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Middling Mavericks

Depending on where you stand, you either believe the Mavericks have parlayed the offseason into a good opportunity to prep for the inevitable departure of franchise legend Dirk Nowitzki or resign yourself to the fact that the next few years will bring about mediocrity. Of course, the premise of both viewpoints could be simultaneously true, in which case cynics will be having a field day noting that, in the National Basketball Association, purgatory is the worst place to go.
On paper, the Mavericks certainly did well, finally nabbing slotman DeAndre Jordan and, in the process, laying the groundwork for a system leaning towards the defensive predilections of head coach Rick Carlisle. He may no longer be producing at an All-Star level, but he’s still a worthy catch that complements the existing talent base. And he comes on good terms, too; he’s a one-season pickup that allows them to mine the free agency landscape for marquee names next year.
Parenthetically, the arrival of Trae Young reflects the Mavericks’ current position: Like his team, he has an upside that fans can pin their hopes on, as well as a downside that could conceivably crush their hearts. At this point, perhaps the best that can be said about him is this: His game is similar to backcourt partner Dennis Smith Jr.’s, but with range (and, on the minus side, poor shot selection). In this regard, he should thank his lucky stars he has Nowitzki and Carlisle to guide his progress on the court and off.
That said, the Mavericks will find themselves going only so far as Harrison Barnes will take them — which is to say not far, especially in the loaded Western Conference. Even in their much-improved state, they’ll be hard-pressed to make the playoffs, let alone challenge the gold-standard Warriors anytime soon. They’ll play hard and work hard, a byproduct of outstanding organization and mentorship. The flipside is that, because they’ll do so, they won’t be at or near the bottom of the standings, a requisite to subsequently snatching prized draft recruits.
In short, the Mavericks are stuck in the middle. They’re good enough to put some scare into highly touted opponents, but not skilled enough to win with consistency. And they’re overmatched enough to be mere playoff fodder, but not bad enough to secure highly ranked picks. No wonder franchise owner Mark Cuban wants lottery reform to happen, and fast.
 
Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994.

Be a ‘Ninoy’, leaders say in remembrance

IN REMEMBRANCE of the late senator Benigno “Ninoy” S. Aquino, Jr., his son and namesake, former President Benigno S.C. Aquino III, urged Filipinos to stand as a “Ninoy” in serving the country.
Nung nawala po ang tatay natin marami pong tumayo at parang pinuno yung mga papel na ginagampanan nya (When we lost our father, many stood and took his part),” Mr. Aquino said on Tuesday during his speech after the commemoration mass for his father’s 35th death anniversary at the Manila Memorial Park.
It was 35 years ago when the former political leader was shot and killed as he stepped out of the plane that brought him home after three years in exile.
“So, kung nawalan tayo ng isang Ninoy ay dumami naman po ang papel ng mga tumatayong Ninoy (So, even if we lost a Ninoy, in his place there were many others who served his role), Mr. Aquino said, stressing that the country’s development lies in the people’s hands.
President Rodrigo R. Duterte attested to this, saying that in pushing for real change, the country needs “more citizens like him (Ninoy).”
“May his dedication to his cause serve as a guidepost for our current leaders in government as they advance the welfare of our people, especially the oppressed and marginalized,” Mr. Duterte said in a statement on Tuesday.
For her part, Vice-President Maria Leonor G. Robredo highlighted the role of the late senator in what would be the historic People Power Revolution that freed the country from the dictatorship of former President Ferdinand E. Marcos.
“Our remembrance of Ninoy tends to focus largely on this martyrdom, when, through his courage in the face of death, he inspired a people to find their own,” Ms. Robredo said.
She also recalled that it was the people’s undying will to fight during the reign of Mr. Marcos that made Mr. Aquino say that the “Filipino is worth dying for.”
“Today, as we remember Ninoy Aquino, I pray that we find in ourselves the courage to claim for ourselves the freedoms Ninoy died for, and in that way, live up to the unshakable faith he had in us as a people.,” Ms. Robredo said. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Aquino slams Duterte on Ninoy Aquino Day

FORMER President Benigno S.C. Aquino III attacked his successor, President Rodrigo R. Duterte, on the occasion of the 35th commemoration of the assassination of Mr. Aquino’s father, Senator Benigno S. Aquino, Jr.
Mr. Duterte earlier yesterday, issued a message honoring the martyred senator, whose assassination marked the beginning of the end of Ferdinand E. Marcos’s dictatorship. “In this time of real and lasting change, we need more citizens like him so we can steer our country towards the direction where a brighter and better future awaits us all,” Mr. Duterte said in his Ninoy Aquino Day message.
Mr. Aquino spoke on Tuesday afternoon at a mass held at the historic Sto. Domingo Church in Quezon City, the site of a week-long massive vigil 35 years ago following the 1983 assassination of Senator Aquino, the leading rival of Mr. Marcos.
Taking up contemporary issues, the former president said, “Madalas… po nating naririnig sa TV ang katagang nanlaban. Ako ho ay nag-isip na, ‘pag ang tao ho ay inaresto, kadalasan ho…pinuposasan po ang tao na ang kamay niya ay nasa likod, hindi po pinuposasan sa harap….Kaya ako ho’y nagtataka lalo na ‘pag bigla nilang sinabing ito ay nanlaban….” (We often hear on TV the term ‘resisted.’ It made me think that when you arrest a person, most of the time he is being cuffed behind his back. So, I wonder especially when they just suddenly claim the person resisted).
Mr. Aquino also said: “Ngayon po, hindi lang po bumaba ang supply ng bigas, sinabi nga po ng NFA (National Food Authority) ay naubos na at may parating, ano po ba ang naririnig natin?” (Today, the supply of rice has not only gone down, but the NFA also said there is nothing left (but) imports are due. What (else) do we hear?)
The former president said he has so far been careful with his statements. “Maingat akong magkumento dahil trato sa atin ay kalaban (I have been careful about commenting [on issues] because they treat us as an enemy).”
He then spoke about the upcoming midterm elections. “Sa susunod na taon, midterm elections na naman. Dapat klaro ang mensaheng ipaparating natin….Kung sang-ayon po tayo sa takbo ng bansa ngayon, iboto po ang kakampi ng administrasyon. Pero kung ‘di ka sang ayon, huwag niyo lang iboto ang ating mga kandidato, i-kampanya niyo pa sila. Palakasin ninyo ang magdadala ng tinatawag na checks and balances sa gobyerno,” Mr. Aquino said.
(We’ll be having midterm elections again next year. Our message should be clear. If we approve of what is going on in our country today, vote for the allies of the administration. Otherwise, don’t just vote for our candidates but campaign for them. Let’s strengthen those who will bring checks and balances in government).
ROBREDO CAPABLE
Mr. Aquino was at the gravesite of his parents at the Manila Memorial Park on Tuesday morning. Asked by reporters about Vice-President Maria Leonor G. Robredo’s capability to run the country, he said, “I’m very confident that she can.”
“‘Yun ang desisyon ng taumbayan (That’s the decision of the people),” he also said. “Ano ang karapatan kong suwagin o kontrahin ang desiyon ng grupong may karapatang magbigay ng mandato?” he said. (What right do I have to contradict those who have the right to give a mandate?).
Mr. Aquino is chairman emeritus of the opposition Liberal Party, of which Ms. Robredo is chairwoman.
Mr. Aquino said he hopes Mr. Duterte will follow the constitutional order of succession if he vacates the presidency.
Sana ‘yung Chief Executive na nagpapatupad ng lahat ng ating batas, isa na ang Saligang Batas, ang magsabi ng constitutional succession. Iwan na lang du’n, kesa iwan sa personalities,” the former president said. (I hope the Chief Executive who implements all our laws, including the Constitution, will be the one to say that he will follow the constitutional succession. Let’s leave it at that, rather than leave it up to personalities). — Arjay L. Balinbin

PDEA flags threat of psychoactive drugs

“NEW PSYCHOACTIVE substances that are not yet covered by the current drug law” are now in circulation in the country, the spokesperson of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) said.
“There is a trend now called new psychoactive substances,” PDEA spokesperson Derrick C. Carreon said in an interview with The Chiefs on One News. “Ito pong party drugs natin (these party drugs) are sourced from outside the country. For instance, ito pong (this) ecstasy is from either Amsterdam or, during itong (this) last trip, was from France.
Mr. Carreon also cited GBL, or gamma-butyrolactone. “If you reckon back to the time na may nagpakita ng video sa media (someone showed a video to the media). The victim was exhibiting … involuntary movement and incoheren(ce). Nakakatakot (It’s frightening). Ginagamit ang GBL (GBL is used) in tandem with lydocaine,” he said.
He added: “We’re currently moving toward its inclusion (Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002) because (GBL’s) other variant, gamma hydroxybutyrate, which is called liquid ecstasy, is already included.”
“These are industrial cleaners for semiconductors,” Mr. Carreon pointed out.
Despite these developments, Mr. Carreon said the government is “on the right track” in its crackdown on illegal drugs, citing the provinces of Batanes, Romblon, and Southern Leyte.
“We’ve had three, so far, drug-cleared provinces. Na-control na natin ‘yung problema so subjected to barangay drug clearing. Wala nang nagtutulak, walang bumibili, walang nagta-tranship (We have controlled the problem so it is subjected to drug clearing at the village level. There’s no pusher, no buyer, no transhipping)….In fact, the city of Tacloban has also been declared drug-cleared. These are good indicators stating that kahit paano (somehow) we were going somewhere,” he said. -— Vann Mario Villegas

House bill filed on coconut farmers’ inclusion in PCA Governing Board

A BILL reconstituting the Governing Board of the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA) to include more farmer groups has been filed at the House of Representatives (HoR), following the bicameral approval of the coco levy fund early this month.
House Bill 8079 seeks to strengthen the PCA Governing Board with the appointment of four cabinet secretaries, six representatives from among the coconut farmers and one from the coconut industry.
The bill reconstitutes the Board “to (give) farmers a stronger voice in the PCA,” co-author Representative Celso L. Lobregat told BusinessWorld in a phone interview Tuesday.
At present, the Governing Board of the PCA is led by Chairman Leoncio B. Evasco, Jr. with five board members and four deputy administrators.
If enacted, the Secretary of Agriculture will head the Board with the Administrator of the PCA serving as the vice-chairperson.
The Secretaries of Finance and Budget and Management will also be part of the Governing Board.
Among the coconut farmers will be appointed two representatives each from Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.
They shall be appointed by the President among four nominees from each area, as recommended by the PCA.
The representative from the coconut industry will be appointed from a list of five nominees.
Each representative will serve a total of three years with one-time reappointment.
The Coconut Farmers and Industry Development Trust Fund Act provided that the fund will be managed by a strengthened PCA Board.
As stated in the explanatory note, “To effectively implement the Law, the Bicameral Conference Committee resolved that a reconstituted PCA Board will further strengthen PCA’s financial, technical, and administrative capability.”
The bill is at the House Committee on Government Enterprises and Privatization. Its counterpart bill, Senate Bill 1913, is pending at the Committee on Agriculture and Food. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

5 roads in Cordilleras still closed as rains continue

FIVE ROAD sections in the Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR), including the entire stretch of Kennon Road going to Baguio City, are still closed to vehicles, according to the latest advisory from the Department of Public Works and Highways-CAR regional office. The four others are: Beckel, Lamut junction of the Benguet Nueva-Vizcaya Road; Nagaparan, Danglas along the Abra-Ilocos Norte Road; the Acop-Kapangan-Kibunga-Bakun Road in Benguet; and the Dumanay section Kalinga. These thoroughfares have been affected by continued southwest monsoon rains, enhanced by several typhoons. Meanwhile, weather bureau PAGASA yesterday said typhoon Soulik, although not expected to enter the Philippine area, will enhance the monsoon rains and bring moderate to heavy rains to the northern part of the country, including CAR.

Remembering Ninoy

PHILSTAR/EDD GUMBAN

A monument of the late senator Benigno “Ninoy” S. Aquino, Jr. in Manila, just outside Intramuros. Vice-President Maria Leonor G. Robredo said yesterday, on his 35<sup>th</sup> death anniversary, “Our remembrance of Ninoy tends to focus largely on this martyrdom, when, through his courage in the face of death, he inspired a people to find their own.”

IBP says arrest of 3 lawyers threatens rule of law

THE INTEGRATED Bar of the Philippines (IBP) said the arrest of three lawyers in relation to a raid in a Makati bar suspected as an illegal drug trading venue “raises grave concerns for the rule of law in the Philippines.”
In a statement on Tuesday, IBP said, “The arrest and detention of three lawyers for alleged obstruction of justice and the filing of charges for ‘constructive possession’ of illegal drugs, when they had every right to represent their client and be present to observe and record the implementation of a search warrant, raises grave concerns for the rule of law in the Philippines.”
The IBP added, “Such treatment of lawyers erodes the Constitution’s guarantee of due process for every person — be they our son or daughter, teenagers who violated the curfew, or those suspected of committing a crime. Such treatment also violates the UN Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers.”
On August 11, Lawyers Romulo Bernard B. Alarcon, Lenie Rocel E. Rocha, and Jan Vincent S. Soliven were arrested during a sting operation at the Times Bar in Makati.
The police claimed that the lawyers disrespected and intimidated them.
IBP announced last week that they will file a petition for habeus corpus for the illegal detainment of the lawyers.
IBP President Abdiel Dan Elijah S. Fajardo said in an interview that even if the lawyers did disrespect and intimidate the police officers, these acts still do not constitute obstruction of justice “because if you read the law… there are specific actions that constitute obstruction of justice and none of that, not one of what the police general stated, qualified as obstruction of justice.” — Gillian M. Cortez

CoA questions P55.3M spent on food by Bohol provincial gov’t

BOHOL.GOV.PH

THE COMMISSION on Audit (CoA) has ordered the Bohol provincial government to submit justification on the P55.3 million it spent in 2017 for various catering services. CoA, in its annual audit report posted on its Website, said, “The total amount of P55,320,516.31 was spent in CY 2017 for food catering services which were indiscriminately provided during all events/gatherings of the province during the year, which is not in keeping with P.D. 1445 (State Audit Code of the Philippines) and incompatible with the purposes in section 343 of RA 7160 (Local Government Code).” The audit agency added that such “excessive expenditures signify unreasonable expense and exorbitant price,” not usual and proper, and “in excess of reasonable limits.” Among the activities and events where catering was provided include the governor’s radio program, visits of dignitaries, medical mission/outreach/job fair, assemblies, festivals, and assessment meetings. — The Freeman
>> See full story on https://goo.gl/cfh5Uz

Zamboanga City declares state of calamity due to rice shortage

THE ZAMBOANGA City council on Monday declared the entire city under a state of calamity following more than two weeks of rice shortage and continued spiking of rice prices in the public market. With the declaration, the local government will now be able to use the allocated P15 million calamity fund to purchase additional rice for distribution at a lower price to the public. “We will be able to impose price ceiling on rice in the city considering the fact that there are certain sector are taking advantage on the rice shortage,” said Vice Mayor Cesar S. Iturralde, who chairs the council. The rice shortage in the city pushed the price of regular milled rice sold to as much as P80 per kilogram. As a response, the National Food Authority (NFA) Zamboanga Peninsula regional office has launched a program to bring supply directly to the different villages. Earlier this month, this city and its neighboring island provinces of Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi experienced a sudden increase in commercial rice prices due to a strengthened campaign against smuggled rice, coupled by the delay of imports by the government and the off harvest season. — Albert F. Arcilla

How prevalent is modern slavery in the Philippines?

By Mark T. Amoguis, Researcher
Modern slavery refers to situations of exploitation that include human trafficking, forced labor, debt bondage, forced or servile marriage, and sale or exploitation of children among other things. Around 40.3 million people are said to be victims of modern slavery around the world in 2016, 60% of whom are found in ten countries (India, China, Pakistan, North Korea, Nigeria, Iran, Indonesia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Russia, and the Philippines), according to the 2018 edition of the Global Slavery Index.
Modern slavery in the Philippines
In terms of prevalence of modern slavery, North Korea tops the list at 104.6 per 1,000 people. The Philippines, meanwhile, ranked 30th overall (out of 167 countries) with 7.70 per 1,000 people. The Philippines is also considered to be highly vulnerable to modern slavery with an average score of 60.24, above the global and Asia Pacific averages of 45.6 and 46.1, respectively.
However, the country is among the top performers in terms of government response in combatting slavery with a grade of BB compared to the average CCC response rating of governments across Asia-Pacific.
Countries with highest proportion of modern day slavery

Eid’l Adha in the time of transition

Muslims, including officials and employees of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, gathered inside the ORG compound in Cotabato City yesterday for the Eid’l Adha prayer. Eid’l Adha, or Feast of the Sacrifice, is one of the two major festivals in Islam. Anticipating the eventual transition of the ARMM to the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, Regional Governor Mujiv S. Hataman said this Eid is “special.” Echoing the sermon during the ceremony, Mr. Hataman said, “This is a small sacrifice on our part, and I hope everyone who may potentially be adversely affected by the implementation of the (Bangsamoro Organic Law) understands this. I hope they are also ready to make sacrifices not only for themselves, not only for our fellowmen, but most of all for Allah, the Lord Almighty.”

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