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North Korea soldier stable, but riddled with parasites

SEOUL — A North Korean soldier shot multiple times while defecting to the South is in a stable condition but riddled with parasites that could complicate his chances of survival, his doctor said Thursday.

The soldier dashed across the border at the Panmunjom truce village on Monday, as former comrades from the North opened fire on him, hitting him at least four times.

He was pulled to safety by three South Korean soldiers who crawled to reach him, just south of the dividing line.

The young man was rushed to hospital in South Korea by helicopter where he has undergone two rounds of emergency surgery.

“Vital signs including his pulse are returning to stability,” attending doctor Lee Cook-Jong told journalists.

However, he warned, the unnamed soldier could rapidly deteriorate at any moment.

“We’re paying close attention to prevent possible complications,” said Lee, who on Wednesday said “an enormous number of parasites” including roundworms had been found in the small intestine.

“I’ve never seen anything like this in my 20 years as a physician,” he said, adding the longest worm he removed was 27 centimeters (11 inches).

Parasites, especially roundworms, are widespread in North Korea — as they are in many developing countries — where people eat uncooked vegetables that have been fertilized with human feces, experts say. — AFP

TESDA-Davao seeks partners for heavy equipment training

DAVAO CITY — The Technical Education and Skills Development Authority’s (TESDA) Davao Region office is urging schools and construction companies to set up training programs for heavy equipment operators amid a shortage of skilled manpower to service the real estate and infrastructure boom.

TESDA Regional Director Gaspar S. Gayona said in an interview the agency is are ready to provide assistance in developing the curriculum as well as offer scholarships for developing a pool of trainers.

“We don’t have available trainers in Davao,” he said, adding that the agency can assist in “importing” trainers from Cebu “if the private sector offers to provide training centers.”

Mr. Gayona said the shortage in heavy equipment operators has been most pronounced in Davao City, where there has been a surge in property projects alongside the departure of operators for overseas work.

“We have no more heavy equipment operators, they have been pirated abroad,” he said.

The TESDA official said the need for skilled workers is expected to increase further as the administration gains momentum on its infrastructure projects under the Build-Build-Build program.

One of the major projects that will be rolled out in Davao starting next year is the first segment of the Mindanao Railway System, which will traverse the cities of Digos, Davao, and Tagum.

“We are appealing to the private sector,” Mr. Gayona said, to become partners in manpower development.

Apart from heavy equipment operators, there is also a need for more welders, machinery operators, and tourism sector workers. — Maya M. Padillo

A league of his own

Even if he’s serious about it, President Rodrigo Duterte’s offer for the Philippines to host a high-level meeting, or summit, on human rights is unlikely to materialize. The leaders of those countries accused of human rights violations would hardly welcome an assembly in which the details of their crimes against humanity and other transgressions will get a global airing.

To be true to its name, such a summit would necessarily include Mr. Duterte’s new-found friends, the leaders of China and Russia, and the president of this country’s long-time overlord, the United States. Like the Philippines, all three countries have also been accused of human rights violations.

Ruled by a clique from a so-called communist party that has restored capitalism and which is currently aping its imperialist cohorts, China has been suppressing freedom of speech and expression, imprisoning dissenters, and condemning people to death for certain crimes. It is also accused of restricting free movement, repressing Christian and other religious groups, and of harassing and even arresting human rights defenders and lawyers.

The Russian Federation (RF) is bound by the international agreements entered into by the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). But under the presidency of Vladimir Putin, say human rights defenders, violations of such conventions as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights as well as of the Federation Constitution itself have surged, among them government intimidation of the press and media; police torture of persons in their custody; discrimination; racism; abductions; and violations of the right to life through extrajudicial killings including those of journalists.

Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) that receive foreign funding are compelled to register as foreign agents. NGOs can be branded as undesirable and their members fined and imprisoned. Political assassinations are also rampant, with most of them unsolved. The right to a fair trial by political prisoners has also been violated, as has freedom of assembly and association, which are rights guaranteed by the RF Constitution.

The United States under the presidency of Donald Trump has seen a rise in racism and violence against blacks, Jews, and Muslims, encouraged, according to Amnesty International, by Trump’s statements against Mexicans, “radical Islam,” and immigrants.

Trump has prevented those individuals who are being persecuted for their political and religious beliefs from seeking asylum in the US. He has denied protection for LGBTs (lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, and transgenders), labeled the US press “the enemy” and as purveyors of “fake news,” and expressed hostility to dissent and free expression. He justified the attacks by neo-Nazi and white supremacist groups on the civil rights activists who were peacefully demonstrating in Boston, Massachusetts against racism last August. And as Mr. Duterte’s spokesmen have trumpeted, he also expressed approval of the regime’s anti-illegal drugs campaign that has claimed thousands of lives including those of children.

Despite a White House announcement last October that he would bring up human rights issues with Mr. Duterte during their one-on-one meeting in the ASEAN summit this November, Trump did not raise US concern over the thousands of extrajudicial killings that have accompanied the drug “war.”

In addition to the Philippines, such other members of the Association of Southeast Nations (ASEAN) as Burma, Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam have also been in violation of human rights.

Since August this year, Burmese security forces have been targeting the Rohingya Muslims, and committing rapes, looting, and massacres against the community, which have forced more than half a million Rohingya to flee their homes. Neither the party in power nor opposition groups have opposed the atrocities, or even acknowledged them. Human rights groups have described the outrage as a crime against humanity.

A coup d’etat in 2014 placed Thailand under the rule of a military junta which has abolished the National Assembly and usurped legislative powers. Even before the coup, criticism of the king and the royal family was prohibited. Web sites and blogs found guilty of lese majeste (undermining the dignity of the “royals”) have been taken down and the press and free expression subjected to government control.

In Cambodia, the government of Prime Minister Hung Sen, who has been in power for over three decades, is suppressing dissent and the political opposition. The ruling party has used various means to remain in control, among them threats, bribes, and trumped-up charges against critics, particularly those from the opposition party. The regime has also shut down newspapers, stopped radio broadcasts, and harassed human rights activists.

There are over a hundred political prisoners in Vietnam accused of various crimes whose real offense is their being critical of the government. Criticism of the ruling party — another one that’s communist in name but capitalist in purpose ± and the government is forbidden. Similarly banned are human rights organizations, independent political parties, and labor unions. Religious groups are regularly monitored; public gatherings cannot be held without government approval.

But in none of these Southeast Asian countries is there the same record, over a short 16-month period, as that of the Philippines’ Duterte regime in the number of extrajudicial killings, estimated by human rights groups at over 12,000, that have characterized its anti-drug “war” that has mostly victimized the poor. That record is four times the number of EJKs estimated to have occurred during the 14 years of the Marcos terror regime, and nearly 10 times that of the nearly decade-long watch of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

Mr. Duterte has also tried to intimidate human rights defenders and lawyers, and encouraged the police to eliminate drug users and pushers by promising them immunity from prosecution. He has also gone to the extent of urging the police to plant guns on suspects to justify their killing. He has threatened to follow in the footsteps of his idol and mentor, Ferdinand Marcos, Sr., by placing the entire country under martial law.

The would-be host of the human rights summit he has proposed is obviously in a human rights violators’ league that’s uniquely his own.

As Amnesty International’s Philippine Director Butch Olano pointed out, because of the human rights situation in the Philippines, the regime has no moral authority to host such a summit.

“You can’t invite guests to your house if your house is dirty. You should clean up first,” Olano declared.

But will Mr. Duterte “clean up” by, say, putting a stop to the drug-related killings and the assassination of Lumad and farmer leaders, prosecuting those responsible, and focusing on the rehabilitation of drug users rather than on their elimination? Will he stop his attacks on the media and affirm the democratic imperatives of free expression and press freedom and declare once and for all that he recognizes the dangers to human rights of placing the Philippines under martial law, and renounce it as a regime option?

