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Con Ass: Potential Disaster

How easily we forget. It is only a generation ago when we marched in the streets for years to oust a dictator, and promised ourselves and the world “Never Again.” Now, here we are again being bamboozled backwards into authoritarian rule; and so far, not enough pushback is being heard, especially from the business community. Nada.

In 1984, a year after Ninoy Aquino was assassinated, and when I was part of the business community, a group of business executives and professionals were gathered together by the late Jimmy Ongpin and his Harvard and other Ivy League friends, including businessman Mon “Boy Blue” del Rosario, Dr. Alfredo “Alran” Bengzon and Jesuit Fr. Joaquin Bernas into a cause-oriented movement which they named Manindigan (To Take a Stand). The way we expressed our stand was to publicly protest in the streets, and publish our positions in the largely mosquito press, since Ferdinand Marcos controlled, through his cronies and the government, much of the mass media. Men and women who were used to wearing formal business attire began to sport blue jeans, T-shirts, and running shoes, and marched in the streets.

Being young enough then, I was thrilled to march side by side with highly educated colleagues who dropped their inhibitions and boldly risked their careers to fight the dictator.

What started as a small, ragtag band grew into a potent and loud challenge to the Marcos government. We marched from Santo Domingo Church to Plaza Miranda, down to Liwasang Bonifacio. In time, on Fridays, we marched on Ayala Avenue and began what became “the confetti revolution,” which featured dropping shredded yellow pages from tall buildings. From a ragtag band, our confetti revolution drew many business executives, senior and junior into our rallies.

Jimmy Ongpin and his friends put up Veritas, an activist newspaper edited by Melinda Quintos de Jesus and some of us began to criticize the government in our columns. The late dauntless Joe Burgos, (whose forebears include the martyred Padre Burgos), father of Jonas Burgos, whose whereabouts are unaccounted for to this day, began to publish his Malaya newspaper, pioneer of the Mosquito Press in hidden basements, which he moved from place to place.

In time, the heroic Letty J. Magsanoc together with print media icon Eggie Apostol Duran turned a women’s magazine, Mr. and Ms. into an activist medium which later evolved into The Inquirer. We in Manindigan were able to obtain op-ed space in Raul Locsin’s then Business Day newspaper; and continued writing in his Businessworld.

I am reminded of a poster I once saw which said “Revolutions begin in quiet places.”

Today, we have a rude, authoritarian, profane president who is getting high satisfaction ratings. And a House Speaker who has no compunctions about using his power to push his personal vendettas against his rumored foes. This is a Congress that seems to meekly follow the President’s expectations, whether they are legal or not. Senator Leila de Lima has been detained for over a year based on testimony of long-term convicts, who it is said, have enjoyed certain privileges. The judiciary, including the Chief Justice is under fire, and threatened with impeachment when no impeachable offense have yet been cited.

The Court of Appeals has dismissed several cases, despite strong evidence, including that of former Governor Joel Reyes who had been convicted in the lower courts of masterminding the murder of environmental and media activist Gerry Ortega. The CA has also rendered null and void the $10 billion due Marcos human rights victims which they had won in Hawaii.

Police Superintendent Marvin Marcos, who had been convicted with strong evidence of leading the group that killed detained Albuera, Leyte Mayor Espinosa inside his jail cell, has been promoted and reassigned, unscathed to Mindanao.

Already our freedom of the press is under siege with seeming threats to cancel broadcast franchises and related businesses of media owners. And so on and on.

Today, we are being rushed into a new Constitution, bandied about as in support of “Federalism.” There are proposals for No Election in 2019 and terms extensions for all elected officials, national and local, all the way, it seems, to 2030, because it is said it will take at least 10 years for the transition to a new form of government. This should please most incumbents. The new Constitution, it seems to have been decided, will be crafted by a Constituent Assembly, consisting of the present Congress. It is not yet clear if the Senate will vote separately from the House of Representatives. This House has already demonstrated its acquiescence to what the Speaker, or the President wants; and the Speaker has made no secret of his brazen carrot or stick approach to getting bills passed. Rodrigo Roa Duterte has made enough statements and decisions against human rights, which is provided for under the present Constitution. There is enough evidence of a rule of men rather than of laws.

