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Mr. President, we can make an explosion

Our situation in the South China Sea evokes an image of a child who gets his pants pulled down on the playground at lunchtime. This is normally followed by physical harm such as repeated hitting, kicking, pushing, and the like. And, to make the physical intimidation more credible, the bullies usually outnumber the victim, and more often than not, have a visible physical advantage.

In such cases, what are the options available to the boy? Starting with the obvious: the victim, at that particular point, may put up a fight, give in, or flee. Given the odds, fighting may be a losing proposition. But it can also send a clear message to the bullies that he will never take the bullying sitting down. He may even be lucky enough to land a punch and hurt his adversaries. When this happens, obviously the consequences for the victim would be dire.

The victim may also decide to give in and spare himself the additional pain that could be inflicted on him if he challenges the bullies. This scenario emboldens the bullies and gives them more encouragement to continue the mistreatment.

Finally, the boy may attempt to flee the scene and have a stay of execution. Sooner or later, however, the inevitable may happen, and when it does — like hunters deprived of their prey — the appetite of the bullies to harm is more vicious and aggressive.

But in the morning after, the matter can be reported to the authorities, either by the victim or by his parents. However, telling an authority figure about bullying is regarded as the most common failed solution. From most accounts of bullying, the authorities are limited to just telling off the bullies that what they are doing is wrong and has no place in the school. Following the state of mind of the bullies, this scenario may only result in more negative consequences for the victim — this time, for being a snitch.

A lot of victims swear by the effectiveness of the talking to the bullies — engaging them in a candid and personal conversation. Having a sincere dialogue between the bullies and the victims gives them an opportunity to deal with their differences in a more rational way.

However, should the Philippines consider this as a case of Chinese bullying? Expert sources say that for a behavior to be considered as bullying, there must be hostile intent, imbalance of power, repetition, distress, and provocation.

Except for their apologists, the Chinese seem to tick all the boxes in determining whether bullying actually exists. The heavy presence of their military and continuing build-up of military facilities in the area all the more emphasizes their hostile intentions. Every now and then, Filipino fishermen are harassed by the Chinese navy for their presence in the disputed territories. Recently, Chinese vessels were seen harvesting giant clams in the Scarborough Shoal, clearly taunting the Philippine military and our fishermen of the obvious imbalance of power, coupled with the repetitive and provocative nature of these incursions.

Should the Philippines put up a fight, give in, or flee? Should we tell on the Chinese to the authorities or Uncle Sam? Or, should we engage them in a sincere dialogue?

In January 2013, we told the authorities about what was happening. Following a tense standoff between Philippine and Chinese ships, the Philippines filed its case before the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA). The PCA said that there was no legal basis for the so-called nine-dash-line insisted on by China and that it violated Philippine sovereign rights in its exclusive economic zone by (a) interfering with Philippine fishing and petroleum exploration, (b) constructing artificial islands and (c) failing to prevent Chinese fishermen from fishing in the zone.

Since then, President Duterte, has been vacillating on what to do with the ruling and how to deal with China. By and large, it appears that he wants to be friends with China and then live happily ever after. But Gregory Poling, Executive Director of the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative, is sounding the alarm: “The fish are going to be dead pretty soon. And the Philippines is not going to be handcuffed to an ASEAN-China code of conduct process with some indefinite end date that may or may not touch on these issues.”

His prescription is for the Philippines to work side by side with other claimant countries to forge a deal with China regarding fisheries management — not really to settle the territorial dispute. Poling’s approach is directed at saving the resources of the area, without having to push China and its might into doing something worse than what it is already doing. The Philippines, Vietnam, and China may agree on declaring certain areas as protected zones for coral reefs and shoals and limit fishing in other areas.

There seems to be a lot of wisdom in Poling’s prescription. Why go on a one-on-one, all-out conflict with China when the power imbalance is so pronounced? China may just stonewall all efforts to force it to behave like an outstanding global citizen. Poling further suggests that the Philippines should have sanctioned the Chinese companies who have supported paramilitary forces in the Spratlys. At the very least, he says, we should be banning them from operations.

