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Timberwolves All-Star Butler suffers meniscus injury in right knee

LOS ANGELES — Minnesota’s Jimmy Butler has a meniscus injury in his right knee, the Timberwolves said Saturday, a day after the All-Star guard was carried off the floor in the third quarter of a loss to the Houston Rockets.

Butler underwent an MRI exam on Saturday which revealed the meniscal injury, the NBA team said in a statement.

The Timberwolves did not give any timetable for his return, saying only that further updates on his progress would be issued when more information becomes available.

Butler was rebounding a missed shot when Rockets forward Nene appeared to lean slightly on his right knee. Butler took a couple of steps after that, turning and planting his right foot then falling to the court and clutching the knee.

Two teammates helped him leave the court without putting any weight on the affected leg.

Butler, Minnesota’s prized offseason acquisition, has helped the Timberwolves reach fourth place in the Western Conference — in position to make the playoffs for the first time since 2004.

In 56 games this season he is averaging 22.2 points, 5.4 rebounds and 5.0 assists. — AFP

FWD Life Philippines finds cause in North Pole Marathon 2018

SEEING how it runs in line with what it stands for as a brand, which is to pursue one’s passions and celebrating life without hesitation, FWD Life Philippines has thrown its support to the North Pole Marathon 2018 which is happening in April.

Set for April 9, the event dubbed the “world’s coolest marathon” will have the FWD Group as title sponsor and will see it send participants to take on the extreme challenges of the race and embrace the experience of a lifetime that it presents.

In conjunction with it, the local wing of the life insurance company launched on Feb. 20 the “Blaze a Trail in the Arctic” campaign to show its support for the marathon and what it generally embodies of overcoming challenges and pursuing one’s passion.

FWD Life Philippines also sees it as a good platform to share the value of financial literacy to encourage people to strike a balance between living life to the fullest but at the same time being ready as well.

“As a brand that continues to change the way people feel about insurance, FWD saw the North Pole Marathon as a unique platform to empower people to overcome extreme challenges, to pursue their aspirations without worries, and to ignite their passion for life-enriching experiences,” said FWD Life Philippines President and Chief Executive Officer Peter Grimes in a statement, speaking of the motor that has them rallying behind the North Pole marathon.

“With ‘Blaze a Trail in the Arctic’ as our Philippine campaign promoting the marathon, we aim to encourage Filipinos to live life to the fullest, because we will always have their back!” he added.

In the marathon, which is recognized by the Guinness World Records as the “Northernmost Marathon on Earth,” participants will traverse the 42-kilometer path with an average temperature of -30 degrees centigrade.

One of those competing in the marathon is Filipino multi-sport athlete Louie Sangalang, one of 10 runners from six countries across Asia who FWD is sponsoring.

A cancer survivor, FWD Life Philippines said Mr. Sangalang’s life journey made him a “perfect choice” to represent the Philippines.

“Louie’s resilience in overcoming life’s challenges is one trait that resonates with Filipinos and this made him the perfect choice to represent the Philippines in the marathon,” said Mr. Grimes.

“His inspiring story and his passion for sports, which he uses to inspire Filipinos to live an active lifestyle, also best represent what FWD stands for: pursuing one’s passions and celebrating life without hesitation. As such, FWD will be providing Louie with insurance protection so that he can embrace the North Pole Marathon challenge worry-free,” he added.

For Mr. Sangalang, a triathlete and mixed martial arts champion at the Universal Reality Combat Championship, the North Pole marathon is a good opportunity for him to share his story and, in turn, inspire other people to rise above the hardships thrown their way whatever those may be.

“I want to inspire my fellow Filipinos with my story. This is why I’m running. I want them to feel empowered, that despite the many challenges that life throws, you can come back better and stronger with the right attitude,” said Mr. Sangalang, 40, who was diagnosed with cancer of the appendix when he was 21 but has been in remission since 2000.

“I’m excited for the North Pole Marathon. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for me and I’m happy to represent the country. And, yes, I consider this as one of the toughest battles in my life but after all I have gone through I believe I can overcome this as well,” added Mr. Sangalang.

To help Mr. Sangalang prepare for the task at hand, FWD Life Philippines has assembled a team of coaches to help him prepare for the different facets of the marathon.

Part of the team are Ani De Leon-Brown and coach Ige Lopez for Louie’s physical preparedness; mountain climber Romi Garduce, who will share his insights on surviving extreme weather conditions; Maricel Laxa-Pangilinan and son Benjamin, who will provide emotional support and motivation; and sports enthusiast and funny man Sam YG, who will help keep the rigorous — sometimes stressful — training, lighthearted and fun.

FWD Group spans Hong Kong and Macau, Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, Vietnam, and Japan, offering life and medical insurance, general insurance, and employee benefits across a number of its markets.

For more information on the marathon and the FWD’s campaign, log on to npmarathon.fwd.com.ph. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Are mobile games the next platform for pushing government agendas?

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words by

SANTIAGO J. ARNAIZ

videos by

GRETCHEN MALALAD

illustrations by

JIEGO GAVIN TOMAGAN

Late last year, Apple took down a number of Filipino-developed mobile games after over a hundred organizations called for their removal, claiming they “normalized mass murders and impunity through virtual games.” These games, the groups said, actively promoted murder, extrajudicial killings, violence, and the Philippine war on drugs .

While no longer on Apple’s platform, the games are still available on Android, Google’s mobile operating system and the most widely used platform in the country. Since they were launched 18 months ago, these games have been downloaded millions of times.

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Tsip Bato: Ang Bumangga Giba!, a game endorsed and co-developed by the Philippine National Police (PNP) itself, had more than 500,000 downloads before it was taken down from the Apple marketplace.

Launched on Aug. 8, 2016, just six weeks after President Rodrigo Duterte’s inauguration, Tsip Bato shows a cartoon PNP Chief Ronald Dela Rosa barreling through an endless highway and shooting criminals.

The PNP billed Tsip Bato an “entertaining and educational game” meant to teach children the dangers of doing drugs. The game features cartoonish acts of violence against drug suspects, with the avatars of Dela Rosa Duterte shown running over the suspects with a truck, gunning them down with an assault rifle, or blowing them up with a missile launcher.

The game was released when the administration’s drug was was just over a month old, and the police and unidentified gunmen were hunting down and killing scores of suspected drug users and dealers in Metro Manila’s poorest communities.

These games may seem harmless and fun out of context, said the 131 human rights and drug user rights groups that signed a petition against Tsip Bato and similar mobile apps. But set against the backdrop of the ongoing war on drugs – a war that’s seen, and continues to see, thousands murdered – the games take on a more sinister tone.

Tsip Bat­o, in particular, raises concerns for being a government-sponsored project, specifically in its purported goal of educating the youth on how to fight drugs in their communities. By focusing on killing, the game signals that extreme solutions are needed to fight the drug scourge. Wittingly or not, it justifies, and in the view of the games’ critics, also valorizes and normalizes the drug war killings.

Hoping to capitalize on the meteoric rise of President Duterte’s popularity and his campaign to end the illegal drug trade, developer Ben Joseph Banta got his team working on a game built around the PNP’s new mascot, P01 Bato. Banta had previously found success developing games for the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) and was on the lookout for his next big project.

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In the early days of the Duterte presidency, pictures of the bald, wide-smiling mascot based on PNP chief Dela Rosa went viral on Facebook and Banta saw it as an opportunity to garner some attention for his growing game development company, Ranida Games.

The Ranida Games team spent weeks designing a basic “endless runner” with P01 Bato zooming down a highway collecting tokens. Teaser videos of the prototype began to garner attention on Facebook—so much attention, in fact, that the PNP took notice and reached out.

“I received an email from the PNP and, honestly, I was quite scared to open it,” Banta said. “After working on that game for weeks, I didn’t want it to be pulled out.”

But instead of the cease-and-desist order he was expecting, Banta got an invitation from Chief Superintendent Gilberto Cruz, then-director of the Police-Community Relations Group, to work with his agency on making their prototype an official game of the Philippine National Police.

Cruz says he bonds with his children by playing video games with them. Noticing that they were constantly playing games on their mobile phones, he toyed with the idea of creating mobile games as a way to bring the anti-drug campaign to younger audiences. Stumbling upon Ranida’s prototype, he believed he had found just the way to do it.

“The game back then was really raw,” Banta said. “There were a lot of ideas coming from [the PNP] – the looks, following [General Dela Rosa’s] clothes, his biceps, the aesthetics and messages they wanted to appear.” Banta said the PNP wanted a strong-looking protagonist to match the high-octane gameplay.

Together the team designed a game that they hoped would promote the government’s deadly crackdown on drug users and peddlers, while still being fun to play. The result was Tsip Bato: Ang Bumangga Giba! – its name a suggestion from Dela Rosa himself.

The game made headlines when it was released, with footage of Dela Rosa gleefully controlling his gun-toting digital avatar spreading through social media. Thanks to the news coverage, Tsip Bato pulled in 195,000 downloads in its first month, peaking at a rate of four thousand users an hour.

Cruz attributes its popularity to the fact that the game is just fun to play. “I asked my children when they started playing it: They loved running and avoiding those obstacles, and they loved the shooting. And they were learning,” he said.

“They told me that they saw those ads and they saw those signages inside the game. ‘Avoid drugs’, ‘drugs kill’, ‘say no to drugs’. I was happy when they told me that they saw those,” he said.

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In the game, the endless highway that players navigate is lined with billboards plastered with anti-drug-use messages. The main menu has Chief Bato (or President Duterte himself, depending on the player’s chosen character) standing on a podium bearing the words “Oplan Tokhang,” tying the game to the PNP’s larger campaign. According to Cruz, the game is a success because it teaches players a lesson about the ills of drugs. This, he says, is the main intention of the game.

The game’s messaging does warn against the dangers of drugs, but it doesn’t spell out what those dangers might be. What it offers instead is the image of a police chief taking down drug suspects with assault rifles and rocket launchers.

Joie Sales is the chairperson of the game development program at iAcademy, where she teaches not only the skills needed to create video games, but also the ethics involved. According to Sales, Tsip Bato is a very fun game. And it’s the fact that it’s so fun that makes it so concerning.

“The thin line between studying and learning is fun,” she said. “When you cross that line, and they’re having fun while they’re studying, that’s the time that they’d actually accept anything.”

She calls this the “flow state,” a technical term for the point of extreme focus when players become actively engaged with what they’re interacting with. In this state, Sales says players become incredibly susceptible to messaging.

This would be a good thing for a game so saturated with slogans admonishing drug use. But Sales explains that because the player’s focus is on gameplay and the messages sent there, details elsewhere get lost in translation.

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Gaming companies hoping to capitalize on the popularity of the drug war, she said, may not be sensitive to the ethical implications and psychological impact of the games that they are putting on the market.

“Developers should be very careful as to what they want to give these kids,” said Sales. “Kids are like sponges… If you actually use the flow state to your advantage and you are an unethical person, you can manipulate that person. When they’re in that state, you can put any kind of image you want.”

In the case of Tsip Bato, the central message presented is not the anti-drug poster lost in the background as the character speeds by, but the image of the man in the middle of the road, gunned down or blown up by the player themselves.

Alfred Cholo Peteros is a 19-year-old studying communication at the University of Caloocan City. Like many of his classmates, Peteros lives in Caloocan, a city known to be one of the hotspots of the war on drugs.

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Peteros says he’s a fan of mobile games and so was thrilled to see a fun, locally-produced app like Tsip Bato. He, along with a number of his classmates, enjoyed taking on the role of General Dela Rosa in killing criminals. It was only upon further reflection that he grew concerned the game might actually present a skewed version of reality.

According to him, if children were to play games like this, they might imagine that this is what the drug war is about, that this is what the criminals look like.

“In reality, this game isn’t what we see every day,” Peteros said. “It isn’t what you hear or see on the news.”

In reality, the drug war is butchered bodies wrapped in packing tape. It‘s bloody crime scenes. It’s murdered children, and the grieving families left in their wake.

On the evening of August 16, 2017, 17-year-old Kian delos Santos was shot and killed by plainsclothes officers in Caloocan City. Official reports claimed he was an armed drug runner who shot at the police as they gave chase.

But CCTV footage showed he was dragged to the spot where his corpse would later be found. One eyewitness claimed the boy had begged for his life before he was beaten and murdered. At the end of the investigation, the autopsy showed that Delos Santos was shot thrice: Two shots to the ear, and one to the back of the head – execution style.

Kian delos Santos’ murder spurred outrage from the public and other sectors of the government alike. But the killings continue. According to the PNP, nearly 50 people suspected of using and selling drugs were killed by officers in the past two months.

“There’s something missing to make [Tsip Bato] actually educational,” said 18-year-old Valerie Rosaldo, Pateres’ classmate the University of Caloocan City. “I don’t think it’s advisable for kids to play it. It’s still about killing people.”

The PNP isn’t the first government agency to look to mobile games to promote an agenda. Countries all over the world have been developing games as a way to tap into the minds of their citizens for years. The most striking example of this comes out of China.

In 2015, the Chinese government launched Sesame Credit, a joint venture between game development company Tencent and Ant Financial (an affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba) that hopes to attach a social score, much like the American credit score system, to Chinese citizens.

But instead of tracking credit history, this system rewards citizens with points for acts deemed patriotic, and demerits for acts that are considered unpatriotic. All of this is based, in part, on data gleaned from citizens’ social media activity. In effect, the users’ entire life becomes the game. The app is simply the reward system.

For current users of Sesame Credit, a higher score garners real world incentives, like discounts on online shopping. But in a move straight out of techno-dystopian TV series “Black Mirror,” that score will also dictate the what services users can get from government offices, their likelihood of getting a loan approved, and even the range of job offers they can access.

Sesame Credit accounts will be mandatory for Chinese citizens come 2020.

While mobile games like Tsip Bato are far less sophisticated and overtly controlling than Sesame Credit aims to be, any game mechanics that reward pro-government actions and enforce government agendas can only point to one thing: Propaganda.

According to Chief Superintendent Cruz, it was difficult grappling with the possible outcomes of this game. “Is it worth it to create a game like this?,” he said. “Can we achieve what we really want to achieve? Maybe, instead of them learning, we promote a culture of violence.”

Banta , the developer, said that glorifying violence was never the goal of the development team. “We created the game, made it fun for the kids to be interested in it, so they could receive the message,” he said. “So we added features in the game that would make it fun. Shooting criminals was to make the game fun, so we can solidify the gameplay.”

Apple CEO Tim Cook never formally responded to the organizations, led by the Asian Network of People Who Use Drugs (ANPUD), that wrote the October 2017 open letter calling for the takedown of five mobile games, including Tsip Bato. But a month later, Apple silently complied with their request. The same week, PNP Chief Dela Rosa was quoted welcoming the decision to take them down, saying the games misrepresented the point of the government’s anti-drug efforts.

Given the chance to change any aspect of Tsip Bato, Cruz said he would want to somehow incorporate rehabilitation efforts into its gameplay. “Once the criminal was placed there, points will be given when they were rehabilitated and got out”, he said.

If Cruz had his way, the PNP – and the government at large – would continue exploring mobile games as a way to reach the community. To that end, Sales suggests exercising caution.

“There are so many things you need to look into,” Sales said. “That involves a lot of people, not just a few [game] developers. It involves psychologists. It involves educators. You can’t just publish a game right away because it’s fun.”

Following the initial outcry against Tsip Bato, the Drug Policy Alliance, a nonprofit advocacy group, has called for Google to follow Apple’s lead in taking down the pro-drug war games from their Play Store.

Hannah Hetzer, senior international policy manager of the Drug Policy Alliance, called these games inhumane and horrifying.

“This is a real tragedy, not something to be turned into a game,” Hetzer said. “If these game developers wanted to be helpful in reaching out to youth, as they have claimed to, they should design games that give real, honest and evidence-based information about drugs, health and harm reduction, not create games that glorify murder.

Earlier this year, Google announced they had taken down tens of thousands of apps from their Play Store for “containing or promoting inappropriate content.” However, Tsip Bato, along with a number of similar games, is currently still available on the Android marketplace.

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Andre Paras’ NCRAA mission

Andre Paras is back from a severe ankle sprain and quickly made his presence felt in his return to the AMA University Titans in the National Capital Region Athletic Association (NCRAA).

Playing in his first game back since opening day late last year, Paras unloaded 11 points, including two triples, grabbed four rebounds and blocked three shots while trying to feel his way back after a long absence.

For the second-generation cager, trying to fit in is his modest goal for the Titans, who are in solid contention for the championship. AMA finished with a 6-1 win-loss record in Group B, tied with Philippine Merchant Marine School, which it defeated on opening day.

The Titans will be marching to the quarterfinal round, carrying the no. 1 seed in Group B, and will face the survivors in the wildcard phase.

For Paras, son of Philippine Basketball Association legend Benjie, the comeback came in at a perfect time with the Titans now preparing for the tough grind.

“It’s tough because I feel I’m back to zero. I’m out of shape,” added Paras. “There’s not much you can do because I have a right high-degree sprain. I’m trying to get back into shape and trying to get my rhythm back.”

“It’s important because I missed a lot of games in the NCRAA. By the playoffs, I hope to be in top shape again.”

His head coach, Mark Herrera, who handled Paras in the PBA D-League as well, sees him playing an important role in their title quest.

“He just came back because from an injury. He’s still trying to get his wind, missing a lot of games here and in the D-League. He’s still trying to get his laterals, but he’s trying hard. Going to the quarterfinals, he needs to get the feel of the games in the NCRAA to be in top shape.”

But even without Paras, the Titans were able to hold their own against their rivals and the second-generation cager believes AMA will go along way as a team and not just on his efforts.

“It’s the other way around. It’s never been my team. If I were to call it, it’s everyone’s team. It’s AMA basketball. I’m just happy to be part of it. If there are people that needs recognition, it should be Owen Graham and Daniel Salonga among others,” added Paras. “Because they’re the pioneers. They know the system of Coach Mark. I just want to contribute in any way I can.”

 

Rey Joble has been a sportswriter covering the PBA games for more than a decade. He is a member of the PBA Press Corps and Philippine Sportswriters Association, the oldest journalism group in the country.

reyjoble09@gmail.com

Cut above the rest

If there’s anything the Warriors’ set-to against the Thunder yesterday proved, it’s that no other team in the National Basketball Association (NBA) can take their measure when they’re engaged. The visitors seemed to match up well with them, schooling them en route to blowouts in November and earlier this month. Not so; content to trade blows through most of three quarters, they struck, and fast, and effectively turned the payoff period into garbage time.

Clearly, the Warriors circled yesterday’s affair in their calendar. Hitherto embarrassed by the Thunder starring an inspired Big Three led by reigning league Most Valuable Player Russell Westbrook, they resolved to show their full potential. And when they did, their supposedly superior opponents were exposed as wanting. Make that severely wanting. Over a span of three minutes and 54 seconds to end the third period, they put up a clinic on both ends of the court, sticking to assignments like leeches and then finding the hoop with consistency. Their emphatic 14-to-zero run turned what looked to be a close contest into a rout. And for good measure, they went on to score twice as many points as their previous tormentors in the fourth.

When the battlesmoke cleared, the box score told the story. The Thunder barely cracked 30% in field goal accuracy, with Westbrook, Paul George, and Carmelo Anthony going four-of-15, one-of-14, and six-of-17, respectively. With the exception of slotman Steven Adams, not a single player of the 12 head coach Billy Donovan put in managed to shoot over 50% from the floor. Meanwhile, the Warriors reminded all and sundry of their capacity to exhibit shutdown defense; they had eight steals, six blocks, and a whopping 54 rebounds while also forcing 15 turnovers.

And then there was the offense. Throughout their domination of the NBA in recent memory, the Warriors have displayed a historically unparalleled capacity to produce points. In fact, they’re so otherworldly in their efforts that comparisons are useless. And yesterday was a prime example; with Steph Curry breaking traditional sets anew, Kevin Durant being, well, Kevin Durant, and Klay Thompson serving as a valuable insurance policy, they made the Thunder look like junior-varsity hopefuls. Consider this: Of their 42 field goals, 36 came off assists.

Which brings up an incontrovertible fact: The Larry O’Brien Trophy is the Warriors’ to lose. True, the Rockets are dangerous, the Thunder are committed, the Spurs are consistent, and the Cavaliers are blessed with LeBron James. On the other hand, they remain a cut above the rest, and the gap, while closing, continues to be a yawning one. These days, the NBA is composed of them, and then everybody else. Boredom is their biggest threat. And if they succeed in taming their Hyde side for the stretch run, the playoffs will lead to yet another predictable finish.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994.

alcuaycong@www.bworldonline.com

House to quiz Aquino on Dengvaxia

THE HOUSE of Representatives panel will quiz former President Benigno S.C. Aquino III on the realignment of the budget for the purchase of Dengvaxia vaccines as it resumes its inquiry on that controversy on Monday, Feb. 26.

Surigao del Sur Representative Johnny Ty Pimentel, chair of the House committee on good government and public accountability, said in a phone interview that Mr. Aquino has “already communicated with our committee secretary that he will be attending.” The same was confirmed by Mr. Aquino’s executive secretary JC Casimiro.

“The main question would center on who authorized the realignment….(B)ecause we know very well,…wala naman sa (it’s not in the) General Appropriations Act (GAA) of 2015 yung pambili sa (the fund for) Dengvaxia,” Mr. Pimentel said.

At the Feb. 5 hearing held by the good government committee, together with the House committee on health chaired by Quezon Representative Angelina D.L. Tan, Director Cristina B. Clasara of the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) testified that the P3.5-billion funding for the vaccine came from the allotment for miscellaneous personnel benefit funds (MPBF) under the special purpose fund.

Mr. Pimentel said this was a “circumvention” of National Budget Circular No. 599, which provides for guidelines on realigning the budget for the 2015 GAA, as the immunization program is not in the same allotment class as the MPBF. Ms. Clasara, however, said the realignment was possible upon approval by the president.

“’Yun ang sagot nila eh (That’s what I said), ‘As long as this is approved by the President.’ So tinanong namin sila (we asked them), ‘Was it authorized by the President?’ Hindi naman sila makasagot (They could not answer)….So tanungin natin si (So we will ask) Presidente Aquino: did you authorize the realignment?”

Apart from Mr. Aquino, Public Attorney’s Office chief Persida V. Rueda-Acosta, Interior department officer-in-charge Eduardo M. Año, and Education Secretary Leonor M. Briones are also among the resource persons invited to the hearing. Acting Prosecutor General Jorge G. Catalan, Jr. will attend the hearing on behalf of Justice Secretary Vitaliano N. Aguirre II, according to Justice Undersecretary Erickson H. Balmes.

Mr. Pimentel said he hopes to conclude the inquiry by Monday.

“As long as wala nang magreklamo na mga congressmen (As along as the congressmen don’t have anymore questions),…I hope we can already terminate it; we already have all the facts. Kumpleto na ko (I’m done). I can make the committee report,” Mr. Pimentel said. He added that the inquiry could have ended in the last hearing but Buhay party-list Rep. Jose L. Atienza, Jr. motioned to invite Mr. Aquino. — Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz

Bureau to be formed on wildlife protection

By Anna Gabriela A. Mogato, Reporter

THE Department of Environment and Natural Resource (DENR) will form a separate bureau to enforce wildlife and environmental laws as ordered by Secretary Roy A. Cimatu.

DENR Biodiversity Management Bureau (DENR-BMB) Director Theresa Mundita S. Lim said while they develop the policies on environmental laws, these are implemented by regional offices and other enforcement agencies such as the Philippine National Police and the Philippine Coast Guard.

“[Since] we have a secretary who is really into enforcement, he actually wants to institutionalize the enforcement function of the department. Initially, he set up a task force in Metro Manila, but he decided to expand it to the regional offices,” she added.

“But he now has an instruction to set up a bureau that will focus mainly on enforcement against environmental crimes which includes wildlife. So, among the challenges on wildlife enforcement is also following the apprehension, that there should be charges as well. Cases are filed and they (violators) are prosecuted.”

Ms. Lim said that, at present, whenever the government manages to confiscate illegally traded animals, these are sometimes returned to the traders due to lack of proper implementation or knowledge of laws. This is despite the country having special prosecutors and courts that hold trials on environment-related crimes.

Prior to the proposition to set up another bureau for enforcement, the DENR with its partner enforcement agencies had formed the interagency enforcement team Philippine Operation Group for Illegal Trade of Ivory during the Aquino administration.

During former Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Regina Paz L. Lopez’s term, the interagency body National Anti-Environmental Crime Task Force was formed to deal with environmental and wildlife trafficking.

This is not the first time Mr. Cimatu has ordered the formation of an enforcement group or task force, following the initiative of his predecessor, Ms. Lopez.

Mr. Cimatu recently formed task groups to go after illegal small-scale miners in Benguet which he plans to also spread out nationwide, as well as separate groups to monitor solid and water waste in different regions after the crackdown on environmental violators in Boracay.

Aside from enforcement, Ms. Lim said the BMB will focus on awareness providing alternative livelihood to the communities dependent on the illegal wildlife trade. Another plan of the bureau is to educate these communities on how to foster a more sustainable environmental trade.

“[We should] give these violators different enterprises so that they have others than just unsustainable collection. We can probably teach them how to sustainably utilize our wildlife resources,” Ms. Lim said.

“Or, if there are other wildlife resources that can be introduced in the area that can help the communities, that can veer them away from illegal collection. That’s another activity, another program that we are undertaking right now.”

Senate opens inquiry on Philippine Rise

By Camille A. Aguinaldo

THE SENATE on Monday will open its inquiry on the issues hounding Philippine Rise or Benham Rise, especially on foreign and local scientific research as well as national security concerns on the continental shelf.

The Senate committee on science and technology, chaired by Senator Paolo Benigno A. Aquino IV, has invited Filipino scientists and military experts on these matters.

“Let us hear the side of our scientists, researchers and experts….We want to know from the experts the extent of the Philippines’ natural resources in Benham Rise and what are the threats from China here. We would also tackle the funding and assistance for our local research programs,” Mr. Aquino said in a statement. The senator added that local scientists would present their research findings on the 13-million hectare (ha) underwater plateau while national security officials would shed light on the research conducted recently by China on Benham Rise and on other issues surrounding the Philippine territory.

Among those invited to the inquiry are Supreme Court Senior Associate Justice Antonio T. Carpio, maritime law expert Jay L. Batongbacal of the University of the Philippines Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea (UP-IMLOS) and Dr. Fernando P. Siringan, director of the UP-Maritime Science Institute (UP-MSI).

Also expected to appear are Defense Secretary Delfin N. Lorenzana, National Security Adviser Hermogenes C. Esperon, Jr., Philippine Navy chief Rear Admiral Robert A. Empedrad and Chinese Ambassador Zhao Jianhua.

Mr. Aquino stressed the importance of a strong and clear policy on Benham Rise amid the increasing presence of China in the region.

“Let us not give this important natural resource up just like the West Philippine Sea,” Mr. Aquino said.

The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) had earlier granted the request of the Institute of Oceanology of Chinese Academy of Sciences (IO-CAS) to conduct maritime research in Benham Rise together with the UP-MSI.

Malacañang later ordered that new applications for foreign research would have to be approved by the National Security Adviser.

China has also succeeded in registering official names for five undersea features in Benham Rise, claiming to discover three of the features during a 2004 survey by the China Navy Hydrographic Office.

The Philippine government has already objected to the Chinese names and has forwarded this matter to the Philippine embassy in Beijing.

Law enough for protecting OFWs but no implementation — senator

PROTECTION of Filipino migrant workers is already provided by law and remains a matter of implementation, an opposition senator said.

“I read the Overseas Workers Act. It is very detailed. The problem is it is not being implemented. Example is the information-sharing scheme which was not formed. In the case of Ms. [Joanna D.] Demafelis, for instance, almost a year had passed since she was reported missing but no action was taken,” Senator Franklin M. Drilon said in an interview with DZBB on Sunday, Feb. 25.

Mr. Drilon, a former Labor secretary, cited a provision in Republic Act. 8042, the Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipinos Act of 1995, “that there should be a sharing of information.”

“Second, what does the government do in order to have a labor agreement especially with countries where we send women as domestic workers?” he added.

The lawmaker suggested that “we should not allow that there would be a labor agreement between the Philippines and Kuwait and [other] countries in the Middle East,” noting that “the domestic laws of such countries do not cover, most of the time, the protection of our workers.”

Asked whether there is a need for a memorandum of agreement (MoA) extending the protection for OFWs, Mr. Drilon said: “It is already in the law, but it is not followed.”

Mr. Drilon also said it is unnecessary for the government to come up with remedial legislation on the blacklisting of countries seen to have failed protecting OFWs from abuses.

“Hindi kailangan ang batas dahil nasa batas iyan, dahil yung POEA governing board ay may kapangyarihan na ipagbawal ang deployment ng ating mga manggagawa sa ibayong dagat,” Mr. Drilon said. (No need for a law because it is already there. The POEA [Philippine Overseas Employment Administration] governing board has the authority to stop the deployment of our workers overseas.)

He added: “Nasa batas iyan pero hindi ko alam (k)ung nag-meeting itong POEA. Parang hindi.” (It’s in the law, but I don’t know if the POEA meets on this. Apparently not.”

Sought for comment, Migrante International spokesperson Arman N. Hernandez said that a “comprehensive protection” for OFWs is needed,” noting that the deployment ban on OFWs to Kuwait is “not enough help.”

“In protecting the migrant workers, there must (be) an onsite protection; meaning, the government should be active in monitoring the situation of OFWs in the countries where they are deployed. It should not (rely on the) recruiters. The government should be hands-on in protecting them. Along with that is the quick response during emergencies….” he said.

For its part, the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) announced last Friday, Feb. 23, its establishment of the OFW Command Center.

“To further enhance the protection and welfare of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), the Department of Labor and Employment established the OFW Command Center (through Administrative Order No. 73 issued by Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III) to serve as the central referral and action hub for all OFW requests for immediate action and assistance,” DoLE said in a media statement.

“The operation of the Command Center will help ensure that all the concerns of our OFWs are attended to, especially if the incident(s) involving them needed immediate action and assistance,” Mr. Bello said in the statement. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Psychiatrists take stand at Sereno impeachment hearing

AT LEAST two psychiatrists have confirmed attendance on Tuesday, Feb. 27, to the House committee on justice hearing on the impeachment case against Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno. Doctor Rhodora Andrea Concepcion, president of the Philippine Psychiatric Association, and Dr. Geraldine Tria are expected to be present. However, Dr. Genuina C. Ranoy, one of two experts who supposedly evaluated the Chief Justice prior to her appointment, was already subpoenaed by the committee but has yet to give word on her attendance. Meanwhile, Deputy Commissioner Arnel SD Guballa of the Bureau of Internal Revenue is also expected to return to reveal his team’s findings on the possible tax liabilities of Ms. Sereno. During the hearing last Feb. 19, Mr. Guballa said his team observed “discrepancies” in the records of the Chief Justice but could not yet reveal its full report pending the approval of the President. Oriental Mindoro Representative Reynaldo V. Umali, chair of the justice committee, said in a radio interview yesterday, Feb. 25, that Tuesday’s hearing would be the last   and that the committee report is expected to be approved by first week of March. Voting in the plenary would follow by the second week of March. — Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz

Senators to visit Boracay this week as part of legislative probe; DoT pushes for tourism heritage law

A DELEGATION of senators will visit Boracay Island this week as part of an inquiry in aid of legislation, the Department of Tourism (DoT) announced last week. In a statement, DoT Secretary Wanda Tulfo-Teo said part of the multi-agency program “Oplan Save Boracay (#saveboracay)” is pushing for the passage a tourism heritage law that will protect the country’s nature-destinations. “If enacted and implemented, a tourism heritage law will be more effective in ensuring the preservation and protection not only of Boracay Island and its seawaters but all of the country’s natural tourist destinations,” said Ms. Teo. In the meantime, the tourism head said several government agencies are currently working on a joint administrative order to immediately address Boracay’s longstanding sewage, waste management, and other environment-related problems. The agencies include the DoT, Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Department of the Interior and Local Governments (DILG), Department of Justice (DoJ), and the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH). At the same time, Ms. Teo assured tourists that Boracay, the country’s most popular island destination for both local and foreign visitors, “remains among the world’s most beautiful islands.”

FS on unsolicited Cebu monorail proposal out next month

PHILTRAM TRANSPORTATION Consortium, Inc., is set to submit its unsolicited proposal on the Cebu monorail project to the Department of Transportation next month, according to Cerwin Eviota, the firm’s public relations officer. “The FS (feasibility study) should have been done now. But we needed to expand the coverage to the heart of Consolacion following an adjustment in the alignment (of the project). This will be completed next month. By then we will submit Philtram’s unsolicited proposal to DoTr,” Mr. Eviota told The Freeman. Initially, the 16.5-kilometer monorail is being eyed to start at Citta Di Mare at the South Road Properties, then to SM Seaside City, to Mambaling Access Road, to Natalio Bacalso Avenue, to Katipunan area, to P. del Rosario Street, to Zapatera, to Robinsons Galleria, to SM City Cebu, to Mandaue City, to Parkmall, to San Miguel area, to Maguikay, to Pacific Mall. — The Freeman