1987 Constitutional Commission member Christian Monsod has made a case for there being enough provisions in the 1987 People’s Constitution and the Local Government Code of 1991 for decentralization of powers and budget authority; but that these have not been supported by proper execution. The LGUs still have not been given adequate budget authority despite the Code. This makes them still beholden to the central government. Local Autonomy has not adequately taken places intended.

Now, in lieu of an elected Constitutional Convention, we are being bamboozled into a Constituent Assembly, the rationale being the desire to save money (P6-10 billion or so), and time, to ensure that the new Constitution is ratified in May this year.

A federal form of government for us does make sense in many ways. The problem is, why the rush? And can we trust this government to do right by our people?

Sure, the economy is doing well, thanks to monetary technocrats in the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) and systems put in place by the outstanding BSP Governor Amado Tetangco and a few economic technocrats such as Ernesto Pernia in the present Cabinet. The Build, Build, Build program is laudable if carried out efficiently and effectively with less corruption than has been SOP.

It is still possible that this government will deliver the goods on the economy and on infrastructure. Let us hope doubling salaries of uniformed government personnel does not turn out to be fiscally irresponsible, given that if carried out, other civil servants such as teachers and health workers would not take this sitting down, if their salaries are also not doubled. The business community seems quite pleased enough with the way things are going. And seem to be indifferent, or quiet regarding brazen human rights and due process issues.

But what is the price to our sense of decency, our descendants’ sense of right and wrong, our equal access to protection of human rights, including freedom of speech and due process whether or not they are favored by the President, or other politicians?

Even without Constitutional change, human rights and due process under the laws are already being violated and abused. We are in danger of becoming a banana republic. Will the business community stay quiet, if not acquiescent? Ninoy Aquino and other human rights victims must be turning in their graves.

 

Teresa S. Abesamis is a former professor at the Asian Institute of Management and an independent development management consultant.

tsabesamis0114@yahoo.com

City to come up with a list of establishments to be reevaluated

CITY PLANNING and Development Office (CPDO) head Ivan Chin Cortez in an interview said they will come up with a list of establishments that need to be reevaluated for safety worthiness to prevent fire incidents like the tragic NCCC fire. Mr. Cortez said usually it would be the big establishments like malls, hospitals, and hotels that need to be reevaluated. In Davao there are not more than 15 establishments including malls, hospitals and even hotels being considered for inspection. “This reevaluation is supposed to be a regulatory action pero ang aming lang (but for us, this) is just to avoid what happened,” Mr. Cortez said, adding there is already a directive to come up with such a list of establishments. He urges new establishments to maintain the integrity of their approved floor plan and also recommends that the Bureau of Fire Protection conduct regular inspection if their recommendations are being followed. — Maya M. Padillo

Unilever may hold line on prices, sees boost from tax reform program

UNILEVER Philippines, Inc. said it hopes to absorb higher costs where possible instead of passing them on to consumers, adding that it expects the tax reform program to have a positive impact overall on consumer spending.

It added that it expects the main drivers for higher consumer goods prices to be rising crude oil prices and the increased cost of Chinese raw materials.

Vice-president for Sustainable Business and Communications Ed Sunico on Tuesday said: “Crude oil went up to around $60/barrel [so] that will affect us. The tax reform law, not much really. We’re now looking at the crude oil price… plus the raw materials coming from China have been increasing in cost also so that will have an impact on price,” he added.

“We’re looking forward to the good side of that should be an increase in consumer spending. [On balance] it’s positive so it’s good for us.”

Mr. Sunico said that the only segment that will be affected by the first tax reform package is the Lipton iced tea brand, which he described as a small part of Unilever Philippines’ business. The first tax package imposes an excise tax on sugar-sweetened drinks, as a health measure.

“As much as possible we don’t expect to pass on the higher prices. We try to look for way to keep the price [low] so we might do some hedging, find some areas to save on costs. That has always been the agenda for marketing just to make sure that the prices are kept to a minimum. It’s something that we’re looking at.”

Mr. Sunico said Unilever remains confident that overall growth will be high in 2018.

“All products have been growing but last year has been very good for us in our foods and ice cream business because they were saying that we had a pretty long summer last year. The foods category is around 20% of our business,” he added.

Mr. Sunico said that the company is set to unveil its largest distribution center in the Philippines in Cabuyao, Laguna in the first quarter.

It also hopes to adopt more widely a German technology called CreaSolv, which will recycle sachet packaging, helping reduce waste and plastic pollution.

CreaSolv separates the plastic components of sachets from the metal parts, generating plastic pellets than can be remanufactured.

Pilot testing is under way in Surabaya, Indonesia.

If found viable, the recycling service will be offered to outside parties.

“We plan to offer that to the industry, not just for ourselves, because it requires a big input of waste. It’s more of an industry effort, not just a company effort. That’s how big the facility is,” Mr. Sunico said.

He said a recycling plant is being planned around the supply of seven tons of plastic sachets per day. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Volvos to turn electric, hybrid starting 2019

ALL Volvo cars to be launched starting 2019 will either be electric- or hybrid-powered, the car maker said in a statement.

Volvo said the development is “one of the most significant” by any car company as it moves away from the internal-combustion engine and toward electrification. The car maker said its portfolio will include fully electric cars, as well as plug-in hybrid and mild hybrid models.

“People increasingly demand electrified cars and we want to respond to our customers’ current and future needs,” said Hakan Samuelsson, president and chief executive of Volvo Cars.

Volvo said it will launch five fully electric cars between 2019 and 2021, three of which will be Volvo models and two will be high-performance cars wearing the Polestar badge — Volvo’s performance-car arm. These will be supplemented by a range of gasoline and diesel plug-in hybrid, and mild hybrid options, on all models that will still be powered by internal-combustion engines.

“Volvo Cars has stated that it plans to have sold a total of one million electrified cars by 2025. This is how we are going to do it,” Mr. Samuelsson said.

The company added it also plans to reduce the carbon emissions of its products and operations as it aims to achieve climate-neutral manufacturing operations by 2025.

Sta. Lucia to avail of P5-B corporate note facility

By Arra B. Francia, Reporter

STA. LUCIA LAND, Inc. (SLI) plans to avail of a seven-year corporate note facility of up to P5 billion to pay its existing obligations as well as to finance the development of its projects.

The property developer disclosed to the stock exchange on Tuesday its board of directors has authorized SLI to negotiate and avail of the facility with financial institutions. The corporate note facility comprises a base size of P3 billion, with an overallotment option of up to P2 billion.

The listed firm will be tapping a maximum of 19 investors for the facility.

“(The corporate note facility will be used) for the pre-payment of existing obligations of the corporation, the financing of project development costs, and general corporate purposes,” SLI said.

The company will have to secure regulatory approvals to proceed with the corporate note facility.

In the same board meeting, SLI was authorized to enter into a total of eight joint venture projects. The largest project is located in Bulacan, which covers a total of 715,410 square meters (sq.m.). This is followed by a Batangas project spanning 383,069 sq.m., and a project in Palawan with total size of 178,762 sq.m.

SLI will also partner with firms for projects in Baguio City, Quezon City, Cavite, Rizal, and Negros Occidental.

The company known for operating the Sta. Lucia Mall in Cainta is likewise ramping up its land bank, as it is slated to buy more than 1.01 million sq.m. of land. The biggest lot is located in Batangas, covering 524,015 sq.m., followed by a 239,000-sq.m property in General Santos City. Other areas where the company is purchasing land are Dagupan City, Cavite, Laguna, Rizal, Iloilo, and Davao.

Last September 2017, SLI disclosed plans to raise P15 billion in the local capital markets to fund its expansion in the next three to five years. This would accelerate the company’s development of more residential, retail, commercial, and tourism-related properties.

Incorporated in 1996, SLI develops horizontal and residential properties across the country, relying on overseas Filipino workers, families, foreign investors, retirees, young urban professionals, and newly married couples as its clients.

The company grew its attributable profit by 31% in the first three quarters of 2017 to P700.5 million, against the P534.1 million it realized in the same period a year ago. This comes on the back of a 17% year-on-year increase in revenues to P2.79 billion.

Shares in SLI added a centavo or 0.97% to close at P1.04 each on Tuesday.

Warriors forward Draymond Green fined $25,000 for referee rebuke

NEW YORK — Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green was fined $25,000 for public criticism of officiating by the NBA on Monday.

The league announced the punishment was imposed for comments made Saturday after the Warriors defeated the host Los Angeles Clippers, 121-105.

Green told sports Web site The Athletic that NBA referees have gone too far and created a toxic relationship with players.

“It’s bad,” Green said. “It’s horrible. It’s really bad. I don’t know why it is but I think it’s ridiculous. It’s ruining the game. It should be one of, if not the main priority, to be solved. It definitely should.”

Green, who has been whistled for an NBA-high 11 technical fouls this season, says he feels officials have a bias against him. Green would face a one-game suspension if called for 16 technical fouls this season.

“A lot of it is personal,” Green said. “When you give someone so much authority and they make it me against you, you can’t overcome that.”

Green would like to see a wholesale change in NBA officiating personnel.

“They can get a new crop (of referees), a whole new crop,” Green said. “Too many personal things going on. Too much me against you. It just don’t work that way.” — AFP

Pullouts

The local football and e-sports scenes had it rough of late with telling pullouts hitting them.

Football saw one of the marquee names in the Philippines Football League (PFL) in FC Meralco Manila cease operations and has made known it will no longer participate in the next season of the national football league while e-sports had a big tournament lose some luster after the “major” label on it was rescinded last minute.

In a surprising turn of events, FC Meralco announced on its official Facebook account on Monday night that it was folding up as team, citing, among other things, the difficulty of finding new investors to help it run operations.

The decision ended more than a decade of existence for the Sparks which saw them in various iterations and competed in various tournaments and leagues, including the United Football League (UFL) and PFL, where they established a solid standing and following.

Like most who caught FC Meralco’s Facebook announcement, I, too greeted it with surprise and sadness.

Surely it came from left field as FC Meralco was one of the teams which performed well in the inaugural season of the PFL, winding up at third place following a steady regular season that had it on top of the standings for much of the time.

The Sparks were pretty much well-run and organized the way I saw it, highlighted by constant contact with the media for updates and all.

Their decision to trade long-time faces of the team — Phil and James Younghusband — took everyone by surprise but it hardly passed itself off as ominous of things to come.

Having had chance to follow the team in the UFL and PFL, it is sad to see FC Meralco go.

The Sparks were one of the marquee teams in said leagues for a reason, making decisions I felt, by and large, geared towards the advancement of the leagues and football in general, including naming a female general manager in Belay Fernando which was groundbreaking.

The exit also reminds one of how shaky still the national league is and a lot of challenges have to be overcome by all concerned.

If a team backed by a company like Meralco is forced to cease, what more the others, right?

But hopefully the remaining teams and the PFL rise above this episode and view it as further motivation to forge ahead and see the cause of furthering the growth of football in the country through.

Over at e-sports, organizers of the Galaxy Battles II, a Defense of the Ancients (DotA) 2 tournament, that is set to happen in the country next week had its “major” label rescinded by Valve Corporation, the parent company and developer of DotA 2, over what it considers as “unreasonable infringements on the privacy of the players,” including mandatory drug testing.

Organizers of the event, led by Malaysia-based Fallout Gaming, expressed disappointment and surprise over the turn of events as it put them in a bind as along with it went the Pro Circuit points, leaving the participation of some of the expected competing teams in doubt.

But they said they are forging ahead with the event, scheduled for Jan. 19 to 21, in accordance with the rules and regulations of the country’s Games and Amusements Board.

Definitely this pullout of the “major” label on the Galaxy Battles is unfortunate as it deprived fans here the chance to see their favorite international teams in action.

E-sports has been growing exponentially in the country and the upcoming event would have been a good platform to further showcase that.

To pullout over among other things because of mandatory drug testing is flimsy if you are to ask me, considering that proponents of e-sports want to professionalize it and want it included even in the Olympics, which encourages such procedures.

It would have been a good opportunity to set things in the right direction and elevate e-sports to another level of conduct.

Indeed, the pullouts football and e-sports in the country suffered recently were tough blows. Here is just hoping that both come out the better after these and continue the growth they have been experiencing.

 

Michael Angelo S. Murillo has been a columnist since 2003. He is a BusinessWorld reporter covering the Sports beat.

msmurillo@www.bworldonline.com

Peasant, lumad activists ‘abducted’ in Cotabato province; house strafed in Agusan del Norte — Karapatan

THREE ACTIVISTS, two of them peasants, the last one a lumad, were forcibly seized in Magpet town, Cotabato province, early Tuesday morning, Jan. 9, the human rights organization Karapatan said. And on Monday night, two unidentified gunmen strafed the home of a lumad couple in Barangay Bangayan, Kitcharao, Agusan del Norte. — News5/interaksyon.com

See full story on https://goo.gl/gaKkGj

Cryptocurrency may be getting quietly channeled to N. Korea university as Pyongyang’s financial lifeline

SEOUL — A cybersecurity company said it has found software that appears to install code for mining cryptocurrency and sends any mined coins to a server at a North Korean university, the latest sign that North Korea may be searching for new ways to infuse its economy with cash.

The application, which was created on Dec. 24, uses host computers to mine a cryptocurrency called Monero. It then sends any coins to Kim Il Sung University in Pyongyang, said cybersecurity firm AlienVault, which examined the program.

“Cryptocurrencies may provide a financial lifeline to a country hit hard by sanctions, and as a result universities in Pyongyang have shown a clear interest in cryptocurrencies,” the California-based security firm said in a release, adding that the software “may be the most recent product of their endeavors.”

The company added a caveat that a North Korean server used in the code does not appear to be connected to the wider internet, which could mean its inclusion is meant to trick observers into making a North Korean connection. Kim Il Sung University, however, plays host to foreign students and lecturers, not just North Koreans.

Kim Il Sung University did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Government officials representing North Korea at the United Nations were not immediately available for comment.

Others have flagged increasing signs of North Korean interest in cryptocurrencies and underlying blockchain technology.

“With economic sanctions in place, cryptocurrencies are currently the best way to earn foreign currency in North Korea’s situation. It is hard to trace and can be laundered several times,” said Mun Chong-hyun, chief analyst at South Korean cybersecurity firm ESTsecurity.

Cryptocurrency watchers say technical details of Monero, the 13th-largest crypto asset in the world, according to www.coinmarketcap.com, with a total value of more than $7 billion, make it more appealing than bitcoin to those who value secrecy.

Monero funds go to an unlinkable, one-time address generated with random numbers every time a payment is issued. That makes it less traceable than bitcoin, where transactions can be linked to specific, albeit anonymous, private addresses, cybersecurity experts said.

South Korea-based Bithumb, the world’s busiest cryptocurrency exchange, is also the largest Monero trading exchange in the world, with about 24% of trading volume. The next largest were Europe-based exchange HitBTC and Hong Kong-based Bitfinex, as of Monday.

Marshal Swatt, an expert in blockchain technology and financial exchange, said cryptocurrencies’ independence from government regulation — and sanctions — made them logical choices for covert transactions.

“They don’t by themselves discriminate between good and bad actors,” he said. “This makes it extremely compelling for countries like North Korea, Venezuela, Iran, Russia and others to exploit these non-governmental blockchain currencies for their own self-interest.”

Cybersecurity firm FireEye cited in a November blog post a series of North Korean activities against South Korean cryptocurrency targets such as exchanges. Analyst Luke McNamara wrote that “it should be no surprise that cryptocurrencies, as an emerging asset class, are becoming a target of interest by a regime that operates in many ways like a criminal enterprise.”

In early November, Federico Tenga, the Italian co-founder of bitcoin start-up Chainside, posted on his Twitter account pictures and comments on his visit to lecture on bitcoin and blockchain technology at the Western-funded Pyongyang University of Science and Technology.

“The lectures were at a quite basic level to give a general understanding of blockchain technologies, which are also very relevant to trade, supply chains and other e-business,” a spokesman for the university said.

“We believe this teaching can give the next generation of North Korean professionals additional concepts that may be valuable as they seek to develop their country,” the spokesman added. “We’re acutely aware of issues around sanctions, which we keep under regular review and take care to avoid any sensitive or proscribed areas.”

Mr. Tenga said his lectures were geared toward explaining the underlying technology of cryptocurrencies.

“The focus of the lectures was to make the students understand what the blockchain is, how it works (special focus on proof of work) and what are the main use cases. My aim was simply to spread technical knowledge, not suggesting them how to use it,” Mr. Tenga told Reuters in a series of messages.

AlienVault’s report said one North Korean IP address, 175.45.178.19, has been active on bitcoin trading sites. That is the same address used to control compromised web servers in 2014-15 cyberattacks on South Korean energy, traffic, telecommunications, broadcasting, financial and political institutions, according to security firm AhnLab.

The report also observed that North Korean IP addresses have downloaded several episodes of the automotive TV series Top Gear and documentaries by the show’s former presenter James May. — Reuters

Changes under DoLE’s revised rules on inspections

Consistent with the efforts of the Duterte administration to stop endo and promote regulation, the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) recently promulgated Department Order No. 183, Series of 2017, known as the Revised Rules on the Administration and Enforcement of Labor Laws Pursuant to Article 128 of the Labor Code, as Renumbered (DO 183). The new DO superseded Department Order No. 131-B and with stricter guidelines, DO 183 aims to ensure a higher level of compliance of labor laws and standards in the workplace.

Under DO 183, establishments may be subjected to a Routine Inspection, Complaint Inspection or Occupational Safety and Health Standards Investigation, which shall be conducted by Labor Inspectors, formerly called Labor Law Compliance Officers (LLCOs).

ROUTINE INSPECTION
Routine Inspection is the process of evaluating a private establishment’s compliance with labor laws and social legislation through a prescribed Inspection Checklist. Previously, this process was called a Joint Assessment, and establishments with valid Certificates of Compliance (CoC) or Tripartite Certificate of Compliance with Labor Standards (TCCLS) were exempt from inspection. However, since the new rules eliminated provisions on Certificates of Compliance, even compliant establishments may be subjected to routine inspections and random validations by the appropriate Regional Office.

For routine inspections, the DoLE prioritizes establishments engaged in hazardous work; employing children; engaged in contracting or subcontracting arrangements; employing 10 or more employees; and such other establishments or industries as may be determined by the Labor secretary as priority. Philippine registered ships or vessels engaged in domestic shipping and public utility bus transport are no longer considered as priority establishments for routine inspections under DO 183.

The new rules also shortened the period for establishments to correct their violations on general labor standards and contracting and subcontracting rules. DO 183 mandates that after the receipt of Notice of Results, establishments must institute their corrective actions within a non-extendible period of ten (10) days, instead of twenty (20) days as provided under the previous DO.

COMPLAINT INSPECTION
Another amendment found under DO 183 is the Complaint Inspection. It differs from the former Compliance Visit since the new rules limit the conduct of a Complaint Inspection to instances where there is a Single Entry Approach (SEnA) referral, or a request in conciliation-meditation proceedings at the National Conciliation and Mediation Board (NCMB) to validate or verify violation of labor standards. If anonymous complaints are received, DO 183 also allows surprise visits to be conducted to validate the reported violation of labor laws.

OTHER SALIENT POINTS
Under the old rules, the Labor secretary had the authority to issue work stoppage orders when non-compliance with occupational safety and health standards poses imminent danger to the health and safety of employees.

Under DO 183, the Labor Secretary acquires an expanded authority to issue industry-wide work stoppage orders, under exceptional circumstances.

DO 183 also exacts cooperation among employers by imposing stricter rules whenever a person refuses access to records and/or premises of the establishment during an inspection. Under the previous rules, the refusal to access must have been committed at least twice in the course of a joint assessment or compliance visit before the responsible person becomes liable.

Under the new rules, the refusal of access to records or premises, even at the first instance, shall subject the responsible person to a criminal action already. In fact, the new rules even deleted the provision on undergoing a mandatory conference prior to the filing of the criminal case.

Finally, it must be noted that if a compliance order for regularization is issued, and there is a pending appeal on such order, employers are prohibited from terminating the workers ordered to be regularized.

It is apparent that the new rules impose grave consequences for employers who do not comply. It reinforces strict implementation of labor laws and standards and addresses the intensifying campaign of the current administration to accelerate the regularization of workers in the country. While this direction aims to safeguard the rights of our workers, rushing or forcing the regularization of laborers may have adverse effects upon employers who are also struggling to make ends meet. Lest it be ignored, when businesses suffer, ultimately, it is the workers who are the first to bear the most painful blow.

 

Aylene Marie C. Sarmiento is an associate at the Angara Abello Concepcion Regala & Cruz Law Offices (ACCRALAW).

830-8000

acsarmiento@accralaw.co.

London play charts real-life stories in French ‘jungle’ migrant camp

LONDON — A boy is found dead and smoke fills the air ahead of a police raid: traumatic memories from France’s “jungle” migrant camp are being recreated on a London stage.

More than a year has passed since police swept through the squalid camp near the port of Calais, clearing out an estimated 7,000 migrants. Now, the ordeal is captured vividly in The Jungle playing to sell-out crowds at the Young Vic theater.

The play is the creation of two writers who set up their own theatre amid the chaos in Calais, with casts including migrant actors.

“We ended up wanting to chart the creation of that society and then the destruction, or downfall, of that society,” playwright Joe Murphy told AFP.

Murphy and fellow writer Joe Robertson, both 27, set up the Good Chance Theatre in September 2015 at the heart of the Jungle, their actors performing under a second-hand geodesic dome tent.

Three of the migrants who acted in Calais are now performing in The Jungle, which lays bare the precarious and dangerous times faced by those searching desperately for a passage to Britain.

Episodes in which characters race off to try their luck — seeking their “good chance” in jungle lingo — on the roads towards the port bring tears to patrons’ eyes.

A total of 33 migrants died in the Calais area in 2015 and 2016, mostly being hit by vehicles as they tried to climb into lorries, or by trains about to pass through the Channel Tunnel.

The camp was widely seen as a result of a controversial 2003 accord that effectively moved Britain’s border with France to the French side of the Channel, creating a magnet for migrants fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and Asia.

DESPAIR, MUSIC, LAUGHTER
The play’s scenes of despair are punctuated by music and laughter, as different nationalities try to live together and naive British volunteers turn up with breakfast cereal and good intentions.

“We have tried to be as honest as possible about the role we played and the role that the volunteers played in Calais,” Robertson said.

“We’ve tried to be really critical at times of the impact individuals have when they try and help.”

The play’s narrator is Ammar Haj Ahmad, a refugee from Syria, who did not pass through Calais and sees his role as creating empathy.

“It’s my task to invite people to strip with me, to really be vulnerable, whether we cry or we don’t cry, to look people in the eye and say, ‘now you know,’” he said.

‘DANGEROUSLY EXPLORATIVE’
The desire to understand what happened across the Channel is a main draw of the show, which closes on Tuesday, before the playwrights move on to their next project.

Later this month Good Chance Paris will open in the northern Porte de la Chapelle area, bringing the dome tent used in Calais to the French capital.

“We will be a theater that welcomes people of all backgrounds, who’ve been in the city and were born there and lived there all their lives, and those that arrived there the day before,” Murphy said.

Under the stewardship of Good Chance’s French executive producer Claire Bejanin and in collaboration with the charity Emmaus Solidarite, the creative arts space will have an initial 10-week run.

Murphy said he wanted to bring together people from a wide political spectrum — “people who are very sceptical, or angry, or scared, or feel very strongly about the issue.”

Although the Calais camp has long since closed, its legacy is expected to last, and the playwrights plan to take their theatre to Athens, whose government continues to grapple with a relentless migrant crisis.

For Murphy, art is the ideal means to stimulate dialogue between sometimes very different groups of people.

“Art is disarming, it’s generous, it’s gentle, but it’s kind of dangerously explorative at the same time. And that’s the context and the theatre that we want to create.” — AFP

PEZA seeking to make SMEs ‘indirect exporters’

A NEW SCHEME targeting small and medium enterprises (SME) in the manufacturing industry is in the works, with the intention of bringing such companies into the supply chains of larger firms registered with the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA).

The plan is to co-locate SMEs in existing manufacturing zones for exporters, where they can work with and possibly supply larger firms.

PEZA Director-General Charito B. Plaza said in an interview that the strategy will first turn the SMEs into “indirect exporters” until these companies are big enough to become direct exporters themselves.

“We’re in a hurry actually because the SMEs are enthusiastic [since] if they are in the zone, the parameters are clear and… they will also enjoy the incentives,” she added.

“This will [also] put in order the construction of industries in the locality, and their CLUP (Comprehensive Land Use Plan) so now we are encouraging the local government units to use the ecozone concept, [to] convert their lands into different types of ecozones.”

So far, PEZA has only accredited one cooperative to receive fiscal and non-fiscal incentives despite the absence of a firm agreement on specific incentives with the Department of Finance.

“PEZA is recommending the incentives [where] they will only pay 5% of their gross income but will have a cap. We recommended 10 to 15 years that they will only pay 5% of their gross income so they will also enjoy… non-fiscal incentives but these are still all on the table,” Ms. Plaza said.

Ms. Plaza said the scheme is designed to bring many small firms out of the underground economy, thereby broadening the tax base, among other benefits. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato