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Pope Francis calls for peace in Myanmar

YANGON — Pope Francis called on the people of Myanmar on Wednesday to embrace peace and reconciliation as their country emerges from nearly five decades of military rule still riven by ethnic conflicts and communal strife.

The pope made his appeal at an open-air mass in Yangon on the third day of a visit fraught with diplomatic risk over a military crackdown that has triggered the flight of about 625,000 Muslim Rohingya from the predominantly Buddhist country.

In a speech on Tuesday, he did not use the highly charged term ‘Rohingya,’ following the advice of Vatican insiders who feared it could set off a diplomatic incident and turn Myanmar’s military and government against minority Christians.

However, his call for justice, human rights and respect for all were widely seen as applicable to the Rohingya, who are not recognized as citizens or as members of a distinct ethnic group.

The mass exodus from Rakhine state to the southern tip of Bangladesh began at the end of August when the military launched a counter-offensive in response to Rohingya militant attacks on an army base and police security posts.

Scores of Rohingya villages were burnt to the ground, and refugees told of killings and rapes. The United States said last week that the military’s campaign included “horrendous atrocities” aimed at “ethnic cleansing.”

Myanmar’s military has denied all accusations of murder, rape and forced displacement.

Only about 700,000 of Myanmar’s 51 million people are Roman Catholic.

Thousands of them traveled from far and wide to Yangon to see the pope, and many attended Wednesday’s mass on the grounds of what had been racecourse during British colonial times.

Among the tens of thousands there were priests, nuns, diplomats, leaders of Aung San Suu Kyi’s ruling National League for Democracy, as well as members of ethnic groups in traditional garb who sang songs and waved Myanmar and Vatican flags as they waited for the pope.

“We may never get such a chance again. The pope lives in Rome and we can’t afford to go there,” said Bo Khin, 45, a teacher who traveled on a truck to Yangon with a group of 15 relatives from the city of Mandalay.

“We feel very happy, joyful that he visited us in Myanmar,” he added.

Bells chimed as Francis arrived.

Standing in the back of a white truck, he smiled, waved at the crowd and looked relaxed as he headed to a pagoda-style canopy to celebrate mass.

In his homily, he called on the country’s people to “anoint every hurt and every painful memory” and promote “the reconciliation and peace that God wants to reign in every human heart and in every community.”

“I know that many in Myanmar bear the wounds of violence, wounds both visible and invisible,” he said, urging them to shun temptation to seek healing from anger and revenge.

Prayers were then read by members of the congregation in the Shan, Chin, Karen, Kachin and Kayan languages.

The prayer in Karen read: “For the leaders of Myanmar, that they may always foster peace and reconciliation through dialogue and understanding, thus promoting an end to conflict in the states of Kachin, Rakhine, and Shan, we pray to the Lord.”

When she came to power in 2016, Nobel peace laureate and longtime champion of democracy Ms. Suu Kyi said her number one priority was ending multiple ethnic conflicts that have kept Myanmar in a state of near-perpetual civil war since independence in 1948.

That goal remains elusive and, although Ms. Suu Kyi remains popular at home, she has faced a barrage of international criticism in recent weeks for expressing doubts about the reports of rights abuses against the Rohingya and failing to condemn the military.

Although Ms. Suu Kyi formed Myanmar’s first civilian government in half a century, her defenders say she is hamstrung by a constitution written by the military that left the army in control of security and much of the apparatus of the state.

Vatican sources say some in the Holy See believe the pope’s trip to Myanmar was decided too hastily after full diplomatic ties were established in May during a visit by Ms. Suu Kyi.

Pope Francis leaves on Thursday for Bangladesh, where he will meet a group of Rohingya refugees in the capital, Dhaka. — Reuters

DoTr in talks for Sumitomo to maintain MRT-3

THE GOVERNMENT is considering Metro Rail Transit (MRT)-3 builder and former maintenance provider Sumitomo Corp. for the maintenance and rehabilitation of the MRT-3 system.

In a statement, the Department of Transportation (DoTr) said  discussions with the Japanese government are ongoing to rehire Sumitomo as the maintenance provider of the MRT, to replace Busan Universal Rail, Inc. (BURI), whose maintenance contract was terminated by the DoTr earlier this month.

The new maintenance and rehabilitation contract will have a term of three years, and will include the rehabilitation and restoration of the system to its “original performance standards.”

“High-level discussions with the Government of Japan are ongoing to pave the way for DoTr’s direct engagement of Sumitomo Corp. and its technical partner Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, under a Government to Government (G2G) Official Development Assistance (ODA) platform,” the DoTr said.

The DoTr said that the joint venture of Sumitomo and Mitsubishi Heavy is being considered due to their previous experience with the MRT.  “The joint venture of Sumitomo Corp. and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries is being closely considered due to their background and experience with the MRT-3 — they designed and built the system from 1998 to 2000, and maintained the system from 2000 to 2012.”

The then Department of Transportation and Communications in 2012 did not renew the maintenance contract of Sumitomo.

The DoTr added that it is evaluating the unsolicited proposal of Light Rail Manila Corp. (LRMC), a P20-billion investment to rehabilitate the train system, as well as the handling of operations for a period of 30 to 32 years. The agency last month granted original proponent status to LRMC, and the proposal will “soon be endorsed” to the National Economic and Development Authority for its evaluation. 

LRMC currently manages the Light Rail Transit (LRT)-1. The consortium is composed of Metro Pacific Investment Corp.’s Metro Pacific Light Rail Corp., Ayala Corp.’s AC Infrastructure Holdings Corp. and Macquarie Infrastructure Holdings (Philippines) Pte. Ltd.

Transportation Secretary Arthur P. Tugade earlier this month said that the MRT-3 will have a new maintenance provider next year.

The DoTr said that the MRT transition team has enough manpower, after directly hiring more than 450 former BURI employees, and paid their salaries “in full and on time,” after what it says are months of “delayed and partial salaries.” — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Karapatan, CPP condemn killing of 2 human rights fact-finding mission members in Negros Oriental

Bayawan map

THE COMMUNIST Party of the Philippines (CPP) added its voice to condemning the killing of two members of a human rights fact-finding mission in Bayawan, Negros Oriental. “The CPP condemns the most recent killing of two human rights defenders on a fact-finding mission in Negros Oriental… as well as illegal mass arrests and continued harassment of activists and groups in the past week. These incidents, and numerous incidents before them, clearly illustrate Duterte’s dirty war against the people in the guise of an “all-out war” against the revolutionary movement. He will be made responsible for these crimes,” the CPP said in its official twitter account @prwc_info. Human rights alliance Karapatan reported that on Nov. 28, Elisa Badayos of Karapatan Central Visayas and Elioterio Moises, a barangay tanod and member of local peasant organization Mantapi Ebwan Farmers Association, died after being fired at by still unidentified men. Another 23-year-old Kabataan party-list member remains in critical condition, the group said. “The attack on human rights defenders are becoming more rampant, more brutal, more fearless… Fact-finding missions are a mechanism for human rights organizations to confirm reports of abuses, and this incident has only proven how fascism works to outrightly kill those who dare to question,” said Karapatan Secretary General Cristina Palabay in a statement.

Guilt-free holiday treats

PRIOR to working with California Raisins, pastry chef Michael Aspiras avoided eating raisins. “Before, I didn’t actually like eating raisins. It grew on me because it’s a treat whenever you eat it,” Mr. Aspiras told BusinessWorld. It was not until his partnership with California Raisins, accompanied by his and the company’s further research on raisins’ nutritional benefits that he realized that it was a good alternative for sugar in recipes.

California Raisins is a naturally sweet product of sun-dried raisins from San Joaquin Valley, California. It is fat- and cholesterol-free and low in sodium. California Raisins collaborated with Mr. Aspiras to create holiday recipes to add to a healthful feast for Noche Buena and Christmas parties.

In his demonstration at the New World Hotel, Makati City on Nov. 20, Mr. Aspiras prepared California Raisin Bombolini, a bread recipe with California Raisins rum chantilly and crispy topping. The pureed and chunks of California Raisin gives the pastry an ample flavor of sweetness.

California Raisins 2
Pastry chef Michael Aspiras

The second recipe called California Raisin Modern Christmas Cake with crispy California Raisin and chocolate dip coating gives a fruity flavor perfect for a holiday dessert.

At first Mr. Aspiras said that it was challenging to accept and prepare the recipes with raisins instead of sugar. “I actually manipulated the recipes and used very little sugar and replaced it with raisins […] Before, I’d make these two recipes with sugar. But now, I realized that when I replaced it with raisins, it lends itself well because it’s chewy, it didn’t lose the crispness. It did not alter the texture and it actually improved,” Mr. Aspiras said.

“It’s very important to be innovative, but you have to balance it with what people like.” He also added that eating raisins is guilt-free compared to indulging on sweets that we would regret consuming afterwards. When asked about his advice to non-raisin eaters, he said, “Just give it a try.” — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

Ramping up coconut sugar output means less tuba for everyone

Benjamin R. Lao, owner and manager of Lao Integrated Farms, Inc. — CACARILLO

IN THE FAR-FLUNG barangay of Eman in Bansalan, Davao del Sur, as in many remote parts of Mindanao, drinking tuba (fermented coconut sap) is a way of life.

But one farmer’s determination to add value to coconut has transformed the village.

“Drinking tuba used to be a favorite activity here but the number of villagers passing the time drinking tuba has decreased because the supply of tuba here is tightening,” Benjamin R. Lao, owner and manager of Lao Integrated Farms, Inc., told BusinessWorld in an interview.

Mr. Lao’s coconut story started in 1988 after he inherited a five-hectare plot some 10 kilometers away from Bansalan’s town center.

Many coconut trees are in the adjacent lots, which the residents used to tap for copra and tuba.

“But you have to wait four months to make copra again and if you just drink tuba to get drunk, it’s a waste of time,” he said.

Mr. Lao saw the potential in the new product and took on the challenge of encouraging the villagers to make more out of their resource.

Today, Lao Integrated Farms is one of the country’s biggest exporters of coconut syrup to the United States, and has added Australia, France, Canada and Japan to its market.

Instead of tuba, the coconut sap is now processed into syrup, which is then turned into coconut sugar, which has a low glycemic index and is recommended for people with diabetes.

Mr. Lao’s farm, with the initial five hectares now expanded to 85 hectares, produces 2,600 liters of coconut syrup and 1,000 kilos of coconut sugar on a daily basis.

His initial manpower pool of five employees and seven coconut tree climbers, locally called manangiti, has grown to 110 employees and 300 climbers.

These manangiti, he said, used to be the tuba-makers who now earn an average of P20,000 per month from their former income of P1,500 from making tuba.

“No amount of mechanization can replace the skills of the manangiti,” Mr. Lao said.

Lao Farms also touts its organic methods.

Mr. Lao said a negative experience with chemical sprays on the farm encouraged him to shift to organic agriculture.

The farm is recognized as a demonstration site where farmers can learn natural farming techniques such as the use of vermicast, a fertilizer produced by an earthworm known as the African Nightcrawler.

The coconut trees are also intercropped with commercially viable plants, which are also processed into Lao Farms’other products, under the tradename Donabelle, such as ginger tea, turmeric tea, lemongrass tea and moringa tea, all pre-sweetened with coconut sugar.

“We intercrop and we teach farmers for free because our advocacy is to encourage organic farming,” he said, noting that the farm receives up to 1,000 guests monthly.

Lao Farms has three organic certifications: ECOCERT, an inspection and certification body in France; NISARD Certification Services (NICERT); and Organic Certification Center of the Philippines (OCCP). The processing plant, meanwhile, is certified by the Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point TUVSUD based in Germany.

The company has embarked on a 30-month P11-million expansion project that started in March, with help from the Peace and Equity Foundation for financing and the Department of Science and Technology for equipment.

The expansion covers villages outside Bansalan, but remains largely in Davao del Sur and a still-undetermined land area in Tampakan, South Cotabato.

Mr. Lao’s success is a model amid the many challenges faced by the coconut industry, according to Xycris M. Fuerzas, Technical Services and Extension Specialist of the Davao Region Coconut Industry Cluster, Inc. (DRCICI).

“There are many opportunities for those in the coconut industry, but the supply is getting weaker” due to the maturation of many coconut plantations, he said.

According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, the number of hectares planted to coconut fell to 360,000 hectares at the end of 2016 from 370,000 hectares five years ago

Mr. Fuerzas attributes this to old coconut trees dying and not being replaced, plus zoning changes from agricultural to residential.

“When you replace the dead coconut trees it will take five to seven years to bear fruit, so farmers look for other crops that will bear fruit faster,” he said.

Mr. Fuerzas said one solution to keeping the coconut industry thriving is intercropping, as practiced in Lao Farms and promoted by DRCICI. — Carmencita A. Carillo

US Senate Republicans shove tax bill ahead as Democrats fume

WASHINGTON — US Senate Republicans rammed forward President Donald Trump’s tax-cut bill on Tuesday in an abrupt, partisan committee vote that set up a full vote by the Senate as soon as Thursday, although some details of the measure remained unsettled.

As disabled protesters shouted: “Kill the bill, don’t kill us,” in a Capitol Hill hearing room, the Senate Budget Committee, with no discussion, quickly approved the legislation on a 12-11 party-line vote that left Democrats fuming.

Republican committee members quickly left the room after the vote as Democrats complained about a lack of discussion on a bill that would overhaul the US tax code and add an estimated $1.4 trillion to the $20 trillion national debt over 10 years.

After the vote, Trump told reporters: “I think we’re going to get it passed,” adding that it would have some adjustments.

Republicans are hurrying to move their complex tax legislation forward, hoping to avoid the protracted infighting that doomed their effort to repeal Obamacare four months ago.

Since Trump took office in January, he and fellow Republicans in command of both chambers of Congress have approved no major legislation, a fact they want to change before facing voters in the 2018 congressional elections.

If the Senate approves its tax measure later this week, it would need to be reconciled with a version already approved by the House of Representatives before anything could be sent to the White House for Trump to sign into law.

Republican leaders conceded that they had yet to round up the votes needed for passage in the Senate, where they hold a narrow 52-48 majority. “It’s a challenging exercise,” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said at a news conference.

Democrats have called the Republican tax plan a giveaway to corporations and the rich.

The Senate bill would slash the corporate tax rate to 20% from 35% after a one-year delay. It would impose a onetime, cut-rate tax on corporations’ foreign profits, while exempting future foreign profits from US taxation.

Tax rates for many individuals and families would also be cut temporarily before rising back to their previous levels in 2025. Key tax breaks would also be curbed or eliminated, making the bill a mixed bag for some middle-class families. Some taxes paid by wealthy Americans would be repealed.

Wall Street moved higher on the news that the bill would move to a full Senate vote, with the benchmark S&P 500 index closing up a little over 1 percent.

THE CORKER CONCESSION
As written, the bill would widen the US budget deficit by an estimated $1.4 trillion over 10 years. Republicans maintain that gap would be narrowed by additional economic growth.

Senator Bob Corker, one of few remaining Republican fiscal hawks in Congress, said he worked out a deal satisfying his concerns that the tax cuts add too much to the national debt.

He said the bill would be modified to automatically raise tax revenues if growth targets were not reached. “We got a commitment that puts us in a pretty good place,” he said.

Although details were not immediately available, Corker said he expected more information to come out on Thursday as part of the bill.

The concession immediately drew a detractor as Republican Senator John Kennedy told reporters he “would rather drink weed killer than vote for the thing,” adding: “I donít like voting for automatic tax increases.”

The Corker concession was one of several lingering uncertainties in the bill that Senate aides said would be nailed down as the measure neared a floor vote.

Republican Senator Susan Collins, who remains undecided on how she will vote on the bill, said “productive discussions” continued and that she would offer an amendment preserving the $10,000 deduction for property tax payments. The deduction is in the House bill, but not the Senate version.

Republican Senator Ron Johnson voted for the bill in the Budget Committee, even though he had said it did not cut taxes deeply enough for some non-corporate businesses.

The final version could address his concerns. Aides said tax writers were working to change the tax rate for non-corporate businesses, preserve an individual deduction for property tax payments, and incorporate Corker’s tax revenue idea.

Democratic Senator Jeff Merkley told MSNBC that the Corker concession was “an absolute gimmick” that could be undermined later. “It’s just a justification to let those who have argued that they don’t believe in increasing the deficit actually vote for a bill which does exactly that,” Merkley said.

As the tax fight played out, a new battle opened on another front as Democratic congressional leaders Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi skipped a White House meeting with Trump to discuss spending, immigration and other issues after Trump criticized them on Twitter.

Lawmakers must renew government funding before it expires on Dec. 8 or risk a shutdown. Democrats hope to use their leverage on the budget issue to renew protections for young immigrants who entered the country illegally as children. — Reuters

On tobacco tax and plain packaging scheme

Protection of private property rights — including physical and intellectual — is an important cornerstone of a free society. People can exclusively use, keep, sell, donate or give away their property if they want to.

There is a measurement of property rights protection worldwide being done annually by the Property Rights Alliance (PRA), a Washington DC-based think tank. It produces the annual International Property Rights Index report and partners with independent, nongovernment, and market-oriented think tanks and institutes from many countries. IPRI covers three major areas: (1) Legal and Political Environment, (2) Physical Property Rights (PPR), and (3) Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) that include protection of patents, trademarks and brands, copyrights and trade secrets.

In the IPR of several ASEAN countries, the gap is not very wide between say, Singapore and the Philippines or Indonesia (see table).

On tobacco tax and plain packaging scheme

Currently, there are IPR issues that are intertwined with taxation issues of some “sin products” like tobacco and alcohol.

In the Philippines, the sin tax law of 2012 or RA 10351 is turning five years old next month. The law has dual purposes of (a) reducing smoking and drinking incidence in the country by raising tobacco and alcohol taxes, and (b) raising more government revenues.

So far, both have been achieved but there are moves and legislative bills to further raise tobacco tax to twice or thrice their current rates.

In December 2012, Australia introduced a variant of this law aimed to further discourage smoking. Its plain packaging law required tobacco companies to remove the brand, trademark, and logos of its tobacco products and replace them with plain packs with graphic warnings.

Since some smokers may be unable to distinguish good brands from new and/or inferior brands, they are supposedly discouraged from stop smoking.

While the goal is good — to protect public health — the means and the policy leaves much to be desired.

Since it is assumed that consumers can no longer distinguish good brands from inferior ones, brand competition is precluded.

As a result, companies will now be forced to compete on the basis of prices alone, allowing players with poor but cheap products to gain advantage and attract more customers.

Which may then defeat the purpose of anti-tobacco initiatives because this may yet increase the incident of smoking.

Five years after introducing its plain packaging scheme, has Australia been able to meet its goal?

The Australian government collects data on national smoking incidence every three years as part of its National Drug Strategy Household Survey (NDSHS).

Based on 2016 data — its most recent — there has been no statistically significant decline in the overall daily smoking rate between 2013 (12.8%) and 2016 (12.2%).

So the plain packaging scheme is a failure in Australia.

Moreover, the plain packaging law has unwittingly succeeded in raising the consumption of illegal tobacco, estimated at 13.9% of total consumption in 2016. This results in an estimated excise tax loss of A$1.6 billion for the government last year.

Furthermore, Australia is also facing a dispute resolution panel at the WTO for implementing the law that disrespects IPR laws on trademark and branding.

France and the UK have also introduced the plain packaging scheme in recent years. One unintended result in France is the rise in illicit tobacco coming from some terrorist groups and criminal syndicates while the French government suffered an excise tax loss of approximately €2 billion in 2016. This illicit trade was linked to jihadists traveling to Syria and Iraq and terrorist attacks in France. Counterfeit cigarettes are also among the most investigated IP-crime in the UK and are linked directly to criminal organizations.

In Asia, there are plans to introduce plain packaging legislation in Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan, Sri Lanka, and Nepal.

This may a dangerous precedent.

Soon, other “sin products” will be targeted — alcohol, sugary drinks and beverages, fatty foods, even toys.

I am a non-smoker and have never been a fan of smoking. I am just a fan of individual liberty and people having the freedom what to do with their own body and life, also a fan of the rule of law and people’s right to private property.

The plain packaging scheme is dangerous because (a) it disrespects private property rights and IPR laws, (b) encourages the production of illicit items from illicit and possibly criminal players who can easily play with price competition, (c) it encourages more consumption because very cheap products with no brands are more easily available, and (d) it reduces government potential excise tax revenues, which might result in creating new taxes elsewhere.

 

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is President of Minimal Government Thinkers, a member-institute of Economic Freedom Network (EFN) Asia.

minimalgovernment@gmail.com.

Coal tax to raise power costs, drive off investors — DoE

A PROPOSED LAW that will tax the use of coal will be a setback for the country, which is already at a disadvantage because of its high cost of electricity, the Department of Energy (DoE) said.

“It is a problem for DoE because DoE is looking for ways to bring down our tariffs so that we can be competitive in attracting the manufacturers to our country. So that would make our job doubly difficult,” DoE Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi told reporters on the sidelines of a Senate hearing on Tuesday.

He said any form of tax that will be passed on to consumers would result in raising electricity cost.

“We already have the highest [power rates] in our region, and they will rise further,” he said.

Mr. Cusi’s comments on the proposal, which was approved by the Senate, follows Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian’s earlier remarks on the bill, which will be heard soon by both Houses of Congress.

Mr. Gatchalian said the country sources 50% of its energy supply from coal-fired power plants. At such, the impact of a P100 increase in excise tax on coal will result in a P4.78 increase in the bill of an average household consuming 200 kilowatt-hours (kWh) a month, he said.

For a P200 increase, the increase in power rates will be P9.57, and at P300 the corresponding rise is P14.35. At P600, the increase is almost P29 per kWh.

Mr. Gatchalian said 27 electric cooperatives source their supply of electricity from 100% coal. This is quarter of the total electric cooperatives in the country, he said.

“They serve around 2.7 million households… that is 10% of the total households of the entire country,” he said.

In effect, the 2.7 million families being supplied by 100% of coal, will feel a P10 increase at P100 per metric ton excise tax and will feel P20 increase at P200 and P28 increase at P300, he said.

“Unfortunately in our regime right now, coal is a direct pass on cost to the consumers so any increase in the cost of coal, will come straight from the pockets of consumers,” he said partly in Filipino.

Mr. Cusi also told reporters that the DoE’s commercial arm Philippine National Oil Co. (PNOC) has received unsolicited proposals from three foreign entities that are keen to enter into a partnership to develop an integrated liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility.

“What I was informed (is) there is Kepco, there is Lloyds and CNOOC,” Mr. Cusi told reporters on Tuesday.

PNOC President and Chief Executive Officer Reuben S. Lista did not immediately respond to a request for details on the three entities. — Victor V. Saulon

VR headset shipments peak as prices drop

VIRTUAL REALITY (VR) headset shipments are showing no signs of slowing, as the quarterly total exceeded 1 million units for the first time in the third quarter this year, data from a market analyst firm showed.

According to Canalys’ quarterly market tracker released on Nov. 27, Sony took the lead, shipping more than 490,000 PlayStation VR (PS VR) sets in the third quarter. It was followed by Oculus, which shipped 210,000 of its Rift headsets. HTC took third place, shipping 160,000 Vive VR units. Collectively, Sony, Oculus and HTC made up 86% of the total market in Q3 2017.

VR headset shipments peak as prices drop

Oculus increased shipments of its Rift headsets by cutting the price to US$399 for a limited time, matching that of the PS VR. “VR adoption in the consumer segment is highly dependent on price, and Oculus’ strategy of lowering prices has definitely helped drive adoption,” said Canalys Research Analyst Vincent Thielke in a statement.

Canalys defines a virtual reality headset as a device with a display designed to be worn on the face that immerses the viewer in a virtual world, and it excludes simple viewers, such as Samsung’s Gear VR and Google’s Daydream View.

SteelAsia pushes for steel industry council

STEELASIA Manufacturing Corp. is pushing for the creation of a council for the iron and steel industry, composed of the private sector and the government, to help ensure its competitiveness.

“It is time for Philippines to have its own – a council for iron and steel [where] the government will charter the policy and support a competitive market-driven environment, industrial policies [which] must be revised to be in favor of [a more] efficient, of more technologically driven enterprises,” SteelAsia Chairman and CEO Benjamin O. Yao said during the Manufacturing Summit 2017 in Makati City on Wednesday.

Mr. Yao noted the industry development council created by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) is a “good start for the government and private sector to craft a policy and set standards for growth for these core industries.”

Citing other Asian countries as an example, Mr. Yao pointed out the need to have a coordinating council for “certain core industries” — such as iron and steel — which need more attention due to technical demands and special circumstances to monitor development and standards in its operations.

At the same time, Mr. Yao said they are in currently in talks with a former partner to build “an ecosystem of steel-based industry” which requires an investment estimated at $1.5 billion, and considered as the first step in forming an integrated steel industry.

“Those who venturing into manufacturing must be encouraged to build strong partnership not only to suppliers but also to customers and the present those with the best synergies will fly. Those who fail to build linkages will perish,” he added. — A.G.A. Mogato

Stranded whale rescued in Quezon

AN 11.9-meter whale, which was spotted seemingly stranded in the waters off Patnanungan, Quezon, was rescued on Nov. 28 by a joint team of the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG), Municipal Agriculture Office, and the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources-Region 4A office in the town. The PCG Sub-Station Patnanungan reported that upon ocular inspection, the marine mammal, which could not be immediately verified to be sperm whale, had “bruises and wounds in different parts of its body.” The whale was successfully guided towards open water.

World Senior Championship

World Seniors +50 Championship
Acqui Terme, Italy
Nov. 7-18, 2017

Final Top Standings

1. GM Julio Granda Zuniga PER 2650, 9.5/11

2-3. GM Rogelio Antonio, Jr. PHI 2431, GM Eric Prie FRA 2482, 8.5/11

4-10. GM Zurab Sturua GEO 2536, GM Giorgi Bagaturov GEO 2399, IM Evgenij Kalegin RUS 2426, GM Klaus Bischoff GER 2513, IM Alexander Reprintsev UKR 2361, IM Gerard Welling NED 2316, IM Stephen Mannon SCO 2294, 7.5/11

Total of 95 Participants

World Seniors +65 Championship
Acqui Terme, Italy
Nov. 7-18, 2017

Final Top Standings

1. Evgeny Sveshnikov RUS 2480, 8.5/11

2-10. Anatoly Vaisser FRA 2503, GM Vlastimil Jansa CZE 2425, GM Vladimir Okhotnik FRA 2434, GM Lothar Vogt GER 2398, GM Yuri Balashov RUS 2437, GM Eugenio Torre PHI 2465, IM Alexander Lisenko RUS 2372, IM Jan Rooze BEL 2314, GM Evgeni Vasiukov RUS 2404, 8.0/11

Total of 166 Participants

Time Control for both tournaments: 90 minutes for the first 40 moves, then 30 minutes play-to-finish with 30 seconds added to your time after every move starting move 1

The World Seniors Championship were held amongst the hot Sulphur springs of the Northern Italian city of Acqui Terme. Filipino GM Eugene Torre tied for second behind Evgeny Sveshnikov in the 65 and over category while GM Joey Antonio tied for 2nd in the 50 and above tournament.

The Senior Chess Championship was started in 1991 and originally had an age floor of 60 years for men and 50 years for women. In 2014 the title was split into two age categories, the 50+ and 65+ which require the participants to reach the age of 50 and 65 years by Dec. 31 of the year of the event. Winners for the men’s event since 2014 were:

2014, Anatoly Vaisser 65+, Zurab Sturua 50+

2015, Vladimir Okhotnik 65+, Predrag Nikolic 50+

2016, Anatoly Vaisser 65+, Giorgi Bagaturov 50+

This year both defending champions were present to defend their crowns, although unsuccessfully.

Julio Granda Zuniga from Peru just turned 50 this year and was the highest rated player in the tournament. He won eight and drew three games for 8.5/11, a full point ahead of the silver medalist GM Joey Antonio. He is known as a “natural” player, with limited opening knowledge (remember, I said “limited,” not “non-existent) but with a feel for the position which marks him out as a chess genius. GM Granda has been competing since childhood and as late as 2014 was the American Continental Champion.

GM Joey Antonio, the silver medalist, was also undefeated with six wins and five draws. His opponent in the following game is FM Krishan Jhunjhnuwala, the strongest of the Jhunjhnuwala brothers (Krishnan, Ramesh, Naresh and Suresh) who used to represent Hong Kong in team tournaments back in the late ’70s and 1980s.

Antonio,Rogelio, Jr. (2431) — Jhunjhnuwala,Krishan (2340) [B30]
27th World Senior Chess Championship 20 Acqui Terme (8.3), 15.11.2017

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Qb6

Jhunjhnuwala has his own theories in the opening. More common here is 3…g6, 3…d6, or 3…e6.

4.Nc3 e6 5.0–0 Nd4 6.a4 Ne7 7.d3 Nec6 8.Bxc6 bxc6 9.e5 d6 10.exd6 Bxd6 11.Ne4 Be7 12.Nxd4 cxd4 13.Qg4 Kf8 14.Qg3 c5 15.a5 Qc6 16.Bf4 Bb7 17.a6! Bxa6 18.Bd6

White is threatening 19.Bxe7+ Kxe7 20.Rxa6! Qxa6 21.Qc7+ Kf8 (21…Ke8 22.Nd6+ wins the queen) 22.Ng5 White has a mating attack.

18…Bxd6 19.Qxd6+ Qxd6 20.Nxd6 Bc8 21.Ra5 Ke7 22.Ne4 Bd7 23.Rfa1 Rhb8 24.b3 Rb7 25.f4 Bc6 26.Nxc5 Rc7 27.b4 Bd5 28.g3 Kd6 29.Ra6+ Ke7 30.Kf2 h5 31.R6a5 Kf6 32.h3 g5 33.fxg5+ Kxg5 34.Re1 Rb8? <D>

POSITION AFTER 34…RB8

Falls into the trap.

35.Rxe6! Rxc5

[35…fxe6 36.Nxe6+ wins the rook on c7]

36.Re5+ Kf6 37.Rxd5 Rxc2+ 38.Kf3

Material is equal but Black’s pawns are weak and will fall.

38…Rxb4 39.Ra6+ Kg7 40.Rg5+ Kf8 41.Rxa7

Intending Rf5.

41…Rc1

So that if 42.Rf5 then Rf1+

42.Rxh5 Rf1+ 43.Kg2 Rf6 44.Ra8+ Kg7 45.Rg5+ Kh7 46.Ra2 Rb3 47.Rd2 Rd6 48.g4 f6 49.Rf5 Kg6 50.Rf3 Re6 51.Rf4 Rd6 52.h4 Ra3 53.Kg3 Rb3 54.Re4 Ra3 55.Kf4 Rb3 56.Re7 Rb1 57.h5+ Kh6 58.Rf2 Rd1 59.Rf3 Rg1 60.Rf7 Rg2 61.Rf1 Rd2 62.Kg3 Rxd3+ 63.Kh4 Rd2

And now for the coup de grace.

64.R1xf6+ Rxf6 65.g5# 1–0

I couldn’t believe GM Eugene Torre is already past 65. Whereas a lot of us are already winding down, however, he still keeps a very busy schedule playing, teaching, coaching, giving exhibitions. He is truly the Philippines’ greatest ambassador of chess.

Playing White in the following game is IM Herman Claudius van Riemsdijk of Brazil. He has had a long and distinguished career: 3-time Champion of Brazil and has represented his country 11 times in the chess Olympiad from 1972 up to 1998. Van Riemsdijk currently keeps himself busy coaching Brazilian junior players and has written a book on pawn endings.

Van Riemsdijk, Herman C. (2284) — Torre, Eugenio (2465) [C80]
27th World Senior Chess Championship 20 Acqui Terme (10.4), 17.11.2017

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 Nf6 5.0–0 Nxe4 6.Re1

This was the way White usually played against the Open Spanish in the 19th century. This is also a favorite of Van Riemsdijk, so I imagine GM Eugene was not surprised when 6.Re1 appeared on the board. Of course, nowadays it is the rule rather than the exception that White continues 6.d4 b5 7.Bb3 d5 8.dxe5 Be6.

6…Nc5 7.Bxc6

If White wants to test Black’s theoretical knowledge then he should try 7.Nc3 when after the most obvious move 7…Nxa4? (7…Be7 is correct) White can lash out with 8.Nxe5! and now Black has three possible moves: (1) 8…Be7, (2) 8…Nxe5 and (3) 8…Nxc3 and only the first alternative does not lose.

Let us go through the lines quickly.

8…Be7! 9.Nd5 Nc5 10.Nxc6 dxc6 11.Nxe7 Be6! Black holds

8…Nxc3? loses to 9.Nxc6+ Be7 10.Nxe7! Nxd1 11.Ng6+ Qe7 12.Nxe7 White wins a piece as Black’s knight has no escape;

8…Nxe5? 9.Rxe5+ Be7 10.Nd5! 0–0 11.Nxe7+ Kh8 12.Qh5 d5 (There is another pretty finish possible: 12…g6 13.Qh6 d6 14.Rh5! gxh5 15.Qf6#) 13.Qxh7+! 1–0 (13) Voronova,T-Phuong,V (LAT vs VIE) Istanbul Olympiad 2000.

7…dxc6 8.d4 Ne6 9.Nxe5 Be7 10.Be3 0–0 11.c4 f6 12.Nd3 Re8 13.Nc5 b6 14.Nb3 a5

White has wasted a lot of time with his knight and Black with his two bishops soon takes over the game.

15.a4 Bb4 16.Bd2 Bf8 17.Bc3 Ng5 18.N1d2 Bf5 19.Nf1 Rxe1 20.Bxe1 Qd7 21.Ne3 Bg6 22.Nc1?!

Not a good move as it blocks the communication between white’s queen and rook. Black immediately takes advantage of it.

22…Rd8 23.Bc3

White is weak on the d-file so Black can reposition his dark-squared bishop to d6 via …c5 and …d6.

23…Ne4 24.Ne2 c5 25.d5

Not 25.dxc5? Qe8 26.Qc1 Bxc5 Black has very strong pressure. His immediate threat is 27…Nxf2! 28.Kxf2 Rd1! White cannot take the rook because of mate: 29.Qxd1 Qxe3+ 30.Ke1 Qf2+ 31.Kd2 Be3#.

25…Bd6 26.Be1 Re8 27.f3 Ng5 28.Ra3 Be5 29.Qd2 Bh5

With the idea of 30…Bxf3 — White cannot recapture because of the coming knight fork on f3.

30.h4 Nxf3+ 31.gxf3 Bxf3

Black intends to follow-up with …Qh3, forcing mate.

32.Ng3 Bd4 33.Kh2 Re5 34.Nef5?

White has to continue defending passively, for example with 34.Bf2.

34…Rxf5! 35.Nxf5 Qxf5 36.Bg3 h5 37.Bxc7 Qb1 38.Rxf3 Qg1+ 39.Kh3 Qg4+

Black does one repetition to gain some time on the clock before he takes the rook.

40.Kh2 Qg1+ 41.Kh3 Qg4+ 42.Kh2 Qxf3 43.Bg3 Qf1

GM Eugene misses a faster win: 43…Bg1+ 44.Kxg1 Qxg3+ 45.Qg2 Qxh4 the three connected passed pawns on the kingside guarantee the win.

44.Qg2 Qxc4 45.d6 Qe6 46.Qa8+ Kh7 47.Qf3 Kg6 48.b3 f5 49.Qd3 Kf6 50.Qd2 g6 51.Bf4 Qe4 52.Kg3 Ke6 53.Qg2 0–1

White gives up. Black will soon force the exchange of queens after which the endgame is an easy win.

 

Bobby Ang is a founding member of the National Chess Federation of the Philippines (NCFP) and its first Executive Director. A Certified Public Accountant (CPA), he taught accounting in the University of Santo Tomas (UST) for 25 years and is currently Chief Audit Executive of the Equicom Group of Companies.

bobby@cpamd.net