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Ex-BARMM chief declines MP appointment

COTABATO CITY — Former Chief Minister of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) Ahod Balawag Ebrahim has declined his appointment as member of its 80-seat parliament.

“I have decided to respectfully decline that appointment,” said Mr. Ebrahim, who was officially installed as BARMM’s chief minister in 2019 by then-President Rodrigo R. Duterte.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. Early this month designated Abdulrauf Abdul Macacua as the new BARMM chief minister, in place of Mr. Ebrahim, who is also chairman of the central committee of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

Mr. Ebrahim finally acknowledged Mr. Macacua, who is also chief of MILF’s Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces on Monday in a congratulatory message dispatched to media outfits in Central Mindanao.

Mr. Macacua told reporters on Monday that he appreciates deeply the role of Mr. Ebrahim, the members of the regional parliament that he had led for five years, and all the ministers at the helm of different agencies in the autonomous region in setting up the facets for regional governance in the context of Moro autonomy together conceptualized by the MILF and the national government in two decades of peace talks.

Mr. Macacua said he will do his best to sustain the gains of the peace, security and development initiatives of Ebrahim, his predecessor.

Mr. Macacua said he is grateful to all members of the MILF, the civil society organizations and the international humanitarian and peace-advocacy entities helping the BARMM government foster peace and sustainable development in the Bangsamoro region.

The Bangsamoro region covers the provinces of Maguindanao del Sur, Maguindanao del Norte, Lanao del Sur, Basilan and Tawi-Tawi and the cities of Lamitan, Marawi and Cotabato, where its regional capitol is located. — John Felix M. Unson

Giant-killing spree continues

ALEXANDRA EALA from the Philippines serves against Madison Keys of the USA (not pictured) on day six of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium. — REUTERS/GEOFF BURKE-IMAGN IMAGES

Eala stuns world No. 5 Madison Keys

AND Alexandra “Alex” Eala’s Cinderella run continued with the biggest win not only of her career but of the entire Philippine tennis.

A wildcard entry among the sport’s biggest stars, Ms. Eala took down another heavyweight in world No. 5 Madison Keys of the United States, 6-4, 6-2, to barge into the 2025 Miami Open Round of 16 on Monday at the Hardrock Stadium in Florida.

On the heels of a massive win against world No. 25 Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia, Ms. Eala braved on and scored an ever greater feat in the Round of 32 at the expense of the American ace at home.

Ms. Eala, WTA No. 140, needed only 87 minutes to trample Ms. Keys, who’s coming off a stunning championship run in the Australian Open last January.

Ms. Keys’ served as the second big fish in Ms. Eala’s frying pan after upsetting former French Open champion Ms. Ostapenko in the Round of 64.

Not only did Ms. Eala slay two Grand Slam champions but she also became the first Filipina player in history to beat a Top-25 and Top-5 player in the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) rankings.

Ms. Eala did it behind a flawless game, banking on a 3-1 blitz in the first set before repelling Ms. Keys’ furious comeback by owning the last two games.

She then flaunted the same composure in the second set, blanking Ms. Keys in the last four games to break away from a deadlock at two games each.

Prior to Mses. Ostapenko and Keys, Ms. Eala also drubbed world No. 73 Katie Volynets of the USA, 6-3, 7-6(3), in the Round of 128.

“I feel like growing up, it was tough because you didn’t have anyone from where you are to pave the way (for you). Of course you had many people to look up to around the world but I hope this takes Philippine tennis to another step,” said Ms. Eala, who jumped, shouted and cried in euphoria after a monumental victory.

Ms. Eala, who has trained at Rafa Nadal’s academy in Mallorca since she was 13, required a medical timeout for what appeared to be a leg injury but was a force from the baseline against Ms. Keys, who reached the Indian Wells semifinal last week.

But the Filipina tennister is not done yet, setting her sights on another top-ranked player in WTA No. 10 Spain’s Paula Badosa, who scored a 6-3, 7-6(3) win over Denmark’s Clara Tauson, in the Round of 16.

At stake for Ms. Eala is her first-ever quarterfinal stint in the WTA 1000 tourney for another history. — John Bryan Ulanday

Swiatek beats Mertens

FORMER CHAMPION Iga Swiatek earned a 7-6(2), 6-1 win over Belgian 27th seed Elise Mertens that made the Polish second seed the first player to reach the last 16 of a WTA 1000 event in 25 consecutive appearances.

Swiatek built a seemingly comfortable 5-2 lead in the first set but Mertens managed to claw back to 5-5 before the Pole ran away with the tiebreaker and breezed through the second frame.

“I’m happy that I got my level up in the tiebreaker to close it in two sets. Also in the second set I felt like I was playing good, big confidence,” said Swiatek. “Yeah, overall I’m happy with the performance and how I worked through some issues.”

Up next for Swiatek will be Ukrainian Elina Svitolina, who beat Czech 15th seed Karolina Muchova 6-2, 3-6, 6-2 and is looking to build on her run to the Indian Wells quarterfinal where she lost to eventual champion Mirra Andreeva.

In other women’s action, Andreeva’s bid for a “Sunshine Double” ended as American 17th seed Amanda Anismova beat the Russian 11th seed 7-6(5), 2-6, 6-3.

Anisimova will next face former US Open champion Emma Raducanu, who advanced after American McCartney Kessler retired due to a lower back injury while trailing the Briton 6-1, 3-0.

American fourth seed Jessica Pegula rallied to beat Russian Anna Kalinskaya 6-7(3), 6-2, 7-6(2) and will face Ukraine’s Marta Kostyuk in the fourth round. — Reuters

Gin Kings brace for TNT fighting stand in Game 6

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DOWN but not out, TNT is committed to put up a big fight to stop Barangay Ginebra from delivering the kill shot and ascending to the PBA Commissioner’s Cup throne.

After leading, 2-1, the Tropang Giga dropped back-to-back games, 95-78 and 73-66, to find themselves in a do-or-die in Wednesday’s Game 6 at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.

“I see us fighting like hell, fighting to win, fighting to play an excellent game, fighting to give maximum effort all 48 minutes, whether we go up or not, and just staying locked in (in Game 6),” Rondae Hollis-Jefferson (RHJ) said with strong conviction.

“(Coach) Chot (Reyes) said it to us — it’s about mental (toughness), like our mentality going into those crucial moments, turning (the ball) over, being wrong on a defensive play, allowing someone to jump up the screen,” he added.

RHJ and Co. went up by as many as 10 in the Game 5 tiebreaker last Sunday but coughed up only 11 in the third and 10 in the fourth, allowing Ginebra to steal the third W and go on the hill.

“Well, basketball is about scoring points, putting the ball in the basket and we couldn’t do it,” rued Mr. Reyes. whose troops missed several gimmes and open long shots in the stretch.

“We’re keeping them down to 75 points and we’re still losing games. They scored 71 in Game 2 and we lost. In Game 5, they scored 73 and we lost. We have no business winning if we can’t score more than 75.”

Ginebra, meanwhile, is ready to face TNT’s fighting stand head-on.

“We will come and try with all our might (to clinch it),” said Justin Brownlee, who isn’t letting a dislocated right thumb prevent him from helping the Gin Kings’ attempt to get back at their tormentors in their last two Governors’ Cup finals.

“TNT is a great team as the past has shown. They beat us two times in the finals so we know it’s not going to be easy. The hardest game in my opinion and in my experience is the closeout game,” he added.

Notes: After the Game 3 shoving and shouting incident with teammate Glen Khobuntin, Poy Erram got involved in another heated exchange on the TNT bench, this time with coach Chot Reyes. This happened in the third quarter of Game 5 at the height of Ginebra’s searing fightback. “Ah that’s just, I just got fed up with all the antics,” shared Mr. Reyes. “So I let him have a piece of my mind.” Like true pros, the two set aside the incident and went right back to work. — Olmin Leyba

Philippines battles Maldives at AFC Asian Cup Qualifiers

PHILIPPINE MEN’S FOOTBALL TEAM — FACEBOOK.COM/PHILIPPINEMENSNATIONALFOOTBALLTEAM

Match on Tuesday
(New Clark City Stadium, Capas)
7 p.m. – Philippines vs Maldives

THE Philippines aims to take the first step on the road back to the Continent’s football showpiece with a victory against Maldives in Tuesday’s Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Asian Cup Qualifiers (ACQ) opener in Capas, Tarlac.

The Filipinos, who missed out on the Asian Cup in 2023 after making their debut four years before, seek a winning start in Group A in their new home at the New Clark City Stadium.

Coach Albert Capellas’ charges hope to sustain the momentum from their big gains in the last Asean Championship-Mitsubishi Electric Cup, where they reached the semifinals and even beat Thailand for the first time in 52 years in the first leg of the Final Four, 2-1.

“The good performance in the Asean Cup gave us a lot of hope that we are closer to the level that we’re looking for,” said Mr. Capellas, who has assembled a fighting crew led by holdovers Manny Ott, Jesper Nyholm, Amani Aguinaldo, Jarvey Gayoso, Sandro Reyes, and Bjørn Kristensen and new faces Randy Schneider and Josef Baccay for the ACQ.

“And now we have a very important game against Maldives. We want to finish the group in first position, which means we have to win the first game and make Philippine supporters proud.”

Only one spot in the 2027 Asian Cup is at stake in the group with Tajikistan, quarterfinalist in the 2023 meet, looming as the Philippines’ biggest rival.

The Tajiks kick off their bid against Timor Leste over in Dushanbe also on Tuesday. — Olmin Leyba

Petro Gazz, ZUS Coffee clash for last spot to PVL semifinals

Game on Tuesday
(PhilSports Arena)
6 p.m. – ZUS vs Petro Gazz

PETRO GAZZ tries to restore order while ZUS Coffee aims to complete a changing of the guard as the two clash one last time on Tuesday for the last spot to the Premier Volleyball League (PVL) All-Filipino Conference semifinals at the PhilSports Arena.

The Angels bounced back from a 25-21, 25-23, 27-25 Game One defeat to the Thunderbelles last week in Pasig with a 25-19, 25-13, 28-26 win on Saturday in Antipolo that knotted their series at one apiece and force this 6 p.m. deciding Game Three.

The winner will join Creamline, Choco Mucho and Akari in the round-robin format semis unfurling on Saturday at the Ynares Center Antipolo.

And expect nothing less than a battle of attrition.

“It’s going to be a battle,” said Petro Gazz’s power-hitting spiker Brooke Van Sickle, who dropped a 17-point performance in that series-tying Game Two win.

Ms. Van Sickle said it would be a question of who wants it more.

“We got to be ready, focused and, most importantly, we got to be more energized,” she said.

For the Jerry Yee-mentored Thunderbelles, they would need to be more aggressive similar to what they did when they shellacked the unsuspecting Angels in the opener. — Joey Villar

Nuggets’ Jamal Murray scores 39 in key win over Rockets

JAMAL MURRAY scored 17 of his game-high 39 points in a turnaround third quarter as the Denver Nuggets claimed a critical 116-111 victory over the host Houston Rockets on Sunday.

Murray shot 15-for-28 and added seven assists to help the Nuggets (45-27) overcome the absence of star center Nikola Jokic, who missed his fourth consecutive game with a left ankle impingement.

Murray scored 12 straight points during one decisive stretch in the third, a run that he capped with an alley-oop pass to DeAndre Jordan, who scored through a foul and subsequently completed a three-point play that supplied the Nuggets an 86-73 lead with 2:39 remaining in the period. The Nuggets outscored the Rockets 39-22 in the third.

Denver shot 50.6% from the field (44 of 87) and closed within one game of Houston (46-26) for second place in the Western Conference. Jordan (11 points, 15 rebounds) posted a double-double subbing for Jokic. Michael Porter Jr. added 17 points and nine rebounds, while Aaron Gordon chipped in 13 points and eight assists.

Jalen Green scored 30 points to pace the Rockets, who had their nine-game winning streak snapped. Dillon Brooks added 21 points with five 3-pointers, including a corner 3 with 1:16 left in regulation that cut what was once a 19-point deficit to 109-105.

Alperen Sengun assisted on Brooks’ fifth 3 for his eighth career triple-double (17 points, 14 rebounds, 10 assists). Steven Adams had 14 points and 12 rebounds off the Houston bench.

Denver responded to an early salvo from the Rockets with a 15-2 run that netted the Nuggets a 17-13 lead. Murray and Porter scored six points each during that surge while Houston missed six consecutive shots. The Rockets pulled even at 27-27 by the close of the first period despite the starting backcourt of Green and Fred VanVleet scoring seven points on 2-for-8 shooting.

Over the final 5:20 of the first half, the teams produced five deadlocks, with Christian Braun pulling the Nuggets even at 43-43 with a dunk and at 45-45 with a transition layup. Murray answered a Green 3-pointer with 31 seconds left with a 3-pointer four seconds later that knotted the score at 57-57 at halftime. Green scored 15 first-half points while Murray tallied 17. — Reuters

Thunder escape from LA with 2-point win over Clippers

SHAI GILGEOUS-ALEXANDER scored 26 points and Aaron Wiggins added 19 as the Oklahoma City Thunder extended their winning streak to six games by holding on for a 103-101 victory over the Los Angeles (LA) Clippers on Sunday at Inglewood, California.

Isaiah Hartenstein scored 14 points with 10 rebounds and Alex Caruso added 14 points for the Thunder (59-12), who clinched the top seed in the Western Conference last week.

Oklahoma City plays at Sacramento on Tuesday before returning home for six of their next seven games as they make preparations for the upcoming playoffs.

Kawhi Leonard scored 25 points with 10 rebounds and James Harden added 17 points as the Clippers (40-31) saw their five-game winning streak come to an end.

Ivica Zubac scored 15 points with 11 rebounds for the Clippers, who also saw their eight-game home winning streak snapped. Los Angeles was unable to move into a tie for sixth place in the Western Conference with the Golden State Warriors. 

The Clippers trailed 81-77 heading into the fourth quarter before taking a 91-90 lead with seven minutes remaining on two free throws from Amir Coffey.

After Gilgeous-Alexander and Leonard exchanged baskets, the Clippers remained in front until the Thunder tied the score 97-97 on a free throw from Cason Wallace with 2:32 left. Oklahoma City went in front 100-99 on a 3-pointer from Caruso with 1:54 on the clock.

Trailing 101-100, the Clippers had two chances to take the lead in the final 22 seconds, but Norman Powell missed a 3-point attempt and Leonard was off target on a contested 21-footer.

Gilgeous-Alexander iced the victory against his former team on two free throws with three seconds remaining.

The Clippers turned a productive first quarter into a 34-24 lead before the Thunder responded with a 33-point second quarter to take a 57-51 halftime lead. Gilgeous-Alexander scored 17 points in the half.

Oklahoma City’s second-leading scorer, Jalen Williams (21.3 points), missed his fifth consecutive game with a hip injury. Ousmane Dieng (calf) also was out. — Reuters

SK court reinstates impeached PM Han as acting president

ACTING South Korean President and Prime Minister Han Duck-soo delivers an address to the nation at the government complex in Seoul, South Korea, Dec. 14, 2024. — YONHAP VIA REUTERS

SEOUL — South Korea’s (SK)  Constitutional Court reinstated Prime Minister (PM) Han Duck-soo to the post of acting president on Monday, striking down his impeachment as he pledged to focus on steering Asia’s fourth-biggest economy through a US “trade war.”

The ruling, which comes amid months of political turmoil in the country, returns Mr. Han to power immediately. He took over as acting leader from President Yoon Suk Yeol, who was himself impeached over his brief imposition of martial law in December.

“I believe the people are making it very clear, in one voice, that the extreme confrontation in politics must stop,” said Mr. Han, who thanked the court for its “wise decision” and the Cabinet for their hard work while he was suspended.

“As acting president, I will do my best to maintain stable state administration, and devote all wisdom and capabilities to safeguard national interests in the trade war,” Mr. Han said in televised comments.

South Korea, one of the world’s top exporters, has been bracing for the potential impact of a range of threatened tariffs under US President Donald J. Trump.

South Korea has already seen US tariffs on steel and aluminum and has been seeking an exemption from reciprocal US tariffs due to come in next month. Earlier this month, Mr. Trump singled out South Korea for applying high tariffs on US exports.

Mr. Yoon’s martial law declaration plunged the key US military ally into its greatest political crisis in decades, and sparked a leadership vacuum amid spiraling impeachments, resignations, and criminal indictments for a range of top officials.

Mr. Han had initially lasted less than two weeks in the post and was impeached and suspended on Dec. 27 after clashing with the opposition-led parliament by refusing to appoint three more justices to the Constitutional Court.

The justices ruled on Monday seven to one to strike down the impeachment.

Five of the eight justices said the impeachment motion was valid, but there were not enough grounds to impeach Mr. Han as he did not violate the constitution or the law, according to a court statement.

Two justices ruled that the impeachment motion against Mr. Han, who was acting president at the time, was invalid from the start as two-thirds of lawmakers in parliament did not pass it.

One justice voted to impeach Mr. Han.

‘CIVIL WAR’
Mr. Han, 75, had served in leadership positions for more than three decades under five presidents, both conservative and liberal.

In a country sharply divided by partisan rhetoric, Mr. Han had been seen as a rare example of an official whose varied career transcended party lines.

Still, the opposition-led parliament accused him of not doing enough to thwart Mr. Yoon’s decision to declare martial law, an accusation he denied.

Lee Jae-myung, head of the opposition Democratic Party, said Mr. Han’s ruling must be accepted but urged the Constitutional Court to swiftly make a decision on President Yoon’s impeachment.

The court is expected to rule within days, though its deliberations have dragged out longer than expected. Mr. Yoon also faces a separate criminal trial on charges of leading an insurrection by declaring martial law.

If Mr. Yoon is removed, a new presidential election will be held within 60 days.

“The court’s continued delay in ruling is fueling concern and conflict… We can now anticipate the situation going beyond a psychological civil war to become an actual physical civil war,” said Mr. Lee, who is leading in opinion polls to win an election if Mr. Yoon is removed.

South Korea has seen huge, mostly peaceful, rallies both in support of Mr. Yoon and calling for his removal in recent months.

Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok had assumed the position of acting president while the cases of Mr. Yoon and Mr. Han were considered by the Constitutional Court.

The unexpected imposition of martial law on Dec. 3 and the ensuing political upheaval sent shockwaves through South Korea, and raised concern among allies such as the United States under former President Joseph  Biden, who had seen Mr. Yoon as a key partner in efforts to counter China and North Korea.

The martial law in the end only lasted about six hours after lawmakers defied a security cordon around parliament and voted to reject the declaration. — Reuters

Paris residents vote in favor of making 500 more streets pedestrian

PEOPLE walk on Rue Hermel Street, one of the pedestrianized streets in Paris, France, March 21, 2025. — REUTERS

PARIS — Parisians voted in a referendum on Sunday to pedestrianize a further 500 of the city’s streets, giving fresh momentum to efforts by the French capital’s left-leaning town hall to curb car usage and improve air quality.

Some 65.96% of Parisians voted in favor of the measure, while 34.04% rejected it, official results showed. Only 4.06% of voters turned out in the consultation, which was organized by the municipality.

This was the third such referendum in Paris in as many years, following a 2023 vote that approved a ban on e-scooters, and a decision last year to triple parking charges for large SUVs.

The referendum will eliminate 10,000 more parking spots in Paris, adding to the 10,000 removed since 2020. The city’s two million residents will be consulted on which streets will become pedestrian areas.

Paris town hall data show car traffic in the city has more than halved since the Socialists took power in the capital at the turn of the century.

The 500 additional streets to be pedestrianized will bring the total number of these so-called “green lungs” to nearly 700, just over one-tenth of the capital’s streets.

Despite recent changes, Paris lags other European capitals in terms of green infrastructure — which include private gardens, parks, tree-lined streets, water and wetlands — making up only 26% of the city area versus a European capitals average of 41%, according to the European Environment Agency. — Reuters

Trump officials defend use of wartime law to deport migrants

A demonstrator holds a sign calling for protection from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement during a Board of Regents meeting at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington, U.S., March 12, 2025. — REUTERS

WASHINGTON — Trump administration officials on Sunday defended their use of extraordinary war powers to deport scores of Venezuelan migrants despite a judge blocking the move and Venezuela denying US officials’ assertions that the deportees were gang members.

“It’s modern-day warfare, and we are going to continue to fight that and protect American citizens every single step of the way,” Attorney General Pam Bondi told Fox News host Maria Bartiromo on the Sunday Morning Futures program.

Ms. Bondi said the Trump administration’s decision to deport 137 Venezuelan migrants last weekend to El Salvador was justified because they were members of Venezuela’s feared Tren de Aragua gang and posed a safety risk.

Venezuela’s Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello said on Friday, however, that none of the Venezuelans deported by the US to El Salvador were members of the gang, which Washington has declared a terrorist group. Relatives and immigration advocates for some of the men have also denied any links.

The administration used the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, a wartime law, to deport the migrants on the grounds that they were committing violent crimes and sending money back to Venezuela.

White House National Security Advisor Mike Waltz said on CBS’ Face the Nation program, without citing evidence, that Tren de Aragua was a proxy of the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

“The alien sedition act fully applies because we have also determined that this group is acting as a proxy of the Maduro regime,” Mr. Waltz said. “Maduro is deliberately emptying his prisons in a proxy manner to influence an attack on the United States.”

US District Judge James Boasberg said on Friday he would continue to probe whether the Trump administration violated his order temporarily blocking the use of the act for deportations after it failed to turn around two flights carrying the Venezuelans.

The Trump administration is facing a March 25 deadline to respond to his request for more details on the deportations.

Some legal scholars view the situation as an escalation in President Donald J. Trump’s confrontation with the judiciary and say it raises concerns of a looming constitutional crisis.

Mr. Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, told ABC News’ This Week program that he would not defy Mr. Boasberg’s order but reiterated that the Trump administration would continue its arrests of migrants they deem dangerous.

“We’re going to continue to arrest public safety threats and national security threats,” Mr. Homan said. “We will keep targeting the worst of the worst.”

Ms. Bondi criticized Mr. Boasberg for interfering with the Trump administration’s agenda.

“This is an out-of-control judge, a federal judge trying to control our entire foreign policy,” she said. — Reuters

[B-SIDE Podcast] How to make it as a female leader in finance

Follow us on Spotify BusinessWorld B-Side

What’s gender equality like in the finance industry? What challenges and opportunities do Filipinas face in this sector? BusinessWorld speaks with Abbie Dans-Casanova, president and CEO of SB Finance, in this B-Side episode.

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Interview by Patricia Mirasol
Audio editing by Arjale Queral