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Trump willing to talk to North Korea’s Kim on phone

CAMP DAVID — US President Donald Trump said on Saturday he would “absolutely” be willing to talk on the phone to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and that he hopes a positive development results from talks between North Korea and South Korea. North Korea agreed on Friday to hold official talks with South Korea next week, the first in more than two years, hours after Washington and Seoul delayed a military exercise amid a standoff over Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programs. Trump, answering questions from reporters at the presidential retreat at Camp David, Maryland, expressed a willingness to talk to Kim but not without preconditions. “Absolutely, I would do that,” Trump said. “I have no problem with that at all.” Trump and Kim have exchanged insults ever since Trump took office, with Trump repeatedly calling Kim “rocket man” for testing nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles. Early last week Trump dismissed Kim’s taunt that the North Korean leader has a nuclear button on his desk, saying he has a bigger button. Trump suggested the talks might lead to an easing of tensions and took credit for the diplomatic breakthrough, saying it was a result of his steady pressure. “Look, right now they’re talking Olympics. It’s a start, it’s big start. If I weren’t involved they wouldn’t be talking at all right now,” he said. Kim “knows I‘m not messing around. I‘m not messing around. Not even a little bit, not even one percent. He understands that,” said Trump. “If something can come out of those talks, that would be a great thing for all of humanity, that would be a great thing for the world,” he said. On Sunday, North Korea announced a list of five officials who will represent Pyongyang, a day after South Korea confirmed its representatives, the South’s unification ministry said. — Reuters

Public warned against mall smoke

THE SMOKE from the fire that hit Metro Gaisano at Ayala Center Cebu has become an additional problem to authorities. As of last night, 23 hours after the fire broke out, the third floor of the building where the fire originated continued to emit thick smoke, which has spread to establishments and residences nearby and triggered coughing and even dizzy spells. Yesterday morning, the area of the Ayala Business Park where the Metro Gaisano wing is located was engulfed in haze. People working or living at the Cebu Business Park and in nearby areas were advised to wear protective masks to avoid inhaling the harmful smoke. — The Freeman

See full story on https://goo.gl/BGbViM

Bangsamoro: Beyond the combat zones

MORO ISLAMIC Liberation Front (MILF) Chairperson Al-Haj Murad Ebrahim, speaking at the 1st Bangsamoro Assembly on Nov. 27, 2017 held in Maguindanao, waxed sentimental on the years of armed struggle, of days lived in remote areas of Mindanao fighting for deeply-rooted grievances that go as far as five centuries.

“We cannot help but remember the vivid memories of the past — youthful memories spent not in the cafes of the metropolis but in the ever-changing rugged fields, mountains and marshlands,” Mr. Ebrahim said.

“We are proud heirs to a history of freedom and of the zealous struggle of our forebears for liberty, justice and peace for centuries amidst the onslaught of colonialism and conquest,” he continued.

The remembrance, however, was not meant to incite hostility at the event, a multi-stakeholder gathering prescribed under President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s Executive Order No. 8 expanding the composition of the Bangasamoro Transition Commission (BTC) to include representatives from the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), indigenous peoples (IP), and Christian settlers.

Rather, Mr. Ebrahim was putting into perspective the MILF’s resolve to pursue the peace process alongside Mindanao’s diverse communities and rally a united front for the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL).

“I say, let us work and contribute in determining our future with security and succor, a future of peace and plenty that harnesses the potentials of our people whose new skills and talents will be needed for a new age and era in the Bangsamoro. While we shall remain faithful and grateful to our brothers and sisters in struggle, let us tap into the vital energy of our youth and women, whose skills and enthusiasm in pursuing the Bangsamoro dream have kept my confidence in a more secure and certain future for our people,” Mr. Ebrahim said.

That future will largely be determined by the revised BBL proposal, which, for the second time around, lies in the hands of Congress.

The Senate and the House of Representatives, whose leaders are both from Mindanao and are allied with the administration, demurred from the President’s call during the Bangsamoro Assembly to hold a special session at the end of last year to tackle the BBL.

However, legislators in both chambers vowed that the proposal will be among the top priorities at the beginning of 2018.

None among the expanded circle of Bangsamoro stakeholders, over the past year, has publicly made threats of returning to arms if the BBL is not passed.

But Mr. Duterte himself has warned that a protracted legislative action, or worse another congressional bypass, would spell “trouble.”

“If we do not act on it expeditiously, I think that we are headed for a trouble. We must continue to talk and I will urge Congress to fast-track it because they (Bangsamoro stakeholders) are getting impatient,” Mr. Duterte said in a press conference in Davao City on Oct. 29, just before leaving for an official visit to Japan — a trip planned earlier in the year but was postponed in view of the Marawi City crisis.

“And I told them of the wages of how to negotiate peace. Sabi ko, ‘Sandali lang (I told them, just wait a bit), but we (government) will comply on our side what we have promised… that is a commitment eh. Not even a promise, but a commitment to the Moro people,” he added.

Dr. Aboulkhair S. Tarason, chairperson Basilan Ulama Supreme Council and the Basilan Inter-faith Council of Leaders, said in a phone interview, “We are in full support for the passage of the BBL as it will give fruition to the quest for peace of the Moro people.”

One expansion made in the new BBL draft, submitted to Mr. Duterte on July 17 and transmitted to Congress on Aug. 7, is the addition of seats in the council of leaders and sectoral representatives for the youth, traditional leaders, and the ulama, or those considered as scholars or learned of Islam. There are also seats allocated for IPs, settler communities, and women.

OLD AND NEW
BTC Chairperson Ghazali Jaafar, a top MILF official who headed the group’s peace negotiating panel from 1996-1997, explained that the BBL is about resolving the very old “Bangsamoro Question” and addressing a new threat, the emergence of violent extremism.

“Summing up all the number of years since 1521, it means that the Bangsamoro Question has been present for almost 500 years. Parallel to this is the rise and fall cycle of peace negotiations… Consequently, the trust of some Bangsamoro groups on the peace process faded away. These groups started to become radicalized and developed the mindset that the only solution to the Bangsamoro issue is through the use of force,” Mr. Jaafar said in a speech at the Dec. 4, 2017 forum “Way Forward: Beyond Peace in Mindanao” organized by the  Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and the Ateneo de Manila University.

“They started gathering strength even to the point of disregarding the sources and the means just to develop their fire-fight capability. Because of frustration, they do not even mind if the source of the support they receive are from what others refer to as extremists or ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria),” said Mr. Jaafar, noting that these local armed groups “in a strict sense, are not ISIS themselves.”

“They are local armed groups that have been organized with the objective of resolving the Bangsamoro Question,” he added.

Conflict Alert, the monitoring system developed by International Alert Philippines, has noted “the growing strength of the local extremists” since 2015.

In its 2017 Report titled Guns, Drugs, and Extremism: Bangsamoro’s New Wars, launched Nov. 29, Conflict Alert said “Rebellion-related violence increased by 19% from 144 incidents in 2015 to 171 incidents in 2016.”

More than half of these incidents were in Maguindanao, accounting for 96 in 2016, up from 71 the previous year.

The province is a known lair of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, also referred to as the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement, a group that broke away from the MILF at the height of the peace negotiations with the government, and has since pledged allegiance to ISIS.

Conflict Alert, in it’s 2016 Report, also noted “the growing strength of the Maute Group, which is at the core of Dawlah Islamiya.”

It said that “judging by the number of conflict deaths (86) from only six incidents involving the Maute Group that were monitored at that time, it demonstrated it had the resources and capacity to launch large-scale and deadly attacks.”

Their rampage in Marawi last year showed just that — a five-month long battle against government forces that left in its wake deaths, diaspora, and harrowing destruction in what is recognized as an “Islamic City”, the only one in the country.

Mr. Ebrahim calls these groups the “new enemies”, whom he described as followers of a “perverted ideology devoid of a national agenda… without regard to the rules of war and the welfare of the people.”

Mr. Duterte, unlike his stance on the communist movement, wants a comprehensive, inclusive and firm end to the Bangsamoro struggle through the BBL.

“So let us work on the historical issues. Land, the social injustices that were committed since then,” he said at the Nov. 27 assembly, even as he hinted on what he anticipates to be a battle in Congress.

“Alam ko realist kayo (I know you are realists),” he told the crowd.

“If it’s (BBL provisions) not in consonance… then we work it out, but at least Congress and the Filipino people should be given a day to hear you out on what we intend to do… I will impress upon them that you have to devote even one day or two days. Hear them out, hear us from Mindanao,” he said.

Professor Ali T. Yacub, Al-Hj, president of the Golden Crescent Consortium of Peace Builders and Affiliates, said the BBL is the “hard work of the Moro people” that should not be delayed in consideration of the proposal to shift to federalism.

Another Muslim leader, Sheikh Zayd Ocfemia, president of the Assunah Foundation and a member of the Ulama Council for Zamboanga Peninsula, expressed the same sentiment, saying: “Federalism takes a longer time before it will pass, while the BBL it’s already there.”

The bottomline, Mr. Duterte said, is to find a meeting point for two factors relating to the Bangsamoro Question: “Correct the injustice committed against the Moro people and all of the lumads (IPs) here. Second is to preserve the Republic… there has to be a condition that is for all.” — Marifi S. Jara, Arjay L.  Balinbin, Rosemarie A. Zamora, Andrea Louise E. San Juan, and Albert F. Arcilla

Canine couture cuts a dash in Italy’s fashion capital

MILAN, ITALY — Elegant, tailored outfits are not reserved just for fashionistas in Italy — couture for dogs is proving a hit with some Milan pet owners.

Man’s best friend should not be overlooked when it comes to cashmere sweaters and woollen coats, according to designer Giovanna Temellini, who enables the fashion conscious to match their style with that of their pooch.

“Everything is born out of love,” says the 57-year-old, who has been in the fashion industry for 25 years working for labels such as Bottega Veneta and Armani and is an active supporter of animal welfare groups.

One evening just under a year ago in her workshop, Temellini recalled, her daughter said to her: “You do so many little things for all the dogs…” referring to her animal protection voluntary work. “But when it rains, mine gets his ears all wet,” her daughter continued.

The following evening a member of her design team set to work making a hooded coat for the pet, to match the winter jacket of Temellini’s daughter.

From there sprung her made-to-measure fashion line just for dogs entitled Temellini Dog A Porter, with its first shop opening this month.

Her staff use a dog-shaped mannequin to create a range of sizes for different breeds, including dobermans, basset hounds and greyhounds.

But for each commission, the canine customer has its measurements taken to ensure a snug fit.

canine couture 2
A greyhound wears an outfit of Italian designer Temellini Milano in the workshop of the fashion house, in Milan in this photo taken Dec. 5, 2017. — AFP

BECAUSE YOU’RE WORTH IT
One dark gray jacket from her dogs’ range sports a high collar with buttons down the front, with the fabric matching a woman’s over-sized coat from Temellini’s main collection, for women, which she began 15 years ago.

But the focus on high-quality fabrics and stylish cuts means a cashmere T-shirt costs €142 ($171), a merino wool bomber jacket €212 and a coat with small pockets €252.

One customer snapped up an entire wardrobe for his dog, adopted from a shelter, because after what she had been through, “she deserved it.”

Twenty-four year-old student, Beatrice Gerevini, who likes to coordinate her dog’s outfit with her own, said it helps the pair to “create a connection.”

It is also “a sort of game, a way of being noticed — people smile when they see us.”

Temellini, who continues to do some work for other labels too, says she wants to create a collection suitable for all dogs, including those with disabilities.

“I am very respectful and attentive to all the requirements of dogs which are to be able to move, run, get dirty and socialize.

“I refuse to do something that would restrict or ridicule a dog, because they’ll be aware of it.” — AFP

Short on stars, London aims to stay in fashion with youth

LONDON — Grappling with the digital revolution upsetting all corners of the industry, Men’s Fashion Week kicked off in London on Saturday with fewer shows and star names.

But this fixture in the British fashion calendar is attempting to stay relevant by going back to its roots, and promoting a more youthful image.

Burberry deserted the event last year and now unveils its men’s wardrobe at Women’s Fashion Week, riding the trend towards less rigidity around gender.

JW Anderson, the label of Jonathan Anderson, who is artistic director of the Spanish luxury leather goods line Loewe, has followed suit, choosing to present only two runway shows per year instead of four.

Punk icon Vivienne Westwood has now said she will be presenting her autumn-winter 2018-2019 collection not in a catwalk but “through the form of film and imagery,” according to a statement from her company.

Designers have embraced a digital transformation of the industry in recent years, including the use of Web sites and social networking platforms for advertising and selling their latest collections.

“Not only are digital and combined menswear and womenswear shows often more cost-efficient, but such strategies also present the brand in a cohesive manner, whilst reaching new audiences,” Samantha Dover, of the analysis firm Mintel, told AFP.

Kristabel Plummer, editor of the fashion blog I Want You To Know, said designers are now more practical when it comes to catwalks and called the changes “sensible business decisions.”

“There’s no point doing things in the way they’ve always been done, if that’s not right for the brand.

“Increased flexibility and innovation can only be a positive thing, in this challenging consumer landscape,” she said.

‘ERA OF CONTENT’
“Brands need to move at the speed the world does, and today that is fast,” Anderson told The Guardian in a recent interview.

“We live in the era of content. We put something on Instagram and it gets reposted and it’s everywhere and a minute later it’s gone, over,” he added.

The drift away from London Men’s Fashion Week by established designers has seen the number of parades drop by a dozen this year.

It has led to questions over whether the British event, the younger of the annual fashion weeks, can still compete with Paris, Milan, and New York.

Organizer The British Fashion Council hopes it can still flourish by allowing young and upcoming local designers to showcase their talents.

Caroline Rush, its chief executive, said the 2018 edition will be “a celebration of discovery and the creative diversity that has made London an international hub for menswear.”

A raft of emerging names in British fashion will feature their clothes during the schedule, including the luxury streetwear of Edward Crutchley — dubbed a “rising star” by Vogue — and the bold neo-punk hip-hop wardrobe of Liam Hodges.

They are joined by Christopher Raeburn, a pioneer in ethical fashion and recycling materials, and Astrid Andersen, who designs sportswear.

“There’s a variety of brands on the schedule,” said Plummer, pushing back on notions London Men’s Fashion Week is petering out.

“Perhaps a new gem will emerge, thanks to the extra attention,” she added. — AFP

Tanker ablaze, 32 missing after collision off China

BEIJING — Thirty-two people, mostly Iranians, were missing Sunday after an oil tanker collided with a cargo ship off the coast of east China, the transport ministry said. The tanker, carrying 136,000 tons of oil condensate, caught fire following the collision Saturday night and its crew of 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis were missing, the ministry said in a statement. The other vessel had been damaged but “without jeopardizing the safety of the ship” and all its 21 Chinese crew had been rescued, it added. The tanker was still ablaze Sunday, with images broadcast by state television channel CCTV showing the ship in the grip of an intense fire, enveloped in clouds of black smoke. — AFP

Cybersecurity a growing concern among many Filipinos — report

By Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo, Reporter

BUSINESSES in the Philippines should look at investing in talent to improve cybersecurity, as more Filipino consumers are increasingly worried about cyber attacks, a content delivery service provider said.

In its “The State of Cybersecurity 2017 — Southeast Asia” report, Limelight Networks said a survey showed 74% of consumers in the Philippines are “extremely concerned” about cybersecurity. The figure is higher than the 60% average in Southeast Asia (Philippines, Malaysia, and Singapore).

Also, the survey found 71% of consumers have had a more negative opinion of a brand after a cyber attack, while almost 40% of consumers said they will no longer make online transactions on a website that has been previously hacked.

Jaheer Abbas, Limelight Networks regional director for Southeast Asia and Australia-New Zealand, said the top concerns of consumers are the loss of financial/personal information, falling victim to an online scam, and infection of devices by malware.

“Businesses need to know that consumers are most concerned about violations of personal information when it comes to cyber attacks,” Mr. Abbas told BusinessWorld in an e-mail interview.

However, he noted said the high cautiousness of Filipinos compared with Singaporeans or Malaysians is a positive sign that can lead to a better handling of cyber security threats.

The survey showed 96.31% of Filipinos check if a website is secure before making an online transaction.  This is higher than the regional figure of 91.47%.

“This is thus a positive sign and we expect for demand to lead the push in technological improvements nationally in the Philippines to increase the sophistication of how cyber security threats are tackled and handled,” he said.

Mr. Abbas said companies should start planning and seeking out technologies and solutions that can help bolster cybersecurity, including firewalls for online platforms or security applications.

Businesses should also look at investing in talent to come up with a cybersecurity strategy and provide a “multi-layered” approach, employing various technologies and solutions.

“Additionally, to go a step further, they should look at investing in talent that can strategize for the security of their online platform and technologies that provide a multi-layered security approach, one that layers cloud and on-premise technologies into a ‘cyber security stack’ that can protect consumers from a variety of different vectors,” Mr. Abbas said.

Businesses must also communicate their cyber efforts to consumers. “Following that, they must communicate what they are doing to bolster cyber security to their customers. It’s important to let customers know that these measures are in place and that they are taking continual steps to ensuring optimal security and to safeguard against attacks,” he said.

Ang Larawan ng 2018

In the sepia haze, muted rays of suspended light paint a grisaille of the old Marasigan mansion in Intramuros. Bitoy Camacho remembers how it was when his friends Candida and Paula, spinster sisters, insisted to live there before the outbreak of the War — in the cruel reversal of fortune that unfairly tempted compromises of values and tradition.

Don Lorenzo Marasigan, the patriarch, was a once-famous painter — “El Magnifico,” he was called. Now self-exiled to the solitude of his upstairs bedroom, was he aware that his impoverished daughters would not sell his last remaining painting to pay for mounting utility bills? The rich older siblings Manolo and Pepang do not anymore live in the ancestral house. Stupid, they say of Candida and Paula! Sell this dying old mansion! Pepang has a ready buyer (who would give her a handsome commission).

Sell that painting — an American prospect will pay $10,000 (P20,000 at that time), their boarder, lover-boy type Tony Javier urges the two old maids. Many art critics and collectors want that last painting of El Magnifico: a puzzling self-portrait where he was the poet Virgil’s epic hero Aeneas carrying his ailing father Anchises (also depicting Marasigan, as an old man) on his back as they run from the burning city of Troy. Of course Tony will earn a commission from the sale, and he seduces the more vulnerable Paula to make sure the deal will happen. The buyer has doubled the offer to $20,000, and economically deprived, love-starved Paula elopes with Tony and the painting.

The three-act play of the late National Artist Nick Joaquin, Portrait of the Artist as Filipino has been performed hundreds of times in the original in theater and in adaptations in radio and film over six decades since it was written in 1952. At the 43rd Metro Manila Film Festival (MMFF 2017), Ang Larawan (The Portrait), based on the 1997 re-staging of Ang Larawan, the Musical won five of 12 categories, including Best Picture; Best Actress (Joanna Ampil playing Candida); Best Musical Score (Ryan Cayabyab); Best Production Design (Culturtain Musicat Productions: Girlie Rodis and Celeste Legaspi); and the Gatpuno Antonio J. Villegas Cultural Award plus the Special Jury Prize (Nick Joaquin, posthumous).

But the MMFF winnings of the 2017 Ang Larawan, though much to be jubilant about, seem to have unmasked some persistent tension in the Filipino soul that is precisely the message (or question) of Nick Joaquin’s undying Portrait of the Artist as Filipino.

“The year’s Best Picture (Ang Larawan) lost 15 theaters even before the awards night and (only) got relatively better patronage after the festival jury’s verdict. It had better audiences in middle upper-class turfs (Rockwell, Glorietta and Gateway) but suffered poor patronage notably in the provinces…the result of the recent MMFF awards night is a classic case of division between jury’s choice and the ever-changing public taste. Cineastes that include most members of the jury see the festival as a showcase of cinematic excellence while the masa see it as a chance to be entertained after a year of “bad news” ending in death in the highways, in the shopping malls and in the high seas (Pablo A. Tariman in The Philippine Star, Dec. 31, 2017).

Escape from reality (when reality is unpalatable) is the favored theme of popular art and literature — a happy ending is almost always expected by the audience. In the ending of Ang Larawan (2017) the “Unseen Character” Don Lorenzo Marasigan, the patriarch, the painter, the “Pius Aeneas” in the enigmatic portrait, unexpectedly descends from his bedroom isolation and joins the coterie of society guests and his family gathering in the sala of their primped-up old mansion for the feast of the Virgen de la Naval. (Co-producer Celeste Legaspi said in a text message that “that warm and emotional reunion provided a great jumping off point to [the impending] WWII). But it was somewhat a disappointment to see the blood and bones old man Marasigan replace the idealistic inferences to the unseen character that stood for the jealous and faithful respect for history and its values and tradition. It seemed iconoclastic to the portrait of the young Aeneas carrying the old Anchises on his shoulders (probably a take-off from the famous version by the Italian Renaissance painter Federico Barocci in the Galleria Borghese in Rome) that a pyrrhic victory was impliedly won by the Past over the Present.

Even the famous portrait was never actually shown in Nick Joaquin’s original play. Fr. James B. Reuter, renowned for his extensive work and accomplishments in Philippine theater saw in Nick Joaquin’s work “a vocation to preserve the beautiful values of the Filipinos; to preserve the memory of the great things Filipinos have done; their suffering, their courage; their patient, cheerful endurance; their love for one another; their laughter, their tears, their hopes, their dreams. He wanted to tell us that we are standing on the shoulders of great men; that we should not forget the warm hearts and the sacrifices of our ancestors; that we should treasure, and honor the beautiful gifts they have left us” (philstar.com May 8, 2004).

The final dénouement or “tying-up” of Joaquin’s Portrait/Larawan is really when Paula runs away from the manipulative womanizer Tony, and comes back to the old mansion — announcing that she has destroyed the portrait. Symbolically, the tension and conflict within the soul has ended. No more the “ifs and buts”, and the “howevers” that the money-valued painting stood for. No more temptations to compromise Beauty and Tradition, and the basic values of Filipino culture. From then on the portrait would exist solely in the mind and soul of Filipinos as the “Unseen Character” analogous to the “Pius Aeneas” in Graeco-Roman epic history who revered the values and traditions of the ancient peoples that became the foundation virtues and principles of human existence in a harmonious world.

But is Larawan relevant to the country and Filipinos, in 2018?

A snapshot of the country as of last year-end might probably call the sepia photos that Bitoy Camacho saw in his mind, of the old Marasigan mansion in Intramuros. Let the unseen portrait of a modern-day Aeneas carrying on his shoulders his old but steadfast moral and ethical values. Save the people, and run from self-immolation by the corruption of moral values, and as in Virgil’s Aeneid that described the subsequent decay and fall of mercenary Rome.

Mercenary. That is the fatal word that defined the conflict of selling or not selling the painting and the ancestral home in Portrait/Larawan. Compromises for financial security and economic progress in our country in international business and trade relations must not be the covetousness and deviousness of the Tony Javier character and the other opportunists who wanted the painting in Larawan. The end-justifying-the-means is always immoral even in the aggressiveness of a rabid drug war. Let the seeming political bullying end, as with the human rights abuses so loudly whispered about. The looming constitutional change happening this 2018 scares us too much for its eerie simile to Don Lorenzo Marasigan’s last painting being sold.

We pray to the Virgen de la Naval to protect and save us from ourselves, in 2018 and always.

 

Amelia H. C. Ylagan is a Doctor of Business Administration from the University of the Philippines.

ahcylagan@yahoo.com

Tax reform veto creates uncertainty over PEZA perks

THE Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said there is uncertainty over whether firms registered with the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) will keep their value-added tax (VAT) exemptions after Malacañang vetoed provisions of the first package of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law.

This was after PEZA reasoned that the TRAIN will not repeal the PEZA law –  which states that its economic zones are operated and managed as a separate customs territory – and was quoted in a Supreme Court decision but DTI still held its reservations.

“The supreme court decision is based on the laws that we have— the tax code and the PEZA. But the TRAIN package one, it’s also a law so it precedes all that is inconsistent but the supreme court law – the decision, is all this that is that was preceded,” Trade undersecretary for Industry Development Group Ceferino S. Rodolfo said in an earlier press briefing.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte in December vetoed five TRAIN provisions including the zero-rating on the sale of goods and services that cross separate customs territories and tourism enterprise zones, noting that the provision violates “the principle of limiting VAT zero-rating to direct exporters.”

Mr. Duterte noted in his veto that when goods or services cross separate customs territories without being taxed, it will lead to “leakages” in the tax system, which will defeat the TRAIN’s goal of making the tax process simpler and more efficient.

PEZA, an agency under DTI, gives fiscal and non-fiscal perks to certain commercial activities such as export-based manufacturing industries as well as business process outsourcing and knowledge process outsourcing businesses in economic zones.

In a briefing on Dec. 29, PEZA Director General Charito B. Plaza argued that “there are many interpretations of the veto of the President,” giving PEZA leeway to maintain its interpretation, effectively preserving the status quo.

In a dispute involving the Omnibus Investments Code, “there is a Supreme Court decision [which exempts PEZA]. If they’re going to implement otherwise, then that’s when we’re going to fight back because of the Supreme Court decision. But we’ll see,” she added.

PEZA’s Deputy General for Operations Mary Harriet O. Abordo argued that TRAIN does not change the fact that PEZA’s economic zones are considered foreign soil and will not be affected due to the cross-border doctrine.

Troops seize 9 firearms from warring clans to stop ‘rido’

SOLDIERS OF the Joint Task Force Zampelan, mobilized in the wake of a clan war in Lanao del Sur, seized nine assorted firearms after a clearing operation early Saturday morning (Jan. 6), the Western Mindanao Command (WestMinCom) reported. Military units were first deployed Friday afternoon to Barangay Madanding, Bacolod Kalawi town, when two warring factions from the Amanodin and Dipatuan clans of the same village engaged in a firefight, temporarily disrupting the flow of traffic along the highway. — News5/interaksyon.com

No other sister team, please

Half of the members in the PBA are already composed of sister teams. Two groups have three teams apiece that independent teams were having a difficult time winning a championship.

San Miguel Corp., with Ramon S. Ang, having the controlling shares, has San Miguel Beer, Barangay Ginebra and Magnolia Chicken on its stable.

Manuel V. Pangilinan, a telecommunications tycoon, also has three teams being bankrolled — Talk ’N Text, Meralco and NLEX.

This leaves the other half of the cast as the only independent squads.

It came as a big sigh of relief when Phoenix’s planned acquisition of Kia didn’t push through.

A statement was issued by Phoenix Petroleum on the Philippine Stock Exchange squelched early reports that the growing petroleum company is about to take over Columbian Autocars, distributor of Kia in the Philippines.

Had the deal got consummated, the PBA will have another version of sister teams in play, one that could change the landscape of a league that has been already embroiled with a series of controversies, including the most crucial one — losing a PBA Commissioner.

Sources from Phoenix, on the condition of anonymity, told BusinessWorld that there were plans on acquiring Kia, but the deal didn’t push through.

“We’ve been trying that even before the PBA Rookie Draft started. Had the deal push through, we would have already secured the rights on (Christian) Standhardinger,” said one of the sources.

Another source disclosed that Phoenix made a series of due diligence before deciding not to push through with the deal. Such incidents happened in the past as we saw companies, which already agreed in principle, backing out at the last minute.

The Campos Group, which owns Century Tuna, was supposed to take over Purefoods, but backed out at the last minute after making its due diligence.

A potential partnership between Mikee Romero and Harbour Centre and Manuel V. Pangilinan was also quashed at the last minute.

For now, Phoenix Fuel has maintained its independence and that’s good news for the PBA.

The PBA is on its survival phase and seeing new teams owning multiple franchises isn’t healthy anymore for the league.

 

Rey Joble has been covering the PBA games for more than a decade. He is a member of the PBA Press Corps and Philippine Sportswriters Association.

reyjoble09@gmail.com

BBL battle points

A MORE demanding version.

That is how Institute for Political and Electoral Reform Executive Director Ramon C. Casiple describes the revised Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) filed in the current Congress.

“Mas matigas ang BBL na ito kaysa sa original BBL,” he said in an interview, referring to expanded or additional provisions that he called “controversial constitutionally.”

TERRITORY
Maki T. Datu-Ramos II, a former public lawyer who has gone into private practice and has worked as a legal consultant of one of the commissioners of the Bangsamoro Transition Commission, said among the “contentious issues will be the territorial expansion” of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) through a plebiscite.

“That would be constitutionally problematic because mother territories from respective LGUs (local government units) where constituents or officials of barangays, municipalities or cities subject for plebiscite might raise a constitutional issue before the Supreme Court,” said Mr. Ramos, a Maranao from Lanao del Sur, one of the ARMM provinces.

Article III of the proposed BBL covers provisions on “Territory”, which is defined as “the land mass as well as the maritime, terrestrial, fluvial and alluvial domains, and the aerial domain above it.”

It also clearly states that: “The Bangsamoro territory shall remain a part of the Philippines.”

The “Core Territory” would include the existing geographical area of the ARMM, plus the following:

  • Municipalities of Baloi, Munai, Nunungan, Pantar, Tagoloan and Tangkal in the province of Lanao del Norte, which is currently part of the Caraga Region;
  • All other barangays in the municipalities of Kabacan, Carmen, Aleosan, Pigkawayan, Pikit, and Midsayap that voted for inclusion in the ARMM during the 2001 plebiscite (these municipalities are under Cotabato, which is under the SOCCSKSARGEN Region);
  • Cotabato City, which is geographically within Maguindanao under the ARMM, but is administratively under SOCCSKSARGEN (the ARMM regional government complex is located in Cotabato City);
  • Isabela City, which is within the island province of Basilan under ARMM, but is administratively under the Zamboanga Peninsula Region; and
  • All other contiguous areas where there is resolution of the local government unit or a petition of at least ten percent (10%) of the registered voters in the area asking for their inclusion at least two months prior to the conduct of the ratification of the BBL and the process of delimitation of the Bangsamoro.

The draft BBL also opens “contiguous provinces, cities, municipalities, barangays, and geographic areas, other than those mentioned in the preceding Section, that obtain majority of the qualified votes cast in the periodic plebiscites, as provided under Article XV, Section 4, of this Basic Law shall become part of the Bangsamoro.”

EXCLUSIVE POWERS
Mr. Ramos also points to the provisions on “exclusive powers”, which he said are not mentioned specifically under the 1987 Constitution.

Article V covers the “Powers of Government.”

The Philippine government, referred to as the “Central Government”, would  retain authority over nine areas, including defense and external security, foreign policy; monetary policy; postal service; citizenship and naturalization; immigration; intellectual property rights; customs and tariff as qualified by Section 2(10), Article V of the BBL; and common market and global trade, but the power to enter into economic agreements given to the ARMM under Republic 9054 would be transferred to the new Bangsamoro government.

Shared authority between the Bangsamoro and Central governments would include land registration, social security and pension, and human rights and humanitarian protection, among other things.

On the other hand,  the Bangsamoro government would have “exclusive powers” over 58 items, covering much of economic activities, expropriation and eminent domain, social services, and development planning.

POLICE
Mr. Casiple, meanwhile, cites the establishment of a Bangsamoro police force as an expected point of contention.

Article XI covers “Public Order and Safety” and Section 2 provides for the creation of the “Bangsamoro Police, which shall be organized, maintained, supervised, and utilized for the primary purpose of law enforcement and maintenance of peace and order in the Bangsamoro.”

The section does qualify that “It shall be part of the Philippine National Police” and that “It shall be responsible both to the Central Government and the Bangsamoro Government, and to the communities it serves.”

Mr. Casiple forecasts that the BBL “will be passed”.

“But not in its original form,” he added. The question then, he said, is “will the MILF accept what will be passed?”

Time will tell, opines Mr. Ramos. “We can only see what will happen if BBL is passed and implemented in the future. Every people in Mindanao and ARMM want peace. We are all tired of endless wars.” — Arjay L. Balinbin and Rosemarie A. Zamora