The likely answer is a big, fat “no.”

By publicizing the human rights record of other countries, a human rights summit, Mr. Duterte apparently hopes, would prove his claim that he’s being singled out for criticism by human rights groups. It would also demonstrate how much worse the violations in other countries are.

But the summit Mr. Duterte would host will do neither.

As the above accounts of the state of human rights in various countries gleaned from human rights groups’ reports prove, these organizations including the UN Human Rights Council have criticized and called for action not only against the Philippines, but also against other countries that violate human rights. And what has happened and is happening in most Southeast Asian countries, with the exception of Burma, pale in comparison to what’s happening in this archipelago of fear, where the Duterte regime is disgracefully validating every oppressor’s and dictator’s dismissal of Constitutions and their Bill of Rights provisions as mere scraps of paper. Mr. Duterte’s proposed human rights summit will not serve his or any other tyrant’s purpose.

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro). The views expressed in Vantage Point are his own and do not represent the views of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility.

www.luisteodoro.com

FVR, The FORUM host 10th Rafael M. Salas Golf Cup

FORMER president Fidel V. Ramos and The Forum for Family Planning & Development, Inc. will host the 10th Rafael M. Salas Golf Cup on Nov. 23 at the Camp Aguinaldo Golf Club.

With the theme “Nurturing Mother Earth, Women and Girls,” this year’s staging will be participated by at least 100 avid golfers who will play to support the annual event’s cause.

The tournament is open to all amateur golfers for an entry fee of P5,000 that includes a donation to this noble cause, green fee, special edition Salas golf giveaways, door prize, buffet lunch during and raffle.

Participants are also entitled to win the hole-in-one prize at stake — a Ducati Scrambler Sixty2.

Registration opens at 6:00 a.m. Sequential tee-off is from 6:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. The ceremonial tee-off at 7:30 a.m. shall be led by Former president Ramos himself.

Named in his honor, Mr. Salas is remembered as a patriot par excellence who dedicated himself to serving his people in various government posts notably, executive secretary of the late president Ferdinand Marcos. In the international community, he served as the first executive director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) with the rank of undersecretary-general and is known as “Mr. Population.”

The event’s generous major sponsors include DKT Philippines, San Miguel Corp., PAGCOR, Filinvest Development Corp., Marubeni Philippines, Group Management Development, Inc., Team Energy, Lopez Group, Northstar Transport Facilities, Inc, Asia United Bank, Alpha One (Benedicto Steel Corp.), PCSO, SGV, San Roque Power Corp., SSS, Land Bank, DBP, Meralco, Pilipinas Shell, Trans Asia, Quickminds, Philippine Resources Savings Bank, Stradcom, Grand Videoke, Business Mirror, among others.

Ayala Malls host farmers markets over the holidays

MUCH LIKE Makati’s main thoroughfares which are all decked out for Christmas in a distinctly Filipino fashion — from the capiz shell (windowpane oyster) lights decorating the trees along Ayala Avenue to Christmas lights done in the patterns of native woven fabrics like inabel and Yakan — Ayala Malls are similarly celebrating this Christmas with a decidedly Filipino flavor as they host “TienDA sa Ayala Malls,” a series of two-day weekend markets bringing the products of local farmers and fisherfolk to several Ayala Malls in the country.

“This is a joint project with the Department of Agriculture (DA) and we’re so happy they chose the Ayala Malls as the venue to bring the farmers and their produce closer to the people of Metro Manila, Visayas and Mindanao. We’re so excited,” Maria Rowena Manhit-Tomeldan, head of the Ayala Malls Group, told BusinessWorld during the launch on Nov. 9 at Park Terraces in Makati City.

TienDA is the agriculture department’s version of a farmers market where they bring local farmers and fisherfolk together in one venue so they can “directly sell their produce and for consumers to be able to access these products at its farm gate price,” said the DA Web site.

