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LPA east of Mindanao being monitored as storm Urduja exits

A LOW pressure area (LPA) located 1,710 kilometers east of Mindanao as of Tuesday morning could possibly enter the Philippine area today, Dec. 20, according to weather bureau PAGASA. This LPA was earlier forecasted to likely develop into a storm, but has since weakened. Meanwhile, tropical storm Urduja (international name: Kai-Tak) exited the country yesterday, leaving at least 40 people dead and a still undetermined number of missing with the count up to at least 45, based on the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council’s report yesterday. The Department of Social Welfare and Development, for its part, said some 11,670 families or 53,448 individuals were still staying in 365 open evacuation centers in Regions V, VIII, and Mimaropa as of Tuesday.

10 stocking stuffers for motorists

By Kap Maceda Aguila

CHRISTMAS is right around the corner and you’re still clueless about what to give your friends and family? Well, if they drive their own set of wheels, that’s a good lead right there. Here are a few essentials that motorists will definitely appreciate getting.

DASHBOARD CAMERA
Protect yourself from imbeciles on the road claiming it was your fault. Procure a quality dash camera like the DDPAI M4 for added peace of mind. The wireless product is easy to install via a magnetic interface, and even provides a social community platform for “users to share videos and photos on the road.” If you’re looking for bare functionality, we suggest to at least get a unit that returns good images even at night.

CUBBY/ORGANIZER
As we are spending an inordinate amount on the road, some of our cars have now become our veritable bedroom — and sometimes in a bad way. Lugging a lot of our stuff (including on-the-go munchies) into the vehicle often means a lot of mess. Get an organizer for your friends. There are ones that hang from the back of the seats, or tray-type products that can be slid under the driver or passenger seat. Trunk organizers are also a good idea, as with the slim pockets that slide beside the car seat and prevent items from falling into the virtual twilight zone that’s just (almost) impossible to reach.

CAR WAX
This is perfect for DIY-ers who prefer to wax their own car. Caveat: Make sure that it’s the type he/she wants; fish for information.

CLEANING CLOTHS
Who wouldn’t love a pristine set of cleaning cloths? Go for the soft, non-abrasive microfiber type that won’t scratch exterior and interior surfaces.

CAR VACUUM CLEANER
Neat freak or not, friends or family members will surely appreciate a portable vacuum cleaner. There’s actually a dearth of these lifesavers that conveniently draw power from the 12-volt socket of the car. Choose one from a reputable maker so you can be sure you’re getting your money’s worth.

AIR IONIZER
This helps fight those undesirable odors in the vehicle — destroying them, instead of masking the stink like ordinary air fresheners do. A good-quality ionizer will also neutralize mold, bacteria and viruses. Now, isn’t that just wonderful?

DETAILING SESSION
Show your beloved just how much you care by taking him/her to the local detailing shop for some precious pampering for the auto.

STEREO HEAD UNIT
You don’t really have to break the piggy bank if you choose wisely. Take advantage of yuletide offers on slightly older (but quality) models. Should you have some funds left over, use them to upgrade speakers, too. Your motorist will love you for it.

PILLOWS
How about a neck pillow, or one that a driver can slip behind his/her lower back? These are crucial areas that need support as driving-related pain is on the rise from all the hours we’re logging behind the wheel.

PHONE MOUNT
Unobtrusive phone holders have now become a must — especially with the implementation of the Anti-Distracted Driving Law. Get the type that relies on a strong magnet and can be easily installed outside the line of sight.

Russian firms plan Surigao mineral processing investments

TWO RUSSIAN COMPANIES are planning to put up mineral processing plants in the Surigao provinces, the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) said.

MGB officer-in-charge Wilfredo G. Moncano told reporters on Tuesday that the bureau expects final signing with one of the companies signed by January. He did not identify the companies nor specify where in the Surigao region the plants will be built.

“Actually, the first signing was with one [Russian] mining company —  I do not want to mention the name — in October and [another] to sign early January,” he said.

Mr. Moncano said a mineral processing facility typically costs about $200 million, but the two Russian investments could be worth $600 million.

Mr. Moncano also said there have been other expressions of interest from Australian companies.

“We want [the investments to go into mineral] processing [because] that’s what the President has said,” he added.

Mr. Moncano said he expects the mining industry to bounce back in 2018, noting that the first half of the year prior to the appointment of the current Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Roy A. Cimatu was an “unstable” period for the industry.

“I would expect that there would be increase in production, I would also expect that there would be major issues on mining that would be solved, I am very confident [it can be achieved].” — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Glass protegee finds music’s emotion in technology

NEW YORK — Wearing a dress made of 100 speakers might seem to be a fashion statement. But for composer Pauchi Sasaki, the aesthetic goes deeper — it is a way to express humanity.

The Peruvian artist and chosen protegee of Philip Glass, one of the world’s most influential living composers, had first covered herself with amplification equipment when she played her violin in the ancient Pachacamac temple near Lima and found herself without an electrical outlet.

She has since developed the concept into the “speaker dress,” a shoulder-to-knee wall of 100 speakers the size found on shelf stereos, and made it an instrument itself.

She performed on speaker dress as she recently premiered her latest piece, GAMA XVI, in the presence of Glass at New York’s Carnegie Hall.

“I realized that it had a very iconic power and people want to reduce the object and say, ‘Oh, that looks cool,’” Sasaki said of the speaker dress.

“But I really wanted to bring out the spirit of the instrument because every instrument, like a violin or a piano, has a spirit,” she told AFP.

The speaker dress does not in itself have an acoustic capacity; it is connected to programming by Sasaki.

Yet she plays it with pitch, tone, and intensity variations like a classic instrument, with a mouthpiece or physical touch triggering software, which in turn sends back processed sounds to speakers on her body.

She finds the layer of computerization especially apt for the 21st century, when so many human experiences and interactions are filtered through smartphones, speakers, or other technology.

“I don’t create an object that makes things; I build extensions for human gestures,” she said.

“I want to be able to deliver nuances through the instrument. And what I mean with that is that human emotion is not only about randomness or about will, it’s also about fragile moments, it’s about doubt and it’s about strength — a wide range.”

The speaker dress was all too real the first time she performed it — her hair caught fire. She has since fine-tuned the wiring and is confident about its safety.

YEAR WITH GLASS
Sasaki has composed film scores in Peru and worked extensively in Japan, where she traces her ancestry, and had been considering an academic career until a year ago.

Then, under a mentorship program sponsored by luxury watchmaker Rolex, she was selected to spend a year in New York studying with Glass, who interviewed her to make the final cut.

Performing GAMA XVI, her new work, at Carnegie Hall with the American Composers Orchestra, Sasaki explored not only the physicality of her instrument but also that of her performance.

Sasaki entered the hall from the back, with the initial blurt from the speaker dress causing much of the audience to look around in befuddlement, fearing perhaps that someone had not turned off a cellphone.

Instead, Sasaki slowly made her way to the stage, the electronic sounds and the strings gradually merging together into a nebulous unison, with flickering projections of slender rectangles reinforcing the sense of being in a space out of time.

By the third movement, in a structural nod to Glass, GAMA XVI builds into full balance as a melody emerges, a repeating motif inspired by Andean folk music played by violin soloist Tim Fain.

Glass, addressing the audience after the premiere, described Sasaki’s compositions as “music that people should hear.”

“It’s work that’s inspired, it’s very natural and it has its own sound. You can’t be taught to write that music,” the composer said.

Glass credited his own musical relationship in the 1960s with sitar virtuoso Ravi Shankar as critical to his career. But the 80-year-old composer said he was still figuring out how to be a mentor.

“I suppose that I never doubted her or her talent,” he said of Sasaki. “But I doubted my ability to do anything about it.” — AFP

SNAP to add 500 MW in capacity by 2027

THE SN ABOITIZ Power (SNAP) group is looking to add 500 megawatts (MW) to its existing installed power capacity by 2027 as it plans to build new hydroelectric power plants in northern Luzon, while studying the commercial viability of solar energy and battery storage.

“We’d like to add 500 MW by 2027,” Joseph S. Yu, SNAP president and chief executive officer, told reporters. “We’d like to think we’re strong in the north.”

“One of the tough things for hydro is it’s a seven to 10 years gestation. During those seven to 10 years, so many things can happen in terms of policy, market pricing, how many new plants get built. So it’s a fairly risky endeavor,” he said.

SNAP currently has at least 600 MW of installed capacity, more than half of which comes from SN Aboitiz Power-Magat, Inc. The unit owns and operates the 380-MW Magat hydroelectric power plant at the border of Isabela and Ifugao. Its 8.5-MW Maris Main Canal 1 hydroelectric power plant started commercial operation in November.

Another unit, SN Aboitiz Power-Benguet, Inc., owns and operates the 105-MW Ambuklao hydroelectric power plant in Bokod and the 140-MW Binga hydro plant in Itogon.

Mr. Yu said the company came up with the 500-MW target in part from the forecast demand in the next 10 years.

“It’s really a feel of where the market is going and what would be a reasonable yet aggressive market position for SNAP in 2027. So you draw a line and you pick a point and say that’s where we are going to aim,” he said.

Asked about the capital outlay for the additional capacity, Mr. Yu cited a $3-million to $4-million cost per megawatt or a total of around $1.75 billion for the 500 MW.

Mr. Yu said SNAP was also looking at venturing into other renewable energy sources, specially solar power, although the assessment is at “very early stages.”

“If you look at where the industry is going, if you look at the prices of [solar] panels and where it’s gone, it’s becoming increasingly more and more competitive,” he said. “As this evolves at some point, solar is going to become a very big force in the generation mix.” — Victor V. Saulon

Annual motorcycle expo points to continued rise of café racers

THE recent EICMA, the motorcycle industry’s showcase of its best new models held annually in Milan, Italy, this year provided notable concept bikes like the Honda CB4 Interceptor, Moto Guzzi V85 and the Indian Scout FTR1200 Custom — a near-production prototype tracker. But what the show also indicated was the continued rise in popularity of café racers, with manufacturers introducing their varied interpretations of what a café racer is. The consensus among them, however, is that such bikes are “modern classics.”

Expectedly, not to be outdone on its home turf was Ducati, which unveiled the all-new Scrambler 1100. Ducati’s newest take on its wildly successful retro model — which, incidentally, was first available (and still is) in 803cc and 400cc cuts — boasts a new frame and a retuned version of the 1079cc L-twin motor found in the brand’s equally iconic Monster 1100.

Along with these come three riding modes, traction control and cornering ABS, all of which offered on the model’s three variants that are marked by each one’s different handlebar, saddle and paint job. Despite the larger power plant, the Scrambler 1100 tips the scales at 205 kilograms due to extensive use of aluminum.

The big Japanese brands came in full force as well. Kawasaki, which ahead of EICMA introduced at the 2017 Tokyo Motor Show its decidedly nostalgic Z900RS, an homage to the brand’s legendary Z1, raised the retro factor further by releasing in Milan the Z900RS Café. Based wholly on the “regular” Z900RS, the Café gains a sexy bikini fairing, drop-style handlebar and a humped saddle.

Propulsion is delivered by a water-cooled, 948cc inline-four engine that makes 110 hp. The bike uses an adjustable 41-millimeter inverted fork and a mono shock in the rear. Its frame, according to Kawasaki, was designed to enhance the bike’s retro styling. Of course, the Z900RS Café’s lime-green-and-white palette ties it quite neatly with its illustrious Z1 forebear.

For its part, Honda brought out a more contemporary-looking, but still retro-inspired, bike. Leaning more toward the street fighter genre, the new CB1000R packs a potent 143 hp inline-four that has been fitted with three throttle maps and a ride-by-wire system. The engine is cradled within a new frame that’s propped by a fully adjustable Showa suspension. With all the components together, the bike weighs in at 212 kilograms.

The company that builds nothing but retro bikes, if not outright vintage bikes, pulled out a surprise in Milan by launching two new models. Royal Enfield unveiled its Interceptor 650 and Continental GT, which are powered by a new 650cc, parallel-twin, air-cooled engine developed in the UK. With a 270-degree crank, the engine is unsurprisingly similar to British-made Triumphs. But no scorcher, this: it spins out a mere 47 hp and 52 Nm.

True to tradition, it’s the Continental GT that’s more of a café racer between the pair. Kitted with a single saddle and clip-on handlebar, the bike had the distinction of being the sole café racer in EICMA that came rolling in genuine wire wheels. Matched with the vintage touches though are items like fuel injection and ABS-equipped disc brakes.

Modern bike classics live on.

Battling climate change

Last Dec. 12, French President Emmanuel Macron hosted a climate summit, two years after the historic COP 21 Climate Change Agreement in Paris. Said gathering was called the “One Planet Summit,” where emphasis was placed on climate finance or how to ensure the availability of the reported more than $200-billion annual funding in compliance with the provisions of the Paris Agreement.

The call of the French leader was for nations, especially the developed ones, the private sector, the scientists and civil society groups to act faster in keeping the global temperature down. In response, several commitments were made, particularly from private corporate entities, thereby providing renewed optimism to make the Climate Pact work. Unfortunately, the government of the United States, under President Donald Trump, considering their huge contribution to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and great capacity (and responsibility) to chip in into the climate fund, was sorely missing in the Summit.

Without question, the industrialized countries have the substantial accountability, along with the private sector, to address climate change. Calling the Summit “One Planet” is apt and should provide a realization that all of us, regardless of economic standing, will ultimately be adversely affected by the changing climate. Thus, the onus is for the “big boys” to lead the fight by looking inward first, as well as providing assistance to developing nations to build resiliency, most especially the vulnerable ones.

For the Philippines, such a gathering must again highlight the call for climate justice being a nation ranked among the most vulnerable to extreme weather, yet not a major source of GHG emissions. The availability of funding mechanisms will definitely go a long way in establishing the resilience of the country. Although entitlement to such funds cannot be mistaken, the Philippines’ pursuit of climate justice will have another dimension if the effects of the changing climate is linked to human rights. To this end, every nation is obligated to address human rights violations, including those brought about by extreme weather, held to be anthropogenic.

Putting in context the Philippine’s contribution to climate change should grant a good insight to policy makers on where to double efforts in combating extreme weather. The paper entitled: “Blameless in Stratosphere: Carbon Footprint, Manufacturing Growth, and the Fuel Mix Debate in the Philippines,” presented in a Stratbase-ADR Institute roundtable discussion, is most enlightening. In the presentation, Dr. Raul Fabella highlighted that the Philippines has a very small carbon footprint with a per capita carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions even less than African countries such as Angola, Congo and Djibouti. Moreover, Dr. Fabella, et al. looked at other Asian countries in their respective years of comparable development to 2011 Philippines. Interestingly, the country’s 0.9 metric tons per capita CO2 emissions was significantly lower than 1968 levels in Singapore (2.7 metric tons), 1982 South Korea (3.6 metric tons), and 2004 China (4.1 metric tons). In this comparison, the Philippines, at 2011 development levels, was closest to Thailand in 1991 and Indonesia in 2008, both at 1.8 metric tons of per capita CO2 emissions. With such a small carbon footprint, the Philippines is said to have remarkably outweighed its CO2 emissions share by its renewables share from 1990-2014. Surprisingly, such renewables share is observed to even surpass almost all of the top 10 carbon emitting countries in the same period. Lastly, it is important to note that the transportation sector accounts for the largest average of CO2 emissions in the Philippines at 36.43%, followed by “other industry” at 20.22% in the same period of 1990-2014.

With this backdrop, our policy makers should focus the climate change mitigation efforts of the country on the transportation system. Obviously, the still worsening traffic situation in almost all urban centers uselessly burning away tons of fossil fuel, not to mention the dire public health implications.

Worse, the handful of rail transits we have in this country are not expanding, but in fact deteriorating. Thus, if we are to curb our share of CO2 emissions to help in the climate action, our government has to quickly make good on its promise of a massive infrastructure program that should introduce modes of transportation that are less dependent on fossil fuel. In this regard, mass transportation should be the priority.

On the climate change resiliency front, one cannot dismiss the value of adapting to extreme weather for such a vulnerable country like the Philippines. Again, being able to tap a fund to build resilient communities will be a tremendous step towards facing the so-called “new normal.” A significant action, however, which is independent of third-party action and immediately doable, to promote adaptation is effective dissemination of climate-related data, or any risk data for that matter.

The government can vastly improve our disaster risk management by enabling all concerned to readily and freely access data and information that will heighten the awareness of vulnerable communities and instill a mind-set of readiness for natural calamities. Used wisely, knowledge is power, but power in the wrong hands, in this case, is disastrous.

 

Lysander N. Castillo is an Environment Fellow at the Stratbase ADR Institute and Secretary-General of Philippine Business for Environmental Stewardship (PBEST).

Qatar sovereign wealth fund scouting possible investments

A DELEGATION from the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), a sovereign wealth fund, met Philippine officials here on Friday to discuss investment opportunities, the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) said in a statement.

The QIA delegation was headed by Sheikh Abdulaziz Ali Al Thani, Head of Business Development.

Budget Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno led the Philippine side, along with Philippine Ambassador to Qatar Alan L. Timbayan, and Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) President and Chief Executive Officer Vivencio B. Dizon.

Also represented were the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), Department of Finance (DoF), Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), Al Amanah Islamic Bank, Department of Transportation (DoTr), Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Center, and the Mindanao Development Authority (MinDA).

Mr. Diokno, in the statement, said: “[I]nfrastructure spending has constantly fallen below the suggested threshold of 5% of GDP (gross domestic product) for developing countries,” he said.

“In fact, government estimates show that it only averaged 2.6% over the past 50 years. In contrast, the Duterte administration aims to target at least 5% of GDP for infrastructure spending rising up to more than 7% of GDP,” he added.

The government plans to spend P8 to P9 trillion until 2022.

As of October, government expenditures rose 10% year on year to P2.241 trillion. This is equivalent to 77.04% of the P2.909 trillion disbursement program for the year.

“Clearly, we walk the talk and put our money where our mouths are,” Mr. Diokno said.

In 2016, Qatar ranked as the Philippines’ 32nd trading partner, with bilateral trade amounting to $241 million.

The Middle East remains the country’s second-largest source of remittances from overseas Filipinos, accounting for 28% of the total or almost $7.6 billion in 2016.

It also hosts more than one million overseas Filipino workers. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

PT&T signs agreement with Chinese company

PHILIPPINE Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (PT&T) is looking to team up with a Chinese company to provide free wireless broadband services in public areas around the country.

In a disclosure to the stock exchange, PT&T Senior Vice-President and Chief Information Officer Arturo T. Falco said the company has signed a memorandum of agreement (MoA) with Chengdu Zhongxing Tiantong Technology Corp. The MoA will be effective for 90 days.

“The purpose of the agreement is to explore the feasibility of engaging in a project that will provide free wireless broadband services in designated public areas before, during and after the occurrence of disasters in any part of the country,” he said.

PT&T and Chengdu Zhongxing Tiantong Technology will conduct a feasibility study on the project.

“Actual participation of the each party shall be discussed after the conclusion of the said study and will be reflected in the definitive agreement that may be reached by the parties,” Mr. Falco said.

In an interview with BusinessWorld last week, PT&T Chairman Salvador B. Zamora II said the company will tap Chengdu Outwitcom, a wireless communication and networking technology provider and a wholly owned subsidiary of Chengdu Zhongxing Tiantong Technology Co. for the broadband network.

Mr. Zamora said Chengdu Outwitcom was able to roll out Wi-Fi service in the outdoor areas of the Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) complex during the 31st Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Summit and meetings last month.

“It was their contribution for ASEAN 50. Their signal was so strong that even the delegates who were inside the ASEAN 50 were using their Wi-Fi. Most delegates ended up using their facilities,” he said, adding the company was able to roll out the service in just one week.

PT&T is also in “preliminary” talks with China Telecom, which Malacañang earlier said the Chinese government picked to enter the Philippine market.

While hopeful of a deal with China Telecom, Mr. Zamora said they will still continue its national broadband network rollout “with or without” the Chinese company.

Returning PBA chairman Ricky Vargas calls for healing, reforms in Board

ON the night the PBA board accepted the resignation of Chito Narvasa as commissioner and appointed Willie Marcial as the officer-in-charge of the league, the board of governors also saw swapping of duties between two gentlemen belonging to the MVP Group of Companies.

Ricky Vargas, board of governor of Talk ’N Text and a former chairman of the PBA board, took over the chairmanship position from Ramoncito Fernandez of NLEX.

Mr. Fernandez was supposed to assume as chairman for the league’s 43rd season, but gave way to the more experienced Vargas, also a former executive of the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas.

Executives from NLEX confirmed this development to interaksyon.com.

“I think it’s part of the deal,” said NLEX general manager and head coach Yeng Guiao said in a text message.

The same was confirmed by Ronald Dulatre, team executive of the Road Warriors.

“It’s a swap with TNT,” added Mr. Dulatre.

As the new chairman, Mr. Vargas said reforms in the league and changes in the constitution and by laws are needed to avoid another impasse, one that saw the board split into two with seven calling for the non-extension of Mr. Narvasa as commissioner and five giving support to the embattled former head of the league.

But Mr. Vargas is calling on his fellow members to work together.

“My main objective is the complete healing and reforms to our constitution and by laws,” added Mr. Vargas. — Rey Joble

Fancy a Marquis de Sade erotic novel, or Titanic souvenirs?

PARIS — Fancy some 232-year-old pornography, written in the Bastille and hidden behind a stone?

Or something more intellectually stimulating? How about mathematical equations sketched by quantum theory pioneers Erwin Schroedinger? Or poems from the pen of Arthur Rimbaud?

All yours if you have the money.

One of the world’s largest collections of historic letters, musical scores, notes and manuscripts — including the Marquis de Sade’s Bastille-written 120 Days of Sodom — will be auctioned in Paris this week.

The vast collection was assembled by Aristophil, a French company set up in 1990 that raised funds from investors and art lovers, granting them in exchange a share in a trove of documents, drawings and objets d‘art acquired around the world.

Aristophil’s founder, Gerard Lheritier, appeared to be doing well, earning the moniker “the king of manuscripts.” But the firm went bankrupt in 2015 having spent hundreds of millions of euros on some 130,000 pieces.

Lheritier, 69, was detained and put under investigation for fraud, a charge he has denied.

The entire collection is now being liquidated, a process that is expected to take six years spread over more than 200 auctions, partly to avoid saturating the market and suppressing prices.

All will be handled by auctioneers Aguttes, with the first taking place at the Drouot auction house in Paris on Dec. 20.

Among the most high-profile lots is De Sade’s manuscript, written on 33 pieces of scroll while he was imprisoned in 1785.

“It’s a book written on a 12-meter (yard) long roll which if it’s rolled up tightly can be hidden in your hand,” said Claude Aguttes, the chief auctioneer. “Sade used to hide it every night behind a stone in the Bastille.”

When he was forcibly taken from the prison in 1789, the scroll, a pornographic novel telling the tale of four noblemen who resolve to experience every sexual perversion, was left behind and only later discovered. It is expected to sell for between €4 million and €6 million ($4.75-$7.10 million).

Other lots include a 40-page first-hand account of the sinking of the Titantic by survivor Helen Churchill Candee, whose dramatic testimony helped inspire the movie Titanic.

There are original manuscripts by Alexandre Dumas and Honore de Balzac, emotional correspondence from Admiral Nelson and Napoleon I, and operatic scores drafted by Richard Strauss, among many others.

The first sale is expected to raise between €12 and €16 million. The bidding will be closely watched by the 18,000 people who invested in Aristophil and lost everything.

They hope to recoup some of those losses via the liquidation, but the prices may never match what Lheritier paid — he said the Marquis de Sade’s manuscript cost €7 million, but it is not expected to reach that sum.

Among the most notable 20th century pieces are four manuscripts by Andre Breton, a founder of surrealism, that are being sold together for the first time. They include his famous definition of the movement from the Surrealist Manifesto.

The manuscripts together are expected to sell for between €4.5 and €5.5 million, the auctioneers estimate. — Reuters

Printing shop found making counterfeit copies of REX Book Store publications

 

A PHOTOCOPYING and printing establishment in Dasmariñas, Cavite was raided on Monday, Dec. 18, by a team from the National Bureau of Investigation-Intellectual Property Rights Division (NBI-IPRD) and was found to be reproducing and selling counterfeit copies of REX Book Store, Inc.’s published books. Acting on a complaint filed by REX Book Store, the raid was conducted at the Sha-I Copy Center owned by a certain Edgar dela Cuesta. Another Sha-I branch located in Crossing East, Tagaytay City was also raided. REX Book Store, in a statement, said the counterfeit books were seized along with photocopying machines and other equipment and accessories. The NBI-IPRD also searched the residence of a certain Edgar Dizon, an online seller of counterfeit books, in Silang, Cavite.