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Le Tour has two technical stages

THE Tagaytay City climb and the winding roads leading to and from Donsol in Sorsogon are bound to test how well the 75 cyclists could adopt quickly and strongly to technical rides in the Le Tour de Filipinas that celebrates its 10th year from June 14 to 18.

Stage One of the Le Tour de Filipinas on June 14 starts and ends in Tagaytay City but its not picturesque Taal Volcano that provides glitter to the race, but the descent from the Praying Hands monument on Aguinaldo Highway and the climb in Barangay Sampaloc in Talisay town that provides the challenge.

The stage could be short at 129.50 km but for Paquito Rivas, the tour’s race manager and owner of the moniker Eagle of the Mountain, said the kick off would sap the most out of the cyclists.

There are five stages this time in the International Cycling Union Category 2.2 event founded by PhilCycling chairman Bert Lina to celebrate a decade of racing. And Stage Five on June 18 is as crucial as the first in Tagaytay.

Covering 145.80 km, the riders will be flagged off from Legaspi City and will pass through Donsol that is made famous by the butanding (whale sharks).

The whale sharks are famous for being amiable to humans, but the route at Luzon’s southern tip could be brutal to the cyclists.

Sandwiched by the two technical stages are long rides over the flat and well-paved Maharlika Highway that dissects the Bicol Region where sprinters could frolic on.

Fifteen teams — five local and 10 international — composed of 75 riders are vying in the race.

Ghana FC dethrones Super Eagles in Philam Life 7s Football League; Outkast wins

AFTER settling for a heartbreaking runner-up finish in Season 2, Ghana FC dominated and broke through against the Super Eagles in their Philam Life 7s Football League men’s final rematch, 3-1, to emerge as champions in Season 3 Sunday at the McKinley Hill Stadium.

The Ayi Bimbo-mentored squad shocked the packed venue by controlling possession and scoring two quick goals in the first half, coming from forwards Emmanuel Mbata and Daniel Ashley to go up 2-0 in a 10-minute span.

It left the Super Eagles flat and unable to dictate the pace throughout the match as the ousted champions played catch-up for the entire duration.

In the second half, Super Eagles tried to mount a comeback with Emmanuel Sylvernus converting a goal. However, the defense and crisp passing of Ghana FC were too much to handle for them, and striker Junior Sam chipped in another goal to secure the victory.

“When we scored 2-0 in the first half, Super Eagles’ confidence was really shut down and even if they scored a goal in the second half, we were not worried because I know we can score another goal to seal the win. I knew already that we will get another goal,” said Mr. Bimbo.

“It was really hard for us to keep it at a clean sheet because of their pressing but I was glad that after they scored their lone goal, my teammates tried their best to score another one to kill their momentum,” added Steve Waledji.

“When I said that we will go all the way, I meant it. We were not going to think about our opponent, and we just focused on winning. I told [my guys] that this is not a revenge game. I told them that let’s all have fun,” added Mr. Bimbo.

In the women’s division, it was Outkast FC prevailing over the tough Stallion-Hiraya side, coming from behind to bag home the inaugural Philam Life 7s Women’s Football League title via a 2-1 win.

Hiraya’s Aiza Mondero opened the scoring in the final, as her side kept pressing early on in the first half. Stallion-Hiraya looked good after 25 minutes, but Outkast relied on veterans Let Dimzon and Loreta Ladero to pour in two goals to complete their comeback.

Ms. Ladero’s go-ahead goal came in the second half as she volleyed a cross from Alesa Dolino that went past Hiraya coach-goal keeper Haya Ibarra.

Their defense also tightened in the second half, as Stallion-Hiraya had a difficult time on their counter attacks and the Keuts Smith-managed squad controlled the possessions just enough to preserve the win.

In the Philam Life 7s Football League all-star game, Team Foreigner All-Stars, coached by Danny Kross, walloped Bimbo’s Team Filipino All-Stars, 5-nil in the seasonal centerpiece of the league.

Strikers Kathy Aihunu and David Asare sparked Team Foreigners’ torrid start on offense by converting two goals in the first half. Hamed Hajimehdi, Stacey Arthur, and Ebere Ogochukwu scored one goal each to add on to their goal total as they built an insurmountable lead against Team Philippines.

Having topnotch goalkeepers like Dini Outtara and Abu Ibrahim also helped the squad maintain the clean sheet throughout the match. The Foreigner All-Stars had players like Gui Matsunaga, Joaco Canas, Otuyemi Emmanuel, Hideo Muraoka, Petar Sajko, and Tako Odawara.

The Filipino All-Stars were bannered by Daniel Matsunaga, Anton Del Rosario, Roberto Orlandez, Roberto Corsame, Cedric Hodreal, Rafael Halili, Mateo Yuhico, Amanda Fernandez, and Joyce Semacio, to name a few.

UAAP women wars

UAAP Season 81
2018-2019 UAAP Chess Team Tournament (Women)
1st Floor, QPAV Building, UST, España St., Manila
Sept. 19-Oct. 28, 2018

DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY (DLSU), 43 pts, 23 match points

bd01 Mira Mirano 9/13, bd02 WIM Marie Antoinette San Diego 6/6, bd03 Ella Grace Moulic 11.5/14, bd04 Samantha Glo Revita 11.5/14, bd05 Franchell Eds Javier 4/7, bd06 Daphne Mae Dy 1/2. Team Captain: Mira Mirano, Team Coaches: FM Randy Segarra, Susan Grace Neri, Team Managers: Aurelio Family, George Barcelon, Gerardo Achacoso.

UNIVERSITY OF THE PHILIPPINES (UP), 29.5 pts, 19 match points

bd01 Ynna Sophia Canape 7.5/14, bd02 Jee-Ann Faye Barry 0/4, bd03 Geraldine Guyo 8.5/14, bd04 Justnin Macapuno 9.5/14, bd05 Martina Sophia Casiano 4/9, bd06 Queenie Rose Solis 0/1. Team Captain: Ynna Sophia Canape, Head Coach: FM Leonardo Carlos, Asst. Coach: WIM Catherine Perena-Secopito, Team Manager: Sol Marfori.