“The project seeks to eliminate unnecessary layers of middlemen in the supply chain, hence allowing our farmers and fisherfolks to command fair and reasonable prices for their produce,” Agriculture Undersecretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat said during the launch. “This will also help us assess and analyze the demand for agriculture and fisheries products in the different parts of the country.”

On Nov. 18-19, TienDA will be held at the Abreeza mall in Davao City, followed by the Ayala Center Cebu on Nov. 25-26, UP Town Center on Dec. 2-3, Alabang Town Center on Dec. 9-10, Ayala Malls The 30th on Dec. 16-17, and Solenad on Jan. 18-21.

“The number of farmers and fisherfolks would vary per region as we invite those who come from the same region as the venue of the market,” Carolyn C. Castro, OIC director of the Agribusiness and Marketing Assistance Service (AMAS) of DA told BusinessWorld during launch.

While there are as yet no concrete plans to make it a regular weekend market — Ms. Manhit-Tomeldan said they would love to make TienDA a regular thing — Ms. Castro said they are treating the project as a pilot for other projects they can do in the same vein.

“In a way, this is our way of piloting so we’ll know how to go about it,” she said.

Aside from TienDA, Ayala Malls are also celebrating Christmas online by putting up the Ayala Malls Christmas Catalog on the e-commerce site ZALORA. The catalog contains “a comprehensive list and inventory” to help customers with their gift ideas, according to a company press release.

For those making a quick trip to the mall to pick up takeout or other stuff for Christmas, the malls will offer several special parking slots for a limited time of 30 minutes.

Ayala Malls will also be presenting several musical performance including I Got Stung, a musical performance by the Steps Dance Studio inspired by the music of Sting. The performance will tour select Ayala Malls starting Nov. 26 and will include special guests such as Piolo Pascual, Sam Milby, and Gian Magdangal.

Similarly, The Manila Symphony Junior Orchestra will also be touring several Ayala Malls starting Nov. 11 where they will play the winning pieces they performed at the Summa Cum Laude Festival in Vienna, Austria where they won second place in the strings category.

These performances are only some of the events slated for the holidays as Ayala Malls is committed to “spreading good cheer,” said a press release.

For more information on the malls’ holiday plans, visit its Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/AyalaMalls360/. — Zsarlene B. Chua

LPA over Mindanao could become 20th storm this year

A LOW pressure area (LPA) hovering over Mindanao could develop into a tropical depression by today, according to the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA). As of 3:00 p.m. yesterday, the LPA was at the vicinity of Malaybalay, Bukidnon, bringing cloudy skies with scattered rains and thunderstorms over most of Mindanao, the Visayas and Bicol in Luzon. PAGASA issued a warning for possible flash floods and landslides in these areas. The weather bureau said should the LPA develop into a tropical depression, making it the 20th storm to enter the country this year, maritime operations along the Bohol Sea including the seaboards of Surigao provinces, southern Leyte, southern Negros Oriental and Zamboanga del Norte would be disrupted. Rains in other parts of the country, including the capital Metro Manila, are brought by the northeast monsoon and localized thunderstorms.

Chelsea Logistics earns P405.7M in 9 months

CHELSEA LOGISTICS Holdings Corp. (CLC) said its earnings quadrupled in the first nine months of the year, as operations continued to expand.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange, the company owned by Davao-based businessman Dennis A. Uy said its net profit hit P405.7 million for January to September period, 298% higher than the P102-million pro-forma combined earnings of subsidiaries a year ago.

“The increase in the Company’s net income reflects the P168.1 million recognized by the Company as equity shares in the net income of Negros Navigation Co., Inc. and 2GO Group, Inc. through its investments in Udenna Investments B.V.,” the company said.

In March, CLC acquired a 28.15% indirect economic interest in 2GO Group and subsequently took over its management.

For the nine months ending September, CLC’s total revenues rose 9% to P2.3 billion, as increases in freight and passage revenues, as well as tugboat fees helped offset a 4% decline in charter fees.

CLC said freight revenues jumped 43% to P646.4 million, largely from the commercial operations of MV Trans-Asia 12 which started plying the Manila-Cebu route in August last year.

