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Developing countries need to play bigger role in ESG rule-setting — UN

REUTERS

DEVELOPING COUNTRIES need to play a bigger role in the drafting of environment, social, and governance (ESG) rules, a United Nations (UN) official said.

On the sidelines of the 16th edition of the Investment Policy Forum on Wednesday, UN Special Rapporteur on the right to development Surya Deva said that ESG regulations such as those imposed by the European Union, although well-intentioned, might not be inclusive.

“The difficulty I see is in terms of the process, whether the countries, let us say in the Global South or in Asia, were consulted properly before these regulations were pushed forward by the European Union,” he told reporters.

“So going forward, my suggestion would be that we need more global rules, but those rules must be developed in a more participatory fashion rather than being imposed by the European Union or any particular developed economy,” he added.

In the case of the Philippines, he said that its government has the ability to adapt itself to the global ESG regulations.

“It can be proactive in terms of preparing ready in terms of the economy, how these regulations are going to impact the local businesses and others,” he said.

“But in addition to that, the Philippine government can also work with other governments in Asia so that they can leverage better in terms of negotiation,” he added.

Asked about the readiness of the Philippines, he said the country has the technical expertise.

“Your human capital is definitely very well advanced in terms of that. But then, the Philippines is part of a global ecosystem. So, we have to ensure that the global rules are also there to ensure that the government of the Philippines is able to promote that kind of sustainability,” he said.

“Because if not everyone is following the same rules in terms of sustainability, the markets may not be ready to be at that kind of model of sustainable development,” he added.

The UN official also said that although investments are critical for development, there is a need to put focus on biodiversity, climate change, and the environment, especially in countries like the Philippines where a lot of natural disasters happen.

“So the private sector and the governments also have a key role to play because they need to align their tax incentives and other regimes in a way that they are promoting the right kind of investment,” he said.

He said that a right investment should not result in the displacement of indigenous peoples and must follow labor laws.

“Human development is something we should be aiming for. So, when we are talking about inclusive and sustainable development, it should not leave anyone behind, and I think the government should proactively ensure that,” he added. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

Team Asia blanks Team Europe on second day of the Reyes Cup

CARLO BIADO — FACEBOOK.COM/MATCHROOMPOOL

FILIPINO ACE Carlo Biado smashed Mickey Krause, 5-3, on Wednesday night to cap Team Asia’s four-match sweep of Team Europe in Day Two to move on cusp of ruling the inaugural Reyes Cup at the Ninoy Aquino Stadium.

That Mr. Biado triumph powered the Asians from turning a slim, shaky 3-2 edge over the Europeans in Tuesday’s opener to a commanding 7-2 advantage in this three-day, race-to-11 event that is being done in honor of Filipino legend and Team Asia skipper Efren “Bata” Reyes.

And Mr. Biado, who has won almost everything after topping the world nine-ball and 10-ball championships, was at the center of it all as he summoned the magician-like wizardry of Mr. Reyes in the former’s disposal of the beleaguered Mr. Krause.

Mr. Biado also decimated Mr. Krause in the fifth rack of the team match — the first duel of the day — that resulted in a 5-3 Team Asia triumph where the host had to dig deep in rallying from 0-2 down.

It was all Team Asia from there as Taiwanese Ko Pin Yi, another world beater, downed Spanish conquistador Francisco Sanchez Ruiz, 5-3, and the duo of Duong Quoc Hoang and Aloysius Yapp destroyed David Alcaide and Eklent Kaci, 5-2.

And then Mr. Biado entered the fray to complete what had been a dominating performance for Team Asia.

Mr. Biado is expected to figure prominently again when Team Asia go for the jugular in the final day being played Friday night. — Joey Villar

Mapua faces Estrada-less Letran in NCAA matchup

MAPUA UNIVERSITY CARDINALS — FACEBOOK.COM/NCAA.ORG.PH

Games on Friday
(Filoil EcoOil Arena)
12 noon – San Beda vs UPHSD
2:30 p.m. – Mapua vs Letran

MAPUA UNIVERSITY will parade its two-headed dragon in Clint Escamis and Marc Cuenco against a Colegio de San Juan de Letran team that will be out its most lethal scoring weapon in Jimboy Estrada as the two collide in a marquee NCAA Season 100 matchup on Friday at the Filoil EcoOil Arena.

The Escamis-Cuenco tandem was in full attack mode in an 82-79 victory over the Emilio Aguinaldo College (EAC) Generals on Tuesday when they combined for more than half of their ouput — 42 points.

And the signs point at the juggernaut pair having no plans of slowing down.

The sharp, sweet shooting Mr. Cuenco, who delivered that triple that hammered in the dagger straight into the hearts of the Generals last time.

A victory for the Cardinals, currently at No. 2 with an 8-3 mark, would push them half a game behind the league-leading College of St. Benilde Blazers (9-2).

They wade into battle at 2:30 p.m. against the Knights, who are fighting to keep their place inside the top four as they are currently tied with the Lyceum of the Philippines University  Pirates on 6-5 records.

Painfully, Letran will be minus Mr. Estrada, their primary source of offensive strength after the cerebral guard was slapped a one-game suspension for his misbehavior last time.

Somehow, Mapua will be without one key cog less too in starting big man Marc Igliane, who will also serve a one-game ban for his disqualifying foul last game.

“Yes, suspended Messrs. Estrada and Igliane,” said NCAA Management Committee chair Herc Callanta of host LPU.

The San Beda University Red Lions, presently at No. 3 with a 7-4 slate, for their part, hope to move up the ladder as they tangle with the University of Perpetual Help Altas, who at joint No. 6 with the EAC Generals on 5-6 marks, are fighting to stay in the hunt. Game time is at 12 noon. — Joey Villar

Meralco suffers 74-77 EASL loss to Ryukyu in Okinawa

MERALCO BOLTS — PBA.PH

THE MERALCO BOLTS fell short in their late fight-back against the Ryukyu Golden Kings and absorbed a 74-77 loss on the road on Wednesday night in the East Asia Super League (EASL).

Off a 66-77 deficit, DJ Kennedy, Bong Quinto and Allen Durham pumped life back into Meralco with an 8-0 bomb in the last 2:33 but the Bolts failed to follow through as Mr. Durham’s potential tying trey at the buzzer foiled by Ryukyu’s Vic Law.

The result that was witnessed by a record crowd of 7,347 at the Okinawa Arena lifted the Golden Kings to the top in Group B with 1-0 while denying the Bolts (1-1) a followup to their 97-85 win over the Macau Black Bears on tipoff night.

Mr. Kennedy fired 30 points and grabbed 12 rebounds as Mr. Durham, playing against his former team in the B. League, and Chris Newsome added 18 apiece for the visiting Meralco.

The Bolts missed the inside presence and hustle plays of Cliff Hodge, who attended to his wife as she delivered their first-born baby in Manila.

The reigning PBA Philippine Cup titlists found themselves playing catchup after giving up 28 points to the home squad and scoring only 11 in the second quarter.

Ryukyu seemed poised to cruise to the easy win when Mr. Law made it an 11-point contest with under three minutes to go in the fourth.

But Meralco mounted a searing rally touched off by Mr. Kennedy’s jumper and followed by Mr. Quinto’s back-to-back buckets and two freebies by Mr. Durham to get to within three points with still 41.7 ticks left.

After forcing Mr. Law to a missed jumper, the Bolts got 20 seconds to make a move but their last offensive featuring Mr. Durham beyond the arc fizzed out.

Luigi Trillo’s charges will regroup for now before seeking to rebound in a home gig on Nov. 13 against Korea’s Busan KCC Egis. — Olmin Leyba


The scores

Ryukyu 77 – Law 18, Cooley 18, Kirk 12, Eumatsu 9, Matsuwaki 9, Waki 6, Kishimoto 3, Arakawa 2, Onodera 0.

Meralco 74 – Kennedy 30, Durham 18, Newsome 18, Kouame 4, Quinto 4, Bates 0, Almazan 0, Caram 0.

Quarter scores: 23-18; 51-35; 66-57; 77-74.

Dodgers display late power for 2-1 edge

NEW YORK — Enrique Hernandez and Shohei Ohtani hit multi-run homers to provide the Los Angeles Dodgers insurance in an 8-0 win over the New York Mets on Wednesday in Game 3 of the National League Championship Series.

Hernandez belted a two-run shot in the sixth inning and Ohtani added a majestic three-run blast in the eighth for the Dodgers, who lead the best-of-seven series 2-1. Game 4 is scheduled for Thursday night in New York.

The Dodgers hit just one ball into the outfield — a sacrifice fly — while scoring two runs off Luis Severino (1-1) in the second inning. Los Angeles left five runners on base over the next three innings before mounting a two-out rally against Reed Garrett in the sixth.

Tommy Edman singled and went to second on a balk before Hernandez homered just beyond the reach of a leaping Brandon Nimmo in left field. — Reuters

TNT eyes Governors’ Cup finals berth against ROS

Games on Friday
(Ynares Center, Antipolo)
5 p.m. – San Miguel vs Ginebra (Semifinals Game 5)**
7:30 – Rain or Shine vs TNT (Semifinals Game 5)*
* TNT leads best-of-seven series, 3-1
**Series tied, 2-2

WITH Rain or Shine (ROS) on life support, defending champion TNT knows that now’s the perfect time to finish off its pesky rival for a PBA Governors’ Cup finals seat.

The Tropang Giga are on the hill with a commanding 3-1 lead, thanks to their hard-earned 91-89 victory in Game 4, and need just 48 minutes or so of hard labor to put the race-to-four series to bed.

It entailed blood, sweat and tears to get into this position and the Chot Reyes-coached TNT is well aware Friday’s potential clincher at the Ynares Center in Antipolo City is going to take more.

“The finals are furthest from our minds right now. Our only thought is to prepare for the next game — Game 5,” Mr. Reyes said ahead of the 7:30 p.m. fifth match.

“Rain or Shine came up with a great game plan (in Game 4) but I thought my players really fought hard, buckled down. Give a lot of credit to the effort they put in. In the end they know what to do, we know what they want to do. It’s just really going to boil down to who wants it more. Hopefully on Friday, we act with the same kind of hunger and edge in Game 5.”

For the embattled Elasto Painters, the plan is simple.

“Our hope is just to keep the series going. RHJ (TNT import Rondae Hollis-Jefferson) is playing like 46 minutes a game at high intensity so tingin namin kung ma-extend namin ito ng 6 or 7 games, there’s a possibility that he might tire out,” ROS mentor Yeng Guiao said.

“If we can continue the series, at some point we’ll be fresher than them.”

Meanwhile, Ginebra and San Miguel Beer battle for control and break a 2-2 stalemate in their Final Four duel at 5 p.m.

It’s been a literal seesaw battle for the two protagonists, with the Gin Kings taking Games 1 and 3 and the Beermen striking back in Games 2 and 4.

SMB strategist Jorge Gallent wants the Beermen to be the first to win back-to-back in the series and close in on the ticket to the Last Dance.

“I hope we change the tide in Friday’s Game. Now, it’s a best of three na lang. We’ll just think of it as ‘Game One’ on Friday. In a ‘best-of-three,’ Game 1 is very important so I hope tradition breaks on Friday.”

Ginebra counterpart Tim Cone said the adjustment falls on them after SMB’s 131-121 romp last outing.

“It’s basically back to the drawing board for us, try to figure out what we can do better next time around. They were just too good for us (in Game 4). It’s a best-of-three now. We’ll see.” — Olmin Leyba

CSB shoots for last playoff slot against SSC-R in Shakey’s Super League

Games on Friday
(Rizal Memorial Coliseum)
11:30 a.m. – CSB vs SSC-R
1 p.m. – Mapua vs Perpetual
3:30 p.m. – UP vs JRU
6 p.m. – Arellano vs NU

COLLEGE of St. Benilde (CSB) spikes for the last playoff ticket from Pool D against San Sebastian College-Recoletos (SSC-R) in the 2024 Shakey’s Super League Collegiate Pre-Season Championship on Friday at the Rizal Memorial Coliseum.

Game time is at 11:30 a.m. with the Lady Blazers looking to be the lone NCAA team in the next round after the seven UAAP teams booked their slots.

The three-time NCAA champion on Wednesday took down Adamson, 25-13, 25-22, 25-19, to potentially spoil an all-UAAP playoffs and control its own fate at 1-1.

Far Eastern University (3-0) already topped Pool D, National University (3-0) and Ateneo de Manila University (3-1) led Pool A, University  of Santo Tomas (3-0) and University of the East (3-1) headlined Pool B with De La Salle University (3-0) and University of the Philippines (1-1) spearheading Pool C.

And the pressure now is on the Lady Blazers to take care of business.

A win by St. Benilde would assure it a playoff spot while a loss would give way to a triple-tie with Adamson (1-2) and San Sebastian (0-2) in which scenario that the Lady Falcons would hold a superior quotient to advance to still make it an all-UAAP playoffs.

Meanwhile, also-ran squads Mapua University (0-3) and University of Perpetual Help System Dalta (0-3) go for graceful exits at 1 p.m. in Pool B while UP (1-1) collides in a no-bearing match with Jose Rizal University (0-2) in Pool C at 3:30 p.m.

Capping the quadruple-header ender of the elimination rounds is the sweep bid of back-to-back champion NU against Arellano University (2-1) at 6 p.m.

Teams will carry over their preliminary round points and play another round-robin in the next phase starting on Sunday with the top two teams from each pool earning twice-to-beat bonuses in the crossover quarterfinals. — John Bryan Ulanday

Biñan cruises past ICC Negros in Maharlika volleyball tilt

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

Games on Tuesday (Oct. 22)
(Alonte Sports Arena, Biñan)
2 p.m. – Quezon vs Bacoor
4 p.m. – Caloocan vs Biñan

BIÑAN Tatak Gel stayed on track of its semifinal bid after cruising past ICC Negros, 25-16, 25-16, 26-24, in the Maharlika Pilipinas Volleyball Association (MPVA) Season 1 on Wednesday night at the Alonte Sports Arena in Laguna.

Erika Jin Deloria rifled in 19 points on 18 hits and one ace as the Volley Angels leaped to 9-5 to create wider separation from their closest challengers in San Juan (6-7) and Caloocan (5-7) for the coveted fourth and last playoff seat.

Shane Carmona and Chreizel Aguilar chipped in 11 and 10 points, in Biñan’s perfect home stand after also scoring an easy 25-14, 25-17, 25-22 win over the Valenzuela Classy the other day at the same venue.

San Juan, for its part, stayed in the race with a 25-9, 25-11, 19-25, 15-25, 15-10 win against Valenzuela behind the 15 points of Gregchelle Grace Cabadin.

Chamberlaine Cuñada added 13 points as the Lady Knights wasted a 2-0 set lead before recovering in time in the decider following a comeback win against Negros, 22-25, 23-25, 26-24, 25-14, 15-12, the other day.

Valenzuela (2-10) and Negros (4-9) absorbed big losses to fall at seventh and eighth place, respectively. — John Bryan Ulanday

Caitlin Clark named All-WNBA first team

CAITLIN CLARK — REUTERS

INDIANA FEVER guard Caitlin Clark was named to the All-WNBA first team on Wednesday, becoming the first rookie in 16 years to earn the honor.

Clark joined Napheesa Collier, league MVP A’ja Wilson of the Las Vegas Aces, Breanna Stewart and Alyssa Thomas on the first team. Wilson and Collier, the 2024 Defensive Player of the Year, received unanimous first-team votes. It’s the sixth first-team honor and seventh overall for Stewart, also a two-time league MVP.

Sabrina Ionescu (New York Liberty), Kahleah Copper (Phoenix Mercury), Nneka Ogwumike (Seattle Storm), Arike Ogunbowale (Dallas Wings) and Jonquel Jones (Liberty) were named to the All-WNBA second team.

Clark received 52 first-team votes, fourth-most overall. She also finished fourth in MVP voting. She’s the first rookie named to the first team since Candace Parker in 2008. Sue Bird (2002), Tamika Catchings (2002) and Diana Taurasi (2004) were also first-team rookies.

The WNBA Rookie of the Year, Clark finished her first campaign averaging 19.2 points, 5.7 rebounds and a league-high 8.4 assists per game.

Stewart, Ionescu and Jones all play for the New York Liberty, who are locked in a 1-1 series tie with the Minnesota Lynx in the WNBA Finals. Collier is the only player from the Lynx named to either team.

Ionescu was the top vote-getter on the second team, earning 204 points, 51 points shy of Thomas of the Connecticut Sun.

The teams were selected by a panel of 67 sportswriters and broadcasters. Voting was conducted at the conclusion of the regular season. Players were selected without regard to position. — Reuters

Liberty lead Lynx

The Liberty are a game away from their first-ever championship in the Women’s National Basketball Association, and, fittingly, they have put themselves in position to make history with a ridiculous game winner. That the basket was made by the best shooter in the league via a Curryesque sidestep logo bomb only made the outcome even more memorable for fans who have long been tortured by cruel twists of fate. Perhaps it was simply time for the law of averages to come their way.

To be sure, the Liberty had to endure the worst practically all match long. With the Lynx finally hitting the ground running from opening tip, they found themselves playing from behind for the first time in the series. In front of a hostile crowd of 19,521 that booed them at just about every turn, they needed no small measure of resolve to stay focused on their objective of regaining the homecourt advantage they let go of following their devastating Game One experience.

Fortunately for the Liberty, their two brightest lights came through just when it mattered in Game Three. Two-time Most Valuable Player Breanna Stewart practically carried them from the moment they trailed a minute and a half into the first quarter until the instant they regained the lead with a minute and a half left in the set-to. She was a monster on both ends of the court, and she set the stage for fellow All-Star Sabrina Ionescu’s last-minute heroics. After having seemed to disappear for the first 39 minutes of the contest, the latter came alive in the crunch to secure the triumph.

Tomorrow, the Liberty have the opportunity to completely exorcise the demons that have plagued them since their pioneering campaign 28 years ago. The task will not be easy, what with Target Center diehards slated to once again make the going miserable for them in Game Four. More importantly, the Lynx have a winner’s pedigree borne of head coach Cheryl Reeve’s steady hand and highlighted by Defensive Player of the Year Napheesa Collier’s ascension as a member of the league elite.

That said, the Liberty are primed. For the first time in five trips to the Finals, they will be playing ahead. And how well they stand and withstand the pressure of closing out the best-of-five affair with the vaunted Lynx in the way will determine their fate.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

China building capacity to rapidly strike Taiwan, senior Taiwanese official says

A globe is seen in front of Chinese and Taiwanese flags in this illustration, Aug. 6, 2022. — REUTERS/DADO RUVIC/ILLUSTRATION

— China is building its capacity to rapidly turn military drills into a full-out attack, a senior Taiwan security official said, providing the Taipei government’s assessment of the strategic intent behind Beijing’s war games around the island this week.

China, which views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, staged large-scale drills on Monday that it said were a warning to “separatist acts” following last week’s national day speech by Taiwan President Lai Ching-te.

Taiwan has for the past five years complained of almost daily Chinese military activities around the island, including at least four rounds of major war games and regular “joint combat readiness patrols”.

“They are increasing the building up their capacity to turn military exercises into a conflict,” the official said at a briefing in Taipei, requesting anonymity to be able to speak more frankly.

Taiwan reported a record 153 Chinese aircraft took part in the drills, and the official added an unprecedented 25 Chinese navy and coast guard boats also approached close to Taiwan’s 24-mile (39-km) contiguous zone.

“They approached very close to Taiwan. They increased their pressure on Taiwan and squeezed Taiwan’s response time,” the official said. “This drill presented more of a threat than ever before to Taiwan.”

The official said during the drill, China launched two missiles towards an unspecified inland area, without providing further details.

“Although they did not fire missiles towards Taiwan this time, they did practice missile launches,” the official said.

China’s defense ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment. On Monday, it vowed to take further action as needed against Taiwan.

Lai and his government reject Beijing’s sovereignty claims saying only Taiwan’s people can decide their future. Lai has repeatedly offered talks, but he has been rebuffed by China.

In a report to parliament on Thursday, Taiwan’s defense ministry said China currently holds three to four “joint combat readiness patrols” per month around Taiwan, in a move the ministry described as “provocation and increasing the threat to our military”.

Defense Minister Wellington Koo, asked when China could hold its next war games, told reporters it could be at any time and under any pretext.

“This shows their hegemonic nature, which we can all see very clearly,” Koo said.

A Taipei-based diplomat familiar with security issues in the region said Beijing’s war games presented a “big threat” because through the drills, China’s military was quickly building up its mobilization and combat capabilities.

“The permanent state of readiness is getting higher and higher – they can switch from nothing to drills to war in no time,” said the diplomat, who requested anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter. — Reuters

US says Israel must show no Gaza ‘policy of starvation’

PALESTINIANS wait to receive food in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, March 13, 2024. — REUTERS

UNITED NATIONS — The United States is watching to ensure that Israel’s actions on the ground show that it does not have a “policy of starvation” in the northern Gaza Strip, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations (UN) Linda Thomas-Greenfield told the Security Council on Wednesday.

She told the 15-member council that such a policy would be “horrific and unacceptable and would have implications under international law and US law.”

“The Government of Israel has said that this is not their policy, that food and other essential supplies will not be cut off, and we will be watching to see that Israel’s actions on the ground match this statement,” Thomas-Greenfield said, in a ratcheting up of the US posture toward its longtime ally.

The United States has told Israel that it must take steps in the next 30 days to improve the humanitarian situation in the Palestinian enclave or face potential restrictions on U.S. military aid, US officials said on Tuesday.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened an emergency meeting on Wednesday to discuss expanding humanitarian aid to Gaza, three officials who had attended the discussion said, with aid likely to increase soon.

“Food and supplies must be surged into Gaza, immediately. And there must be humanitarian pauses across Gaza to allow for vaccinations and the delivery and distribution of humanitarian aid,” Thomas-Greenfield said.

A deadly attack on southern Israel by Palestinian Hamas militants on Oct. 7, 2023, triggered Israel’s retaliation in Hamas-run Gaza, sparking a humanitarian crisis in the besieged enclave. Authorities say more than 42,000 people have been killed and almost the entire population of 2.3 million displaced.

Israel’s UN Ambassador Danny Danon told the council that the issue in Gaza was not a lack of aid, saying more than 1 million tons had been delivered during the past year. He accused Hamas of hijacking the humanitarian assistance.

“Israel, along with our international partners, continues to flood Gaza with aid, but it will never reach all those in need as long as Hamas remains in power,” he said. “Hamas has weaponized the humanitarian situation.”

Hamas has repeatedly denied Israeli allegations that it was stealing aid and says Israel is to blame for shortages.

‘UNCONSCIONABLE’
The UN has long complained of obstacles to getting aid into Gaza and distributing it throughout the war zone, blaming impediments on Israel and lawlessness. The UN said no food aid entered northern Gaza between Oct. 2 and Oct. 15.

“Given the abject conditions and intolerable suffering in north Gaza, the fact that access is nearly nonexistent is unconscionable,” acting UN aid chief Joyce Msuya told the council.

On Wednesday, the Israeli military unit that oversees aid and commercial shipments to Gaza said 50 trucks carrying food, water, medical supplies, and shelter equipment provided by Jordan were transferred to northern Gaza.

Ms. Msuya said that throughout Gaza less than a third of the 286 humanitarian missions coordinated with Israel during the past two weeks were facilitated without major incidents or delays.

She said that on Oct. 12 a humanitarian team reached two hospitals in northern Gaza after they were denied or impeded by Israeli forces nine times. They transferred more than a dozen critical patients to Al Shifa hospital in Gaza City.

“These missions were completed amid fierce ongoing hostilities,” said Ms. Msuya, adding that drivers in the convoy “were subjected to humiliating treatment during security screening and temporary detention” at an Israeli checkpoint.

“Medical staff kept one child alive by hand pumping oxygen for over seven hours until they made it through the checkpoint,” she said.

Mr. Danon cited the recent medical mission as an example of Israel’s “comprehensive” humanitarian efforts, adding that “as always, we acted in accordance with international law, going above and beyond our obligations.”

Mr. Danon also spoke about the start of a second round of polio vaccinations on Monday by the UN children’s agency UNICEF and the World Health Organization, targeting 590,000 children under the age of 10 during area-specific pauses in fighting. — Reuters