Our biggest obstacle may be the eagerness of President Duterte to throw in the towel and concede to China. He has led many to believe that it is in our best interest to just kowtow to Beijing and to Xi Jinping. As it turns out, we are not that helpless. We may just need to believe that there is something more to be done. We may just need to light the match and put international pressure on China.

As cliché as it sounds, Rachel Platten’s “Fight Song” may as well be our rallying cry. It goes:

Like a small boat
On the ocean
Sending big waves
Into motion
I might only have one match
But I can make an explosion

Edwin Santiago is the Executive Director of Stratbase ADR Institute.

Snapshots of Eddie Garcia

I’m praying that, by the time this piece comes out, my friend and motion picture colleague Eddie Garcia will have recovered from his recent neck fracture and is resting well, before going back before the cameras. At age 90, Eddie is one of the oldest film and TV actors in the country and, without fear of contradiction, one of the most awarded silver screen professionals in the world, not just as best actor and best-supporting actor, but as best director, as well.

In fact, Eddie’s achievements in films are so awesome that in April last year, I took the liberty of suggesting that he be named National Artist for Film, alongside directors Gerry de Leon, Lamberto V. Avellana, Lino Brocka, Ishmael Bernal and Eddie Romero, and actor-directors Manuel Conde and Fernando Poe, Jr.

Here’s what I cited, among Eddie’s many achievements: “In the annual Filipino Academy of Movie Arts & Sciences (FAMAS) Awards (the equivalent of Hollywood’s Oscars), Eddie has had a total of 34 nominations (13 for Best Supporting Actor of which he won 6; 10 for Best Actor of which he won 5; and 11 for Best Director of which he also won 5).

“He is the only one in the history of the FAMAS to win the Best Supporting Actor trophy for 3 consecutive years (1957, 1958 and 1959); was the first to be inducted into the Best Supporting Actor Hall of Fame; and is the only one to have also been inducted into the Best Actor and Best Director Halls of Fame, in addition to a Lifetime Achievement Award.

“Additionally, Eddie received from the Film Academy of the Philippines 3 Luna Awards for Best Director (1986, 1987 and 2001), the Lifetime Achievement Award in 1998 and the Best Actor Award in 2000. In the Metro Manila Film Festival, Eddie won the Best Director Award in 1989 and the Best Actor Award in 2002. In 2000, he won the Urian Award for Best Actor, conferred by movie critics. In 2006, he was given the Natatanging Gawad Urian Award for his achievements in Film. In 2012, the Asia-Pacific Film Festival named him Asian Best Actor.

“There have also been two special honors given in the name of fellow actors, a distinct recognition in a highly competitive field: the Fernando Poe, Jr. Memorial Award and the first Dolphy Lifetime Achievement Award conferred in 2013 by the Entertainment Press Society. Even the TV industry acknowledged Eddie’s artistry by giving him the 2002 Star Award for Best Actor in a Drama Series.”

I have known Eddie as a friend and a fellow film worker for an unbelievable 63 years. He is 10 years older than I am and I first met him when he was a 27-year-old top contravida (villain) at Sampaguita Pictures and I was a 17-year-old movie reporter. We met through director Armando Garces who gave me my break as a screenplay writer. I would subsequently write several screenplays directed by Eddie, specifically the Tony Falcon, Agent X-44 series starring Tony Ferrer. Among them were Sabotage and Crisis, both of which were the box-office champions in the 1966 and 1971 Manila Film Festivals, respectively.

I knew Eddie as someone with a wicked sense of humor, delivered in a semi-serious, soft-spoken drawl that invariably caught the victims of his jokes off guard and vulnerable. You were sure to come to grief if you ever tried to sing a song in his presence. “Are you crying or complaining?” Eddie would quip, poker-faced.

In my forthcoming book, Confusions of a Communications Man – Surviving Radio, TV, Movies, Journalism and Advertising, I recount snapshots of Eddie Garcia as a person:

“Whenever Manding (Garces) and Eddie were not busy with their movies, they were sure to make a beeline for nightclub row on Roxas Boulevard. Their favorite watering hole was Kapitbahay Sa Riviera. This was because Carding Cruz and the Tirso Cruz Band played there. Carding was a perennial musical director in Manding’s films.