Passage revenues rose 10% to P339.5 million, while tugboat fees climbed 15% P192.7 million.

“As we continue to expand and improve our operations, we hope to sail further in providing better shipping and logistics services to customers; delivering more value to investors and business partners; and contributing bigger to our growing economy,” CLC President and CEO Chryss Alfonsus V. Damuy was quoted as saying in a statement. — P.P.C. Marcelo

Luc Besson to direct detective show; Amazon to launch LOTR TV show

LOS ANGELES — French filmmaker Luc Besson is working on a pilot for a proposed police drama starring the Oscar-winning actor Jean Dujardin, a source at US television network ABC told AFP on Wednesday.

The French Detective would be adapted from James Patterson’s novels about the Parisian detective Luc Moncrief, who moves to New York and joins the police department there to escape his dark past.

The first US television role for Dujardin, who won best actor for his work on the silent movie The Artist (2011), would follow Moncrief as he and his female colleague hunt the perpetrators of various complex crimes.

It would also be the first TV series directed by Besson, the French filmmaker best known among the American public for his films Nikita, The Fifth Element, and Leon: The Professional.

LOTR MINI SERIES
Meanwhile, Amazon said Monday it had acquired the global television rights to The Lord of the Rings, the celebrated fantasy novels by J.R.R. Tolkien, with a multi-season commitment.

Set in Middle Earth, the adaptation will explore new storylines preceding Tolkien’s The Fellowship of the Ring, the Internet streamer said, adding that the deal included a potential additional spin-off series.

The Lord of the Rings is a cultural phenomenon that has captured the imagination of generations of fans through literature and the big screen,” said Sharon Tal Yguado, head of scripted series at Amazon Studios.

The Tolkien Estate had also approached Netflix and HBO, according to Hollywood entertainment Web site Deadline, which reported the deal came with an eye-watering upfront rights payment of around $200 million.

The production budget will likely add another $100-$150 million a season — but Amazon is seen as having deep pockets, as chairman Jeff Bezos has challenged his creative teams to come up with a prestigious fantasy series to rival Game Of Thrones.

Amazon said the series would be available via the Prime Video app or online in more than 200 countries and territories, but it did not announce a release date.

“We are delighted that Amazon, with its longstanding commitment to literature, is the home of the first-ever multi-season television series for The Lord of the Rings,” said Matt Galsor, a representative for the Tolkien Estate and Trust and HarperCollins. — AFP

Auto sales up 16% in 10 months to October ahead of excise tax

AUTO SALES in the 10 months to October rose 16% year on year, the Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines, Inc. (CAMPI) and Truck Manufacturers Association (TMA) said, citing a rush to make purchases before a higher excise tax kicks in next year.

In a report released by CAMPI on Thursday, year-to-date sales at the end of October totaled 339,380 units for both associations from 292,502 a year earlier.

CAMPI President Rommel Gutierrez in a statement said sales were also strong due to “competitive promotional support and marketing activities.”

“Higher sales… were driven by the continued surge in demand as well as promotional support to further support the key models. The outlook for the succeeding months remains strong, driven by the good sales performance of key models from major players,” he added.

Commercial vehicle (CV) sales rose 22.9% to 226,039 units in the 10 months, while passenger car (PC) sales rose 4.4% to 113,341 units.

According to CAMPI, strong demand was driven by fleet sales and the availability of inventory.

In October, sales rose 17.3% to 36,511 units.

Compared to September, October PC sales grew 11.1% to 11,686 units, while CV sales rose 3.7% to 24,825 units.

In the 10 months to October, sales of Asian Utility Vehicles (AUV) and Light Commercial Vehicles (LCVs) rose 24.10% and 22.50%, respectively, to 66,582 and 145,485 units.

In October, AUV sales rose 14.7% to 6,858 units while LCV sales rose 2.4% to 16,521 units.

