the other semifinal bracket are the Meralco Bolts and TNT KaTropa.