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Memories of UP ‘masa’ dorm

Yakal is a dorm in UP Diliman. It was a “masa” [for the masses] dorm as it had double-deck beds good for four. It was known for the bed bugs that inhabited the mattresses. Bathrooms were common.
Yakal hosted many interesting, and later well-known personalities. It was a microcosm of Philippine society in the late 1960s to early ’70s. Those were years of activism, of Diliman commune, and Marcos regime. It was the time when the Philippine history textbook was Agoncillos’s book.
At Yakal, the opposing ideological factions treated each other civilly, or often just ignored one another. There were teach-ins from Kabataang Makabayan and related leftist groups. There were also fraternities and “tribal” groups galore: Beta Epsilon, Beta Sigma, Epsilon Chi, Sigma Rho, Upsilon Sigma Phi, Knights of Palaris of Pangalatoks, Hamili of Ilonggos, and Filipinos of the Bisayans.
Residents were diverse. They came from the north (Cagayan, Ilocos Norte, Nueva Ecija, and Pangasinan) to the south (Agusan, Cotabato, Davao and Sulu). Many were products of public high schools.
From my recollection, here are some.
Jose “Pepe” Perez from Batangas, retired Supreme Court justice. He had the loudest laugh in the territory.
Fortunato de la Peña, president Duterte’s secretary of the Department of Science and Technology, and a UP engineer.
Francisco Viray of Pangasinan, former dean of the UP College of Engineering, and president Ramos’s secretary of Energy, 1994-1998. His room was beside mine.
Franklin Drilon, current senator and past Senate president and past secretary of three departments under Corazon Aquino and Fidel Ramos (Executive, Justice, and Labor and Employment).
Ericson Baculinao, chairman of the UP Student Council, martial law exile to China, and NBC Beijing Bureau Chief.
Nelson Navarro, editor of the Philippine Collegian, martial law exile, and, of late, Juan Ponce Enrile’s biographer.
Mukhtar Muallam, ambassador to Libya.
Rafael Baylosis, political science, cum laude, when Latin honors were very scarce. He later became secretary-general of the Communist Party of the Philippines.
Melito Glor of Sariaya, Quezon and my roommate for one summer, whose name is immortalized in the Quezon NPA command.
Lawyers. Alfonso Reyno, Jr., CEO of Manila Jockey Club; Luis “Chito” Veracruz, counsel of ACCRA Law; Rafael Morales, managing partner of his law firm and UP law class of ’74 valedictorian; Paraja Hayudini, partner of his law firm, and Dave Simon, assistant GM, Philippine Ports Authority.
Doctors: Eduardo Firmalo, Romblon governor; Copernico Villaruel, Philippine General Hospital orthopedic surgeon; Luisito Maano, former head of National Orthopedic Hospital; Gene Abis, a well-known eye specialist; and Jesus Baylon, former top executive of United Laboratories.
Engineers. Edgardo Paynor, CEO of Telmarc Cable; Antonio Ng, former CEO of Clark Development Corp. and managing director of Amkor Technology Philippines; Epifanio Lopez, UP engineering professor; Cesar Iñiguez, international water resources consultant; Lawrence Tumaneng, metallurgy/mining consultant; Alberto Selorio, Australia-based logistics manager; Cesar Monzon, LA-based engineer, Carlos Tiongco, retired from General Motors Michigan; Jun Papelleras of the University of Asia and the Pacific; Catalino Corpuz, community organizer; and Jose Albano, San Francisco-based; Victor Jaranilla; Tony Tañada, the Cimagala brothers; and Pete, my New Jersey-based brother.
Bankers. Edgardo Lorenzo and Samuel Basiao.
Luis Fullante, a working student, completed PhD in English at University of California, Los Angeles; Toronto-based Efren Marcos; and Davao activist Ray Quitain.
Jobs were easy to find then after graduation. I joined the government’s Metal Industry Development Center. I commuted to Taguig City via Highway 54 (now EDSA). Many overstayed at Yakal dorm as it was really cheap. When we were asked to leave, we moved to an apartment in UP Village.
When martial law was declared in September 1972, there was a lot of uneasiness on the campus. Military intelligence agents were all over, some taking graduate studies at UP. The left lost hope in a democratic struggle. By then, Marcos was ready to unfold his long-term ascendancy.
Those were the halcyon days of the ’60s, but later disturbed days of the early ’70s.
Parenthetically, China was ruled by the Gang of Four during the so-called Cultural Revolution in 1966-1976. The Cultural Revolution crippled the economy, ruined millions of lives and thrust China into 10 years of turmoil, bloodshed, hunger and stagnation. The Cultural Revolution’s official handbook was the Little Red Book, a pocket-sized collection of quotations from Mao Zedong. It was not until 1978 that Deng Xiaopeng launched a wide-ranging market reforms that led to a rapid 40-year economic growth and lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty.
The left was idealistic then. Perhaps, many students were naïve about how difficult it was to change society. Maybe, they did not realize that ASEAN neighbors — Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore — were moving in the right direction without revolution.
But since they were hunted down for their ideas, many went underground and joined the NPA. Many were killed. One was friend Antonio Tagamolila.
Times have changed. Contrast this idealism with the extortion and burning of agriculture assets by the NPA fronts today. They have discouraged investments in the countryside. Some 800 workers lost their jobs with the burning of Lapanday plant and Macondray plastics plant in Davao last year. Recently, a small aircraft pilot was killed in Tagbina, Surigao del Sur. He was only doing his job: spraying fungicides over banana farms.
I wonder whether my generation (those who graduated in the late ’60s and early ’70s), whether left, right, or center, made a difference in the country’s development in reducing the high poverty and income inequality. Philippine poverty incidence at 21.6% is very high and several multiples that of Indonesia (10.9%), Thailand (10.5%), Vietnam (7%) and Malaysia (0.6%). It’s nothing to be proud of.
Or whether they just went with the tide as family concerns overrode past idealism or absorbed by the “system.”
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

No more ‘business as usual’ for electricity in the Philippines

By Eddie O’ Connor
AS the economy in the Philippines continues to grow, energy demand races ahead. Recent analysis by the Asia Development Bank and the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) suggests that energy consumption will grow by 40% by 2025, with an 85% increase in energy demand for electricity.
The question for the Philippines is how to deliver these very large amounts of new electricity without exposing the country to increased energy insecurity and environmental pollution. On a “business as usual” track, where coal remains the dominant fuel in the country’s electricity mix, the Philippines will become a net importer of energy over the coming decade. At the same time, the impacts of pollution, driven by this fossil fuel use, continue to grow. External costs, including health care, will rise inexorably, amounting to some $225 billion across the ASEAN region by 2025.
Thankfully, the Philippines has an alternative pathway which will enable it to meet its growing energy demand while increasing energy security and reducing the costs of, and exposure to, pollution. This pathway also sees a reduction in the cost of energy, as coal and gas are replaced by less expensive alternatives, which can also be brought onto the grid faster and deliver electricity with reliability and in meaningful amounts.
Renewable energy is already cheaper than new coal fired generation and it is quicker to install. In markets around the world, new solar and new wind energy is beating coal in auctions for new capacity.
As the costs of these technologies continue to fall, the cost of coal remains stubbornly high, even without factoring in the price of pollution and security of supply.
Both wind and solar power plants can be built in a year to eighteen months, irrespective of the size of the unit. This is in contrast to building a new coal fired power station, which can take the better part of five years.
In short, coal is neither a quick nor cheap solution to the Philippines’ ongoing demand for energy. The country has plentiful supplies of renewable energy and God doesn’t charge for sunlight or wind.
The energy industry is a major employer, and renewable energy is expected to deliver very significant numbers of new jobs over the next decade. IRENA estimates that the region could sustain a 9.5% employment growth rate in renewable energy. Many of these jobs will come in the design and manufacturing of renewable energy components, as well as in the development, construction, and operation of the plant.
If the Philippines sets out an ambitious medium-term strategy for wind and solar energy, it will like Morocco, South Africa, and Brazil attract the design, manufacturing, and servicing operations to support these growing industries. Wind turbine towers and blades, along with power electronics and operations monitoring work could all be attracted to the Philippines if it set its target to become the regional hub for Southeast Asia, as well as servicing its own demand.
The Philippines has built a global position in the business services and outsourcing sectors in a comparatively short space of time.
By investing in renewable energy, the country also has the opportunity to do the same again by developing the energy systems of the future, which will use smart technology to run the power plant, grids, and transport needs of tomorrow.
While this prize awaits the Philippines, it is clear that the alternative — coal — will not deliver such economic opportunities. The components and the fuel for any new coal fired power stations will come from overseas, bringing energy insecurity and exposure to price volatility along with pollution and greenhouse gases. Coal will not deliver an energy system of the future for the Philippines, just business as usual.
The Philippines has set out its ambitions in its 2030 National Road map.
But, a road map can only describe a destination.
If the country is to truly steal a march on its competitors and unleash the nation’s renewable energy potential, it needs to significantly increase the amount of renewable energy capacity to be procured by local utilities under the new Portfolio Standard. If this doesn’t happen, and we take an incremental approach, then the country will continue to be exposed to fossil fuel price risk, the growing costs of environmental pollution and the prospect of its neighbors grabbing the clean energy investment and jobs that would otherwise come here.
This is a moment for action; business as usual, or a new pathway to growth and economic development powered by our own resources. It’s not a difficult choice to make.
 
