Home Blog Page 10177

Teachers’ plaint

Teaching is not about money but about public service, Education Secretary Leonor Briones told her constituents last week.

She was right — at least about the public service part.

Teaching is also a job and not volunteer work. One has to have certain qualifications to teach, in exchange for which the successful applicant correctly expects to be justly compensated. Holding a public service job that requires having a college degree and passing a government examination should mean getting paid for it. Briones and her fellow bureaucrats themselves are, at the very least, as much for the money as for the opportunity to serve the public, and it is simply not fair to expect teachers not to demand that they be paid fairly for the work they do.

Sec. Briones was nevertheless implying that teachers are in the profession only for the money. Adding insult to injury, she went on to say that the teachers of Bacoor National High School who converted a toilet rather than one of their laboratories into a faculty room did so for “dramatic” effect. Their own principal disparaged those teachers by saying they don’t need a faculty room to rest in, in apparent ignorance of the fact that such facilities are not for rest, but for providing teachers the opportunity to discuss academic issues among themselves and to learn from each other.

Sec. Briones — who, according to one media report, has taken a “hands-off” stance on the issue — was responding to questions on the demand of public school teachers for salary increases, which they’ve been asking for, and have been denied, for years. Numbering 800,000 nationally, public school teachers compose the largest group of employees in government service. But even their number and the fact that, by law, education gets the largest allocation in the budget annually have not benefited them much.

Then President Benigno Aquino III did raise through Executive Order 201 the salaries of civilian and military government employees in 2016 before his term ended. But what teachers received was only a very small 11.9 percent of their then salaries compared to the 233 percent increase in the pay of the President of the Philippines. As most Filipinos know by now, the P20,500 per month most teachers are still getting today is barely enough to support their families because of the huge increases in the inflation rate since 2017. Despite the lip service politicians paid teachers during the last mid-term elections, education is not their first priority. Keeping themselves in power is — hence policemen and soldiers are being paid twice the salaries teachers make.

Compared to 2016, the salaries teachers receive can purchase today even less of the goods and services they need to live with some dignity and freedom from worrying where to get the money for junior’s college tuition, or the hubby’s prostate operation. And yet as financially troubled as many are, some teachers provide out of their own shallow pockets the chalk, pencils, paper, and other needs of their charges that government cannot always provide, while they cope with the daily horrors of overcrowded classes, makeshift classrooms, and even the lack of such basic instructional necessities. Some teach hundreds of students in as many as three shifts a day. Others even provide their poor students the nutritious food their parents can’t afford.

Teaching may be a public service, but the compensation teachers receive is hardly commensurate to the multiplicity of tasks they are called upon to perform. Those tasks include not only teaching a multitude of subjects and being at the forefront of the national imperative of making every Filipino at least literate and numerate. They also have to entertain their superiors when these visit their schools, perform election duties every three years, and be model citizens for the entire community.

But the most crucial teacher’s task of all is that of awakening the love of and respect for learning among the young, in preparation for their assuming the roles of leaders, citizens, professionals and productive members of society. But no administration seems to have recognized this enough to provide teachers, most of whom are surviving from pay check to pay check and are heavily indebted, the salaries that that mandate demands.

Then Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte did promise to raise teachers’ salaries in 2015 when he was thinking of running for president. And he has promised it several more times since he came to power, but it hasn’t happened. Instead he’s raised the salaries of police and military personnel without any prodding, apparently, because he thinks them the guarantors of his remaining in office until 2022 — or even beyond, should plans to trash the current Constitution and to replace it with one more to his and his accomplices’ liking materialize.

In addition to teachers’ being overworked and underpaid, the police and military establishments that Mr. Duterte so obviously favors have even red-baited the biggest teachers’ organization in the Philippines, the Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT). The Director General of the Philippine National Police himself challenged ACT members to prove they’re not in a Communist Party of the Philippines “front,” and even tried to prevent their serving as members of the Board of Election Inspectors during the last elections.

The inevitable conclusion one can draw from all these is that, focused as it is on the preservation of personal, familial and class interests, like its predecessors the current regime not only has education as a last priority. Although its bureaucrats can hardly articulate that thought, teaching is also thought to be a threat because teachers preside over the first encounter with learning and knowledge of the country’s young. In the minds of this benighted country’s ruling elite, it can mean arming the next generations with such nonsense as the need for change and even revolution.

Not that that is an entirely mistaken view. As seemingly hackneyed as the cliches “Knowledge Is Power” and “The Truth Shall Set You Free” are, they do say something that all human history and experience have demonstrated is true enough. Knowledge is indeed empowering: it provides people the understanding of their political, social and economic environments that can enable them to intelligently evaluate, and if necessary change them. By providing men and women the intellectual means to shape their own destiny and the society they live in, the truth liberates them from the vagaries of chance and the shackles of ignorance.

In the 1950s, in response to McCarthyite persecution of universities in the United States, rather than deny their commitment to change, progressive academics affirmed the imperative for true higher learning to question the political, economic and social structures of their time. The capacity to do that is ideally implanted in the brains of the very young when they enter the educational system, and through the teachers who first introduce them to the world of learning, whether the ABCs, arithmetic, literature, geography or any other field of knowledge.

In their heart of hearts, the rulers of this sorry land know how dangerous to them — and to injustice, inequality, poverty and mass misery — true knowledge can be. Keeping teachers disadvantaged and indebted while pampering the police and military is only one of the ways through which they protect the unjust order that for far too long has kept them in riches and power.

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro).

www.luisteodoro.com

MORE passenger safety and the LTFRB

Passengers and commuters want convenient, safe, and faster mobility to reach their destinations. There is great inconvenience for people who take multiple rides (tricycle, jeep or bus, MRT/LRT, jeep again to destination, reverse the process going back home). Taking a taxi is good but there are many complaints like choosy drivers, robbery, or sex molestation inside the cab, etc.

I made a small experiment, I Googled “robbery inside _____ in Philippines” for regular taxi, jeepneys, city buses and Grab. I counted the top 8 entries that refer only to my subject search, and stories like “robbery of a bank” or “taxi/jeepney accident” are not included. I was surprised by the result (see table 1).

And that explains why many people choose taking the transport network vehicle service (TNVS) or transport network companies (TNCs). Cost should not be a factor because passengers know that Grab cars are more expensive than a regular taxi but they still choose the former. It’s like parents know that Ateneo and La Salle are more expensive than other private universities but they still enroll their kids at these two schools. People value the brand, their service quality, etc.

My little experiment is consistent with the findings of a paper, “Innovation Versus Regulation: An Assessment of the Metro Manila Experience in Emerging Ridesourcing Transport Services” (2017) published in the Journal of the Eastern Asia Society for Transportation Studies, Vol. 12, by Ma. Sheilah G. Napalang (UP School of Urban and Regional Planning) and Jose Regin F. Regidor (UP College of Engineering). The authors cited a study by de la Pena and Dizon (2016) on passenger preference between Grab taxi vs regular taxi (see table 2).

So if many people prefer TNVS or TNCs, how come that the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) is further bureaucratizing and even deactivating many TNVS cars and drivers?

See these three reports in BusinessWorld this week, I quote portions of the stories:

1. “Grab drivers seek amnesty for uncertified operators” (June 11):

“the process to secure a CPC is difficult for drivers to follow after the LTFRB added new requirements… produce a bank certificate of conformity… Many operators cannot comply, some banks will ask for thousands of pesos in fees, plus an increase of monthly amortization… proof of financial capability… has been increased to P50,000 from P15,000 previously”

2. “Grab calls on LTFRB to allow deactivated drivers temporarily” (June 12):

“‘The best scenario for the Filipino people, is to have more drivers which results in passenger convenience, and less traffic as car owners will just need to hail a ride… If LTRFB will allow the deactivated drivers to resume work while it processes the application of 10,000 new drivers, that would be the best win for the Filipino people,’ Grab Philippines President Brian P. Cu was quoted”

3. “LTFRB won’t ease driver norms for ride-sharing industry” (June 13):

“LTFRB said it will not ease its accreditation requirements to deal with a potential shortage of ride-share drivers, despite appeals to temporarily allow TNVS operators with pending documents to stay on the road.”

Reports #1 and #3 show that LTFRB seems to violate its own mandate — to help ensure passengers safety and convenience. Why has it imposed new strict requirements that will effectively ease out many TNVS cars that passengers precisely want?

Report #2 is true, it is basic economics. If LTFRB and passengers want lower, cheaper price per ride, just allow the supply of service to rise relative to demand. The “equilibrium point” of supply-demand dynamics will lead to a decline in price while the supply of service will increase.

The market-oriented reforms for efficiency (MORE) that LTFRB can take is to allow more TNVS cars and drivers, not reduce them. If it is more convenient, waiting time to book a ride is shorter, price or fare is lower due to competition, then more people will leave their cars at home and that will help reduce traffic.

 

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is the president of Minimal Government Thinkers.

minimalgovernment@gmail.com

The hubris of liberal progressive ‘education’

In essence, to be simple about it: we know that human nature has worked this way for millennia, we know that human experience showed us the limitations of human intellect and comprehension, that our beings come with certain flaws and restrictions.

But let’s all set that aside and pretend.

Pretend that our intellect has developed so much further from the time of Aristotle and Aquinas. That we have now the ability to predict the infinite variety of human actions with all its possible permutations.

That, as every leftist, socialist, and totalitarian fascist believes: all human problems or sadness can be solved if only enough money and power is in their hands.

In their hands.

Anybody reading this should instantly see the insanity, not to mention the narcissistic egomania, of their thinking.

Set aside, for now, the intricate debate that gnosticism and mind/body unity that such statement implies.

Suffice for now is a paraphrase of what legal philosopher John Finnis once said on the matter of homosexual unions: “Reality is known in judgment, not in emotion. In reality, whatever the generous hopes and dreams and thoughts [will always have to give way to what is actually there].”

Or to paraphrase another, this time G. K. Chesterton: my reason is fed by my senses.

No matter how good our intention is, such will have to conform to reality.

Nothing in the world results in such tragic consequences as good intentions based on fantasy.

Millions of people have died, starved, or suffered because an idealist believed his intellect can change the world without considering what the world has to say.

Hence, why this column repeatedly warns: hell is not only paved with good intentions, it is polished, furnished, and heated with it.

Why the paucity in thought? The refusal to accept reality?

Self-entitlement is certainly a factor. That nothing stands in the way of getting what one wants.

Another is an “education” that feeds and sustains this.

That education is more apt to be filled with liberal progressive indoctrination, more to the Left than anything else.

Thus, Cass Sunstein writes: “In recent years, concern has grown over what many people see as a left-of-center political bias at colleges and universities. A few months ago, Mitchell Langbert, an associate professor of business at Brooklyn College, published a study of the political affiliations of faculty members at 51 of the 66 liberal-arts colleges ranked highest by U.S. News in 2017. The findings are eye-popping (even if they do not come as a great surprise to many people in academia).

“Democrats dominate most fields. In religion, Langbert’s survey found that the ratio of Democrats to Republicans is 70 to 1. In music, it is 33 to 1. In biology, it is 21 to 1. In philosophy, history and psychology, it is 17 to 1. In political science, it is 8 to 1.”

These numbers are genuinely disturbing, which Prof. Sunstein correctly points out, because “students are less likely to get a good education, and faculty members are likely to learn less from one another, if there is a prevailing political orthodoxy. Students and faculty might end up in a kind of information cocoon. If a political-science department consists of 24 Democrats and 2 Republicans, we have reason to doubt that students will exposed to an adequate range of views.”

And this is all the more true in “subjects like history, political science, philosophy and psychology, where the professor’s political perspective might well make a difference. (The same is true of law.)”

Such kind of closed adherence to “political orthodoxy” and “information cocoon” could produce editorials of such assured banal self-righteousness as the Philippine Daily Inquirer’s (June 9, 2019):

“Correcting imbalances in the law to protect LGBT Filipinos from discrimination, harassment and bullying, and working on the basic legal infrastructure that would ensure equality among all Filipino citizens of whatever gender orientation, are paramount at this point.

“For the Philippines to evolve into a more accepting, inclusive place, in keeping with the march of the rest of the enlightened world, it needs to pass, as a necessary step, the Sogie Bill. Because it’s already 2019. More pride, less prejudice.”

In truth, less pride and more intellectual humility is what our people deserve. Thomas Sowell puts it best:

“By encouraging, or even requiring, students to take stands where they have neither the knowledge nor the intellectual training to seriously examine complex issues, teachers promote the expression of unsubstantiated opinions, the venting of uninformed emotions, and the habit of acting on those opinions and emotions, while ignoring or dismissing opposing views, without having either the intellectual equipment or the personal experience to weigh one view against another in any serious way.”

 

Jemy Gatdula is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constitutional philosophy and jurisprudence.

jemygatdula@yahoo.com

www.jemygatdula.blogspot.com

facebook.com/jemy.gatdula

Twitter @jemygatdula

A culture of blending in

By Tony Samson

FOR HOST COUNTRIES, one desirable trait of Filipino expats working there is their ability to adapt to the local culture, with its unwritten rules and taboos. This integration involves the right accent and peculiar turns of phrase. (How you doing? I’m good.) Beyond this verbal skill lies the adoption of the local work ethic (Filipino time is thrown out the window), attire, and observing special holidays like Thanksgiving and getting excited over the Super Bowl.

This blending ability is mainly due to familiarity with the language. But beyond that, the Filipino abroad is a cultural chameleon that can effortlessly chuck his past baggage and readily take on new cultural habits like hockey madness and cheering for the only foreign team in the NBA. He acquires a taste for winter clothes and the intricacies of traffic rules as applied to crossroads.

The chameleon is a reptile that can conceal itself against his background by taking on the color of its surroundings as a defense mechanism. This same ability to blend into a new habitat comes naturally to us as a people. We would rather not disagree even with disagreeable people to avoid making a scene and attracting unwanted attention.

The entry of new top management in a large company requires a display of this chameleon talent. The old guard is not so much eager to please as loath to openly displease and be included in the list of redundant positions. They would rather be left unnoticed by adopting the new culture and attire. If blazers are preferred over grungy tops, then it means getting a new wardrobe.

It is not surprising in politics to find that the biggest party is always that of the victors — “oh so, derecho.” Those who switch to the winning side are not to be derided as turncoats, they are just out to blend in with the new power structure, the better not to be smashed for sticking out of the crowd, like a pesky nail that needs to be hammered. The chameleon is not an aggressive predator. It just wants to be left alone to bask in the sun and stick out its long tongue to catch careless grasshoppers for their protein.

Is it perhaps our four hundred years under four foreign powers (if you count two under the British) that have rearranged our national DNA to be accommodating to the powers that be?

During the 14-year martial rule, this penchant for accommodation (going along and getting along) kept the structure unchallenged for a long time. Relatives that had gone underground were not always treated as heroes even by their family trying to be under the radar screen of the authorities. They were not accorded hero status for their courageous and lonely struggle. Most of the time, student activists who went mountain climbing were perceived as dragging their families to unnecessary scrutiny. Only afterward were their stories and struggles elevated to heroic heights.

The reason over ten million Filipinos abroad do well enough to send back billions of dollars home is not just self-selection which favors the industrious and enterprising, determined to venture out of their comfort zone. It is also the ease with which they absorb the culture they find as they take pains to blend in and not be perceived as outsiders. Many even voted for the candidate rabidly against immigrants — oh, those are the newcomers.

This readiness to adapt to even the most difficult situations makes the country inhospitable to reform, including the struggle against corruption in all forms. For change to be considered, there must be deep-seated dissatisfaction with and raging anger at an oppressive state of affairs. This feeling of dissatisfaction goes against the grain of a culture that can accept chaos as part of life. (It’s just the way things are.)

We really have only two political parties in the country — the “winners” and the “losers”. As for the latter party, one can be assured that after each election, their ranks are decimated as the former party starts to gain new members. Those who refuse to join (or were rejected from joining) call themselves independent.

Still, even these outliers change their colors and start wearing blazers… waiting with their long tongues for the errant grasshopper.

 

Tony Samson is Chairman and CEO, TOUCH xda.

ar.samson@yahoo.com

Peso slips on political concerns

peso remittance
THE PESO slipped due to political concerns abroad.

THE PESO weakened slightly on Thursday amid ongoing protests in Hong Kong and bets on the United Kingdom’s next prime minister.

The local currency closed at P51.865 on Thursday, slightly lower than Tuesday’s P51.85-per-dollar finish.

The peso opened the session stronger at P51.95 against the dollar. It logged an intraday peak of P51.83, while its lowest point for the day was at P51.98 versus the greenback.

Trading volume increased to $919.84 million from the $867.45 million that switched hands in the previous session.

“The peso slightly depreciated as heightening trade and geopolitical uncertainties abroad, particularly the Hong Kong protests and increasing speculations over the new British Prime Minister, propelled broad safe-haven demand toward the greenback,” a trader said.

Scuffles broke out between protesters and police in Hong Kong on Thursday as hundreds of people remained on the streets to protest a planned extradition law with mainland China, a day after police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at demonstrators.

The legislature remained closed, with the council issuing a notice that the meeting to discuss the bill would not be held on Thursday.

Authorities have shut government offices in the financial district for the rest of the week after some of the worst violence in Hong Kong since Britain handed it back to Chinese rule in 1997.

Meanwhile, the contest to replace British Prime Minister Theresa May was due to narrow on Thursday when Conservative Party lawmakers vote to knock out at least one of 10 candidates in the first ballot, though Boris Johnson is far ahead of rivals.

For today, the trader said the peso might weaken ahead of a likely upbeat US retail sales report.

The trader said the peso could trade between P51.70 and P52 against the dollar. — KESF

Main index climbs as investors pick up bargains

By Arra B. Francia, Senior Reporter

THE MAIN INDEX firmed up on Thursday, recovering from the previous session’s slump as investors went bargain hunting.

The 30-member Philippine Stock Exchange, Inc. (PSEi) rose 0.25% or 20.78 points to close at 8,051.76 after moving sideways for most of the session that saw it fall to the 7,900 level intraday. The broader all-shares index likewise climbed 0.13% or 6.44 points to 4,914.12.

“Investors (went) bargain-hunting after the holiday as the theme shifted to President Trump versus the Federal Reserve,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said in a mobile phone message.

Local investors were coming back from a holiday on Wednesday for the Philippine Independence Day. Meanwhile, news from overseas focused on US President Donald J. Trump’s statements against the Federal Reserve, as he criticized the central bank for hiking interest rates that supposedly helped China.

Mr. Trump has repeatedly called on the Fed to lower interest rates, calling its decision to raise the benchmark rates last December a “big mistake.”

Recently, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell hinted they will reduce interest rates sooner than expected, in response to the US economy’s potential slowdown because of its trade war with China.

Meanwhile, Papa Securities Corp. Sales Associate Gabriel Jose F. Perez attributed the market’s slow start to negative sentiment on Wall Street.

“The index surged in the afternoon after a bloody morning to close 20 points in the green at 8,051.76. Note that the index fell by as much as 77.7 points early on in the day, which may have been caused by US markets closing in the red last night,” Mr. Perez said in an e-mail.

Wall Street indices were mostly down overnight, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 0.17% or 43.68 points to 26,004.83. The S&P 500 index fell 0.20% or 5.88 points to 2,879.84, while the Nasdaq Composite index dropped 0.38% or 29.85 points to 7,792.72.

Back home, four sectoral indices moved to positive territory yesterday, led by services which gained 0.59% or 10.05 points to 1,697.47. Financials added 0.18% or 3.28 points to 1,735.23; industrials went up 0.15% or 17.78 points to 11,796.07; holding firms increased 0.12% or 9.24 points to close the session at 7,650.47.

In contrast, mining and oil plunged 2.06% or 149.35 points to 7,100.34, while property slipped 0.06% or 2.9 points to 4,369.63.

Foreign investors extended their net buying streak to a third day at P318.98 million, higher than the previous session’s P244.02 million.

Turnover was valued at P9.10 billion after some 993.50 million issues switched hands, higher than Tuesday’s P7.78 billion.

Decliners outpaced advancers, 104 to 82, while 52 names were unchanged.

Military says West PHL Sea collision ‘accidental’

PHILSTAR

By Vince Angelo C. Ferreras, Reporter

THE ARMED Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Western Command said the collision last Sunday between a Filipino boat and a Chinese vessel at Recto Bank in the West Philippine Sea was “accidental.”

“Initial reports reaching this Command from our operating unit that they have received info from the Boat Captain of FB 076 stating that a certain Chinese vessel accidentally collided with a Filipino fishing boat on June 09 2019 at around 12 midnight,” AFP said in a statement on Thursday, June 13.

However, the military confirmed that as earlier reported, the Chinese vessel immediately left after the collision.

“According to the Boat Captain of F/B 076 the said Chinese vessel immediately left the vicinity after the collision leaving F/B GIMVER 1 sinking,” said AFP.

Defense Secretary Delfin N. Lorenzana, in a statement on Wednesday, denounced the Chinese vessel for leaving the scene and abandoning the sinking Filipino boat with 22 crew members on board.

At the time of the collision, the Filipino boat was anchored at Recto Bank, which is within the Philippine’s Exclusive Economic Zone.

AFP said a joint task force will investigate “on how the collision happened to document evidences for the possible filing of diplomatic complaints if the alleged information against the Chinese Vessel that did not even bother to stop and rescue the Filipino Fishing Boat with its crew onboard is true.”

Malacañang, meanwhile, said on Thursday that the Philippines is ready to cut diplomatic ties with the People’s Republic of China if the incident is proven to have been done with intent.

“We will cut off diplomatic relations,” Mr. Panelo said in a press briefing at the Palace on Thursday when asked about the country’s next move should an investigation prove that the collision was not accidental.

He added that a diplomatic protest will first be filed.

“Our responses will always be calibrated, depende sa (depends on the) degree. But definitely, we will not allow ourselves to be assaulted, to be bullied, to be the subject of such barbaric, uncivilized and outrageous actions from any source,” the spokesman said.

“We call the Chinese government to probe the incident and to impose punitive action against those at fault,” he added.

Lawmakers and various sectors also condemned the actions of the Chinese fishing vessel’s crew.

“There are laws like the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea or SOLAS and Article 98 of the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea or UNCLOS that mandate vessels, especially after a collision, to render assistance to the other ship, its crew and its passengers, and where possible, to inform the other ship of the name of his own ship, its port of registry and the nearest port at which it will call,” Senator Richard J. Gordon said in a statement on Thursday.

Reelected Senator Aquilino L. Pimentel III said leaving the scene “was a total breach of that duty to help.”

“I urge the authorities to immediately find out the Flag State of the offending vessel so that the Philippines can file the appropriate diplomatic protest,” Mr. Pimentel added.

Senate Minority Leader Franklin M. Drilon also said a diplomatic protest should be immediately filed by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA).

“I urge the DFA to file a diplomatic protest immediately. This incident demands strong and immediate action. We cannot let this incident pass. No self-respecting nation will allow that.” — with Arjay L. Balinbin and Gillian M. Cortez

Duque assures ‘anti-corruption’ health care rules

HEALTH SECRETARY Francisco H. Duque III gave assurance that “anti-corruption” measures will be included in the guidelines for the implementation of the Universal Health Care (UHC) Act amid the ongoing probe on irregularities involving service providers and the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth).

“I have instructed my colleagues at the Department of Health to ensure anti-corruption measures are in place for the implementation of the Universal Health Care as we write the Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR). This is to highlight the provisions in the UHC Act that were intended to improve the health financing system,” Mr. Duque said in a statement on Thursday.

The UHC, passed into law last Feb. 20, provides that all Filipinos will automatically be PhilHealth members and be able avail of primary health care services.

At the same time, Mr. Duque warned that the government will be looking into other anomalous transactions and make those involved accountable.

“I am warning all health providers and PhilHealth officials in the strongest possible terms: Do not cheat the system nor even attempt to do it…. I will ensure that justice will be served to those who defraud the system,” he said.

The National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) yesterday said it will also investigate PhilHealth officials and other medical service providers that are possibly involved in “ghost” claims.

“That is the next phase of the investigation of the NBI. We will go into that plus of course we are not singling out WellMed (WellMed Dialysis and Laboratory Center Corp.). We’re also investigating the claims of the other medical entities,” Deputy Director for Investigation Vicente De Guzman III said in a press conference.

Meanwhile, Malacañang on Thursday confirmed that the members of the PhilHealth Board, whom President Rodrigo R. Duterte asked to resign while an investigation into alleged irregularities in the agency is being conducted, had filed their resignations on June 11.

Nag-file lahat (Everyone filed),” Presidential Spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo told reporters in a chance interview at the Palace.

Asked if the President has accepted the resignations, he said: “That goes without saying siguro (I suppose).” — Gillian M. Cortez, Vann Marlo M. Villegas, and Arjay L. Balinbin

VP Robredo asks SC to immediately resolve Marcos electoral protest

VICE-PRESIDENT Maria Leonor G. Robredo on Thursday asked the Supreme Court, acting as the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET), to immediately resolve all pending incidents involving the electoral protest of former senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. after the termination of the ballots recount.

Lawyer Romulo B. Macalintal, legal counsel of Ms. Robredo, said there is an additional 15,000 votes credited to the vice-president after the recount of ballots in the pilot provinces of Camarines Sur, Iloilo and Negros Oriental, consequently widening her lead against Mr. Marcos compared to the initial post-election count.

“Without pre-empting the resolution of the Honorable Tribunal, the result of the revision, recount and re-appreciation of the ballots clearly confirm the victory of protestee Robredo,” the motion read.

Mr. Marcos filed the election protest in June 2016.

Lawyer Victor Rodriguez, legal counsel of Mr. Marcos, in a statement countered that there are “no official findings yet by the PET as to figures recovered by either party.”

“What they have at the moment are all self-serving assumptions meant to mislead the Filipino people who have long been waiting for the result of the election protest filed by Sen. Bongbong Marcos the early resolution of which Mrs. Robredo have time and again suppressed by her delaying tactics,” Mr. Rodriguez said. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Police bust Organico offices in Cebu, Davao

LAW ENFORCERS on Tuesday swooped down on the offices of Organico Agribusiness Ventures Corp., a company that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has declared to be running an illegal investment operation. The operations came amid the government’s crackdown on investment scams. In Cebu City, the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG)-Region 7, led by Metro Cebu chief Major Niño Briones, served a search warrant at the office of Organico along Pope John Paul Avenue in Barangay Kasambagan, which they found closed and empty except for some computer sets and scattered documents. “There were computers that were unplugged and documents were all over the place. They must have received a tip about the raid and vacated the building,” Mr. Briones said in Filipino. In a separate operation on the same day, a team led by CIDG-7 chief Lito Patay also raided the headquarters of another illegal investment firm, Ada Farm Agriventures, along MC Briones Highway in Mandaue City. Police confiscated drafts of contracts, receipts, computers, logbooks, bankbooks, checkbooks, documents and other gadgets. Like at Organico, no one was arrested at Ada Farm. Lester Bautista, a securities specialist from the SEC in Manila, said the two companies are considered as investment scams for selling, unlicensed securities under the cover of selling livestock.

DAVAO CITY
In Davao City, a CIDG team led by Police Major Milgrace C. Driz, accompanied by two SEC officials, served a search warrant at the Organico office, which was also closed upon their arrival. The raiding team seized boxes of coffee drinks, pouches of fertilizers, draft contracts, fliers, official receipts, bank books, investment ledger, among other documents and items. Ms. Driz said there were two women who were waiting outside for the office to open and “receive their payouts.” One of them claimed she invested about P300,000 into the company. In an advisory against the firm issued in May 2018, the SEC said Organico was found to be soliciting investments of at least 10 shares priced at P1,800 each from the public, with a promised return of P450 per share every 15 days. Organico also had a 90-day scheme, where investors are promised a profit of P7,000 after three months, alongside their initial P3,600 investment. Ms. Driz said the company’s officials would be charged with violating the Securities Regulation Code.

MONITORING
Meanwhile, Police Major Jason L. Baria, Davao regional office spokesperson, said police intelligence units have heightened the monitoring of officials as well as members of these schemes to prevent potential untoward incidents. Mr. Baria said there is a “need to intensify monitoring to prevent incidents like the one that happened in a mall in Tagum City (Davao del Norte).” He was referring to the recent incident wherein a glass wall of the mall collapsed after a big crowd of members rushed to claim their payouts from one operator. Mr. Baria said they are also on alert for rallies that these groups might launch to pressure government to let their companies resume operations. “Our units and stations are prepared to prevent possible incidents to happen,” he added, pointing out that the monitoring include activities on social media. — The Freeman and Carmelito Q. Francisco

‘Air pollution is a problem that is not easy to see’ — expert

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION Studies Laboratory (EPSL) founding head Mylene G. Cayetano has called on the health care sector to take a more active role in addressing the ‘invisible killer’ that is air pollution. “Air pollution is a problem that is not easy to see. Oftentimes, the threat/harm is not perceived important and immediate, because our naked eye cannot see right away the air pollution shrouding us, whether indoor or outdoor,” Ms. Cayetano said during a public health forum hosted by the Health Care Without Harm (HCWH) Southeast Asia at the National Children’s Hospital last June 6. She said emissions from vehicles are the major sources of pollution in Metro Manila, while “Particulate Matter (PM)” or dust also contribute to the poor air quality. “Knowing that air pollution is now the leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide, the problem is not just environmental; it is environment, health, socioeconomic caused by human activities, hence it can be solved by humans if we work together. Let us all act to clean the air,” Ms. Cayetano stressed. EPSL is under the University of the Philippines Institute of Environmental Science and Meteorology. The Philippines observes June as Environment Month in line with the annual June 5 World Environment Day.

KAPA officials face securities regulation violation, but no estafa complainant yet

THE NATIONAL Bureau of Investigation (NBI) said complaints may be filed against the founder and officers of the Kapa-Community Ministry International, Inc. (KAPA) for violation of the Securities Regulation Code, but no complainants have so far come forward for an estafa charge. “As of this time wala pa (there are none). Wala pang private complainants or victims na gustong mag-file ng reklamo (There are still no private complainants or victims who want to file a complaint),” NBI-National Capital Region Director Cesar A. Bacani said. “One of the elements of estafa is damage,” he added. KAPA, a non-stock and independent religious corporation, was found by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to be soliciting investments from the public without the secondary license to be authorized for it. SEC issued a cease-and-desist order against KAPA in February but it still continued to operate. Its certificate of registration was revoked in April. The Court of Appeals has also issued a freeze order on KAPA’s several accounts and assets. President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Thursday warned the Land Reform beneficiaries in the southern part of Mindanao that if they sell their lands and invest their money in KAPA, he will “punch” them one by one. “Ayaw lagi mo ana (Do not do it)… because KAPA is a continuing [crime]…. Large scale estafa is non-bailable,” Mr. Duterte said in his remarks in General Santos City after the distribution of certificates of land ownership to Agrarian Reform beneficiaries there. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas and Arjay L. Balinbin