ADAMSON UNIVERSITY (AdU), 28.5 pts, 16 match points

bd01 Bonalyn Ornido 3/9, bd02 Jellie Ann Magro 10/14, bd03 Jean Paula dela Cruz 5.5/12, bd04 Abigail Tamundong 7.5/14, bd05 Jashua Patria 2.5/7. Team Captain: Jullie Ann Magro, Team Coach: Christopher Rodriguez.

UNIVERSITY OF THE EAST (UE), 28 pts, 15 match points

bd01 Virgenie Ruaya 8/14, bd02 Monaliza Geronimo 0/2, bd03 Cristhina Ann Medenilla 7/14, bd04 Kimberly Chu 4.5/13, bd096 Isabel Palibino 8.5/13. Team Captain: Virgenie Ruaya, Head Coach: John Perzeus Orozco.

UNIVERSITY OF SANTO TOMAS (UST), 25 pts, 14 match points

bd01 Glenderlyn Anana 4/11, bd02 Highzzy Manaloto 9.5/14, bd03 Cyamir Jill Villanueva 2/9, bd04 Mary Ann Alcantara 7.5/14, bd05 Charlotte Britney Paez, 2/5, bd06 Hilary Claire Murillo 0/3. Team Captain: Highzzy Manaloto, Team Coach: IM Ronald Dableo, Team Manager: Michaela Concio.

FAR EASTERN UNIVERSITY (FEU), 24.5 pts, 8 match points

bd01 Enrica Villa 7/13, bd02 Marife dela Torre 7/13, bd03 Viona Nepascua 3.5/9, bd04 Babylyn Salanga 2/6, bd05 Janin Crisologo 2/6, bd06 Jemima Valdez 3/9. Team Captain: Michelle Yaon, Team Coach: GM Jayson Gonzales, Team Manager: Atty. Ruel Canobas, Asst. Team Manager: WFM Shania Mae Mendoza.

NATIONAL UNIVERSITY (NU), 23.5 pts, 10 match points

bd01 Mary Rose Trono 0/1, bd02 Jemelee Oandasan 5/12, bd03 Ma. Kathrine Grace Almodal 3/12, bd04 Lovely Iris Reyes 7.5/13, bd05 Kisha Marie D. Flores 3.5/10, bd06 Charmaine Lilan Manga 4.5/8. Team Captain: Lovely Iris Reyes, Team Coach: Jose Aquino Jr, Asst. Coach: Mark Anthony Bernales, Team Manager: Samson Go, Manny Go.

ATENEO DE MANILA UNIVERSITY (ADMU), 22 pts, 7 match points

bd01 Jillian Jay Feliciano 1/7, bd02 Alexis Anne Osena 7.5/14, bd03 Merlene Membrere 5.5/14, bd04 Laila Camel G. Nadera 7/14, bd05 Ma. Minella Christine Sandoval 1/7. Team Captain: Jillian Jay Feliciano, Team Coach: IM Yves Ranola, Team Managers: Bernice Ty, Maegan Lim, Brena Mae Membrere.

Individual Medal Awardees

Most Valuable Player: Mira Mirano, DLSU

Rookie of the Year: Samantha Glo Revita, DLSU

Board 1
Gold — Mira Mirano, DLSU 9/13
Silver — Virgenie Ruaya, UE 8/14
Bronze — Enrica Villa, FEU 7/13

Board 2
Gold — Highzzy Manaloto UST, 9.5/14
Silver — Marife dela Torre FEU, 7/13
Bronze — Alexis Anne Osena, ADMU 7.5/14

Board 3
Gold — Ella Grace Moulic, DLSU 11.5/14
Silver — Julie Ann Magro, AdU 10/14
Bronze — Geraldine Guyo, UP 8.5/14

Board 4
Gold — Samantha Glo Revite, DLSU 11.5/14
Silver — Justnin Macapuno, UP 9.5/14
Bronze — Lovely Iris Reyes, NU 7.5/13

Board 5
Gold — Isabel Palibino, UE 8.5/13
Silver — Franchell Eds Javier, DLSU 4/7
Bronze — Abigail Tamundong, AdU 7.5/14

Board 6
Gold — Charmain Lilan Manga, NU 4.5/8
Silver — Jashua Patria, AdU 2.5/7
Bronze — Jemima Valdez, FEU 3/9

Last year WIM Bernadette Galas played top board for De La Salle University in the UAAP Women’s Team Championship and scored 12/13, leading the Lady Archers to the team gold and winning for herself board 1 gold honors as well as the overall Most Valuable Player award.

Her teammate WIM (Woman International Master) Marie Antoinette San Diego did very well too — she won the individual gold on 3rd board with a mind-boggling 12.5/13 score.

So what happens with the defending champion DLSU team this year when WIM Galas is no longer available to play and WIM San Diego misses more than half of the event because she is representing the Philippines in the Women’s Chess Olympiad in Batumi, Georgia?

Apparently, no problem at all. Ms. Tonette San Diego could only play 6 games but whitewashed her opponents 6/6. WCM Mira Mirano had 9/13 on top board and replicated Bernadette Galas’s feat last year — Mira was the individual gold medalist on board 1 and was declared the UAAP Season 81 Women’s Most Valuable Player. Then there is their 3rd board Ella Grace Moulic, 11.5/14 on 3rd board and likewise individual gold medalist.

DLSU added new players WFM Samantha Glo Revita, Daphne Mae Dy and Franchell Eds Javier and they all did well, especially the talented Rosales, Pangasinan product Glo Revita, a veteran of the Age Group competitions in Southeast Asia where she won several gold medals in previous years. Here in her debut season she was 11.5/14 on board 4, also an individual gold-medal winning performance.

No other school could keep up with De La Salle University and the players from Taft wound up with 43 pts out of a maximum of 56, a full 13.5 points ahead of the second-player UP Lady Maroons. This might be the biggest winning margin ever in the history of the UAAP. Really impressive performance — let us take a look at their games.

[UST] MANALOTO, Highzzy G. — [DLSU] WIM SAN DIEGO, Marie Antoinette M. [A36]

2018–19 UAAP Chess (WOMEN) 1st Flr., QPAV Bldg., UST, Es (11.1), 20.10.2018

Tonette gets the jump on White in the opening from which her opponent does not recover.

1.c4 c5 2.Nc3 g6 3.e4 Bg7 4.g3 Nc6 5.Bg2 a6 6.Nge2 b5

A Benko Gambit-like sacrifice specifically targeted against the Botvinnik formation (pawns on c4 and e4, knights on c3 and e2 with fianchettoed bishop on g2) of White. It scores well for Black.

7.cxb5 axb5 8.0–0

Taking the pawn is not recommended. After 8.Nxb5 Ba6 9.Nec3 (9.Nbc3 Bd3 10.0–0 Nb4) 9…Qa5 10.a4 (10.Na3 Ne5 White will have difficulty castling) 10…Bxc3 11.dxc3 Bxb5 12.axb5 Qxa1 13.bxc6 dxc6 both sides have chances but I think most people would prefer Black here. Lagopatis, N. (2182)-Navara, D. (2715) Achaia 2013 0–1 53.

8…Ba6 9.Re1

White goes into passive play. The position calls for dynamic play, something like 9.e5! Bxe5 10.Ne4 c4 (10…d6?! is what White is trying to provoke, to be met by 11.Nxc5!) 11.d4! cxd3 12.Nf4 it is going to be an exciting game.

9…e6 10.Nf4 Nge7 11.Bf1 Nd4 12.Kg2 Nec6 13.Nce2 b4 14.Nxd4 Nxd4 15.Ne2?

[15.Bxa6 is almost forced]

15…Bxe2 16.Bxe2 b3 17.Bd3

[17.a3 Nc2]

17…0–0 18.a3 d5 19.Bb1 dxe4 20.Bxe4 Ra7 21.Rb1 f5 22.Bf3 e5

POSITION AFTER 22…E5

Clearly White is about to be overrun by Black’s pawns.

23.d3 Nc2 24.Rf1 Rd7 25.Bc6 Rxd3 26.Qe2 c4

White’s bishop is stranded with nowhere to go. Black will continue …e5–e4 and …Nc2–d40f3.

27.Ba4 Qa8+ 28.f3 Qxa4 29.Bg5 h6 30.Be7 Ne3+ 31.Kh3 Re8 32.Bb4 f4 33.Rg1 Qd7+ 34.g4 h5 35.Kh4 Bf6+ 36.g5 Nf5+ 37.Kh3 Nd4+ 0–1

Samantha “Glo” Revita was obviously too strong for board 4. She caught several of her opponents in opening traps. For those who survive the opening she gets to display her endgame skills.

[DLSU] REVITA, Samantha Glo C. — [NU] FLORES, Kisha Marie D. [A45]

2018–19 UAAP Chess (WOMEN) 1st Flr., QPAV Bldg., UST, España (10.1), 14.10.2018

1.d4 Nf6 2.Bg5 e6 3.e4 Be7 4.e5 Nd5 5.Bxe7 Qxe7 6.c4 Nf4 7.Nc3 d6 8.g3 Ng6 9.f4 dxe5 10.dxe5 0–0 11.Bg2 Rd8 12.Qe2 Na6 13.Nf3 Bd7 14.0–0 Bc6 15.Rfd1 Nc5 16.b4 Na4 17.Nxa4 Bxa4 18.Rxd8+ Rxd8 19.a3 Qd7 20.Ra2 Bd1 21.Qe3 Bxf3 22.Bxf3 b6 23.Kf2 Qd4 24.Rc2 Ne7 25.Be4 Kf8 26.Qxd4 Rxd4 27.Ke3 Rd1 28.Rd2 Rxd2 29.Kxd2

White’s only plus is the slightly weakened Black queenside pawns. Surprisingly enough she quickly turns this into a big advantage.

29…h6 30.Kc3 Ke8 31.c5 Kd7 32.Kc4 c6 33.cxb6 axb6 34.a4 Kc7 35.a5 bxa5?

Correct is 35…Kb7! perhaps Kisha Flores was afraid of 36.b5 but then 36…bxa5 37.Kc5 Kc7 38.bxc6 a4 the white king has to go pick up the a-pawn and Black’s forces will in turn capture White’s c6–pawn.

36.bxa5 Nc8 37.Kc5 Ne7 38.a6 Nd5 39.Bh7 Ne7 40.Be4 Nd5 41.a7 Kb7 42.a8Q+ Kxa8 43.Kxc6 Ne3 44.Kd7+ Kb8 45.Ke7 Nf1 46.Kxf7 Nxh2 47.Kxe6 Kc8 48.Kf7 Ng4 49.e6 1–0

 

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

bobby@cpamd.net

Leader Kawhi

Considering how closely the Raptors and Sixers battled throughout their semifinal-round series, it was fittingly settled on a last-second shot in its last game by its most active player yesterday. Indeed, by the time Kawhi Leonard let go of his twisting corner fadeaway over the outstretched arms of Joel Embiid just before the final buzzer sounded, he had already played a whopping 278 minutes through seven grueling matches. He looked tired for the duration of the contest, reflecting his extremely high mid-30s usage rate, and his final stab at the rim was short, just like many of his 38 other attempts. That said, it was straight and, more importantly, soft, managing to draw front iron and bounce around before going in, spectacularly securing for the hosts a seat in the conference finals.