Toyota Motors Philippines Corp. topped all manufacturers in terms of market share in the 10 months to October, with 44%. Mitsubishi Motors Philippines Corp accounted for 17.61% of the market, while Ford Motor Co. Philippines held 8.42% of the market. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

High blood pressure is redefined as 130, not 140 — US guidelines

LOS ANGELES — High blood pressure was redefined Monday by the American Heart Association, which said the disease should be treated sooner, when it reaches 130/80 mm Hg, not the previous limit of 140/90.

Doctors now recognize that complications “can occur at those lower numbers,” said the first update to comprehensive US guidelines on blood pressure detection and treatment since 2003.

A diagnosis of the new high blood pressure does not necessarily mean a person needs to take medication, but that “it’s a yellow light that you need to be lowering your blood pressure, mainly with non-drug approaches,” said Paul Whelton, lead author of the guidelines published in the American Heart Association journal, Hypertension, and the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Healthy lifestyle changes include losing weight, exercising more, eating healthier, avoiding alcohol and salt, quitting smoking, and avoiding stress.

The new standard means that nearly half (46%) of the US population will be defined as having high blood pressure.

Previously, one in three (32%) had the condition, which is the second leading cause of preventable heart disease and stroke, after cigarette smoking.

The normal limit for blood pressure is considered 120 for systolic, or how much pressure the blood places on the artery walls when the heart beats, and 80 for diastolic, which is measured between beats.

Once a person reaches 130/80, “you’ve already doubled your risk of cardiovascular complications compared to those with a normal level of blood pressure,” said Whelton.

“We want to be straight with people — if you already have a doubling of risk, you need to know about it.”

PEOPLE IN 40S MOST AFFECTED
Once considered mainly a disorder among people 50 and older, the new guidelines are expected to lead to a surge of people in their 40s with high blood pressure.

“The prevalence of high blood pressure is expected to triple among men under age 45, and double among women under 45,” according to the report.

Damage to the blood vessels is already beginning once blood pressure reaches 130/80, said the guidelines, which were based in part on a major US-government funded study of more than 9,000 people nationwide.

The category of prehypertension, which used to refer to people with systolic pressure of 120-139, no longer exists, according to the new guidelines.

“People with those readings now will be categorized as having either Elevated (120-129 and less than 80) or Stage I hypertension (130-139 or 80-89).”

Medication is only recommended for people with Stage I hypertension “if a patient has already had a cardiovascular event such as a heart attack or stroke, or is at high risk of heart attack or stroke based on age, the presence of diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney disease or calculation of atherosclerotic risk.”

The proper technique must be used to measure blood pressure, and levels “should be based on an average of two to three readings on at least two different occasions,” said the report.

“I absolutely agree with the change in what is considered high blood pressure because it allows for early lifestyle changes to be addressed,” said Satjit Bhusri, a cardiologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York.

“It is important, however, to realize that the change in the definition does not give course to increase prescription of medications, rather that it brings to light the need to make lifestyle changes,” Bhusri said in an e-mail to AFP.

The new guidelines were announced at the American Heart Association’s 2017 Scientific Sessions conference in Anaheim, California. — AFP

Cinema One offers different film fare

THE 13TH run of Cinema One Originals Festival entitled, Walang Takot (Fearless) features seven independent local films in the Narrative category, two documentaries, several foreign films, and restored films.

The festival will be showing in selected Metro Manila cinemas — TriNoma, Glorietta, Gateway, UP Cine Adarna, Cinema ’76, and the Film Development Council of the Philippines Cinemateque — from Nov. 13 to 21, with an extended run in PowerPlant Mall Cinemas from Nov. 22 to 28.

The films in competition in the Narrative Category (full-length features) are:


Changing Partners, directed by Dan Villegas, starring Agot Isidro, Anna Luna, Jojit Lorenzo, and Sandino Martin in a story of four individuals who experiences love and heartbreak. The film is an adaptation of Vincent A. de Jesus’ musical of the same name.

• Paki, directed by Giancarlo Abrahan and starring Dexter Doria, Noel Trinidad, Shamaine Buencamino, and Ricky Davao, is about an 80-year-old woman who decides to leave her husband of 60 years in order to live as an old maid though her children forbid her from doing so.


• Nay
, directed by Kip Oebanda, starring Enchong Dee and Sylvia Sanchez, is a supernatural thriller about a man who is turned into an aswang (a local version of a vampire) by his nanny.


Nervous Translation, directed by Shireen Seno, starring Jana Agoncillo and Sid Lucero, tells the story of a shy eight-year-old who finds a pen which can decode the thoughts of other people.


Si Chedeng at si Apple, directed by Fatrick Tabada and Rae Red, starring Gloria Diaz and Elizabeth Oropesa, is a dark comedy about two 60-somethings searching for a long-lost girlfriend while evading the law.


Throwback Today, directed by Joseph Teoxon, starring Carlo Aquino, follows a production designer who finds a glitch in his old desktop computer that makes it possible for him to rewrite his life.


Histographika Errata, directed by Richard Somes, features a disillusioned and suicidal Rizal, a cross-dressing Bonifacio who leaves the Katipunan to join the US Army, and a widow whose sex-for-food errands leads her to become the first-ever Makapili.

Cinema One will also be showing several restored classics including Marilou Diaz-Abaya’s Moral (1982), Jeffrey Sonora’s Asedillo (1971), Celso Ad Castillo’s Tag-Ulan sa Tag-Araw (1975), and Danny Zialcita’s Langis at Tubig (1980).

Foreign films to be shown include the Golden Bear-winning 2017 film On Body and Soul by Ildiko Enyedi, and the Palme D’Or-nominated Good Time by Ben and Josh Safdie. Cinema One Originals will also be showing a 4-D restoration of Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977).

For more information on Cinema One Originals and the full schedule of screenings, visit www.facebook.com/CinemaOneOriginals.

Nike under pressure from unions over tax practices after ‘Paradise Papers’

NIKE, Inc. is facing a push by organized labor to stop using tax-avoidance schemes following revelations in the so-called Paradise Papers that the sports brand funneled billions of dollars into offshore havens.

The AFL-CIO, a federation of 56 unions that represent 12.5 million workers, said it sent a shareholder proposal to the company on Tuesday. The document asks the world’s largest sports brand to pay its fair share of taxes — money that could help fund public services. Nike has avoided paying $4 billion in US taxes, according to the AFL-CIO.

“The Paradise Papers described how Nike shifted billions in profits,” Heather Slavkin Corzo, director of AFL-CIO office of investment, said on Wednesday during a call with reporters. “This could fund infrastructure, schools and other public services.”

The move comes after Nike’s appearance earlier this month in the Paradise Papers, a trove of 6.8 million leaked internal files from an offshore law firm. The documents have been analyzed by more than 90 media outlets and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. A report from this group highlighted Nike’s use of a subsidiary that allowed it to shift billions in profits from Europe to a tax haven in Bermuda.

Nike, based in Beaverton, Oregon, declined to comment.

The AFL-CIO is also considering making shareholder proposals to other companies highlighted in the Paradise Papers, including Facebook, Inc., Alphabet, Inc. and Allergan Plc. The group also wants to shed light on Apple, Inc.’s practices but the deadline for filing a proposal for the next shareholder meeting had passed.

The pension funds of the union’s membership own a combined 500,000 shares of Nike. Domini Impact Investments, which manages about $831 million in assets and co-filed the shareholder proposal with the AFL-CIO, owns about 375 shares.

The proposal urges Nike to consider the impact of its global tax strategies on local economies and governments, as well as the risk of a damaged reputation for not paying its fair share of taxes.

Getting investors to support backing away from a strategy that has made a company more profitable is not an easy task, said Adam Kanzer, managing director of Domini. One way they are trying to overcome the challenge is by presenting it to fellow shareholders as a way to reduce the risk of public-relations damage.

“This is not a proposal to get Nike to pay more taxes,” Kanzer said. “It’s directed at setting up a governance mechanism and greater oversight.” — Bloomberg