“Like a mascot, whenever I happened to be at Sampaguita, I always tagged along with Manding and Eddie. And while they had fun on the dance floor, I would help myself to the drinks and the cigarettes, which I couldn’t afford to buy for myself…

“I distinctly remember an incident at Kapitbahay when our group was confronted by a pair of gun-wielding toughies who had a grudge against one of our companions, Ben Johnson, a Sampaguita actor. With us at the table, aside from Manding, Eddie and Ben, were Sampaguita star Rod Navarro, script writer-director Chaning Carlos and choreographer Rally Calvo.

“Despite having already downed a lot of drinks, I suddenly sobered up at the sight of the gun barrels pointed at us. But Eddie calmly told the toughies, ‘How can you be sure that guns aren’t being aimed at you right now?’

“It was a bluff but it worked. The two gun-wielders backed off and hurried out of the club. That was when I learned that Rod Navarro was an active duty officer of the Philippine Constabulary. He quickly left the club and in less than an hour was back, armed and in uniform, accompanied by a squad of soldiers. Luckily, the toughies had long gone.

“That incident would not be my last experience where the line between reel and real-life violence overlapped.”

As a screenplay writer, I was notorious for not submitting a complete shooting script, even in the course of production. I turned in sequences on installment as required by the filming schedule. But I had to make an exception of the movies I wrote for Eddie:

“The only director to whom I eventually had to diligently submit a complete shooting script before start of production was Eddie Garcia. Eddie and Tony Ferrer had already done several Agent X-44 films together, with Eli Corcuera and Henry Cuino as script writers. They were all box office hits. But on the suggestion of Manding Garces, Eddie agreed to try me out for the next sequel, Deadline: Agosto 13, based on a story by Manding himself.

“Apparently, everyone was happy with my output because I was assigned two more Agent X-44 films in succession, Trapped and Blackmail. In each case, Eddie cheerfully accepted my installment system of writing screenplays.

“Then came Sabotage. According to Atty. Laxa, it would be his company’s biggest production yet and would be Tagalog Ilang-Ilang’s entry in the first Manila Film Festival. Some of the scenes would be shot on location. In fact, I was asked to go along with Eddie and the production team to check out Binga Dam, up in the Mountain Province, several kilometers from Baguio.

“With his trademark wicked smile, Eddie told me, ‘Greg, I know that you like to submit your script on installment. That’s perfectly okay with me. I’ll simply bring you along to Binga Dam.’

“Eddie had found my Achilles’ heel! Being shanghaied on location would keep me away from my day job. And there was no way I could slip back to civilization from Binga Dam.

“A week before start of production, I handed over a complete shooting script to Eddie. ‘This means I get to stay in Manila,’ I said cheerfully.

“‘You better hope so,’ was his reply.”

To be inducted into the Order of the National Artists of the Philippines (Pambansang Alagad ng Sining ng Pilipinas) is, doubtless, the apex of one’s achievements in the Arts, specifically, in the fields of Music, Dance, Literature, Theater, Visual Arts, Film and Broadcast Arts, and Architecture, Design and Allied Arts. Eddie’s accomplishments as an actor and as a director — and, just as importantly, as an artist who epitomizes the finest qualities of a professional in Film and Visual Arts — deserve a place alongside that of the country’s National Artists.

I fervently hope that Eddie Garcia will receive this well-deserved recognition while he can still relish the honor in person. Sadly, all the National Artists for Film have been sent for by the Great Producer in the Sky.

 

Greg B. Macabenta is an advertising and communications man shuttling between San Francisco and Manila and providing unique insights on issues from both perspectives.

gregmacabenta@hotmail.com

*The original version of this column said that Mr. Garcia suffered a heart attack, in line with earlier reports. He did not. He suffered a neck fracture on set, after tripping and falling while shooting a TV series. We regret the error.

Who gets the credit?

By Tony Samson

AFTER the Bay of Pigs fiasco, John Kennedy famously noted: “Success has many fathers, but failure is an orphan.” It seems this quote was originally from Tacitus which in Latin has a slightly different tone: “This is an unfair thing about war: victory is claimed by all, failure to one alone.”

In trying to grab credit for success, many self-proclaimed fathers jostle for acclaim. Basking in unearned triumphs takes some cheek, especially when the involvement is marginal. (I was serving them coffee when they decided on the winning bid.)

Sharing the limelight can be a simple matter of sneaking uninvited into a group photo in front of a championship trophy.

Brilliant ideas with successful outcomes are hard to pin down to individuals. Concepts are not subject to ownership rights. This is the whole point of intellectual property rights like patents and authorships which are often the subject of litigation and settlements for big bucks.

Claiming other people’s ideas as one’s own is plagiarism, and more than a simple breach of etiquette. While words set on paper or blogs are properly dated and attributed, fleeting insights and ideas in a business discussion are more abstract and often neither properly recorded nor definitively attributed.

There is no accepted process that allocates credit, like those who thought of an idea first — why don’t we create a platform for sharing rides? Even email is not a reliable record of chronology and authorship, as what is written down may be based on something already discussed earlier. “Aha moments” are not recorded under intellectual property.

Even when someone thought up a great idea first, another person operationalized it and made it work with all the moving parts. Who gets the bigger credit?

Credits for ideas, performance, and achievements are rewarded with recognition and a bigger paycheck. So, this is not just about bragging rights. It may mean the Nobel Prize or at least a promotion and a better car.

Individual honors like “Most Valuable Player” are sought and treasured, even in team sports like basketball or hockey. True, the recipient of the trophy feigns modesty in his acceptance speech by saying he couldn’t have won the award without his teammates. Yet he alone gets to bring home the prize and the bigger paycheck that comes with it.

Recognition can be sought as an end in itself. In the corporate world, the quiet worker who contributes to excellent performance behind the scenes (usually classified as “support service”) just gets more assignments as the adulation (and promotions) go to others above him — yes sir, your file is in the folder tagged “looney tunes.”

Corporate culture highlights individual achievement as a basis for bonuses and promotions and thus encourages credit-grabbing as a way of getting ahead. Even in team-building exercises out of town, one team is usually pitted against another… around designated leaders.

Paternity for success, as in its biological counterpart, is not so easy to establish as it requires a combination of knowing the mother (and more importantly the mother knowing the claimant) as well as a combination of opportunity, intimacy, and the confluence of factors synchronized with the gestation period.

The movie Mamma Mia! handles this conundrum of the bride’s rightful father among three possible partners of the Mom. All three sing their claims to the right ABBA song. In the end, it really doesn’t matter who the real father of the bride is. All the potential fathers love the bride to be, and get to sing the nice finale number, “Dancing Queen”.

An adviser for a successful venture may opt to hide his influence, cherishing his anonymity even as powerful people seek his counsel and claim the credit. When queried on his influence on high profile leaders, he demurs — we just had coffee and chatted about old friends. Powers behind thrones deflect envy by affecting a lack of influence on any decisions made.

A quote attributed to Harry Truman notes: “It’s amazing what you can accomplish if you don’t care who gets the credit.” Grabbing glory takes too much effort. It also leads to turf wars and the sabotage of good ideas coming from the wrong person.

Anyway, successful initiatives eventually go wrong. Murphy’s Law states: “If anything can go wrong, it will”. Not as well-known is a corollary, one of many, to Murphy’s Law which goes: “When things go right… the wrong person gets the credit.”

 

Tony Samson is Chairman and CEO, TOUCH xda.

ar.samson@yahoo.com

Moving to a low-carbon future — why banks and companies need to step up

By Bill Winters

THE CLOCK is ticking on climate change. We currently have more greenhouse gases in our atmosphere than at any time in human history.

As a result of our increasing economic activity, scientists estimate that, under one potential scenario, average temperatures could rise by 6°C by the end of this century. The consequences of that would be catastrophic for humanity. And the most alarming thing is that scientists call this scenario “business-as-usual.”

But this does not have to be the outcome. The term “business-as-usual” itself implies that there must be an ‘unusual’ alternative that leads to a different outcome. We at Standard Chartered are committed to helping our clients, communities, stakeholders, and ourselves achieve the climate goals, as set out in the Paris Agreement, to keep warming below 2°C.

We announced last year that we would develop a methodology to “measure, manage, and ultimately reduce” the CO2 emissions from the activities we finance. We believe this is critical to enable us to meet these climate goals and support our clients through the low-carbon transition.

We can do this, but it won’t be easy. As a global bank, we operate in over 60 markets, many of which have fast-growing, increasingly prosperous economies which bring with them growing demand for energy, food, water, and goods. We can help our communities meet that growing demand in a sustainable way, ensuring those markets have access to the capital they need to fund reliable, cleaner energy.

We must also help them to improve their resilience to the potential impacts of climate change, of which they are often on the frontline. At Standard Chartered we believe we have both an obligation — and a unique opportunity — to help countries meet these challenges without compromising our collective climate goals.

But like action on climate change itself, measuring emissions is complex and requires action from multiple parties. This is a challenge we cannot solve alone. Today, we are making public the work we have done to date to build our methodology. We want to use this to drive the conversation, to accelerate progress and to prevent duplicated efforts. As we see it, success depends on joint efforts among financial institutions to help collectively and continually refine this methodology, as well as widespread company disclosures of accurate and meaningful emissions data.

With the objective of refining our framework, we’re collaborating with four other banks — BBVA, BNP Paribas, Société Générale and ING — through the Katowice Commitment to develop the methodologies and tools the banking sector needs to assess our own contribution to climate goals. We are making some progress, but with more collaborators, we can do more.

We recognize that getting robust, verifiable data in many of our markets may take some time, but we are not waiting. We’ve joined forces with 2 Degrees Investing Initiative (2DII), a climate think tank to pilot a software tool which provides emissions assessments, the actions and findings of which can be found in our emissions white paper (available online at https://www.sc.com/en/sustainability/emissions-whitepaper/). Our pilot has shown a lot of promise, and with the help of other banks and stakeholders, we can make more headway and find answers to the challenges we have identified: getting the right data, validating it and scaling it up to cover 100 percent of our portfolio.

Of course, none of our actions will matter without the efforts of companies across our markets. Disclosures are critical, to show current progress in the transition to a low-carbon future, and help us and other banks understand where capital is needed to complete this transition. There is much we can do in working with clients to assess and improve their emissions profiles.

Disclosures make perfect business sense — the Paris Agreement is expected to open up climate investment opportunities of US$23 trillion in emerging markets between now and 2030, according to the International Finance Corporation (IFC). Much of this investment flow will be guided by and dependent on emissions data. When the private sector recognizes its business case, disclosures on climate-related matters can become the new “business-as-usual.”

The stakes cannot be overstated. To ensure that the flow of capital reaches the places where it is needed most to achieve climate goals, the world must work together and fast. “Business-as-usual” as we know it is no longer acceptable; let’s all come together to help ensure the sustainability of our planet.

 

Bill Winters is the Group CEO of Standard Chartered.

Palace advises KAPA investors to file class suit

MALACAÑANG PALACE on Tuesday urged those who put in money to the Kapa-Community Ministry International, Inc. (KAPA) to file criminal and civil suits against the group to recover their investments.

“They should. They should in order to recover [their investments],” Mr. Panelo told reporters in an ambush interview when asked if the investors should file a class suit against individuals behind KAPA, which according to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has been “running a scam.”

Mr. Panelo added, “And so that you will put behind bars those people who have been swindling them.”

KAPA, a non-stock and independent religious corporation, collects money from members with a promise of very high return rates.

The SEC said the scheme in which KAPA operates is unsustainable as it may run out of investors and fail to pay its members. The group is said to be soliciting investments of P10,000 to P20,000 for monthly returns of 30%.

Mr. Panelo also noted that it is “strange” that many investors remain very supportive of the SEC-registered group despite the order from President Rodrigo R. Duterte to close it down because it is “fraud.”

Ang…supportive ‘yung mga nakakuha na ng pera, ‘yung mga nauna (Those who are supportive are those who joined first, those who received money). They were able to get that. Hindi nila alam (They don’t know) that was a trap,” he said.

In a press briefing, the spokesman said the government will also run after other investment scams in Mindanao.

Kapag nalaman nating mayroong mga ganiyan, ‘di dapat talagang ipasarado (Once we find out there are other such scams, it should really be closed) because it’s a continuing crimes of estafa,” he said.

Asked if filing charges is the only way for investors to recover their money, he said: “Yes, they will have to file criminal and civil suits.”

The SEC announced on Monday that it has obtained a freeze order on several bank accounts and assets of KAPA.

In 2017, SEC found KAPA to be soliciting investments from the public even if it does not have a secondary license to conduct such.

SEC issued a cease and desist order against KAPA last Feb. 14, but it still continued its operation. Its certificate of registration was revoked by the commission last April.

Meanwhile, the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) said it is preparing the appropriate complaints against the founder and officers of KAPA for violation of the Securities Regulation Code.

In a press conference Tuesday, lawyer Antonio M. Pagatpat, deputy director for Regional Operation Service, said they conducted simultaneous operations for 14 search warrants, 13 of which were in various KAPA offices, including the residence of its founder, Joel A. Apolinario.

He said the search warrants were issued by Manila Regional Trial Court Branch 20 for the violations of sections 8 (Requirement of Registration of Securities) and 26 (Fraudulent Transactions) of the Securities Regulation Code.

Mr. Pagatpat said while there was no one arrested and all the offices reached by the NBI teams were non-operational and closed, they were able to seize “some vital evidence.”

“In the course of the service of the search warrants, our teams were able to seize or recover various documents, records, books, equipment, all proving that indeed KAPA was violating the Securities Regulation Code. And so this time, we are preparing the appropriate complaints against the founder and the other officers of KAPA,” he said.

Mr. Pagatpat also said that reports from their agents showed the organization was not conducting any religious activity.

The NBI is also looking into the possibility of filing charges of large-scale estafa. — Arjay L. Balinbin and Vann Marlo M. Villegas

PhilHealth execs could be reappointed—Panelo

PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. Duterte may reappoint the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) board members whom he asked to resign if they will be cleared of any involvement in irregularities in the agency.

In a press briefing Tuesday, Presidential Spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo said the officials met with the President at the Palace last Monday to discuss the situation.

“They thanked the President for giving them the opportunity to serve and they also appreciate the fact that the resignation is based not on the fact that the President mistrusts them, but because he wants a clean slate, he wants a full investigation,” Mr. Panelo said.

He added, “Parang may binanggit pa nga siya doon, kung okay eh di puwede naman silang ibalik o kaya bigyan sila ng ibang position(It seems that it was mentioned there that if [the investigation] comes out okay, then they can go back or be given another position).”

The President is awaiting the results of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) probe, he noted.

The spokesman also said the President has tapped a doctor to serve in the agency, but did not give the specific position.

May nabanggit siya na (He mentioned that) he’s waiting for the response of Dr. Jaime Cruz for an offer I think he made to him,” he said.

In his official statement regarding the President’s meeting with the officials of PhilHealth, Mr. Panelo reassured the public that the services of the agency “will remain unhampered as operations will continue and will be momentarily run by second-level officials pending the subject investigation.”

COMPLAINTS FILED
The NBI yesterday filed complaints before the Department of Justice against WellMed Dialysis and Laboratory Center Corp. owner and Vice-President Bryan Christopher W. Sy, along with whistleblowers Liezel Aileen Santos and Edwin C. Roberto and other WellMed officials, for estafa and falsification of documents in connection with the “ghost” dialysis treatment funded by PhilHealth.

The criminal complaints for violation of Article 315 (estafa) and Article 172 (falsification of documents) in relation to Article 171 of the Revised Penal Code was filed against Mr. Sy and the two whistleblowers, following the complaint filed by PhilHealth Monday.

Other WellMed officers included in the complaint are Medical Director John Ray M. Gonzales, Chairman Claro N. Sy, Purchasing Officer Therese Francesca R. Tan, Administration Officer Dick S. Ong, and physicians Porshia C. Natividad and Joemie D. Soriano.

Mr. Sy and the whistleblowers were also presented for inquest proceedings after they were arrested by the NBI Monday.

Mr. Roberto, a former WellMed assistant manager, said in his sworn statement that Mr. Sy instructed him in March 2016 to charge a dialysis billing of P2,600 as PhilHealth claims of two deceased patients, while Ms. De Leon was ordered to generate the necessary PhilHealth forms.

Mr. Roberto also disclosed that before his resignation in March 2018, a total of P600,600 from 200 dialysis sessions were settled by PhilHealth to WellMed for patients who already died.

A total of 80 dialysis sessions worth P208,000 were unpaid as of March 2018, but have been paid since, Mr. Roberto said in the statement.

A number of claims were also allegedly made by Ms. De Leon following instructions from Mr. Sy.

Harry L. Roque, legal counsel of the whistleblowers, said the complaint against his clients and Mr. Sy has been submitted for resolution.

He added that they wanted to immediately submit the case for resolution because “we have a pending application into the witness protection program and they have to be charged according to the provision of the witness protection.”

In another development, Manila Regional Trial Court Branch 20 denied the petition of Mr. Sy for writ of habeas corpus citing that the NBI had no ground for his warrantless arrest and detention.

“The instant petition is denied. The singular function of a petition for habeas corpus is to inquire into the cause of detention of a person… That there is no probable cause for the warrantless arrest of the subject has been held not a valid ground for the issuance of a Writ of Habeas Corpus,” the court decision states. — Arjay L. Balinbin and Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Salceda says DFA obliged to support climate change talks

ALBAY 2ND DISTRICT Rep. Joey S. Salceda has called out Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro L. Locsin Jr. for banning his department’s officials from attending climate change conferences “requiring air travel” and pulling out financial support for other offices.

“Can I remind you that section 9 of the Climate Change Commission (CCC) [Act]… The provisions and functions of the CCC? So you cannot do away with it. You’re violating the law,” Mr. Salceda, chair of the House special committee on climate change, said in a briefing Tuesday at the Shangri-La Hotel in Mandaluyong City.

Section 9 (K) of Republic Act 9729 provides that the CCC shall coordinate with DFA in representing the country in climate change negotiations abroad.

“How do you interpret that provision of the law which should be superior to any of your statements,” said Mr. Salceda.

Mr. Locsin announced the travel ban in a June 10 DFA statement following President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s criticism of climate change efforts in the international community.

In the statement, he said other agencies and offices could send their representative provided that the travel budget will come from funding sources other than the DFA.

“This is incompatible with the legal obligations under the Philippine law,” said Mr. Salceda, citing the General Appropriations Act of 2019 mandating DFA to “extend the necessary, technical, legal, and logistical support to the Climate Change Commission on the participation of the Philippine delegation in the climate negotiation processes…”

“Your budget was given to you because you are compelled to support this negotiation. There’s no ifs and buts,” said Mr. Salceda.

In response, Mr. Locsin said in a tweet: “To Joey Salceda, my House mentor: Please. I’m not stopping anybody outside DFA from traveling to TALK rather than ACT on Climate Change. DFA is committed to vote YES to the most radical proposals but not again to keep traveling to talk about it ad nauseam.” — Vince Angelo C. Ferreras

Forums set in preparation for President’s 4th SONA

PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. Duterte’s Cabinet officials are set to hold a series of forums to discuss the policies, programs, and achievements of his administration in preparation for his fourth State of the Nation Address (SONA). In a statement on Tuesday, Presidential Spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo said Cabinet Secretary Karlo B. Nograles updated the President’s men during the Cabinet meeting last Monday with the pre-SONA activities. “There are three pre-SONA forums to be spearheaded by the Presidential Communications Operations Office. The first forum, entitled Patuloy na Pag-unlad to be led by the Economic Development and Infrastructure Cluster, will be held in Manila on July 1. The second one, Patuloy na Malasakit at Pag-kakaisa, will be led by the Human Development and Poverty Reduction Cluster, alongside with the Participatory Governance Cluster, in Cebu City on July 10. “Lastly, the Patuloy na Katatagan will be held in Davao City on July 17 and shall be presented by the Climate Change Adaptation, Mitigation and Disaster Risk Reduction Cluster and the Security, Justice and Peace Cluster,” Mr. Panelo said. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Order out soon to formalize Cabinet members’ special regional designations under CORDS

PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. Duterte is set to issue an executive order (EO) formalizing the designation of the Cabinet Officers for Regional Development and Security (CORDS). In a statement on Tuesday, Presidential Spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo said National Security Adviser Hermogenes C. Esperon, Jr. “requested” during the Cabinet meeting last Monday to formalize the CORDS, which is tasked to help counter regional and local communists, through the issuance of an EO. “This initiative spreads Cabinet officials nationwide and are designated per region to help ending regional and local communists. The CORDS will also be able to help in delivering basic services and livelihood to regions,” he said. In a press briefing, Mr. Panelo said Mr. Esperon’s request was “approved.” — Arjay L. Balinbin

No Duterte Youth representative can sit until Cardema case resolved — Guanzon

THE COMMISSION on Elections (Comelec) started its hearings yesterday on former National Youth Commission chair Ronald Gian Carlo L. Cardema’s petition to be the Duterte Youth party-list’s first nominee. Comelec Commissioner Rowena Amelia V. Guanzon said during the hearing, “While this case is pending, no one can sit as Duterte Youth.” Ms. Guanzon was the only commissioner who opposed giving due course to Mr. Cardema, citing that he is not qualified to be a youth sector representative being 34 years old. Under the law, youth party-list representatives must be 25 to 30 years old. Mr. Cardema filed a petition to replace his wife, Ducielle Marie D. Suarez-Cardema, who was recently granted a withdrawal of her Certification of Acceptance of Nomination along with the four other Duterte Youth nominees last June 4. The same resolution granted Mr. Cardema “due course” regarding his petition for substitution. Ms. Guanzon also raised questions regarding Duterte Youth supposedly representing both the youth and young professionals when a party-list should focus on one sector. Election lawyer Emilio Marañon III, who represented the petitioners against Mr. Cardema’s substitution, said Duterte Youth is not permitted to represent both sectors considering Mr. Cardema “himself knew he was representing the youth sector.” — Gillian M. Cortez

Trillanes claims to have new evidence relating to Bikoy

OUTGOING SENATOR Antonio F. Trillanes IV yesterday said he is in possession of new evidence that will further disprove allegations that he is among those behind a plot to oust President Rodrigo R. Duterte, as claimed by Peter Joemel Advincula. Mr. Trillanes, in a briefing, said he has videos of Mr. Advincula, who claims to be “Bikoy” in the controversial “Ang Totoong Narcolist” videos, that will “debunk the Duterte ouster plot.” He said, “I’ll let you judge if this is consistent sa mga sinasabi niya (with what he says).” Mr. Trillanes said he has also received documents and text conversations from various sources that are linked to Mr. Advincula, showing that he is not credible in his testimonies. The Bikoy narcolist videos claimed that members of Mr. Duterte’s family are involved in the illegal drug trade. — Gillian M. Cortez

PRDP projects in Pangasinan almost complete

AGRICULTURE-RELATED projects in Pangasinan implemented under the Philippine Rural Development Project (PRDP) are almost complete and the next challenge is ensuring sustainability, a World Bank (WB) official said. “As the PRDP projects near completion, it is another challenge for us in terms of the sustainability part, particularly on how to maintain the projects,” Frauke Jungbluth, team leader of WB’s implementation support mission, said during the North Luzon cluster meeting of the 8th World Bank Implementation Support Mission held June 7 in Calasiao, Pangasinan. In a statement posted on the Pangasinan provincial government’s official social media page, Vice-Governor (VG) Jose Ferdinand Z. Calimlim Jr., representing the governor at the forum, thanked WB executives for the PRDP grants. At the same time, Mr. Calimlim raised the suggestion on the need to simplify the processing of papers for acquiring funding. Ms. Jungbluth “responded to the query on PRDP processing in a positive note,” the provincial government said. The PRDP is a nationwide WB-funded program with the Department of Agriculture (DA) as lead implementing agency. “Pangasinan has the largest portfolio of PRDP infrastructure and enterprise sub-projects in Region 1,” said DA Regional Director Lucrecio R. Alviar, Jr. as he lauded the province for its active engagement to the PRDP. He said Pangasinan was granted seven infrastructure sub-projects worth P581.94-M, and 36 enterprise sub-projects worth Php60.14-M., which is second highest in the country.