As far as dramatics go, Leonard’s clincher could not have been more nerve-racking. The ball certainly stayed in the rim far longer than it appeared to have a right to, and it could just as easily have bounced out to send the set-to to overtime. Nonetheless, it would be a disservice to the way the Raptors competed in Game Seven to argue that a lucky break was all it took for them to win. The Sixers came ready to play, and they needed every bit of resolve to keep the challengers at bay. It’s why they prevailed despite shooting much worse than their opponents; they had 16 offensive rebounds and came up with a stout defensive effort that likewise produced 10 steals and induced 15 turnovers.

A glance at the box score would seem to indicate the Raptors’ tendency to rely on Leonard too much for points. It’s a legitimate observation. They run complex offensive sets, but, once stifled, are often content to just dump the ball to him in isolation. And, yesterday, it’s to his credit that he delivered in the crunch despite his shooting travails and notwithstanding the increased attention given him by the Sixers. That he sank six of nine shots in the payoff period was no coincidence. That his teammates gladly did the dirty work to claim possession and allow him to operate more freely was likewise no coincidence.

Moving ahead, the Raptors will need to stay the course if they are to have a chance against the powerhouse Bucks. They don’t have the luxury of depth, but for as long as they keep plodding on and sacrificing their bodies for the greater good, they‘ll remain competitive. In this regard, the likes of Kyle Lowry and Marc Gasol set perfect examples on the importance of putting collective interests above personal gain. The two posted numbers against the Sixers that were pedestrian at best, but proved indispensable to the cause all the same; both were active, especially against Embiid, in the dying minutes yesterday, setting the stage for the favorable denouement.

Once the outcome of Game Seven was clear, Leonard could not help but let out a sustained shout of success. In the middle of the scrum that enveloped him after his series winner, he was a picture of pronounced confidence. The contrast to the workmanlike demeanor he had hitherto cultivated was stark. Prospectively, it is also crucial to the Raptors’ sustained success. Leadership is earned; he has earned it. Leadership is owned; he is owning it.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is the Senior Vice-President and General Manager of Basic Energy Corp.

Duterte bets dominate Top 12

By Vann Marlo M. Villegas, Reporter

AN unofficial count as of Monday early evening showed candidates of President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s administration dominating the top 12 slots of the senatorial race, led by reelectionist Senator Cynthia A. Villar.

Based on partial and unofficial election returns by the Commission on Elections, as posted at the headquarters of the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting (PPCRV) and also by the media, the top 12 candidates in the count are:

1. Cynthia A. Villar

2. Grace Poe-Llamanzares

3. Christopher “Bong” T. Go

4. Pilar Julianna “Pia” S. Cayetano

5. Ronald “Bato” M. Dela Rosa

6. Juan Edgardo “Sonny” M. Angara

7. Maria Imelda Josefa “Imee” R. Marcos

8. Manuel “Lito” M. Lapid

9. Francis N. Tolentino

10. Maria Lourdes “Nancy” S. Binay

11. Ramon “Bong” Revilla, Jr.

12. Joseph Victor “JV” G. Ejercito

The 13th to 18th spots, meanwhile, are occupied by opposition reelectionist Senator Paolo Benigno “Bam” A. Aquino IV, reelectionist Senator Aquilino Martin “Koko” D. Pimentel III, former senators Jinggoy E. Estrada, Manuel “Mar” A. Roxas, and Sergio “Serge” D. Osmeña III, and first-time senatorial candidate Willie “Doc Willie” T. Ong.

Ms. Villar led the senatorial race as of 6:05 p.m. with 93,660 votes followed by Ms. Poe with 83,258 votes. The count is based on 330 out of 85,769 clustered precincts.

Among the Top 12, only three candidates were not endorsed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte: Mses. Poe and Binay, and Mr. Lapid.

VOTE-BUYING
“Massive” vote-buying as well as malfunctioning vote-counting machines (VCMs) were among the drawbacks reported by the Philippine National Police (PNP) and election watchdog Namfrel, as voters trooped to the polls for Monday’s midterm elections, three years into President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s term.

The PNP claimed that there are “massive” vote-buying cases after it tallied a total of 120 incidents with 302 violators based on its 1 p.m. update.

“The report here is nakikita natin is ‘yung massive ‘yung vote-buying incidents. ‘Yung reports of vote-buying ay kaliwa’t kanan,” PNP chief Gen. Oscar D. Albayalde said in a noontime press briefing on Monday, May 13. (We see reports of massive vote-buying incidents. Reports of vote-buying are everywhere).

But the PNP chief also qualified, “Although some of the reports ay hindi (are not) confirmed and are not actually true. Dahil yung iba nga, ‘yung mga supporters, makita lang na magrupo-grupo ‘yung mga tao du’n ire-report na nila as vote-buying.” (Because in some cases, supporters will spot people gathering and will report this as vote-buying).

Mr. Duterte himself, asked by reporters after voting in Davao City on Monday afternoon, said, “I have yet to receive (reports about) more than just the ordinary vote-buying.”

Mr. Albayalde also reported that election violence is thus far lower compared with 106 recorded in 2016 and 94 in 2013.

As of noontime Monday, PNP reported 43 incidents of election violence with 20 casualties, 24 individuals injured, and 29 unharmed.

The National Citizen’s Movement for Free Elections (NAMFREL) also reported “rampant” vote-buying on Monday.

“Talamak nga din ‘yung vote-buying. May vote-buying reported incidents in Cagayan de Oro, inconclusive pa, kasi patago ‘yang mga yan. Sa Pasay kanina may sample ballots. Du’n sa report mukhang nakalakip ‘yung pera sa sample ballot,” National Council member Lito Averia of NAMFREL told reporters early Monday afternoon. (Vote-buying is rampant. There are reported vote-buying incidents in Cagayan de Oro, but still inconclusive, because these are done surreptitiously. In Pasay [city], earlier, there were sample ballots distributed, which according to reports contained money).

For its part, election watchdog PPCRV said as of Monday afternoon it has received “(n)othing alarming so far” from its monitoring of Monday’s elections.

“The reports that we’ve been receiving so far are VCMs that are malfunctioning, and people not being able to find their names in the master list. For the VCMs not functioning, it’s the (Electoral Board) whose taking care of that…. Basically those are reports on the ground that we have been receiving so far,” PPCRV Media Director Agnes Gervacio told reporters.

“All of our reports are really just, ‘I cannot find my name or VCMs are not working and were waiting here,’ the usual problems that we encounter. Nothing alarming so far,” she added.

On vote-buying, Ms. Gervacio said in part, “From our side, I don’t think we’ve received a lot of reports from our volunteers.”

PPCRV Executive Director Maribel Buenaobra, for her part, said the 400 to 600 malfunctioning VCMs reported by the Commission on Elections (Comelec) is “not alarming,” as this number is “just about less than 1%” of around 85,000 machines.

Former vice-president Jejomar C. Binay himself had complained to the Comelec on Monday morning after his ballot was rejected by the VCM at the Makati polling place where he was registered. Mr. Binay was able to cast his vote again after he was provided a “replacement ballot.”

BLASTS
In Mindanao, authorities reported Election Day to be generally peaceful, with reported incidents mainly concerning malfunctioning VCMs as in other parts of the country.

But two separate blasts were reported in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), although no casualties were reported yet from either incident.

The explosions, which took place early morning before the opening of voting precincts, were in Barangay RH10 in Cotabato City and in the town of Datu Odin Sinsuat in Maguindanao, according to the Philippine Army’s 6th Infantry Division (6ID).

Both occurred in open areas, but the one in Cotabato City was near the People’s Palace.

“No one was hurt during the two separate explosions,” Major Arvin Encinas, 6ID spokesperson of the Philippine Army 6ID, said. “The military sees this as an attempt to disrupt the election. This only aims to scare the citizens for them not to proceed to their precincts.”

“Aside from these two incidents, we can say that the elections in our area of responsibility are generally peaceful,” said Mr. Encinas.

In the Davao Region, Police Regional Director Brig. Gen. Marcelo C. Morales said 110 VCMs, mostly in Talaingod, Davao del Norte, out of 3,771 were reported to have malfunctioned.

For his part, Col. Ferlu M. Silvio, head of Davao del Norte’s provincial police, said he has ordered the monitoring of vehicles being used for vote-buying. “Vans are mobile and we have yet to accost and catch them in the act,” he said.

Davao del Norte is considered a hotspot due to the political rivalry between 2nd District Rep. Antonio R. Floirendo Jr. of the Hugpong ng Pagbabago (HnP) and 1st District Rep. Pantaleon D. Alvarez of the Partido ng Demokratikong Pilipino-Laban (PDP-Laban).

Mr. Floirendo, whom Malacañang anticipates to be the next speaker of the House of Representatives, is seeking reelection against Alan R. Dujali of PDP-Laban, while Mr. Alvarez is also seeking reelection against Mr. Floirendo’s cousin, Gov. Antonio Rafael R. del Rosario.

In the Northern Mindanao Region, Police Region 10 Office reported more than P1 million seized and at least 16 persons arrested, as well as eight cases filed on alleged vote-buying. — with reports by Vince Angelo C. Ferreras, Charmaine A. Tadalan, Maya M. Padillo, Tajallih S. Basman, and Carmelito Q. Francisco.

Gasoline, kerosene prices drop for 2nd week

FOR THE second straight week, oil companies are cutting the prices of their gasoline products to reflect the movement of prices in the international market. For most of the firms, the reduction is P1.25 per liter (/L) for gasoline and P0.30/L for kerosene. No price change was reported for diesel products. The cut in pump prices is to take place at 6:00 a.m. today, May 14. But for Phoenix Petroleum Philippines, Inc., the decrease in gasoline prices was set earlier, at noon of Saturday, May 11. The reduction was also bigger at P1.30/L. In its price advisory, the company said the move was meant “to provide the public a longer period to avail of cheaper fuels.” Generally, oil companies follow the same schedule of price adjustment and almost always implement the same price changes. Last week, they cut the per liter prices of gasoline, diesel and kerosene products by P0.90, P0.80 and P0.80, respectively. — Victor V. Saulon

Snapshots: 2019 national and local elections

Early birds

PHILSTAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

Teachers serving as Board of Election Inspectors (BEI) and poll watchers start their day early as they prepare for the influx of voters at the Araullo High School in Manila.

Monitoring

WESTMINCOM

Military and police officers man the monitoring center at the Western Mindanao Command (WestMinCom) Operations Building in Zamboanga City. The team, which gathers reports from the ground on the voting process and election-related incidents, is tasked to issue hourly updates.

No to vote-buying

PRO-CARAGA

Police officers distribute leaflets to voters at the Butuan Central Elementary School on the Philippine National Police’s anti-vote buying campaign dubbed ASIN (Ang Suhol Iwaksi Natin)-ILAW (Itaguyod Ligal at Wasto).

Hot election day

TACLOBAN CIO

Voters from Barangay 106 Sto. Niño and Barangay 101 New Kawayan in Tacloban City carry umbrellas or cover their heads with small towels as they line up under the sun to cast their ballots. The temperature in the city on Monday reached a high of 33°C with heat index up to 40°C.

Slow-moving

BW/LEAN S. DAVAL, JR.

With the slow-moving casting of ballots, voters form a long queue outside the polling stations at Daniel R. Aguinaldo National High School in Davao City.

Nation at a Glance — (05/14/19)

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

Nation at a Glance — (05/14/19)

‘What is your opinion of your President?’

The Myanmar Colonel was smiling as he asked me this publicly — it was an earnest question. Majority of the Myanmar Tatmadaw (military and police) present in the gathering are supporters of President Duterte, or at least they approve of what he’s doing as regards peace and order. I answered, “I didn’t vote for him, but he was voted by our people. So, he is my President.” The subtext of my answer is that democracy, imperfect as it is, is still my chosen political system for the Philippines. The officers nodded approvingly, including the Major General in front. Myanmar is in its beginning journey towards democratization; they look at the Philippines for lessons.

Monday’s midterm election seals the fate of the remaining three years of the Duterte administration. As of this writing, the election result is not known yet, but the outcome, whichever it goes, is generally predictable: a Senate dominated by pro-administration members means that charter change and a shift to Federalism would be an inevitable reality by the end of this year. Likewise, the major programs of the government will continue – the war on drugs, the foreign policy that seemingly favors China, martial law in Mindanao, the Bangsamoro peace process, the Build-Build-Build infrastructure program. A divided Senate, or at least a Senate with 9 or 10 opposition members, is expected to stop or delay the charter change train, as well as to pose a critical challenge to the major programs of the government.

The mid-term national election, as has been in the past, is really a test on how much the electorate approves or rejects the programs of the current administration. During the administration of President Arroyo, majority of the pro-administration Senate candidates failed to get the nod of the electorate in 2007, making the Senate dominated by the opposition. Note that the term of office of President Arroyo (2004-2010) was saddled with legitimacy issues due to the “Hello Garci” scandal that alleged massive cheating in the 2004 presidential elections. On the other hand, the winning streak of the pro-administration Senate candidates in 2013, during the administration of President Benigno Aquino III, signals approval for his administration.

The 2019 midterm election under President Duterte has been one of the most divisive elections of late. Of course, past elections also divide communities and families, but not in the same toxic and hurtful environment as what was created under the current administration. Lines have been drawn, not just based on support or rejection of government programs and personalities, but significantly, lines are drawn based on religious values and principles. The President himself knowingly created this situation — since assuming office, he has launched a consistent attack on the leaders of the Catholic Church, its laity, its doctrines and values. He has forced a situation where people will choose between their support for him or their support for the Church. This apparently is deliberate — the Church has always been a major player in shaping the direction of the country. From the 1986 People Power, the 2001 People Power 2, and on issues of charter change, death penalty, and divorce, the Church has always flexed its muscle, asserting that these issues stand irreconcilable with the morality, values and doctrines of the Catholic faith. Consistently, the church has proven to be a major force to reckon with. Given the clear divergence between the position of the Church, especially on the flagship “war on drugs” program of the administration, a stand-off is inevitable. The mid-term election is the stage. The interesting part is that while the Catholic Church has and can pull its weight on certain issues, there has never been a Catholic vote. Its members seemingly follow their own choices when it comes to politics, regardless of what the Church leadership has to say. This perhaps is what the President is banking on — knowing that the Catholic vote has never been proven, his consistent attack on the Church — its leaders and values — was meant to further wedge a divide between the “church” and “state” domains. In doing so, however, he has made the conflict personal.

Conflict and disagreements based on resources and programs are easier to resolve because they mainly operate in the realm of ideas — and ideas can be tested, resources can be allocated and divided, and conflicts can find compromises. However, once disagreements enter the realm of values and principles, it rips through the core of one’s identity and reason for being. Unlike resources and programs, values are a zero-sum game — either you embrace the value, or you reject it. The conflict becomes personal. And personal conflicts are the most hurtful kind.

This is the subtext of the entire campaign season. The outcome will demonstrate whether the strong participation of Church leaders — not since been observed since the campaign of Cory Aquino in the 1986 snap elections — has affected the voting preference of its members. But more importantly, the midterm election has wedged a divide between families, friends, colleagues, communities — a divide that will affect relations long after the elections are over.

Indeed, it is expected that not everyone will be happy with the election results. Protests will be filed, accusations exchanged. But as a democracy, it is imperative that we respect the results of the exercise, provided of course that the election was clean and honest. Imperfect as it is, this is our democracy journey.

And hence, the same question, with slight modification, remains: what is your opinion of your elections?

 

Jennifer Santiago Oreta is an Assistant Professor of the Ateneo de Manila University Department of Political Science, and Director of the Ateneo Initiative for Southeast Asian Studies.

Myth: a religious sect’s endorsement assures election

On April 30, I wrote in this space that a religious sect endorses only the candidates who the polls show to be likely winners. By so doing, it sustains the myth that its endorsement assures victory.

Four days later, Mike Velarde, leader of the Catholic charismatic group El Shaddai, endorsed the candidacies of 14 senatorial candidates. Except for Sen. Bam Aquino and Dr. Willie Ong, all the Velarde-endorsed senatorial candidates were projected by Pulse Asia’s surveys to be the 12 winning senatorial candidates. One cannot but conclude that the choice of candidates was based on the results of surveys as the stands of many of the candidates are inconsistent with Catholic doctrines.

The Catholic Church waged a vigorous and relentless campaign against the passage of the Reproductive Health bill into law. Yet, among the candidates endorsed by El Shaddai leader Velarde was the champion of the RH bill in the Senate. The Church condemns the extra-judicial killings of drug traders and users, yet among those preferred by the Catholic group’s head was the former field commander of the forces behind the EJK. The Church is against the death penalty, yet two El Shaddai-backed candidates want the death penalty imposed again.

The Catholic bishops exhorted their faithful not to vote for those who have been accused of plunder. Velarde endorsed two former senators accused of that crime, while another belongs to a family notorious for political persecution and massive graft and corruption.

Friends told me I was wrong in calling El Shaddai a religious sect when it is a group within the Catholic Church. But it is not the El Shaddai charismatic group I referred to in my column as the religious sect that endorses only candidates that the polls show to be probable winners, although I consider El Shaddai by its rites, practices, and pronouncements — such as its endorsement of certain candidates referred to above — a religious sect, not a Catholic group.

I was referring in my column to a religious sect, while Christian is not Catholic. In fact, its disdain for Catholic beliefs, rites, and practices has long been manifest.

It is said that the sect’s support has been sought from the time of President Manuel L. Quezon. It is well known that politicians court the goodwill of the executive minister of the religious sect all year round and come election time candidates for national positions ask for his endorsement. That is because its members all vote for the candidates endorsed by the executive minister.

President Ferdinand Marcos nurtured the sect’s influence during his administration into a powerful political force so it could serve as his foil against the Catholic Church which was becoming more critical of him as his rule became more oppressive. He appointed a prominent member of the sect to the Supreme Court. He awarded the contract to supply the large-scale requirements of a major government agency to a company two of whose incorporators were prominent members of the sect.

It stood by Marcos when the people’s call for his ouster got louder and louder. It directed its members to vote for Marcos in the Snap Election of 1986. When the people roundly repudiated Marcos, the sect’s position of influence became tenuous. In the 1992 presidential election it endorsed Eduardo Cojuangco Jr. Once again, its presidential bet was soundly beaten, its political influence diminished markedly.

The sect learned its bitter lesson. Never again would it gamble on a candidate who has not been projected by the polls as the eventual winner. Thus, in 1998 it endorsed Joseph Estrada for president months before the elections. This in spite of the fact that Estrada’s private life is the antithesis to the teachings of the religious sect. Adulterous relationships, gambling of any kind, and excessive drinking are prohibited by the sect. Members found guilty of transgression of those rules are either suspended or expelled.

Estrada has been known to have sired children with several women. He frequented the casinos. His drinking sprees with his close friends were said to be nocturnal occurrences. But the sect endorsed Estrada just the same because the Social Weather Stations (Pulse Asia was not yet in existence then) consistently projected Estrada as the overwhelming preference of the voters.

In 2004 it delayed its endorsement of Gloria Arroyo until the last week of the campaign period when she emerged as being ahead of Fernando Poe, Jr, the rumored preference of the sect, by a wide margin. In 2010, it switched from Senator Manuel Villar to Senator Noynoy Aquino five days before Election Day, when Aquino had dislodged Villar from the top rank of the polls as Election Day neared.

After a long wait for its endorsement, it finally announced last Friday which 12 senatorial candidates it is endorsing. Nine of them are in the senatorial slate Davao City mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio’s Hugpong ng Pagbabago (HNP), two from the Nationalist People’s Coalition, and one independent. It did not endorse any candidate from the “Otso Diretso” ticket nor the other son of Estrada. All those endorsed by the sect are among those who occupied the top 12 spots in the surveys conducted by Pulse Asia this year.

It appears that that is how it chooses the candidate it will ask its faithful to vote for. It chooses a candidate not on the basis of any moral or political standard but on who the polls show to be the most likely winner. That is why it has given the less discerning traditional politicians the impression that its bloc vote is the deciding factor in the success of a candidate’s quest for an elective position.

I say, therefore, the sect’s endorsement as the deciding factor is only a myth created by the sect itself. The candidates it endorsed in recent elections would have won just the same, with or without its endorsement, as they are really the people’s choice as the surveys projected.

That is why I say political surveys have become dysfunctional as they are used by politicians to create a bandwagon effect. In the early years of election surveys in the Philippines, results of surveys were released to the public only after the polling places had closed, preventing the creation of a bandwagon effect. That is how it should be. But it is folly to expect the survey companies to stop their practice of releasing to the public the results of their election surveys. Their election forecasts promote their wares and their organizations, thus generating revenue for them.

 

Oscar P. Lagman, Jr. is a member of Manindigan! a cause-oriented group of businessmen, professionals, and academics.

oplagman@yahoo.com

120 years of the Spanish Chamber of Commerce

Last week, the Spanish Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines celebrated its 120th anniversary. La Camara, as the organization is fondly called, predates all other business groups in the country including the Filipino-Chinese Chamber of Commerce, the American Chamber of Commerce and even the Rotary Club. It was the first Spanish chamber to be established in Asia.

La Camara was founded in 1898 and was originally called the Manila Chamber of Commerce. It was set up to preserve the interest of Spanish enterprises following the release of the country from the colonial administration of Spain. It will be recalled that Spanish-owned companies controlled the most important industries of the era including public utilities, shipping, food and beverage manufacturing, the tobacco trade and the sugar trade. It was vital not to disrupt these industries so as not to destabilize the economy.

In 1989, the name of the organization was changed to the Spanish Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines and was housed in Casa España in the financial district of Binondo. Early records dated 1917 show that La Camara’s members were composed of the business elite of the time. Among them were Luis Llanso who was President, Santiago Elizalde, Juan Camahort and Anicieto Ruiz.

From its founding up to the Pacific War, La Camara was noted for its quarterly bulletin called El Boletin Oficial. It was among the few publications that provided in-depth analysis of the economy and of various industries, opinions on public policy and recommendations on how to improve the country’s business climate. Back then, La Camara had a strong sway over commercial legislation and public policy. It could be said that La Camara played an important role in the Philippines’ ascent towards becoming the second most advanced economy in Asia from the ’30s to the ’60s.

The second world war interrupted La Camara’s operations and the organization remained virtually inactive during the Japanese occupation. After the Philippines gained its independence in 1946, however, La Camara was reincorporated upon the initiative of Tabacalera & Co., Ayala Corporation, Elizalde y Cia, Roxas y Cia., San Miguel Corporation and Philippine Airlines, which was then controlled by Andres Soriano.

In October 1951, President Elpidio Quirino visited Spain to mark the reestablishment of Filipino-Spanish diplomatic relations. The Philippine Chief Executive was welcomed by the Spanish government with full diplomatic honors and regale. The fact that the Philippine economy was growing at double digit rates following the war reconstruction efforts and that companies of Spanish origin were predominant in the business scene bolstered Quirino’s profile and that of the Philippines. It was a proud moment for the country.

From the ’50s to ’90s, El Boletin Oficial continued but with decreasing gravitas. Publication eventually ceased in 1998. Since then, La Camara’s efforts have been focused on developing commercial relations between the Philippines and Spain, forwarding the interest of companies of Spanish origin, data banking and paving the way for Spanish investors into the Philippines.

While La Camara has kept a relatively low profile in the last few years, its importance in the business scene cannot be denied. Its members are still among the elite of the business community, albeit now considered Filipino (although still of Spanish origin). Among them are Aboitiz Equity Ventures, the Ayala Group, Roxaco and Elro Corporation of the Elizaldes, Tabacalera de Filipinas, Rayomar, Fundador, the MFT Group, DM Wenceslao and Associates, Solid Cement and Lhuillier & Co., among many others.

These days, the real contribution of La Camara to the country lies in facilitating the entry Spanish investors. The number of Spanish companies operating in the Philippines is on an all-time high and they include technology behemoths Indra and Amadeus; energy giant Gamesa Eolica; engineering firms Acciona, Inclam S.A, and Alsina; financial services providers Mapfre Insular and Ibero Asistencia; healthcare provider Sanitas S.A.. The influx of Spanish companies is due to the many opportunities brought about by governments Build Build Build program, a growing middle class and vibrant consumer demand.

CURIOUS FACTS
Those born before 1975 will still remember how our American textbooks vilified everything of Spanish origin and romanticize everything that is American. I was one of them. Now I recognize that it was all part of an insidious campaign to Americanize the Filipino people.

This is why most Filipinos belonging to older generations still associate Spain with the abuses of the friars, plundering of our natural resources and perpetuating an inefficient governmental system where the church and state were one and the same. We were made to resent the Spanish way of life and scoffed at such traditions as the afternoon siesta and monthly religious fiestas.

Meanwhile, the American way of life was romanticized. Through the Hollywood propaganda machine, glamour and the hedonistic lifestyle were made sexy while chastity and piousness were made out-of-date. From singing Ave Maria, the Filipinos were made to boogie to the tunes of Glen Miller. Worse, we were made fans of all products of American origin

We know better now and recognize how the United States has indoctrinated the Filipino to forward its own agenda. While the allegations of Spanish abuses may be true in isolated cases, it does not tell the full story. What the American never told us was that Spain actually set us up to be a modern republic.

Unbeknownst to many, it was Spain that unified the archipelago from one composed of several fiefdoms into a united country, duly governed by a central government. It introduced civil, criminal, administrative, labor and corporate laws based on the roman template. It established the country’s financial system including the use of notes, taxes and the banking system. It built roads, bridges, city gates, water reservoirs and sewer systems to enable local societies to thrive. It established the country’s educational system and the first university.

All these were colonial contributions that the Americans conveniently relegated as a mere footnote in our history.

Lesser spoken of is the fact that as early as the 15th century, the Philippines would have been a Japanese colony if not for Spanish intervention.

Records show that in the year 1573, the Japanese were already trading gold and silver with the inhabitants of Pangasinan, Cagayan and Manila. In 1580, the leader of the Japanese flotilla forced the natives of Cagayan to give Japan their fidelity and submission. They used violence through iron weapons to coerce the natives into submission. The Japanese established a stronghold in Cagayan and embarked on a series of bloody raids of surrounding territories within the island of Luzon. Slowly but surely, the Japanese were taking political control of the island.

The Spanish governor-general at the time was Gonzalo Ronquillo Peñalosa. With permission from King Philip II, the Spanish navy, led by Juan Pablo de Carrion was ordered to launch an attack against the Japanese forces, first in the West Philippine Sea and then in the Cagayan River. Forty Spaniards in five vessels battled close to 400 Japanese troops led by Tay Fusa, a Japanese feudal lord, who came with 19 ships. Despite the overwhelming number of Japanese, their katanas and muskets proved no match to Spanish cannons.

The Japanese attempted to surrender on the condition that they be recompensed with gold fort their losses. Carrion refused and ordered them to leave Luzon. The Japanese waged two separate attacks after that. They were defeated by the Spaniards in both instances.

Luzon was pacified and Japanese looting ceased. To commemorate Spanish-Philippine victory, the city of Nueva Segovia was established in Cagayan. Today, it is known as Lal-lo in the Cagayan Administrative Region.

Persistent, Japanese chieftain Toyotomi Hideyoshi demanded on several occasions in 1590 that the people of Philippines surrender to the Japanese flag. Their efforts were blunted by the Spaniards on each occasion. The Japanese ceased from invading Philippine territories as the Spaniards were faithful in protecting the Philippines.

Another fact not mentioned in American textbooks is that the Philippines would have been a full Muslim nation if not for Spanish intervention.

Islam first came to Southeast Asia by way of Muslim traders from the Middle East, Turkey and Armenia in the 9th century. By the 12th century, the Sufi order waged a massive conversion campaign of Southeast Asia beginning with Northern Sumatra and Melecca. Eventually, both cities became the nerve center of the Muslim movement.

By the year 1380, the Muslim movement spread to the Philippines via Brunei and Borneo, first in the island of Sulu, and then in southwestern Mindanao. The conversion of the Visayas and parts of Luzon was gaining momentum if not quelled by the Spaniards who perpetuated Christianity.

As we celebrate La Camara’s 120th year, of which I am a proud member, I hope we could all objectively appreciate what Spain has contributed to the Philippines.

The future is bright for both nations. If the projections of Pricewaterhouse Coopers, Goldman Sachs and HSBC are to be believed, the Philippines is poised to be the 19th largest economy in the world by the year 2050 and Spain the 26th (the 5th largest in the EU). It serves our best interest to cooperate, collaborate and conspire for mutual benefit. After all, that is what close friends do.

 

Andrew J. Masigan is an economist