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Citicore eyes higher capex to support projects

CITICORE

RENEWABLE ENERGY developer Citicore Renewable Energy Corp. (CREC) is expecting a higher capital expenditure (capex) budget for this year as it works towards its five-gigawatt (GW) project roadmap, its president said.

“Most likely higher,” CREC President and Chief Executive Officer Oliver Y. Tan told reporters last week when asked about this year’s capex.

For 2024, CREC allotted a capex of around P35 billion, primarily for renewable energy projects.

Mr. Tan said the company is working on the first GW worth of energy projects targeted to come online this year, which are mostly under the government’s second green energy auction held in 2023.

“We have four solar projects in Tuy, Batangas, one in Arayat, two in Pangasinan, and two in Pagbilao that will come online within the year,” Mr. Tan said.

The company is targeting to energize projects with a capacity of 200 megawatts (MW) by April and 800 MW by August, he said.

With the development, CREC sees ending the year with almost 1.2 GW of capacity, contributing to its goal of reaching 5 GW of capacity by 2028.

“We’re rolling out the second GW pipeline this year,” Mr. Tan said.

Meanwhile, CREC said in a regulatory filing on Monday that the company and Indonesian state-owned PT Pertamina Power Indonesia (Pertamina NRE) are targeting to implement their P6.7-billion investment deal by the first quarter of 2025.

“The subscription is targeted to be implemented by the 1st quarter of 2025,” CREC said.

Earlier this year, CREC announced that its board of directors approved Pertamina NRE’s subscription to a 20% interest or 2.23 billion common shares of CREC, at P3 per share, raising an estimated value of P6.7 billion.

The partnership marks Pertamina NRE’s first investment in the Philippines, according to CREC.

Proceeds from the deal will contribute to the development of CREC’s pipeline of renewable energy projects nationwide in line with its energy goal.

CREC, directly and through its subsidiaries and joint ventures, manages a diversified portfolio of renewable energy generation projects, power project development operations, and retail electricity supply services.

At present, the company has a combined gross installed capacity of 285 MW from its solar facilities in the Philippines. 

On Monday, shares in the company fell 2% to close at P3.43 apiece. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

Pru Life UK partners with Al-Amanah to promote Islamic finance

PRU LIFE Insurance Corp. of UK Philippines (Pru Life UK) has partnered with Al-Amanah Islamic Investment Bank of the Philippines (AAIIBP) to promote Islamic finance.

The partnership aims to “promote Islamic finance and takaful through financial education and capacity-building initiatives and help expand reach of financial inclusion to more Filipino communities, primarily in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao,” Pru Life UK said in a statement on Monday.

“This collaboration between Pru Life UK and AAIIBP is a promising step towards a more inclusive and financially resilient Philippines,” it said.

The life insurer last year secured its takaful window operator license from the Insurance Commission (IC). It previously said it aims to launch its first takaful insurance product within this quarter.

Takaful is a type of Islamic insurance where members contribute a certain sum of money to a common pool. Takaful insurance needs to be compliant with Shari’ah law, which prohibits riba (interest), al-maisir (gambling), and al-gharar (uncertainty) principles.

“Pru Life UK’s Takaful journey is driven by our commitment to social inclusion, aiming to provide financial protection to more Filipino families. We are excited to collaborate with AAIIBP on financial education and capacity-building to help address the need to fill in the gap in financial education especially for Muslim communities,” Pru Life UK Chief Legal, Government Relations and Sustainability Paul Mandal said.

“As the country’s first Islamic bank, AAIIBP is committed to advancing financial inclusion through Shariah-compliant solutions. The partnership with Pru Life UK on financial education and capacity building is a significant milestone in our efforts to uplift Muslim communities and empower them to become key contributors to the nation’s progress. We are eager to witness the positive impact this collaboration will bring,” AAIIBP Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Amilbahar Amilasan, Jr. said.

Pru Life UK booked a premium income of P46.19 billion and a net income of P4.36 billion in 2023, IC data showed.

Meanwhile, AIIBP posted a net loss of P81.44 million in 2023, narrowing from the P86.448-billion loss in 2022, its financial statement showed. — AMCS

Entertainment News (01/21/25)


Renée Zellweger returns for Bridget Jones 4

ROMANTIC comedy franchise Bridget Jones Diary is back with another heartfelt chapter, Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy. Renée Zellweger reprises her role as the titular lead who tries to rekindle the spark in her life after the death of her husband Mark Darcy, played by Colin Firth. Now a single mother to two children, her loved ones encourage her to pursue a new path into life and love, often with hilarious results. The film opens in Philippine cinemas on Feb. 12.


Sunshine official entry to Berlin Film Fest

Sunshine, the latest film by Antoinette Jadaone starring Maris Racal, has been chosen as an Official Selection at this year’s Berlin International Film Festival under the Generation 14plus Program. The 75th edition of the festival takes place from Feb. 13 to 23.


Ronan Keating headlines Valentine’s concert

THIS February, the Irish singer-songwriter and global heartthrob Ronan Keating will make hearts swoon with a special Valentine’s concert at the Newport Performing Arts Theater. He will serenade fans in the one-night only concert on Feb. 13, 8 p.m. Prices range from P4,000 to P20,000.


Surge Fitness + Lifestyle offers wellness packages

AT premium club Surge Fitness + Lifestyle, clients are invited to refocus and welcome the new year with revitalized fitness objectives. Themed “RESET,” the club is offering wellness packages this January. These include Surge JR for kids, yoga and mindfulness sessions, nutrition plans, recovery rooms, and even a golf simulator, pickleball court, basketball court, bowling lanes, and billiards for leisure and sport enthusiasts. Exclusive member events are Cheatday Friday, Family Sunday, and the newly launched Sports Saturday (happening every 2nd and 4th Saturday of the month) where the club community comes together for fun, food, and inspiration. For more updates and news, follow Surge Fitness + Lifestyle’s social media pages.


Stories of the Heart for Valentine’s Day

THIS Valentine’s season, Newport World Resorts is staging Stories of the Heart, a concert that brings together three original Pilipino music (OPM) icons: Erik Santos, Christian Bautista, and Yeng Constantino performing a romantic soundtrack to life. For the first time, these three will join forces to headline the two-night show on Feb. 14 and 15, 8 p.m., at the Newport Performing Arts Theater. Ticket prices range from P2,300 to P9,500.


Marvel, Disney bring Daredevil: Born Again

COMIC book characters Matt Murdock and Wilson Fisk will face off once again in Marvel Television’s all-new series, Daredevil: Born Again. In it, Charlie Cox reprises his role as Matt Murdock, a blind lawyer with heightened abilities, as he fights for justice through his law firm, while Vincent D’Onofrio plays former mob boss Wilson Fisk who pursues his own political endeavors in New York. When their past identities begin to emerge, both men find themselves on an inevitable collision course. It premieres on Disney+ on March 5.


Kaloy Tingcungco releases debut single

GMA Sparkle artist Kaloy Tingcungco has released his first single, “Infatuation,” a song that explores the complexities of emotions and relationships. The debut single was a collaboration with GMA Playlist, which helped Tingcungco bring this passion project to life.


K-pop concert  in Manila

The K-pop concert IAM K-POP will be bringing some of Filipinos’ favorite South Korean artists to the Smart Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City on March 29. Among the K-pop acts that have been revealed to be part of the concert thus far are boy groups RIIZE and HORI7ON and pop stars IRENE and Seulgi from Red Velvet. More details will be announced soon.

How PSEi member stocks performed — January 20, 2025

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, January 20, 2025.


Philippines worsens in military strength list

The Philippines fell seven notches to place 41st out of 145 countries in the latest edition of the Military Strength Ranking by Global Firepower (GFP) with a PowerIndex score of 0.6987. The ranking utilizes over 60 individual factors to determine a nation’s PowerIndex (PwrIndx), covering war-making capability across land, sea, and air fought by conventional means.* The smaller the PwrIndx value, the more powerful a nation’s perceived fighting capability is.

Philippines worsens in military strength list

Manila says it will keep challenging China’s ‘illegal patrols’ in own EEZ

CHINA COAST GUARD VESSEL 5901, nicknamed the “monster ship,” off the coast of Capones Island, Zambales on Jan. 4, 2025. — PHILIPPINE COAST GUARD

THE Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) on Monday said it would continue to confront illegal patrols in the South China Sea as it tries to prevent China from “normalizing such unlawful actions.”

“If we fail to challenge this, China will succeed in establishing a precedent for its maritime forces’ illegal patrols in the future,” it said in a statement.

It added that the deployment of white hull vessels in the face of China’s incursions into its waters signals its intent to manage tensions peacefully.

The Philippine Coast Guard said the use of its assets amid the presence of Chinese vessels including China’s “monster ship” within Manila’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) in the South China Sea “aims not to provoke China, but to resolve differences through rational discussion and adherence to international law.”

“It is also important to highlight that the deployment of our white hull vessels to address China’s unlawful presence demonstrates the government’s intent to deescalate tensions and pursue a peaceful resolution to these violations of international law,” it added.

The Philippines last week accused China of intimidating Filipino fishermen near Scarborough Shoal and normalizing its “illegal presence” after Beijing sent its biggest coast guard ship into the Philippine EEZ.

China Coast Guard (CCG)-5901 was about 175.94 kilometers from the coast of Zambales province as of 9 p.m. on Sunday.

The monster ship, first spotted within the Philippine EEZ on Jan. 4, “moved further away” from the PCG vessel Gabriela Silang, the agency said in a statement on Sunday night. It said another Chinese vessel, CCG-3304, approached the coast of Zambales at 120.38 kilometers.

“Although the monster ship has departed, it is important to note that CCG-3304, its replacement, remains larger than the largest PCG vessel,” the Philippine side said, referring to the 97-meter muti-role response vessel BRP Teresa Magbanua.

CCG-3304 is 111 meters long and 46 meters wide, it said.

It said the 83-meter French-built BRP Gabriela Silang “continues to diligently fulfill its patriotic mission of challenging the unlawful presence of the Chinese Coast Guard.”

The Philippine Coast Guard said it must confront illegal patrols “as it prevents China from normalizing such unlawful actions.” “If we fail to challenge this, China will succeed in establishing a precedent for its maritime forces’ illegal patrols in the future.”

“Therefore, no matter how long it takes, the PCG vessels will always be present to prevent China from changing the status quo,” it added.

The PCG said China’s “disregard of international law” is a matter of concern not only for the Philippine government but for the entire region and the international community.

“If the People’s Republic of China feels emboldened to ignore UNCLOS (United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea) and unlawfully patrol the EEZ of other states, what will stop it from doing the same to additional countries?” it asked.

“While some may argue they are prepared to defend their rights, isn’t that precisely what we are trying to prevent?” it added.

“A world increasingly dominated by rising tensions among sovereign nations is not what we desire. This is why international law has been established — to ensure equality and uphold the sovereignty of all nations.”

A United Nations-backed tribunal in 2016 voided China’s expansive claims in the South China Sea, as it ruled Scarborough Shoal, which Beijing has controlled since 2012, is a traditional fishing ground for Filipino, Chinese and Vietnamese fishermen.

The shoal, which Manila calls Bajo de Masinloc, is 241 kilometers off Zambales and is within the Philippines’ 200-nautical mile EEZ. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Marcos says Duterte lied about blank budget items

PRESIDENT FERDINAND R. MARCOS, JR. — PHILIPPINE STAR/NOEL PABALATE

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on Monday called out his predecessor for “lying” after claiming that the 2025 General Appropriations Act (GAA) is invalid for having blank items.

“He’s lying,” he said. “He was a president. He knows that you cannot pass a GAA with blanks,” he told reporters on the sidelines of an event in Taguig City, referring to former President Rodrigo R. Duterte. “And he’s lying because he knows perfectly well that that doesn’t ever happen.”

Mr. Duterte and Davao City Rep. Isidro T. Ungab at the weekend said in an online program that the 2025 national budget is “invalid.” The congressman accused his colleagues of approving a spending plan that included “blanks.”

Mr. Ungab said the bicameral conference committee report approved by the Senate and House of Representatives had line items without the amounts. The Executive branch might have filled it out later, he added.’

“In the entire history of the Philippines, the GAA is not allowed to have an item without specifying the project, its cost and funding,” Mr. Marcos said. “So, it’s a lie.”

Mr. Duterte and Mr. Ungab were joined in the program by former Executive Secretary Victor D. Rodriguez and Duterte-era Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board chairman Martin Delgra III.

Malacañang earlier on Monday said Mr. Duterte’s allegations were “malicious.”

“Some quarters, including a former president, have maliciously peddled fake news about President Marcos having signed the GAA of 2025 with certain parts of the enactment purposely left blank to enable the administration to simply fill in the amounts like in a blank check,” Executive Secretary Lucas P. Bersamin said in a statement.

“The peddling of such fake news is outrightly malicious and should be condemned as criminal. No page of the 2025 National Budget was left unturned before the President signed it into law,” he added.

Mr. Bersamin said items in the GAA were “exhaustively reviewed” by hundreds of professional staff from Congress and the Department of Budget and Management.

“This meticulous line-by-line scrutiny is a pre-enactment check performed by dedicated civil servants to ensure that the GAA contained no single discrepancy in the amounts being appropriated,” he added.

Mr. Bersamin said it would be impossible for any funding items to be left blank, “as alleged by misinformed and malicious sources.” “The true facts and the printed figures appearing in the GAA easily debunk the malicious claims of deliberate blanks being left for filling in.”

The Budget department said the allegations were “completely false and reckless.”

“Under the 1987 Constitution, it is the General Appropriations Bill, and not the bicameral report that is officially submitted for the consideration and approval or veto of the President,” it said in a separate statement.

It said the bill, with all its details, was presented to the President. “Once signed, the GAB becomes the Law — the GAA.”

“To reiterate, the bill presented to and signed by the President is a complete document, with no blank pages or missing details. In no case does the Executive issue a GAA with blank pages or figures,” the DBM said.

Mr. Marcos said the public should see the budget for themselves, citing the availability of the GAA on the DBM website.

“Take a look at it. You don’t even need to read the whole document,” he said in Filipino. Just look for the items they claim are blank checks.”

The Executive branch prepares a proposed budget for the next fiscal year. Both chambers of Congress deliberate on the proposed budget, and government agencies must defend their proposed funding.

The budget is then passed separately by the House and Senate. A bicameral conference committee reconciles differences between the two versions.

Mr. Marcos, before the approval of the GAA, said the bicameral committee’s spending version was far from the version the Executive branch submitted to the House of Representatives in July.

The Executive can veto the budget items or the entire bill.

Mr. Marcos on Dec. 30 signed into law the P6.326-trillion national budget for 2025 but vetoed more than P194 billion worth of line items that he said were inconsistent with his administration’s priorities.

Marcos to veto anti-teen pregnancy bill, says it promotes ‘woke mentality’

PRESIDENT FERDINAND R. MARCOS, JR. — PHILIPPINE STAR/NOEL PABALATE

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on Monday vowed to veto a bill that seeks to prevent teen pregnancy through a comprehensive sex education campaign, saying it promotes “woke mentality.”

He noted that while he is in favor of sex education, he was “appalled” by some elements in Senate Bill 1979 or the proposed Prevention of Adolescent Pregnancy Act.

He echoed an allegation by a conservative group led by former Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno that the bill seeks to teach kids how to masturbate, a claim that the bill’s proponent in the Senate has debunked.

Mr. Marcos blamed “woke mentality” that he said the bill’s proponents are “trying to bring into our system.”

“You will teach four-year-olds how to masturbate,” the President said. “That every child has the right to try different sexualities. This is ridiculous. It is abhorrent.”

“It is a travesty of what sexual and sex education should be to the children. If this bill is passed in that form, I guarantee all parents, teachers, and children: I will immediately veto it.”

Ms. Sereno’s Project Dalisay linked the measure’s sex education provision to a technical guidance by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization and World Health Organization for sex education, which tackles masturbation.

“The two international documents are quite candid about its normalization,” the group of the ousted chief justice said in a statement earlier this month.

In response to Mr. Marcos’ remarks, Senator Ana Theresia “Risa” Hontiveros-Baraquel reiterated that nowhere in the bill is childhood masturbation mentioned.

“Mr. President, with all due respect, it’s clear that there is no such word as masturbation in the bill,” she said in a video statement.

She also said the bill does not encourage kids to “try different sexualities.” “Child sex education contains the very same things you support: teaching kids — anatomy and the consequences of early pregnancy.”

“I am willing to accept amendments to refine the bill so we can steer it to passage,” she added.

Ms. Hontiveros has said Project Dalisay’s claims were fake news.

The Senate bill pushes a compulsory comprehensive sex education in schools that is “medically accurate, culturally sensitive, rights-based and inclusive and nondiscriminatory.”

With the passage of the Reproductive Health Act of 2012, sex education has been incorporated into the curriculum of public school students aged 10-19. The Senate bill is yet to be scheduled for floor debates.

The Commission on Population and Development last week flagged the rising incidence of teen pregnancies, particularly those under 15 years old, as it urged the Senate to pass the teenage pregnancy bill.

Pregnancies among minors aged 10 to 14 are at an alarming state “that needs a more responsive policy,” it said in a statement.

Repeat pregnancies also remain an issue, with 38 young girls under 15 having experienced it in 2023, it said. Seventeen women have given birth to five or more babies before they turned 20, it added.

The problem calls for a “comprehensive, age-sensitive sexuality education to address the issue,” Undersecretary Lisa Grace S. Bersales said.

The sex education curriculum will tackle “human sexuality, informed consent, adolescent reproductive health, effective contraceptive use, disease prevention, HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted infections, gender sensitivity, gender equality and equity, teen dating, gender-based violence, sexual abuse and exploitation, peer pressure, women’s and children’s rights and issues like pornography,” according to the Senate bill. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Peso climbs as dollar drops before Trump’s return to White House

BW FILE PHOTO

THE PESO gained against the dollar on Monday as market focus turned to US President-elect Donald J. Trump’s inauguration.

The local unit closed at P58.52 per dollar on Monday, strengthening by 12 centavos from its P58.64 finish on Friday, Bankers Association of the Philippines data showed.

The peso opened Monday’s session stronger at P58.52 against the dollar, which was also its closing level. It climbed to as high as P58.45, while its worst intraday showing was at P58.60 versus the greenback.

Dollars exchanged went down to $1.23 billion on Monday from $1.6 billion on Friday.

The peso-dollar pair mostly moved sideways amid cautious trading ahead of Mr. Trump’s inauguration overnight, a trader said by phone.

The local unit rose as the dollar weakened before Mr. Trump’s inaugural speech, where he was expected to make policy pronouncements, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a Viber message.

On Tuesday, the peso’s performance against the dollar could depend on Mr. Trump’s speech, the trader said. The trader sees the peso moving between P58.40 and P58.70 per dollar, while Mr. Ricafort expects it to range from P58.40 to P58.60.

The US dollar dropped on Monday before Mr. Trump’s inauguration as US president later in the session, with investors focusing on policy announcements that could immediately affect the greenback, Reuters reported.

Trading volume was expected to be thin due to the US markets being closed for the Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday.

Softer US inflation data and the prospect of multiple Federal Reserve rate cuts have recently boosted risk assets.

Investors’ attention was firmly fixed on the policies Mr. Trump will enact on his first day in office. At a rally on Sunday, Mr. Trump said he would impose severe limits on immigration.

The dollar index, which measures the US currency against six peers, was 0.32% lower at 109.08. It hit last week a 26-month high of 110.17.

It has risen 4% since the November presidential election as traders anticipate Mr. Trump’s policies will boost growth and inflation. — A.M.C. Sy with Reuters

Philippine shares slip before Trump inauguration

PHILIPPINE SHARES inched down on Monday in cautious trading before the inauguration of US President-elect Donald J. Trump. 

The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) slipped by 0.03% or 2.23 points to end at 6,349.89 on Monday, while the broader all shares index dropped by 0.02% or 0.87 point to 3,702.86.

“Philippine shares started the week on a flat note… Focus shifts to Monday’s inauguration of Donald Trump, where investors will watch for early policy announcements,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said in a Viber message on Monday.

“The local market edged lower this Monday as investors traded cautiously while waiting for US President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration. Investors in particular are waiting for the incoming president’s policies in his first few days in the office,” Philstocks Financial, Inc. Senior Research Analyst Japhet Louis O. Tantiangco likewise said in a Viber message.

Mr. Trump was set to be inaugurated overnight. He told thousands of roaring supporters he would impose severe limits on immigration on his first day in office, vowing to swiftly fulfill the central promise of his presidential campaign at a rally on Sunday inside a packed Washington arena a day before he returns to power, Reuters reported.

Mr. Trump repeated his campaign pledge to launch the largest deportation effort in US history, which would remove millions of immigrants. An operation of that scale, however, would likely take years and be hugely costly.

Mr. Trump’s rally, along with his inaugural address on Monday, could preview the tone he plans to adopt during his second White House term.

He vowed to repeal “every radical and foolish executive order of the Biden administration” within hours of assuming the presidency.

A source familiar with the planning said Mr. Trump will take more than 200 executive actions on Monday.

Sectoral indices were split on Monday. Property declined by 1.61% or 37.94 points to 2,316.66; services went down by 0.21% or 4.56 points to 2,098.21; and holding firms dropped by 0.08% or 4.56 points to 5,325.11.

Meanwhile, financials rose by 0.78% or 17.07 points to 2,189.45; mining and oil went up by 0.48% or 38.39 points to 7,930.96; and industrials climbed by 0.41% or 37.27 points to 8,972.63.

“Monde Nissin Corp. was the top index gainer, climbing 3.68% to P7.05. ACEN Corp. was the worst index performer, dropping 3.30% to P3.52,” Mr. Tantiangco said.

Value turnover dropped to P3.81 billion on Monday with 1.54 billion shares traded from the P4.93-billion worth of 993.88 million issues that changed hands on Friday.

Decliners outnumbered advancers, 105 versus 98, while 48 names closed unchanged.

Net foreign selling increased to P107.92 million on Monday from P97.37 million on Friday. — R.M.D. Ochave with Reuters

Review of PHL bilateral labor ties sought after OFWs’ death in Kuwait

DMW

A PHILIPPINE senator on Monday called for the review of bilateral labor deals and recruitment policies with Kuwait after two overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) based in the West Asian country died of “anomalous causes.”

“The government must stop the abuse in its tracks by strengthening recruitment policies and ensuring that host countries comply with bilateral agreements on the welfare and rights of OFWs,” Senator Emmanuel Joel J. Villanueva said in a statement.

“We cannot be reactive and rely on a ban-lift-ban cycle of OFW deployment.”

Kuwait-based worker Jenny Alvarado on Jan. 2 was reported to have died by coal smoke inhalation at her place of work with her Nepalese and Sri Lankan coworkers. 

In December, the decomposing body of Dafnie Nacalaban, a domestic worker in Kuwait since 2019, was dug up and discovered at the residence of a Kuwaiti national. She had been reported missing by her employer since October.

Migrant Workers Secretary Hans Leo J. Cacdac earlier said his agency was temporarily halting OFW deployment to Kuwait due to the deaths.

The Philippines in 2018 imposed a worker deployment ban to the Gulf country after the killing of Filipina domestic helper Joanna Daniela Demafelis, whose body was found in a freezer at an abandoned apartment. It partially lifted the ban in the same year after the two countries signed a protection agreement for workers.

In May 2019, Filipina maid Constancia Lago Dayag was killed in Kuwait, and a few months later, another one, Jeanelyn Villavende, was tortured by her employer to death.

The government again imposed a deployment ban in January 2020, which it lifted when Kuwaiti authorities charged Ms. Villavende’s employer with murder and sentenced her to death by hanging.

The International Labor Organization has said only 6% of domestic workers worldwide have access to comprehensive protection including medical care and unemployment benefits.

“Every OFW we allow to work in a foreign land must be assured of a safe workplace, decent living conditions, timely payment of correct wages and benefits, and must be able to return to their families alive and with gainful income worthy of their sacrifices,” Mr. Villanueva said.

DIPLOMATIC OPTIONS
In a separate statement, a lawmaker also asked the Philippine Department of Migrant Workers (DMW) to weigh all diplomatic options and “seriously study” its proposal to implement a deployment ban in Kuwait.

Mr. Cacdac last week floated the possibility of declaring a deployment ban on Kuwait following the recent deaths of two OFWs in the middle eastern country.

“We appeal to the DMW to seriously study and rethink its reported consideration of another deployment ban, and to adopt a more nuanced and strategic approach,” Party-list Rep. Ron P. Salo said in a statement.

“An outright ban may exacerbate the situation of approximately 260,000 Filipinos currently working in Kuwait, potentially placing them in even more precarious positions,” he added.

Manila prohibits first-time OFWs from being deployed to Kuwait, according to Mr. Cacdac.

“It is also essential to consider that deployment bans are typically implemented when a host country violates an existing bilateral agreement. Crimes committed by private individuals, though deeply tragic, do not necessarily constitute a breach by the Kuwaiti government,” said Mr. Salo.

“Determining the host government’s breach, if any, is vital before imposing such an extreme measure,” he added. — John Victor D. Ordoñez and Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

Sandiganbayan finds former QC mayor guilty of graft in P32.1-M deal

FORMER Quezon City Mayor Herbert M. Bautista — TARLAC CITY PIO

FORMER Quezon City (QC) Mayor Herbert M. Bautista was found guilty of graft over a P32.1-million procurement deal with a local software company in 2019, the Philippine anti-graft court said on Monday.

In a 146-page decision, released on Jan. 20, the Sandiganbayan Special Seventh Division convicted Mr. Bautista and a former city administrator for the procurement of an online application system, Online Occupational Permitting Tracking System (OOPTS), which expedites processing of occupational permits.

Imprisonment of six to ten years and perpetual disqualification from public office were meted out by the court on the convicted officials.

But they won’t be ordered to pay back the P32.1-million involved in the deal as “it cannot be directed to be paid by either accused,” with the software company not a respondent to the case, a part of the ruling penned by Associate Justice Ma. Theresa Dolores C. Gomez-Estoesta.

The camp of Mr. Bautista said they are “deeply saddened” by the decision, maintaining that the former mayor is innocent, his legal counsel, Nilo T. Divina, told BusinessWorld in a Viber message.

We “assert that no act constituting the offense was committed. Notably, the vote was split 2-1, highlighting reasonable doubt,” he noted.

“Evidence presented in the trial confirmed the project was delivered and received by the Quezon City Government, with payment made by the succeeding administration. Mayor Bautista did not financially benefit from the project, and no harm or injury was incurred by the city or its people.”

Mr. Divina said they will file a motion for reconsideration, in the hopes that a thorough review of the evidence will affirm Mr. Bautista’s innocence.

The former mayor had denied any irregularities in the bidding procedure and implementation of the project, the ruling read in part. He had also denied conspiring with his co-accused to defraud the government.

Mr. Bautista sought the case’s dismissal last year, but the Sandiganbayan rejected it, saying the case deserved a full-blown trial after finding probable cause.

The case emerged in 2019 after an internal audit revealed that full payment was made to the contracted software company for OOPTS despite the incomplete delivery of the project.

“Complaints on the non-functionality of the OOPTS (Online Occupational Permitting Tracking System) spurred an internal audit which revealed that the delivery of the project was not complete; yet, full payment was made to the supplier,” the decision stated.

The former mayor had said he received no reports that the project was defective or incompletely delivered. He also argued that there were reports by the Quezon City government’s General Services Department (GSD) and Information Technology Development Department (ITDD) finding that the delivery of the system was in order.

The Court, however, said that there were “visible red flags” in the inspection reports of GSD and ITDD, which should have been noticed by Mr. Bautista and his co-accused. The report particularly lacked photos and manuals from the delivery inspected by the GSD, while the ITDD remarked the online application itself was not included.

“This notation should have been the brunt that should have cautioned one’s guard. An online system without the software application defied the very essence of the Project,” the ruling read.

The Sandiganbayan also noted that the OOPTS was launched in “late 2021 to early 2022,” almost three years after the payment’s release. “Payment was approved and released to [the software company] at the end of June 2019, in spite of numerous glitches, crashes, and non-functional features afflicting its application.”

The ex-mayor should have endorsed the project to his successor instead of rushing the payment, the anti-graft court said. – Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio