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Teo resigns amid ad deal controversy

By Denise A. Valdez
TOURISM SECRETARY Wanda T. Teo has resigned Monday, her lawyer confirmed Tuesday.
Lawyer Ferdinand S. Topacio said Ms. Teo personally submitted her letter of resignation to Executive Secretary Salvador C. Medialdea before the start of the Cabinet meeting. He added that Ms. Teo privately met with President Rodrigo R. Duterte later in the evening, and emphasized that Ms. Teo resigned of her own volition.
Malacañang confirmed on Tuesday that Mr. Duterte has accepted Ms. Teo’s resignation.
“Her decision to leave her position was made after a long and deliberate reflection and soul-searching with respect to the events that have transpired the past few weeks,” Mr. Topacio said in a press conference Tuesday.
He added that Ms. Teo was not at first inclined to resign, but said there were probably other factors that eventually led her to do so.
“The enemies of the President were seizing upon this issue to do harm to the Presidency. That’s something she could not accept,” Mr. Topacio said.
“We are not admitting guilt. It was more of delicadeza to protect the family name and to show the people the Tulfos do not wish to benefit from government funds.”
Ms. Teo and her brothers had been caught in a controversy over a P60-million advertising deal between her department, the media company of Bienvenido “Ben” T. Tulfo, and broadcaster Erwin T. Tulfo’s program on government network PTV-4.
Mr. Topacio also said that Ms. Teo did not know that Mr. Tulfo’s show, Kilos Pronto, is hosted by her brothers. “She did not know. She was only informed later on. Do you think if she knew, she would not have vetoed it?” he said.
He said there is nothing illegal with the advertising deal, it just “did not look good.”
The lawyer added: “There is no allegation on the part of the CoA (Commission on Audit) that there was something illegal or improper with the disbursement of funds by PTV4 to Bitag. Ang sinasabi ng CoA, ‘O nag-disburse pala kayo ng ganitong amount. Amin na yung resibo para ma-liquidate.’” (What CoA is saying is give us the receipts since you disbursed this amount, so we could liquidate the disbursement.)
As for possible liability on Ms. Teo’s part, Mr. Roque said this will now be up to the Office of the Ombudsman. — with Arjay L. Balinbin

Palace adviser appointed special envoy to Kuwait

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Reporter
PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte has appointed Presidential Adviser on Overseas Filipinos Workers’ (OFW) Affairs Abdullah D. Mama-o as the Philippines’ special envoy to Kuwait, Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr. said on Tuesday.
“Secretary Mama-o (has) just returned from Kuwait. He came bearing good news for the President. The good news though, we will withhold releasing until we’ve had actual realization, Mr. Roque said in his press briefing.
The spokesman added: “But the President then said that Secretary Mama-o will be appointed as Special Envoy to Kuwait and he was tasked to return to Kuwait immediately to make sure that all Filipinos who should be sent back home, can return home. I do now know when Secretary Mama-o can actually fly back to Kuwait, but the marching order of the President was as soon as possible.”
Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) reported last week, May 1, that Mr. Mama-o, in his capacity as Presidential Adviser on OFWs, had met with Kuwaiti Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Al-Jarallah on that day to discuss the recent labor issues between the two countries.
The two states, according to KUNA, expressed their “willingness to promote and develop their friendly relations and to overcome the ongoing crisis for the common interest of both.”
It will be recalled that the Kuwaiti government had expelled Philippine Ambassador Renato O. Villa last month, citing his embassy’s “undiplomatic acts” in the Persian Gulf state when it rescued some distressed Filipino workers there.
Mr. Duterte appointed Mr. Mama-o in 2016 as his adviser on OFWs, with the rank of Secretary.
According to his Facebook page profile, Mr. Mama-o is a graduate of San Beda College of Law, where Mr. Duterte also earned his law degree.
Chan Robles Virtual Law Library shows that Mr. Mama-o was admitted to the Philippine Bar on June 20, 1973.
The Presidential Communications Operations Office could not yet provide Mr. Mama-o’s resume as of this reporting. The Kuwaiti Embassy in Manila was also sought for comment.
Also on Tuesday, Labor Secretary Silvestro H. Bello III said there will be a partial lifting of the deployment ban to Kuwait if negotiations on the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the Philippines and the Persian Gulf state are successful.
Mr. Bello said the MoU being pushed between the two states is the reason why the President appointed Mr. Mama-o as special envoy to Kuwait.
“If Secretary Mama-o succeeds in convincing them (Kuwait) to sign the MoU, this may pave the way for me to recommend to the President the partial lifting of the ban,” Mr. Bello told reporters on Tuesday.
He emphasized that only “skilled workers” will be allowed for deployment under the partial lifting. — with Gillian M. Cortez

Gov’t, Reds begin back-channel talks

(LtoR) The founder of the Filipino Communist Party and National Democratic Front’s (NDF) Chief Political Consultant, Jose Maria Sison; Norwegian Special Envoy, Elisabeth Slattum; Philippines’ Presidential Advisers on the Peace Process Jesus G. Dureza and Silvestre H. Bello III take part in a meeting as part of the peace talks between the Government of the Philippines (GRP) and the NDF organised by the Dutch government on April 2, 2017 in the Dutch town of Noordwijk aan Zee. / AFP PHOTO / Sophie MIGNON

MALACAÑANG ON Tuesday said the Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP) is currently holding informal back-channel talks in Europe with the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army-National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF) in a bid to resume peace negotiations within 60 days.
“President Duterte was briefed last night [May 7] after the Cabinet meeting by Cabinet Secretaries Jesus G. Dureza and Silvestre H. Bello III to inform him that the efforts to resume peace negotiations with the CPP-NPA-NDF are underway with back-channel informal talks now taking place in Europe,” Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, Jr. told reporters in a press briefing at the Palace.
He added: “Secretaries Dureza and Bello informed the President that his clear directives are being relayed across the table, and are now the subject of discussions in the ongoing meetings.”
Mr. Bello also serves as GRP panel chairman while Mr. Dureza is Mr. Duterte’s adviser on the peace process.
Mr. Roque likewise said that according to Mr. Dureza, the government’s team in Europe has informed him “there are initial positive results.”
“The team will return home soon to personally brief the President of the outcome. Secretary Bello said they are doing their best to meet the deadlines set by the President about the resumption of talks within 60 days,” Mr. Roque said.
Last month, Mr. Duterte invited CPP founder Jose Maria Sison to return home for the peace talks.
For his part, Mr. Sison said, he will only return to Manila if his “comrades and lawyers are satisfied with legal and security precautions.”
“In response, I declare that I will certainly return home when a significant advance in the peace negotiations has been achieved within the framework of The Hague Joint Declaration and when my comrades and lawyers are satisfied with legal and security precautions,” Mr. Sison said in a statement. — Arjay L. Balinbin

ConCom introduces proposal strengthening PCC

By Charmaine A. Tadalan
A SUBCOMMITTEE of the Consultative Committee (ConCom) on Charter Change proposed creating a national competition authority to “strongly” regulate a liberalized economy under a federal republic.
Subcommittee on Economic Reforms chair Arthur N. Aguilar said the provision gives the federal competition body “exclusive powers to formulate and execute policies and laws and regulations on fair competition that will cut across all federated regions.”
“This means that the federated regions cannot formulate their own competition policy or create their own competition authority,” Mr. Aguilar added.
He added that the Subcommittee on Constitutional Bodies will determine whether the structure of the national competition authority will be a “full constitutional body or a constitutional agency,” clarifying too that “what we have envisioned is (to) definitely have elements of ensured independence and security of tenure within a fixed term.”
The same Subcommittee will also be tasked to determine the institutional design, and define the powers and functions, membership, and extent of authority of the proposed competition body.
At present, there is only one provision in the 1987 Constitution against anti-competitive behavior. As stated in Article 12, Section 19, “The State shall regulate or prohibit monopolies when the public interest so requires. No combinations in restraint of trade or unfair competition shall be allowed.”
Mr. Aguilar said his subcommittee opted to retain the provision as it serves as “a general preamble (which) we will craft to (give) more specific powers for the national competition authority.
The sub-panel further proposed to prohibit anti-competition agreements, including anti-competitive mergers and acquisitions, rent-seeking behavior, and abuse of dominant position.
“If we are to liberalize the economy, we have to make sure that there will be fair and healthy competition and no players will be allowed to dominate any industry or market,” Mr. Aguilar said.
Sustaining a competitive market was included in the standpoints of the Philippine Competition Commission (PCC), which according to them, benefits both businesses and consumers in the long run. “While greater competitive pressure may reduce revenues in the short run, the same pressure can lead inefficient firms to shape up and improve their processes or technology,” the PCC said in a study submitted to the Subcommittee as part of the commission’s position paper.
The ConCom Technical Working Group will formulate the exact wording of these provisions for submission to the en banc next week.

Guevarra to Dela Rosa: Destroy drug machinery in Bilibid

JUSTICE Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra on Tuesday told reporters in a text message he plans to meet with newly appointed Bureau of Corrections (BuCor) chief Ronald M. Dela Rosa on Friday.
He pointed out: “There’ll be only one marching order for chief Dela Rosa: destroy the drug machinery inside the penitentiary,” Mr. Guevarra said, referring to the New Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa City which the former Philippine National Police (PNP) chief now oversees.
According to the BuCor official website, New Bilibid Prison “houses not only death convicts and inmates sentenced to life term, but also those with numerous pending cases, multiple convictions, and sentences of more than 20 years.”
Mr. Dela Rosa took his first day of office on Monday and inspected the maximum security prison which is rumored to be a hive for high-profile drug personalities and their illegal activities. He warned convicted drug lords that he was the “boss” in the prison.
BuCor is one of the several attached agencies under the Department of Justice (DoJ). — Dane Angelo M. Enerio

SC rules in favor of burger chain in contempt charge filed by McDonald’s

LOCAL burger chain L.C. Big Mak Burger, Inc. (Big Mak) has won against fast-food giant McDonald’s Philippines after the Supreme Court (SC) reversed a contempt ruling that stemmed from charges of trademark infringement and unfair competition.
The 13-page decision promulgated on Feb. 14 and penned by SC First Division Associate Justice Noel G. Tijam dismissed McDonald’s complaint accusing Big Mak of defying a Sept. 5, 1994, ruling by Makati Regional Trial Court Branch 137 that ordered them to pay a P600,000 fine and to stop using the “Big Mak” name for being similar to McDonald’s own “Big Mac” mark.
According to the recent decision, McDonald’s accused Big Mak of “using for its fast food restaurant business the name ‘Big Mak’… to confuse, mislead, or deceive the public into believing that (their) goods and services originate from…those of McDo’s, and…otherwise unfairly trading on the reputation and goodwill of the McDonald’s Marks, in particular the mark ‘Big Mac.’”
McDonald’s then filed a petition for contempt against Big Mak and its president Francis Dy for “(continuing) to disobey and ignore their judgement obligation by continuously using, as part of their food and restaurant business, the words ‘Big Mak’” and for “(refusing) to fully pay the damages awarded to the respondent in the said case.” Big Mak denied the claims and said “it offered and tendered payment” to McDonald’s.
The case was brought to the Court of Appeals (CA) where Big Mak was found guilty of indirect contempt in a decision dated Feb. 2, 2017. The CA upheld its ruling in a decision on July 26 that year, following Mr. Dy’s motion for reconsideration.
When the case was elevated to the high court, whose decision read in part: “Contrary to what respondent attempted to impress to the courts, it is not wholly true that petitioner continues to use the mark ‘Big Mak’ in its business, in complete defiance to this Court’s decision.”
It added: “As early as during the trial of the said case, certain changes had already been made by the petitioner to rule out the charge of infringement and unfair competition.”
“The use of petitioner’s corporate name instead of the words ‘Big Mak’ solely was evidently pursuant to the directive of the court in the injunction order. Clearly, as correctly found by the RTC, (petitioner) had indeed desisted from the use of ‘Big Mak to comply with the injunction order,” the decision read further, referring to Big Mak’s decision to use the names “Super Mak” and “L.C. Big Mak Burger, Inc.” after the 1994 ruling.
These acts, the court said, “belie the imputation of disobedience, much less contemptuous acts, against (petitioner).”
The SC decision reversed and set aside the CA’s 2017 decision and reinstated a ruling on April 7, 2014 by Makati RTC Branch 59 favoring Mr. Dy.
Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P.A. Sereno (since on leave) and Associate Justices Teresita L. De Castro, Mariano C. Del Castillo, and Francis H. Jardeleza concurred with Mr. Tijam’s decision. — Dane Angelo M. Enerio

Palace to probe PhilHealth finances, expenditures

THE PALACE said on Tuesday that it will investigate the alleged multi-billion peso losses of the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (Philhealth), including the travel expenses of the agency’s interim president, Celestina Ma. Jude de la Serna. “All I can say is, now with all the news that are coming out, this will be investigated by the Palace,” Presidential Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, speaking in Filipino, said in his interview with DZMM on Tuesday morning, May 8. — Arjay L. Balinbin
>> See related story on GOCC subsidies rise 27% in 2017 led by PhilHealth https://goo.gl/jNvxVH

NPA-affiliated MB members surrender in Nueva Vizcaya

FIVE MEMBERS of the Milisyang Bayan (MB), or People’s Militia of the communist New People’s Army (NPA), surrendered to the Northern Luzon Command on May 7 in Ambaguio, Nueva Vizcaya. The MB members were identified as Walter T. Pulido, Pio P. Kaila, Mario U. Humakey, Delfin U. Domingo, and Fredie Q. Dulnuan. The People’s Militia are considered as “force multipliers” of the regular NPA. Meanwhile, a member of the NPA who was part of the encounter with the 8th Infantry Battalion (8IB) in Malitbog, Bukidnon last May 4 also surrendered on Monday. The surrenderer, identified as Anaclito S. Sagula Jr., alias Jepy, will undergo interview and psychosocial intervention with the Department of Social Welfare and Development as well as given cash and livelihood assistance by the Department of Interior and Local Government, according to Lieutenant Colonel Ronald M. Illana, 8IB commander. — Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz

MB cancels license of 2 remittance/foreign exchange dealers

THE MONETARY Board (MB) has cancelled the registration of World Wide Money Changer and Edzen Enterprises, both with addresses in Mabini Street, Manila, for violations of the anti-money laundering and money exchange rules. In a statement released Tuesday, May 8, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said Edzen and World Wide Money, owned by Zenaida M. Artuz and Elliot M. Artuz, respectively, failed to “strictly comply with Republic Act No. 9160 (Anti-Money Laundering Act)… and the minimum procedures on the sale and purchase of foreign currencies.”

Maute Group sniper arrested in Cubao

THE NATIONAL Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO) arrested a suspected member of the Maute Group in Cubao, Quezon City on Monday. The suspect, identified as Unday Macadato, was nabbed for illegal possession of a caliber .45 firearm and grenade after a citizen reported that he was brandishing the gun and threatening neighbors and bystanders. Investigation revealed he was a sniper of the Maute Group and included in the government’s list of wanted terrorists. Police Chief Oscar D. Albayalde said terrorist members are known to lie low and try to earn money in Metro Manila to evade authorities. — Minde Nyl R. dela Cruz

99 immigration officers deployed to NAIA for summer season peak

THE BUREAU of Immigration (BI) has started to deploy 99 newly-hired immigration officers at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) as the travel season peaks with the summer break. BI commissioner Jaime H. Morente, in a statement, said with the additional manpower, “these long queues of passengers at our immigration centers at the airport will be reduced, if not totally eliminated.”— Dane Angelo M. Enerio

Iloilo Business Club: Another wage hike in Western Visayas could discourage investors

By Louine Hope U. Conserva, Correspondent
ILOILO CITY — The Iloilo Business Club is appealing to the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board-Western Visayas (RTWPB-6) to defer another round of pay hike after last year’s P20 increase in the daily minimum wage.
IBC Executive Director Lea E. Lara said they were finalizing a position paper to be submitted to the RTWPB on May 8, opposing the petition to increase the daily minimum wage in the region by P130 to P150.
The Philippine Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial Workers Union-Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (PACIWU-TUCP) filed the wage hike petition in January 2018.
RTWPB chair and Department of Labor and Employment Regional Director Johnson G. Cañete earlier said no opposition was lodged on the wage hike during the public hearings conducted in Aklan on April 24 and Capiz on April 26.
“We will be appealing for the board’s consideration to not implement a wage increase this year. As much as possible we would like to give it a status quo because of the increase that was implemented last year which we think has more than covered naman,” Ms. Lara said.
The P20 hike was implemented on March 16, 2017.
“It is more than what is usually granted. At the rate that they’re asking, businessmen could not afford that,” she said, adding that another wage hike this year could affect the investment climate in the region.
“We would like to create a very good climate where investors are coming in and that is something that we want to maintain. If the increase in implemented, we will end up higher than other regions in terms of minimum wage,” she said.
Ms. Lara also cited that the RTWPB should consider the six-month closure of Boracay, which has an overall effect on the region with businesses in Panay providing supplies to the island’s establishments.
The current minimum wage rates in Western Visayas are:
• P323.50 — commercial/industrial and non-agricultural firms employing more than 10 workers
• P271.50 — commercial and non-agricultural employing up to 10 workers; and agricultural non-plantation workers
• P281.50 — agricultural plantation workers
The PACIWU-TUCP’s petition proposed the following increases:
P150 — commercial, industrial, and non-agricultural firms employing more than 10 workers
P130 — commercial and non-agricultural firms employing 10 workers and below
P140 — agricultural/plantation with more than 24 hectares
P130 for agricultural/plantation with 24 hectares and below.

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