Eddie O’ Connor is the executive chairman of Mainstream Renewable Power, an independent developer of utility-scale wind and solar power plants.

Instituting bayanihan in governance and policy making

By May Zuleika Salao and Michael Henry Ll.Yusingco
EVERY Filipino has been taught that bayanihan is the indigenous cultural phenomenon of community solidarity. It is the “bayan” demonstrating the will to work together to achieve a task.
Bayanihan is the manifestation of an individual’s innate capacity to see himself as merely a part of the larger whole. Indeed, it is the spirit that pushes one to freely act for the benefit of the group.
The most familiar illustration of bayanihan is the image of a bahay kubo being carried by the village. However, we think that a more authentic representation would be the Banaue Rice Terraces.
This wonder of the world is testament to a community singular in its goal to thrive. The mastery of the mountains is a result that no single individual can lay claim to. Indeed, it is incontrovertible proof of the power of collective action.
Sadly, bayanihan is on its last breath these days given the prevalence of anti-social behavior constantly displayed in the public sphere. The rampant littering in our streets and beaches and the annoying counter-flowing vehicles during peak hour traffic are just some examples.
Revitalizing bayanihan in our national psyche can be an effective antidote to this self-centered mind-set dominating Filipino society today.
Remember the advice of Apolinario Mabini in “The True Decalogue”: “Always look on your countryman as more than a neighbor: you will find in him a friend, a brother and at least the companion to whom you are tied by only one destiny, by the same happiness and sorrows, and by the same aspirations and interests.”
Indeed, an outlook underscored by social responsibility can end the “me and my family first” attitude pervading in our culture. And more critically, it may eventually countervail the acrimonious divisiveness plaguing our political system.
In this need for social responsibility that bayanihan exemplifies, it could clarify our thinking if we momentarily consider social integration and political participation. These are two separate social realities.
We, Filipinos, may be cohesive as a nation but possess limited opportunities for participation or, we may be fragmented yet participate in the same political events such as voting.
In terms that perhaps may be better grasp by our millennials, social integration refers to cohesiveness as a nation. It acts as the software that runs or directs the hardware that is our state and its government.
The waning of bayanihan as our grandparents (or, great grandparents) recognize it, more so this attitude of “me and my family first” tell us that modernity may be fragmenting our nation. Modernity with its push toward new ways of life and doing things challenges our resilience as a people. Discontents from our modernizing economy may be weakening and fraying our national fabric though at the same time, our history, education, and new communication technologies strengthen and unite us together with our geography and the gift of our natural environment.
Amid these contrasting forces, we thus employ politics and governance to wilfully steer toward our chosen destination. Building our nation-state has its own, concomitant issues involving “top-down” and “bottom-up” change processes.
“Top-down” and “bottom-up” are not either/or propositions anymore. Our nation-state has been around long enough and we learn from this past that choosing one over the other restricts possibilities. Moreover, it harms social integration needing initiatives from both top and bottom. Because while “top-down” seldom witnessed wealth “trickling-down,” “bottom-up” saw significant instances of wayward social movements and uprisings.
To favorably harness both these change agents toward nation-state building, we therefore ensure mechanisms in-between: these are “transmission belts” that facilitate communication and consequently, resource flows spreading power and wealth thus widening dimensions at the center for a diamond — rather than a triangle-shaped social hierarchy.
Twenty-seven years of decentralization should have served as a mechanism bridging top to bottom through the creation of a larger center or middle-class. Though there have been gains, decentralization as an avenue for political participation remains mostly untapped as its powers remain underutilized, and we wonder the many ways that this top-down policy has been failing the many.
In the meantime, the bottom risks danger of falling-off when our people in large numbers opt-out as they are pushed-out. Numbers and statistics illustrate growing inequalities as well as failed opportunities but the unending narratives of our children, women, and men about their dwindling life chances articulate human experience in more graphic terms.
And now within weeks, we will embark on another project contributory to enhancing our political participation — the barangay elections on May 14. At this point in our collective history, this is where social responsibility calls. The barangay serves at the lowest end of the transmission belt of decentralization remaining elusive up to this day.
As the closest, most accessible and personal representation of government and the state, the barangay performs a strategic role in this relentless consolidation of our formal institutions in a context of weak social integration.
Toward shaping social integration, therefore, what are the political resources available to the barangay? The barangay formally institutionalizes bayanihan as a governance and policy making ethos.
According to the Local Government Code of 1991, the barangay as one of the political subdivisions of the republic is likewise deemed as “a forum wherein the collective views of the people may be expressed, crystallized and considered.” (See Section 384)
The barangay can potentially lead us back to that community mind-set in finding solutions for our country’s many problems. And possibly even wean us away from our dependence on “saviours” who for the past decades have gotten away with varying degrees of promises from establishing a strong republic to leading via a straight and honest path to just bringing “change.”
It is worth noting that respected economist, Solita Monsod, and Mindanao political analyst, Manny Valdehuesa, have long urged Filipinos to actively participate in the respective barangay assembly sessions. Precisely, because this is an excellent way to exert “people power.” It is the venue for the people to exercise direct democracy.
But surely, closing the gap between vocation and reality always brings challenges. A vocation as an ideal for our well-being as a nation-state has already been enshrined as a formal structure. This is the Local Government Code of 1991 that provides for greater political participation down to the level of the barangay.
Yet, our bayanihan culture wanes, social integration declines. Going out to vote in the barangay elections initiates renewed efforts at arresting these forces that degenerate. Instituting bayanihan in governance and policy making means heightened civic participation beginning May 14.
 
May Zuleika Salao is an assistant professor, School of Law and Governance, at the University of Asia and the Pacific. She is currently a Visiting Scholar at the Global South Studies Center, University of Cologne.
Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco is a lecturer at the Institute of Law of the University of Asia and the Pacific and nonresident Research Fellow at the Ateneo School of Government.

Hunger drops to single digit in Q1 SWS survey

THE SHARE of families that experienced involuntary hunger at least once in the past three months fell by 6 points from 15% to 9.9%, or around 2.3 million families in the first quarter of 2018, according to the First Quarter 2018 Social Weather Survey by the Social Weather Stations (SWS).
SWS noted this is only the second time hunger has been in the single-digit range since March 2004’s 7.4%.
The survey gauges a family’s experience of hunger according to the “involuntary suffering” they experienced due to food scarcity.
Quarterly Hunger by this year’s first quarter survey is the sum of 8.6% (est. 2.0 million families) who experienced Moderate Hunger and 1.3% (est. 306,000 families) who experienced Severe Hunger, SWS noted.
(Moderate Hunger refers to those who experienced hunger “Only Once” or “A Few Times” in the last three months, while Severe Hunger refers to those who experienced it “Often” or “Always” in the last three months. The polling group said respondents who did not state their frequency of hunger were classified under Moderate Hunger.)
Moderate Hunger fell by 3.6 points (from 12.2% in December 2017 to 8.6% in March 2018), the lowest since the 7.9% in June 2017, and Severe Hunger fell by 2.4 points (from 3.7% in December to 1.3% in March), the lowest since the 1.2% in September 2003.

SWS also found the hunger rate falling in all areas, particularly Metro Manila and Mindanao, which respectively lost 8.7 points from 14.7% (est. 457,000 families) to 6.0% (est. 190,000 families), and 8 points from 15.3% (est. 802,000 families) to 7.33% (est. 390,000 families).
Quarterly Hunger fell by 6.7 points in Balance Luzon, from in 17.7% (est. 1.8 million families) in December to 11.0% in March (est. 1.1 million families).
In the Visayas, Quarterly Hunger decreased slightly by 0.3 points from 13.3% (est. 589,000 families) in December to 13.0% in March (est. 583,000 families).
SWS said the drop in Quarterly Hunger was also “due to a decrease in the incidence of Hunger among both the Self-Rated Poor and Self-Rated Non-Poor.”
Quarterly Hunger fell by 8.2 points among the Self-Rated Poor, from 24.9% in December to 16.7% in March. SWS noted that this is similar to the 16.7% in September 2017. It also fell by 4.0 points among the Non-poor (Not Poor plus Borderline) over the same period, going from 8.9% to 4.9%, which the polling group said is the lowest since June 2015.
Hunger also fell among the Self-Rated Food Poor, falling by 8.0 points from 28.8% in December to 20.8% in March. It also fell by 4.5 points among the Not Food-Poor/Food-Borderline, from 9.9% to 5.4%.
The noncommissioned survey was conducted from March 23-27, using face-to-face interviews of 1,200 adults nationwide: 300 each in Metro Manila, Balance Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao, with sampling error margins of ±3% for national percentages and ±6% each for the said areas. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Duterte may yet issue EO on ‘endo’

MALACAÑANG SAID, contrary to President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s earlier pronouncements, that he may still sign the executive order (EO) on labor contractualization depending on the outcome of his meeting with the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) on the eve of Labor Day.
“I can confirm there might be an EO that may or may not be signed depending on the meeting tonight with Labor Secretary (Silvestre H.) Bello III,” Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr. said in a press briefing on Monday.
Labor Undersecretary Joel B. Maglunsod said in a press conference last week that his department is “still open to the possibility” that the EO will be “reconsidered” by Mr. Duterte by “May 1.”
For his part, Associated Labor Unions-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (ALU-TUCP) spokesperson Alan A. Tanjusay said: “If President Duterte decides to sign an Executive Order on Endo (end of contractualization) today, Labor Day, whose EO on Endo would President Duterte sign? We ardently hope that since it is Labor Day, Mr. Duterte (will sign) the labor-drafted EO.”
“If Mr. Duterte signs the EO drafted by labor leaders, he will be the new modern-day hero to the Filipino working class. On (the other) hand, if he signs the EO drafted by business and employers’ groups, he will be forever condemned. Nobody would believe him anymore,” Mr. Tanjusay said in a statement.
If the President chooses to keep quiet or seek to merge the two contrasting drafts and come up with a hybrid EO, Mr. Tanjusay also said, “the people and the working class will perceive him to be a compromised leader.”
“So, it’s now or never and take it or leave (it) for Mr. Duterte as far as the workers’ sector is concerned,” Mr. Tanjusay added.
The National Anti-Poverty Commission (NAPC) said in a statement it will continue to push for prohibition of all forms of contractualization based on the following reasons:
“First, the current policy of ‘allow then regulate’ has failed the workers and this nation. A country of endos is a nation of poor, violated, and voiceless people; second, it is immoral as it allows employers to save on labor cost while their middlemen earn profit from their common, devious trading transaction; third, it is anti-labor because it violates all the fundamental rights of labor; and fourth, it is anti-development as it exacerbates poverty and deepens inequality in our country.”
Also on Monday, Senator Risa N. Hontiveros-Baraquel pushed for the immediate passage of the Security of Tenure bill, saying the proposed measure would provide an alternative to the country’s labor export policy.
“If the government wants our overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) to return home and end the Filipino diaspora, let us ensure that they will return to a country where regular and decent jobs are plentiful,” she said in a statement.
The senator said the bill would protect workers from unfair labor practices which would entice OFWs to return home and eventually end the “mass exodus of Filipino workers” seeking better job opportunities abroad.
Senate Bill No. 1116 or the proposed End of Contractualization Act of 2016 seeks to provide stricter regulations on contractualization and simplifies the classification of employees to regular and probationary. It also prohibits labor-only or manpower contracting and lists unfair labor practices in a contracting or subcontracting arrangement. Its counterpart version at the House of Representatives was approved on third and final reading last Jan. 29.
Senator Emmanuel Joel J. Villanueva, chair of the Senate committee on labor, employment and human resources development, earlier said he would discuss anew the bill with the Labor Department in May as President Rodrigo R. Duterte has planned to certify the bill as a priority measure. — Arjay L. Balinbin and Camille A. Aguinaldo

Barangay drug list bared

By Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz, Reporter
THE PHILIPPINE Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) is set to file charges “in a week or two” against 207 barangay captains and councilors identified in a list released Monday as those involved in illegal drugs.
“PDEA will be filing cases against the personalities in the list. While we have at hand pieces of evidence against them, PDEA is continuously conducting case buildup for the case to be airtight,” PDEA Director General Aaron N. Aquino said in a press briefing on Monday.
The list, bared before the barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) elections on May 14, consisted of 90 village chiefs and 117 barangay councilors.
A total of 70 names came from the Bicol Region, followed by the Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR) with 34 names, and Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) with 13 names.
In the National Capital Region, there are 12 names in the narco-list but Mr. Aquino noted there are more in PDEA’s watch list.
Dangerous Drugs Board (DDB) chief Catalino S. Cuy said the list was released to guide voters.
“It is very important that the public, the voters, are aware doon sa mga kandidato na iboboto nila (of the candidates they are voting for). And may we call on our voters to be vigilant and choose properly ‘yung mga iboboto (who they will vote for),” Mr. Cuy said.
Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) Officer-in-Charge Secretary Eduardo M. Año said the Commission on Elections will be furnished a copy of the list.
Mr. Aquino earlier said the narco-list was validated by PDEA, the Philippine National Police (PNP), the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), and the National Intelligence Coordinating Agency (NICA).
“We ensure that the case is airtight and nandoon lahat ‘yung ebidensya (all the evidence are there). When you say validation, parang kino-confirm mo lang ‘yon (it is like you are simply confirming it). It’s a confirmation that, indeed, those barangay officials are involved in illegal drugs. But it doesn’t mean na andoon na lahat ang ebidensya (that we already have all the evidence),” Mr. Aquino said.
Mr. Aquino said PDEA will file the criminal charges and DILG, the administrative charges. DILG also filed cases against barangay officials who failed to activate efficient barangay anti-drug abuse councils (BADAC).
In line with this, Mr. Año urged the individuals included in the list to submit to authorities.
“If these barangay officials are willing to help the government fight drugs and they are (a) vital component of that drug operation, we encourage (them to surrender),” Mr. Año said.
The list was released a day after President Rodrigo R. Duterte said it is “not yet” the right time to do so. However, Mr. Aquino said the President ordered baring the list and the same was confirmed by Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque Jr.
“That (release of the narco-list) was upon orders of the President. I have a partial list. The information is being released to help guide our voters to choose wisely,” Mr. Roque said, stressing that “no law [was] violated” in the process.
Mr. Aquino said PDEA is still verifying the names of 274 other barangay officers and is awaiting orders from Mr. Duterte to release the names of the 93 other higher ranking officials who are confirmed to be involved in illegal drugs.

DoJ deputies ordered to resign to give agency chief ‘free hand’

By Dane Angelo M. Enerio
ALL incumbent Undersecretaries and Assistant Secretaries of the Department of Justice have been directed to “tender their unqualified courtesy resignations to (President Rodrigo R. Duterte)… not later than 30 April, 2018,” following a memorandum by Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra.
Mr. Guevarra in his memorandum dated April 24 and released to media on Monday said the order was to “give (him) a free hand to perform the mandate given to him by the President.”
He also pointed out, “until any action is taken by the President on such courtesy resignations, all Undersecretaries and Assistant Secretaries shall continue to report for work and perform their usual dates and responsibilities.”
Mr. Guevarra told BusinessWorld in a text message that “all of them except (Assistant Secretary Adonis P. Sulit), who is on vacation leave,” have submitted their courtesy resignation letters.
When asked if he had specific people in mind to fill in the posts, Mr. Guevarra said it was “(too) premature to disclose” but he pointed out that he is “still searching for a few good men.”
DoJ spokesperson Undersecretary Erickson H. Balmes, for his part, told media that he submitted his courtesy resignation letter “on day one of Secretary of Justice Menardo I. Guevarra’s stewardship,” along with Undersecretaries Antonio T. Kho, Jr. and Raymund L. Mecate.
The three were appointed by former justice secretary Vitaliano N. Aguirre II, a fraternity brother at Lex Talionis in San Beda College of Law.
According to Mr. Balmes, none of the Undersecretaries and Assistant Secretaries left following Mr. Aguirre’s resignation on April 5.
Mr. Aguirre left while the department was under fire for its dismissal of the criminal case against several high profile drug personalities and for alleged pork barrel mastermind Janet L. Napoles’ provisional entry into its Witness Protection Program (WPP.)

CIDG submits additional evidence in reopened high profile drug case

By Dane Angelo M. Enerio
THE Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG), through the Office of the Solicitor-General (OSG), on Monday submitted additional evidence in the reopened drug investigation against alleged drug lord Peter Go Lim, self-confessed drug trader Rolan “Kerwin” Espinosa, and several other high profile drug personalities.
Mr. Lim and his co-accused were charged by the CIDG with violation of Republic Act 9165 or the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002, but the case was dismissed by the Department of Justice in a resolution dated Dec. 20, last year over the discrepancies in co-accused and witness Marcelo L. Adorco’s statements. The case was later “vacated” and remanded by former-justice secretary Vitaliano N. Aguirre II in an order dated April 20 for both parties to submit additional evidence.
The OSG, led by Assistant Solicitor-General Angelita V. Miranda, submitted before the Department of Justice (DoJ) Mr. Marcelo’s third sworn judicial affidavit dated April 20 where he disclosed the existence of evidence that supposedly proves Mr. Espinosa’s illegal drug activities.
These include a photo printed on a white mug where Mr. Espinosa can be seen with his children and travel documents verifying Mr. Espinosa’s trip to Thailand on June 5, 2015, where he allegedly met with Mr. Lim.
Mr. Adorco in his affidavit also claimed the existence of Mr’s Espinosa’s so-called “Blue Book” and “Pink Book,” which allegedly contained drug activity information such as bank accounts and names of individuals being given “payola” or drug protection money.
The panel composed of Senior Assistant State Prosecutor Juan Pedro C. Navera, Assistant State Prosecutor Anna Noreen T. Devanadera, and Prosecution Attorney Herbert Calvin D. Abugan were given certified true copies of these books as well as the other attached affidavits to support the main third judicial affidavit, which included among others, the transcripts of the 2016 Senate hearings on the investigation of Mr. Espinosa’s father, the late Albuera, Leyte Mayor Rolando Espinosa Sr.
Mr. Lim’s lawyer, Magilyn T. Loja, criticized the reopened investigation saying, “the intention is baka mayroon hindi na submit (maybe there were pieces of evidence that were not submitted)… pero walang walang bago (but there is nothing new),” as all affidavits except for the third sword judicial affidavit were dated before the the start of the new investigation.
The respondents were directed by the panel to submit their counter-affidavits on May 15.

Malacañang to investigate DoT ad contract with Tulfo firm

MALACAÑANG CONFIRMED on Monday that President Rodrigo R. Duterte has already ordered a probe into the advertising contract of the Department of Tourism (DoT) with the Tulfo brothers’ show on government station PTV 4. The DoT is headed by the Tulfo brothers’ sister, Secretary Wanda Tulfo-Teo. “What I know is that the President is already aware of it, and I can confirm that there’s already a ‘let’s look into this’,” Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr. said in a press briefing. He added: “I assure you, the Palace will investigate the matter. We have to accept the findings of the Commission on Audit (CoA). The Palace will investigate on its own.” Reports came out over the weekend that CoA has flagged DoT’s placement of P60 million worth of advertisements in the show, produced by Ben T. Tulfo’s Bitag Media Unlimited, Inc. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Ex-Justice: quo warranto a threat to judicial independence

PHILSTAR

RETIRED SUPREME Court Justice Vicente V. Mendoza on Monday warned that “a quo warranto proceeding filed against a member of the court or any impeachable officer for that matter filed more than a year after assumption of office will undermine the security of tenure granted by the Constitution to public officers.” Mr. Mendoza was referring to the petition seeking to void Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno’s appointment during an interview on ANC’s Headstart. “(It) will ultimately subvert the independence of the judiciary,” he added, citing the prohibition provided under the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure. Ms. Sereno’s camp, in a press release, also argued that “if the rules of Court is to be followed, the filing of quo warranto against her already lapsed” as “she has been Chief Justice for almost six years.” — Dane Angelo M. Enerio

Gasoline up by P0.85; diesel, P0.70

Oil prices drop this weekFOR THE third straight week, the prices of petroleum products are set to increase, with gasoline having the biggest hike at P0.85 per liter (/L). Diesel and kerosene will both be up by P0.70/L. For most of the oil companies that sent advisories as of Monday afternoon, the adjustment will take place at 6:00 a.m. on Tuesday, May 1, a holiday. The increase follows the movement of petroleum prices in the international market, the companies said. Last week, gasoline, diesel and kerosene rose by P0.40, P0.65 and P0.65, respectively. — Victor V. Saulon

2 police officers caught driving colorum vehicles

TWO ACTIVE police officers, one a chief inspector and the other a senior police officer 4, were among those apprehended last week for operating an unlicensed public utility vehicle, locally referred to as colorum. In a statement on Monday, the Inter-agency Council for Traffic (IACT) said the two cops, who were not named, were among the 92 caught in Parañaque and Pasay on April 26 during the Tanggal Bulok, Tanggal Usok and Kamao operations. These two IACT programs are intended to eliminate colorum and dilapidated vehicles on the road. The two policemen were using their vehicles, with one even bearing a sticker of the Office of the President, like a UV Express, picking up passengers and collecting fare. One was even in uniform and carried his service firearm. “I am disappointed that even those we expect to abide the law first will be caught red-handed,” said IACT head Thomas M. Orboz. PNP Spokesperson PCSupt. John C. Bulalacao, meanwhile, said the police “has a standing policy against personnel moonlighting with jobs that have conflicting interest with our mandate.” He said in the case of the two, they violated various laws, including the Commission on Election gun ban, which is a criminal offense. “We are warning PNP personnel not to indulge in driving unlicensed PUVs as this is prohibited by law and is violative of internal PNP policies. Those who will be found guilty may be punished by suspension to dismissal from the service,” Mr. Bulalacao said. — Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz