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Osmeña lashes at council after ‘no’ vote on Gokongwei-led project

CEBU CITY Mayor Tomas R. Osmeña took to social media his disappointment after the city council junked the proposed joint venture agreement (JVA) between the local government and a Gokongwei-led firm for the P18-billion mixed-use project on Kawit Island. Mr. Osmeña lashed at the members of the opposition led by Vice-Mayor Edgardo C. Labella for voting against the planned real estate development by Universal Hotels and Resorts, Inc. “After we agreed to all the committee’s recommendations, the Team Rama members of the committee still voted against the revised agreement. They in essence voted against their own recommendations,” Mr. Osmeña posted on his Facebook page. Mr. Labella, in an earlier post on his own Facebook page, said the JVA is “grossly disadvantageous to the city. — The Freeman
>> See full story on https://goo.gl/FaHNje

Gas, diesel prices up by more than P1

Oil prices drop this weekOIL COMPANIES are raising the prices of gasoline and diesel this week by more than a peso per liter in one of the biggest price adjustments so far this year. Gasoline will be up by P1.10 while diesel will rise by P1.20. Kerosene will also increase by P0.95 per liter. Most firms will be raising prices at 6 a.m. on Tuesday, May 15. The increase reflects the movement of prices in the international petroleum market. Oil retailers last raised the prices of gasoline and diesel by more than a peso per liter on the last week of March. Last week, the prices of gasoline, diesel and kerosene went down by P0.30, P0.30 and P0.60, respectively.- — Victor V. Saulon

#BSKE2018 Snapshots

Fake signboard

DOTR PHOTO

A jeepney with a “COMELEC SV 239 — Bagombong ES” sign was apprehended by members of the Inter-Agency Council on Traffic (I-ACT) and found to have no permit from the Commission on Elections to serve as a special vehicle. I-ACT conducted on May 14 Project HOPE (Honest, Orderly, Peaceful Elections), which was aimed at monitoring and arresting operators and drivers who would be using public utility vehicles to ferry voters, especially “flying voters,” outside their franchise line.

On guard

TCPO PHOTO

Speedcop Joji S. Amoroto checks his notes as he serves as lead security during the delivery of election paraphernalia from the City Treasurer’s Office to polling centers in parts of Tacloban City on May 14.

Lining up

LEAN S. DAVAL, JR.

Voters line up inside the polling stations in Barangay 23-C Mini forest, Davao City during yesterday’s Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan elections. Commission on Elections data show the Davao Region has more than 2.8 million registered voters. — Carmencita A. Carillo

Women’s vote

NAMFREL PHOTO

Voters wait for their ballots at Barangay Poona in Marantao, Lanao del Sur during Monday’s Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan elections.

DoJ files appeal on dismissed charges in P6.4-billion shabu case

THE DEPARTMENT of Justice (DoJ) has appealed to Judge Arthur B. Melicor of the Valenzuela City Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch 284 to reinstate the charges against the nine allegedly involved in the shipment last year of P6.4 billion worth of illegal drug shabu (methampethamine) from China.
The case against Bureau of Customs (BoC) fixer Mark G. Taguba II and eight others were dismissed over claims of forum shopping committed by prosecutors.
A group of state prosecutors led by Senior Assistant State Prosecutor Rassendell F. Gingoyon, in a 19-page motion for reconsideration dated May 8 and released to media on May 14, argued that “the crime of transportation of dangerous drugs is a separate and distinct crime and under the circumstances at hand cannot be said to be a part of the crime of importation of drugs.”
The judge, in his ruling, said prosecutors committed forum shopping when they filed similar cases for illegal drug importation against the same respondents in a Manila court and in another Valenzuela court.
Mr. Taguba — along with his co-accused Teejay A. Marcellana, Chen Julong, Li Guang Feng, Manny Li, Kenneth Dong, Eirene Mae A. Tatad, Chen I-Min, Jhu Ming Jyun, and Chen Rong Huan — were charged with violation of Section 5, in relation to Section 2(a) of Republic Act (RA) No. 9165 or the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002 for transportation and delivery of illegal drugs.
The imported shipment was seized by the BoC and the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) in May last year from a warehouse in Valenzuela City.
“Since RA No. 9165, as amended, specifically and distinctly punishes the crime of importation and transportation under two separate sections thereof, the prosecution was justified in filing two separate informations for the separate violations of RA No. 9165 committed by the above-named accused as far as the subject dangerous drugs is concerned. In doing so, no forum shopping has been committed and the prosecution did not violate the rule on municipality of suits,“ reads the appeal.
“For forum shopping to exist, the actions must involve the same transaction, including the essential facts and circumstances thereof, and must raise identical causes of actions, subject matter and issues. The mere filing of two or more cases based on the same incident does not necessarily constitute forum shopping,” it continued.
The motion pointed out: “For importation of dangerous drugs to be committed, the following elements must be present, namely: (1) the importation or bringing into the Philippines of any regulated or prohibited drug; and (2) the importation or bringing into the Philippines of said drugs was without authority of law. Clearly, the transportation or delivery is not an essential ingredient or part of this crime.” — Dane Angelo M. Enerio

Panay East-West road expected in 2020

THE DEPARTMENT of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) is aiming to open the Panay East-West Lateral Road in 2020, which will connect Antique, the central and northern parts of Iloilo, and Capiz in Panay Island. The P2.6-billion project covers the construction of a 41-kilometer road, including bridges and slope protection. Once completed, it is expected to cut travel time from central Iloilo to Antique by 30 minutes. DPWH said around 300 motorists pass this route daily. “More than the shorter travel time, the road is seen to boost tourism and deliver positive impacts on the agricultural productivity in the highland communities in Western Visayas Region,” the agency said in a statement. — Denise A. Valdez

Pantar mayor, 6 others arrested for illegal possession of firearms

PANTAR MAYOR Jabar D. Tago was among seven people arrested on May 13 for illegal possession of firearms and violation of the election gun ban. In a raid conducted by a joint team of the military’s 2nd Mechanized Brigade and Pantar police in Mr. Tago’s compound, nine high-powered firearms, five pistols, one shotgun, and assorted ammunition were seized, according to Joint Task Force Ranao Spokesperson Colonel Romeo Brawner, Jr. Aside from Mr. Tago, the others arrested were Jamaloding D. Tago, Janoding D. Tago, Rehan M. Gumpal, Abdul Racman M. Gumpal, Kiram B. Ampuan, and Nasroding Lao. — Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz

Davao City launches peace-building program as alternative to local talks with NPA

THE DAVAO City government has launched its Peace 911 program, which is intended to bring customized development projects in areas that are known lairs of the communist New People’s Army (NPA) members. The initial site is Mapula in the remote Paquibato District, where Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio urged residents to join government efforts in bringing peace and development. “Whatever Peace 911 brings to you, accept it, protect it, think of it as your own for peace and development of your district here in Paquibato,” said Ms. Duterte as she signed the executive order creating the Davao City Advisory Committee on Peace and Development, which will take the lead in implementing peace-building efforts. Ms. Carpio earlier wanted to hold localized peace talks with the NPA, but called off the initiative after the national government issued an order tagging them as terrorists. — Carmelito Q. Francisco

11 Abu Sayyaf members, 3 soldiers killed in pursuit operations

ELEVEN MEMBERS of the notorious Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) were killed in separate encounters with the 5th Scout Ranger Battalion in Patikul, Sulu on May 13 and 14 amid the military’s efforts to rescue hostages of the kidnap-for-ransom group. Three soldiers were also killed in action. The ASG faction, led by sub-leaders Hajan Sawadjaan, Idang Susukan, Injam Yadah, and Ben Tattoh, holds captive two police officers who were abducted last April 29, according to Brigadier General Cirilito E. Sobejana. Among the 10 ASG members killed on Sunday were identified as Amah Talah; Taha Sawadjaan, Hajan’s younger brother and second-in-command of the ASG; Long Abraham; and a certain alias “Red.” On Monday, three more bodies, believed to be among those neutralized on Sunday, were recovered by the military, including a “suspicious foreign terrorist,” which the military has yet to identify. An ASG member was killed in another clash on the same day. The military retrieved two high-powered firearms and various paraphernalia and supplies. — Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz

Nation at a Glance — (05/15/18)

News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.

The most inclusive province: Bataan

If poverty incidence is the metric of inclusivity, what province wins? Bataan. Surprised?
Let us compare the scores of provinces with the least number of poor.
Among the top performers, Bataan has the lowest poverty incidence at 2% in 2015. It was No. 7 among 79 provinces in 2006. It jumped to No. 1 in 2015 from No. 7 among 79 provinces in 2006. It also posted among the fastest reduction of poor between 2006 and 2015 at -74%. NCR hardly reduced its poverty incidence.
Bataan’s poverty incidence is not far from Malaysia’s 0.6%, and lower than Vietnam’s 7%, Thailand’s 10.5% and Indonesia’s 10.9%.
Disclosure: I have no political nor business connections in Bataan. I am from Panabo City, Davao del Norte.
What are the secrets of Bataan? I don’t know all the answers.
The province had 760,650 people with a high density of 554 per square kilometer in 2015. Mariveles, Dinalupihan, and Balanga have the largest population among 12 municipalities. Population growth was 1.7% a year between 2010 and 2015.
Bataan’s strengths include balanced development. It is near industrial jobs in the Subic and Bataan Freeport areas. The latter employs about 28,000 from 81 operating locators.
In addition, the province is a tourist hub anchored on natural and historical places as well as spillovers from Subic. Strong political leadership may be also a factor, as reflected in their vision.
Bataan was the 7th most competitive province in the country in 2016, according to the National Competitiveness Council. It was ranked 1st in Central Luzon.
Agriculture, such as rice, hogs and poultry, are relatively small. In fact, Bataan is a net importer of rice despite its high yield of five tons per hectare.
Among its famous sons are the late David Consunji, the founder of DMCI Holdings, Alfred Juinio, former UP College of Engineering dean and secretary of Public Works, and former senator Manuel Villar.
Bataan 1Bataan 2Bataan 3
Bataan has its share of weaknesses. First is distance from NCR making it tough to be a bedroom community like Cavite, Laguna, and Rizal. A Bataan-Corregidor-Cavite Trans Manila Bay Bridge-Tunnel can surely transform Bataan’s and Subic’s connectivity.
Bataan is a laboratory of inclusive development. Is anyone listening?
This article reflects the personal opinion of the author and does not reflect the official stand of the Management Association of the Philippines or the MAP.
 
Rolando T. Dy is the Vice-Chair of the M.A.P. AgriBusiness and Countryside Development Committee, and the Executive Director of the Center for Food and AgriBusiness of the University of Asia & the Pacific.
map@map.org.ph
rdyster@gmail.com
http://map.org.ph
 
BATAAN: VISION AND MISSION
Vision: By 2020, Bataan will have the lowest poverty incidence resulting from quality growth attaining top-level Human Development Index in the Philippines. Mission: Excellent public services towards a better quality of life for all.
SOURCE:
https://www.bataan.gov.ph/

Rule of law or rule of tainted judges?

Referring to the granting of the quo warranto petition that led to the ouster of Maria Lourdes Sereno as chief justice, Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque said: “The Court ruling is an assertion of the supremacy of the fundamental law of the land.” Chief presidential legal counsel Salvador Panelo asserted, “The Supreme Court has spoken. We all must bow to the majesty of the law.”
Do we bow to the majesty of the law or the supremacy of the president’s minions in the Supreme Court? What is the law in the first place? The Chief Justice and six associate justices of the Supreme Court interpret the law at issue differently from eight other associate justices. Over 100 law professors, including current and former deans, signed a statement reiterating that “The Constitution provides only one means to remove a sitting chief justice.” There must be over 100 law professors, including those with master’s degrees and doctorates from the best law schools in the country, who say there is more than one way to oust the Chief Justice.
There have been cases when associate justices of the Supreme Court interpreted the same law differently depending on the circumstances prevailing at the time or depending on how their decision suits their personal agenda. Remember the midnight appointment of Renato Corona as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in 2010?
The Constitution says that two months immediately before the next presidential elections, and up to the end of his term, the President shall not make appointments, except temporary appointments to executive positions when continued vacancies thereon will prejudice public service or endanger public safety. Corona was appointed chief justice two days after the elections and before the end of president Gloria Arroyo’s term, in contravention of the cited provision of the Constitution.
But the Court, which was then dominated by appointees of president Arroyo, upheld the midnight appointment of Corona, who was chief of staff of the president before she appointed him to the Supreme Court. President Arroyo’s toadies posited that a vacancy in the position of chief justice is so important to the Supreme Court that a high-profile case could not be heard without a chief justice — even if there was no big case being heard at the time. Among the associate justices who advanced that argument to uphold the midnight appointment of Corona as chief justice were Presbitero Velasco, Teresita Leonardo-de Castro, Diosdado Peralta, Lucas Bersamin, and Mariano del Castillo, all appointed to the Supreme Court by president Arroyo.
This year, the same five associate justices voted to force Chief Justice Sereno to go on an indefinite leave, never mind if the Supreme Court acting as the Presidential Electoral Tribunal is conducting a recount of the votes cast for vice-presidential candidates Leni Robredo and Bongbong Marcos. It should be noted that in 2011, then Associate Justice Sereno objected to the execution of the temporary restraining order of the Arroyo-appointees dominated Supreme Court lifting Justice Secretary Leila de Lima’s “hold departure” order on former president Arroyo who was under arrest for non-bailable charges.
As Dale Carpenter, who writes and teaches in the area of constitutional law wrote: “If citizens cannot trust that laws will be enforced in an even-handed and honest fashion, they cannot be said to live under the rule of law. Instead, they live under the rule of men corrupted by law.” Well, Filipinos have been living under the rule of men corrupted by law.
Speaking of that controversial “hold departure” order of Leila de Lima against Gloria Arroyo, Sen. Joker Arroyo said De Lima’s defiance of the Supreme Court’s temporary restraining order emasculated and damaged the Supreme Court. That Supreme Court populated by appointees of Gloria Arroyo had been emasculated and damaged by its own doing.
It flip-flopped five times on the constitutionality of the laws making 16 municipalities cities. There is also its two-sided stand on what the Court’s jurisdiction is. It dismissed the disqualification complaint against Mikey Arroyo, who ran as representative of tricycle drivers and security guards, citing that the case was outside the Court’s jurisdiction. Yet, it stopped the impeachment proceedings against then Ombudsman Merceditas Gutierrez, when impeachment is well outside the jurisdiction of the Court.
It upheld Congress’ creation of a new congressional district to allow Dato Arroyo to run in a district where he would not be opposed by a powerful politician. The creation of the new district was in violation of the Constitution as the new district did not have the population size required by the Constitution.
It ruled in 2015 that the feeble health of Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile presented a compelling reason for his admission to bail. That ruling was contrary to law as poor health is no reason for granting bail. There are many dying lolos and lolas in jail who have been denied bail. Not only that, the senator never gave the condition of his health as reason for his petition for bail. That is because he was not sick. Just as soon he was set free, the senator walked sprightly into the Senate session hall and immediately joined the discourse with fervor.
I saw the ruling though as the justices’ way of setting the precedent for the similar admission to bail of former president Arroyo, who had been claiming that her spinal problem was life-threatening. That is why she wore a neck brace to prevent the further deterioration of her spine and why she sought medical treatment abroad, dismissing the claim of St. Luke’s Hospital as world class.
In July 2016, she was set free by the Court without the expected legal gobbledygook. Eleven justices, all appointees of hers to the Court, acquitted her of the charges for which she was under arrest. Many wondered why she was not acquitted much earlier by the same 11 justices. Well, the political climate prevailing at that time was not favorable to an outright acquittal.
It will be recalled that during the 2016 presidential campaign, candidate Duterte said he would support the call for Arroyo’s release from hospital arrest. Just two weeks after Mr. Duterte was sworn in as president, Arroyo walked free, sans the neck brace and the need for urgent medical treatment abroad.
In that same campaign period, Mr. Duterte said he will allow the burial of former president Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani. The remaining eight appointees of Arroyo to the Court all voted in favor of the hero’s burial of Marcos for reasons that included the false claims that Marcos was a be-medalled war veteran and that he was not convicted of moral turpitude.
In July last year, the remaining seven appointees of Arroyo and the two appointees of President Duterte voted to uphold the President’s imposition of martial law in Mindanao. The same nine justices voted in favor of the President’s extension of martial law in Mindanao to the end of the year.
Four associate justices with personal grievances against Sereno and the four associate justices appointed to the Court by President Rodrigo Duterte, an avowed personal enemy of Sereno, ruled the quo warranto petition in accordance with the law. And the Filipino people are asked to respect the ruling of these supposed supreme but tainted judges.
 
Oscar P. Lagman, Jr. is a member of Manindigan! a cause-oriented group of businessmen, professionals, and academics.
oplagman@yahoo.com

Commodities competition and the mining debate

Commodities competition as defined in this piece refers to companies that are producing certain commodities and are competing for investors. Thus, energy companies are those that plan to attract more investors and expand operations when world energy prices are high as compared to those companies producing agricultural, industrial, and other commodities.
This is a continuation of a series of pieces about competition.
Last week we discussed overall competition and the role of the Philippine Competition Commission (PCC), electricity competition and the role of Philippine Electricity Market Corp. (PEMC), innovation and the role of IPR protection.
Endless competition also leads to endless innovation and this results in disruption in global economic balance or imbalance, which, among others, would be discussed in BusinessWorld’s Economic Forum 2018 that carries the theme: “Disruptor or Disrupted? The Philippines at the Crossroads.”
Currently, energy prices especially oil are rising again as the supply from OPEC-Russia remains constricted and US shale oil production expands but insufficient to cope with high world demand. But this rise in energy prices do not represent disruption in the global energy balance yet.
I visited the Commodities section of Trading Economics, https://tradingeconomics.com/commodities, and checked which of the many commodities have “disrupting”prices over the last five years.
The commodities are divided into five groups: (1) Energy (crude oil, natural gas, naptha, propane, uranium, etc.), (2) Metals (gold, silver, manganese, palladium, rhodium, etc.), (3) Agricultural (rice, corn, coffee, cheese, lumber, sugar, soybeans, wheat, etc.), (4) Livestock (poultry, cattle, hogs, beef), and (5) Industrial (coal, copper, cobalt, steel, nickel, lead, aluminum, etc.). There are about 50 commodities in total.
What is surprising is the eminence of certain metallic products.
Four commodities have incurred disruptive price hikes — cobalt, rhodium, palladium, and lumber. Zinc and lithium also have rising price trends but not as steep as these four. The rest of the commodities have up-down-up cycles, or declining prices like uranium.
Cobalt is mainly used to produce high performance alloys and rechargeable batteries. Thus, companies producing batteries for mobile phones, electric cars, motorcycles and buses would be scrambling for limited cobalt supply in the world as Congo is the dominant supplier but politically unstable. Cobalt is found in copper and nickel ores and the Philippines is a major nickel producer in the world and an average copper producer.
Rhodium is a silver-white metallic element that is highly resistant to corrosion. Thus, it is mainly used in automobiles as a catalytic converter, changing harmful unburned hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen oxide exhaust emissions into less noxious gases. It is found in platinum or nickel ores and other metals, and again, the Philippines is a major player in global nickel production and exports.
Palladium is used in catalytic converters, also in jewelry, dentistry and surgical instruments, watch making, aircraft spark plugs, ceramic capacitors, among others.
High lumber demand is experienced as there is a new trend in building construction using treated wood instead of cement and steel. Innovations in wood treatment allow them to be fire-resistant. Demand for “eco-friendly” packing materials and related products also experience rising demand.
And this brings us to the endless mining debate in the Philippines.
The trend is there — rising if not disruptive price hikes in many metallic products — so why make mining production highly politicized and bureaucratic? Why is that DENR circular that suspended or closed several mining companies issued by a former secretary who believes she can fly still not lifted until now?
Not content with bureaucratic licensing and monitoring of mining companies, mining excise tax has been doubled in the TRAIN 1 law of 2017 and there are moves to further raise this tax in TRAIN 2 bill now in Congress.
A better alternative for Congress would be to ban “small-scale” mining as almost all such mining actually use heavy equipment such as backhoes, bulldozers, and huge trucks. They should then be encouraged to pool their resources to become medium- to large mining corporations registered with SEC and subject to mandatory community projects as provided in the Mining Act of 1995.
Australia and Canada, among the biggest mining powerhouses in the world despite having major environmental NGOs, do not have “small-scale” mines that are harder and more time-consuming to monitor.
The Philippine government should be a partner and not a hindrance to more modern and responsible mining and allow us to take advantage of this upward trend in global metal prices.
The government should be an enabler of disruption, not a disruptor, in the clear potentials of metallic mining.
 
Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is President of Minimal Government Thinkers, a member-institute of Economic Freedom Network (EFN) Asia.
minimalgovernment@gmail.com.

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