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Ageless Venus dares to dream of Serena final

MELBOURNE — Ageless Venus Williams is daring to dream of a possible glamour Australian Open final against sister Serena, but admits they both have their work cut to get there.

Venus Williams of the US hits a return against Germany’s Mona Barthel during their women’s singles fourth round match on day seven of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on January 22, 2017. / AFP PHOTO / PAUL CROCK / IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE

The American great progressed to an amazing 37th career Grand Slam quarter-final Sunday, needing all her big-match experience against determined German qualifier Mona Barthel 6-3, 7-5.

It sets her up against Russia’s Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova for a place in the last four and with Serena in the other side of the draw, the earliest they can meet will be the final.

Asked if she had thought about playing a ninth Grand Slam final against her sister, she replied: “That could hopefully happen. We both still have to work very hard to get there.

“Today I played a qualifier, and she hardly ever missed. So it doesn’t matter who you come up against, they are coming and they want to win, too.

“They have nothing to lose. I’m going to be focused on winning one round at a time and focus on doing what it takes to be there.”

The sisters played each other for the first time in Melbourne in 1998, with Venus coming out on top of the second-round match on her way to the quarterfinals.

So far, they have met in eight Grand Slam deciders, with Venus winning just once, at Wimbledon in 2008.

Serena, gunning for a record-breaking 23rd major crown, faces Barbora Strycova for a place in the quarters on Monday.

‘NOT THE END GOAL’
Venus’s victory over Barthel thrust her into the last eight for a ninth time at a tournament she is yet to win during a career that has earned her seven Grand Slam trophies, though none since that Wimbledon 2008 title.

Next up is Pavlyuchenkova, who upset her fellow Russian Svetlana Kuznetsova 6-3, 6-3.

Despite an elbow injury derailing her build-up to the opening Grand Slam of the year, Venus, who is yet to drop a set, said she was feeling fine.

And the 13th seed warned there was still plenty left in the tank.

“I think the first time I played this tournament I reached the quarter-finals, so I have done this,” she said.

“This is where you want to be, because you set yourself up to move forward, but this is not the end-all for me. This is not the end goal.”

Williams and Barthel had met two times before, with the American winning both. But despite her lowly 118 ranking, Barthel was never going to be a pushover.

She has three career singles titles to her name and is on the comeback trail after suffering chronic fatigue illness last year, which forced her out for four months.

Seeded 13, Williams used her wealth of experience to pounce early and storm to a 3-0 lead. She gave a service game away before reasserting her dominance with another break back.

Undeterred, Barthel kept coming back, winning a titanic seventh game that included six deuces to keep her hopes alive.

Williams, with the bright sun appearing to cause her problems, hit more unforced errors in the set but a superior number of winners made the difference as she finally nailed it in 42 minutes.

It was a much closer affair in the second set until a patient Williams, the oldest player in the women’s draw, broke in game 11 and served out the win. — AFP

Venus Williams of the US hits a return against Germany’s Mona Barthel during their women’s singles fourth round match on day seven of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on Jan. 22. — AFP

Furthering the Jr. NBA Philippines movement

THE National Basketball Association’s (NBA) global youth participation program, Jr. NBA, kicked off its 10th year in the country at the weekend with proponents eyeing to build on the gains of the last decade and further grow what has been an “effective and successful movement.”

Built around the core mission of helping develop participants’ fundamental basketball skills, build character and encourage an active and healthy lifestyle, the Jr. NBA program in the Philippines, geared as well to grow and improve the youth basketball experience for players, coaches and parents locally, has achieved a lot since its maiden holding in 2007.

Since opening its doors for the program, the Jr. NBA has seen 57,000 players and more than 3,000 coaches participate; 94 Jr. NBA All-Stars selected; 64 municipalities and cities play host to the program; 10 NBA and WNBA personalities, including Tina Thompson, Gordon Hayward, Nerlens Noel, Muggsy Bogues and Ruth Riley, join the conduct of the program; and a number of players move on to play in various leagues, including Aljon Mariano and Raphael Banal who are now in the Philippine Basketball Association, and Kobe Paras, now a freshman at US NCAA Division 1 team Creighton University.

Also, the Facebook page of the Jr. NBA Philippines has steadily grown its followers, now numbering more than 133,000.

“It has been a great ride for the Jr. NBA Philippines. To see the number of kids who have benefitted from the program it makes us super happy in the NBA to contribute to their development,” said Carlo Singson, Managing Director of NBA Philippines, in an interview with a group of sportswriters on the sidelines of the Jr. NBA Philippines 2017 tip-off last Saturday at the Don Bosco Technical Institute in Makati City.

“For our 10th year, we know there is room to be better so we are going to visit more cities and municipalities to reach more kids. We have raised the number of Jr. NBA All-Stars to 16, eight boys and eight girls. And we also have lined up a court refurbishment initiative under the NBA Cares platform,” he added.

RIGHT PARTNERS
Now on their 10th year, the NBA Philippines official further said that the program would not be rendered a success if not for the help of the right local partners, highlighting that for the Jr. NBA to sustain its gains it is important for them to continuously engage likeminded organizations.

“It is extremely important to have the right partners. Jr. NBA is not just an event but a movement. We are trying to help kids live an active and healthy lifestyle and learn positive values. It’s important for us to partner with the right organizations that have the same vision as ours. There is only so much we can do and to amplify things we need our media partners, marketing partners, basketball partners to spread the word about the Jr. NBA program,” Mr. Singson said.

And one of the steady partners of the program in its run is Alaska Milk Corp., the presenting partner of the Jr. NBA Philippines.

“Alaska has been a great partner for us not only for its reach but also with its basketball expertise through its coaches in our camps,” Mr. Singson said.

For Alaska Milk President and CEO Wilfred Uytengsu, Jr., whose group has been partner with Jr. NBA for seven years now, the program has been beneficial for them as well as an organization.

“I believe it’s a great collaboration between two fantastic organizations, who are committed to the youth in particular. We are no strangers to basketball being part of the PBA for a long time now but this also allows us to use the Aces as an icon and aspirational part of basketball, giving back to the youth, to the community. And the NBA gives us that expertise,” said Mr. Uytengsu in a separate interview.

“It also highlights Alaska’s emphasis on gender equality, encouraging more girls to play basketball and providing them opportunities through the Jr. WNBA,” the Alaska executive said.

A decade of Jr. NBA in the Philippines, Mr. Singson said they are more than ever determined to further its growth and build on its legacy as an effective program.

“The legacy of the Jr. NBA is all over us with various alumni making their mark in various basketball leagues as well as in other fields. But I think one of the great legacies of the Jr. NBA Philippines is being a model for the expansion of the program to other Southeast Asian countries. Apart from the Philippines, we are now in five other Southeast Asian countries and it’s a testament to how it has succeeded here,” Mr. Singson said.

The skills clinics of the Jr. NBA Philippines 2017, open to boys and girls aged 10 to 14 for free, will be held nationwide from January to April with stops in Bacolod, Batangas, Cagayan De Oro, Cavite, Cebu, Metro Manila and Subic. The National Training Camp where the top participants will be invited and trained by NBA and WNBA personalities will be held in Manila in May. After which the top 16 players comprising the Jr. NBA All-Stars will be selected and gifted with an overseas NBA experience with fellow All-Stars from other Southeast Asian countries. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Proponents and alumni of the Jr. NBA Philippines program which is now on its 10th year. — Jr. NBA Asia Facebook account

Participants do some drills during the tip-off of the 10th Jr. NBA Philippines at the Don Bosco Technical Institute in Makati City last Saturday. — Jr. NBA Asia Facebook account

No longer invited

The usual practice on invitations to request invitees for confirmation of attendance is intended to firm up the guest list and establish catering needs and reservations at hotels as well as champagne consumption. Still, confirmed attendees to a meeting can simply not show up or send a text message at the last minute with a vague excuse, “sorry, something came up” to declare their non-attendance.

Can the organizer of an event cancel just as abruptly?

Unless a meeting is prescribed by the company’s by-laws like a board or annual stockholders meeting, it seems easy enough to cancel or postpone, if all the attendees are notified in time by text or e-mail. And reasons for canceling do not even need to be catastrophic like a typhoon or fire, maybe the sudden migraine attack of the CEO. Even pedestrian reasons will suffice — the boss needed to go to Bora.

Scrapping a meeting is occasioned by the convener’s not answering his phone when an hour has already elapsed from the start time. Secretaries who untangle meetings do not need to give any particular reason for the boss’s absence and are seldom required to even think up of a credible excuse. They just say the boss is unavailable and the meeting will be rescheduled — you can take home the garlic rice and tomatoes.

When a meeting is called by the top summoning those lower in the food chain, the appointment cannot be canceled by those in the latter category. The higher up though can abruptly find such meeting unnecessary — I’ll just send you an e-mail on the subject. I don’t think we need to meet, after all. You can go ahead and get your eye cataract fixed as scheduled. See me when you can see me.

Frequently canceling meetings at the last minute is a bad habit. The routine occurrence of abrupt changes of schedules becomes a trait that then attaches to someone perceived as volatile. If meetings with this particular person seldom materialize, schedules with him are no longer calendared.

Some meetings are not canceled, but even moved earlier. (I really miss you.) These entail mutually satisfying expectations between two consenting adults, with no minutes taken on what transpired. The dates and times don’t even appear on the phone calendar.

Recently, there has been a new protocol on meetings that require its own rules of etiquette. What does an invitee do if the meeting is not cancelled but her participation in it merely scrapped — oh so sorry, but you are no longer invited. Please don’t show up and embarrass the receptionist.

Canceled invitations are different from cancelled appearances. The former is on the demand side of the equation — one’s presence is no longer welcome. The latter is a voluntary decision to snub an occasion due to some recent pique.

This new normal of a canceled invitation requires a proper reaction for the dis-invited. The media (old and new) are sure to try to cajole a reaction from the dropped guest. Here are some possible reactions.

Be honest. Of course, I’m disappointed. I had a good power point presentation ready for the meeting to which I had been asked not to go. As for this second non-invitation to the social event of the year, it’s too bad. I had a nice blue gown which I now have to put back in its box in the closet with new mothballs. I hope there will be other receptions I can wear this gown to. Of course, it’s the prerogative of the host to have a last-minute alteration of the guest list, and remove one plate from the head table.

Mention the faux pas as an administrative glitch. The one in charge of invitations should have be a bit more careful next time to vet the list. It will save on mail and printing to screen the invitees before they are alerted. Anyway, I’m sending back the invitation for recycling.

Anticipate the trolls. I was waiting for the cancellation of the invitation as I was sure there must have been a mistake. I didn’t want to send my regrets since such a notice was sure to be misinterpreted. Anyway, I hadn’t dressed up yet.

Hospitality now has new rules on invitations. Anyway, there are surely many other events where invitations are not necessary… or even expected.

A. R. Samson is chair and CEO of Touch DDB.

ar.samson@yahoo.com

Agri development fund, native animals and protected areas among Senate environment priorities

BILLS onallocating a portion of the development fund of local government units for agriculture and fisheries advancement, native animal development and expanding the coverage of the National Integrated and Protected Areas System (NIPAS) act are among the priorities of the Senate committees on environment and natural resources and agriculture and food, to be passed before the Holy Week break.

In a statement by Senator Cynthia A. Villar, chairperson of the Senate committee on environment and vice-chairperson of the committee on agriculture, she outlined her priority bills for the session.

Senators were asked in a caucus before the session to submit their priority bills.

“These bills were among the bills I filed to advance my legislative agenda in instituting reforms in the agriculture and environment sectors,” Ms. Villar said.

Senate Bill (SB) no. 318, or the Local Government Agriculture Development Act, would allocate 10% of LGU development funds for agriculture and fishery programs.

Citing the growing consumption of meat among Filipinos, SB no. 144 was filed to promote the breeding of native animals, which according to Ms. Villar would be cheaper to raise and more adaptable to the country’s climate.

The bill proposes the creation of a Philippine Native Animal Development Center, with the coordination of the Departments of Agriculture, Science and Technology, and Environment and Natural Resources, along with native animal growers’ organizations, and LGUs, which would come up with a 20-year framework for the development of this sector.

As for the expansion of the NIPAS law, Ms. Villar said this would include 97 additional protected areas in the 240 currently listed.

“If agriculture can grow at 3 to 4%, the average for the world, poverty in the country would substantially be reduced,” the senator said.

“The growth in the Philippine agricultural sector was only 1.7% yearly for the last five years. At the moment, there is slow and inefficient delivery of government support to the agriculture sector, and very limited impact of such support,” she added.

The Senate adjourns on March 17.

Counterfeit revolutions and factional struggles

Philippine politics is driven by the factional struggles over its rent-seeking system.

Rent-seeking is the non-market (primarily politically derived) extraction of surplus or profit. Economic Rent or unearned profit is generated from government-granted concessions, monopolistic privileges, quotas, political favors, outright extortion, etc. Income is unearned because economic activity from rent-seeking doesn’t enhance economic welfare or give value to consumers.

Post-independence, pre-Martial politics was characterized by alternating factions (primarily Liberal and Nacionalista Parties) competing peacefully via elections to control the system. Extraction took many forms, including foreign exchange allocation, favors and protection for industries and agricultural trade, awarding of mining and logging concessions, getting behest loans, and import quotas in various forms, etc.

MARCOS DICTATORSHIP DIDN’T CREATE A NEW SOCIETY
Former President Marcos, however, unilaterally changed the elite political settlement of peaceful competition for control of the rent-seeking system by declaring Martial Law in 1972. He did this because the struggle between the factions intensified after the presidential elections of 1969, when he precipitated a severe economic and political crisis. He caused the economic and political crisis because he printed money and won reelection (the first Philippine president to do so) with the help of “guns, goons, and gold.”

(For a more thorough discussion of Philippine path dependence toward rent-seeking, the reader can refer to my essay, “The Political Economy of Martial Law” in the book, Not on Our Watch: Martial Law Really Happened: We Were There, available in select Fully Booked stores. )

By launching a so-called New Society Revolution with the declaration of Martial Law, former President Marcos legitimized and disguised the monopolization of political power by his faction. The New Society was supposedly going to get rid of political warlords, eradicate the oligarchy, defeat Communist rebels, and instill discipline in society. To show he meant business, the first execution he made after Proclamation 1081 or declaration of one-man rule was the execution of Lim Seng, a notorious drug lord. He jailed the opposition’s main leader (Benigno S. Aquino, Jr.) and the leader of the anti-Marcos oligarchy (Geny Lopez).

His dictatorship, however, was no New Society.

It was marked by political oppression and abuse of human rights as his faction, unchecked by any political opposition, practiced rampant “crony capitalism.” Rent-seeking then reached new heights.

Marcos financed his regime from the foreign borrowings made possible by recycled oil money. (Marcos was lucky. He declared Martial Law in 1972. The Yom Kippur War erupted in 1973, which resulted in higher oil prices and the recycling of oil money by money center banks to developing countries. Foreign borrowings enabled him to prolong his one-man rule.)

However, the 1979 Iranian oil crisis exposed the weaknesses of the debt-financed economic system. Most of the foreign debt were frittered away by inefficient, corruption-riddled projects, inefficient monopolies enjoying various kinds of protection, or outright stealing. By 1981, the system was spent, a full-blown foreign exchange crisis erupted, and it was only a matter of time before the Marcos dictatorship fell.

EDSA 1 WASN’T EXACTLY A REVOLUTION EITHER
Then, the People Power Revolution led by Cory Aquino, the widow of Marcos’s erstwhile nemesis, happened in 1986. While it was a genuine anti-dictatorship revolution, expanding the democratic space and ending the political monopoly of the Marcos faction, it was also not a revolution in the classic sense because it restored the pre-Martial Law oligarchy to power and protected them with the protectionist, anti-FDI provisions in the 1987 Constitution.

However, the post-dictatorship regime of former President Cory Aquino was characterized by numerous coups and political threats. The stability of elite-dominated politics required the presence of the opposing factions for electoral competition for power. Hence, former President Aquino allowed both Imelda Marcos and Eduardo Cojuangco, Jr. to return from exile abroad. It was also a smart move as the two divided the loyalist votes between them in the 1992 presidential elections, and led to the election of Aquino’s anointed one, former President Fidel Ramos.

By 2016, however, it was clear that the post-dictatorship system enshrined in the 1987 Constitution was clearly spent.

After 28 years, there had been no inclusive growth, particularly in the countryside. (Although CARP, the signature legislation of former President Aquino, did not increase productivity, it was a success as an anti-insurgency measure. The Communist threat subsided but is still present because landless peasants just became poor landowners.) Monopolies in strategic industries, protected by the 1987 Constitution, gave poor service and charged high prices. In politics, family dynasties dominated.

IS CHANGE REALLY COMING UNDER DUTERTE?
Comes now Davao Mayor Duterte, and his band of fanatical followers, promising a revolution in the last presidential elections. The theme was “change is coming.”

Has change come? Or is it the same story of factional struggle disguised as a revolution?

In seeking to rehabilitate and perhaps restore the Marcos faction to power and in marginalizing Vice-President Robredo, President Duterte may have revealed that he is engaged in the familiar factional struggle for the control of the rent-seeking system. And because his is a narrow faction, he forged an alliance with the anti-Yellow factions of former President Arroyo and Bongbong Marcos. At the same time, he’s building his own political movement through the Kilusang Pagbabago under Cabinet Secretary Jun Evasco.

Viewed then from this prism that Duterte, in fact, is part of an Arroyo and Marcos alliance and is engaged in a factional (not a revolutionary) struggle against the Yellow faction (Aquino and allies), the political situation is much easier to read.

For example, if indeed Senator Leila de Lima raised money from drug sources to finance her election, why is the focus on her public humiliation, rather than on crafting solutions, such as the public financing of political campaigns so candidates will not to be tempted to raise money from illegal sources, whether drugs, jueteng, or the oligarchy? A genuine movement for change would focus on campaign finance reform to strengthen political institutions, rather than on political persecution.

Why, some of Duterte die-hards will ask, isn’t Duterte’s promise to liberalize the anti-FDI restrictions in the Constitution a “revolutionary act” or a “fundamental change” — one that the Aquino administration failed to do?

The Marcos faction has always targeted these protectionist provisions in the 1987 Constitution because it perceives those provisions as only protecting “yellow” or pro-Aquino businessmen. To recall, former President Estrada, who may be described as part of the Marcos faction, tried to remove those restrictions but was thwarted by the Yellow forces.

POLITICAL ECONOMY HAS CHANGED
However, more recently, the political economy has changed.

Both the change in control of telecommunications and power distribution to foreign companies plus the technological changes in media with the rise of the Internet, have led to a consensus among the elite of the need to remove those restrictions.

Thus, a “Yellow,” former Liberal Party President and Speaker Feliciano Belmonte, spearheaded a move to lift those restrictions, only to be thwarted at the last minute by former President Noynoy Aquino, a reactionary who didn’t want to touch his mother’s Constitution.

In fact, President Duterte seems reluctant to confront the oligarchy (except for the unfortunate Bobby Ongpin, whose misfortune was turned into a fortune by Greggy Araneta). He placed a former Globe executive, Rodolfo Salalima in charge of the Department of Information and Communications Technology. He said that he would walk back on his promise to liberalize the sector if the telcos would reduce telephone rates (which they did, but people aren’t using voice calls anymore, but are instead using data to make calls. Data pricing and service quality remain crappy). His government hasn’t given moral or political support to the Philippine Competition Commission, which is trying to oppose the purchase of the SMC-owned spectrum by the telco duopoly.

FEDERALISM WILL BENEFIT POLITICAL DYNASTIES
The change of the form of government from unitary to federal, however, may be a different matter where there is no elite consensus. The goal of the change in the form of government may not really be to address the fundamental problems of the Filipino people (which is widespread poverty) and the disempowerment of the outlying regions, but to reorder the political system for the benefit of various factions and family dynasties in the regions. In other words, it’s about how to cut up the pie to accommodate the demands of the various factions in a rent-seeking system.

Proof of this is that the nostrum of federalism isn’t accompanied by a true rural development strategy to tackle poverty in the countryside. President Duterte’s agricultural policy consists of more of the same policy of simply throwing government money into the agricultural sector, which is a recipe for failure.

(In my mind, a genuine revolution must tackle the problem of rural poverty.)

Because President Duterte has politicized the situation by trying to isolate the anti-Marcos and Yellow forces, the new Constitution may be seen as a backdoor through which Arroyo and or Marcos can regain political power and therefore will be opposed by them on those grounds. (There is talk that either former President Arroyo or Bongbong Marcos will become prime minister under the new Federal-Parliamentary system.) Irrespective of the merits and demerits of a federal system, the anti-Marcos and Yellow forces may campaign against the ratification of the new Constitution as a way to repudiate President Duterte and his political allies.

FACTIONAL STRUGGLES IN THE DUTERTE CABINET
President Duterte’s positions on foreign policy can also be understood using this prism of factional struggle. The Yellow or Aquino faction is strongly pro-American, perhaps due to the perception that the US helped usher Marcos out of power.

On the other hand, the Duterte-Arroyo-Marcos alliance may be seen as anti-American in various shades, with Duterte being the most extreme. The Marcos faction is anti-American because the camp of the former strongman sees the US as the mastermind of former President Marcos’s forced exile to Hawaii. Arroyo, on the other hand, tilted to China after leaving the coalition of the willing in Iraq and getting the ire of the US.

In the struggle between the factions, where is the Communist Left in all these? Clearly, the CPP-NPA are opportunists, seeking to make tactical gains from the peace talks. Duterte, on the other hand, sees the peace talks and inviting leftists to his Cabinet as a way to isolate his main political enemy, the Yellow faction. However, despite a deep-seated enmity between the Marcos faction and the Communist Left, President Duterte is gambling that the Left needs him more than he needs the Left.

Furthermore, because of the rising opposition by anti-Marcos forces, Duterte, conscious of the need to keep the military to his side, has walked back on his promise to the Left to free all political prisoners. The Left, therefore, is on the horns of a dilemma: continue with its dalliance with President Duterte and gain tactical benefits, or see the Marcos faction, which inflicted the most suffering on its cadres, strengthen and perhaps return to power. (It’s more likely that the Communist Left will swallow its principles because it sees Duterte as a Sukarno whom they can use to infiltrate and control government without a revolution. Already, the Leftist Cabinet members insist on clinging to their posts, despite the administration’s attempt to rehabilitate Marcos and return his faction to power.)

WELFARE PROGRAMS TO INCUR RISKS, CORRUPTION
In his struggle with the Yellow faction, President Duterte is hoping to win public support, consolidate and expand his political power, and isolate the Yellow forces with various programs. These programs, however, are not without risks.

One is the tried and true formula of Philippine demagogic traditional politicians — populist solutions. He has promised to end “endo,” designed to generate populist applause among noisy labor unions and the Left.

The so-called “win-win” compromise formula is a win-win for Big Business monopolists and labor, but not for small and medium-sized business (SMEs) which will bear the brunt of the additional cost.

He has also announced giving away one cavan of rice per Conditional Cash Transfer family through LGUs. However, the program would most probably be marked by political favoritism and corruption.

He has approved a monthly pension increase of P1,000, but to be accompanied by an increase of contribution rates. This so-called compromise will still accelerate the depletion of SSS finances, risking a possible ratings downgrade, especially if collection falls short of targets or the legality of the contribution increase is challenged. Furthermore, the increased contribution will fall heaviest on SMEs.

He’s also going to give away irrigation for free, which will ensure that water, a scarce resource, will be wasted.

TWO IS THE DRUG WAR.
He’s hoping that drug-infested communities will give him public support if they are rid of drug addicts and dealers. However, his method may also be scaring those very same communities. Recent polls show that about 78% of the public express anxiety and worry over the so-called EJK or extrajudicial killings. Also, by encouraging a culture of impunity among the police, he may be empowering them to intensify their nefarious activities.

The third, and to me the most decisive, would be his infrastructure program or as his own people put it, “build, build, build.” It would be the most decisive because Big Business and foreign investors will see whether contracts will be awarded in an open, transparent, and fair way.

However, we are already seeing that Transportation Secretary Art Tugade is being undermined by Duterte’s own political allies. Tugade may yet end up like former DoTC Secretary Ping de Jesus who was replaced by Mar Roxas when political considerations became paramount. The corruption and nonperformance of the DoTC during the time of Mar Roxas and Abaya then contributed to the negative perceptions of the Aquino administration.

PHILIPPINES REMAINS PRONE TO RENT-SEEKING
Despite the rhetoric of President Duterte, the Philippine state remains corrupt and prone to rent-seeking. Were it not for the presence of CCTVs in the hotel, the extortion of P50 million from Jack Lam by Bureau of Immigration Commissioners (Duterte’s own fratmates from San Beda) would have gone unreported. Factional struggles are about this kind of rent-seeking. With big money at stake in the infrastructure program, I wouldn’t be surprised if the rent-seeking intensifies.

The rise in global interest rates and failure to pass the revenue-raising tax measures in toto could also derail President Duterte’s bold infrastructure program. Political posturing may mean that only revenue-losing measures are passed while painful revenue raising measures are not. Bureaucratic capacity to properly implement huge infrastructure projects poses another constraint.

With President Duterte, I had hoped that we would have a Teddy Roosevelt and the start of the Progressive Era. (In the US, Teddy Roosevelt ushered in trust-busting and the passage of progressive laws between 1890 to 1920, known as the Progressive Era).

I guess this is not to be. There is no revolution. We may be just replaying the same old story of factional struggles.

The fate of the Philippines seems to be that it will have no visionary leader like Lee Kuan Yew or Deng Shao Ping.

As I said before, change in the Philippines will be bottom up. Change will come, but it will be painful step by painful step, and not be led from the top. n

Calixto V. Chikiamco is a board director of the Institute for Development and Econometric Analysis.

idea.introspectiv@gmail.com

www.idea.org.ph

The beauty contest: a rite of passage

It’s a political diversion — to veer the collective consciousness away from the disquieting political noise, and the chilling possibility of a declaration of Martial Law, a cynical friend said about the 2016 Miss Universe pageant hosted this year by the Philippines. Now that is too far-fetched, and too paranoid even over growing common uneasiness about a leader whom his critics say talks too fast and too much. Nah, the Miss Universe contest is just some clean, wholesome fun — like a for-adults fairytale enactment of a Cinderella being recognized for her awesome beauty and shining character. Watch the culminating pageant, to be broadcast live from the Mall of Asia in Manila on Jan. 29.

But women’s rights advocate group Gabriela does not believe in fairytale extravaganzas meant to deceive the public into thinking the country is peaceful and stable (ABS-CBN News, 01.12.2017). “The Miss Universe pageant is an expensive exercise to lull the people and the international audience into a false sense of well-being and celebration,” Gabriela party-list Representative Arlene Brosas said in a press conference (Ibid.). They feel specially aggravated that the Department of Tourism has been deeply involved in the two-week joint pre-pageant local resort tours and promotions with the commercial promoters, sponsors and local franchise owners of the 2016 pageant organization. Why does not the country put forward other initiatives for the country’s development, instead of exploiting the women candidates in the pageant to market products and services, Gabriela asks? (Ibid.).

The first Miss Universe Pageant was 65 years ago, held in Long Beach, California in 1952. Armi Kuusela from Finland was the first Miss Universe. She married Filipino business tycoon Virgilio Hilario before her one-year term was completed (The Philippine Star, 06.28.2006). Miss Philippines Gloria Diaz was Miss Universe in 1964; Margarita Moran in 1973; and the reigning 2015 Miss Universe is Pia Alonzo Wurtzbach.

When the Miss Universe Pageant moved from Long Beach, California to Miami Beach, Florida in 1960, the competitor Miss International Beauty Pageant was started in Long Beach, now 57 years ago. Since then, six Filipinas have won the Miss International crown: Gemma Cruz in 1964; Aurora Pijuan, 1970; Melanie Marquez, 1979; Precious Lara Quigaman, 2005; Bea Rose Santiago, 2013; and Kylie Verzosa was named Miss International in 2016.

For the hundreds of Filipino young ladies who dreamily joined local national beauty contests to qualify for, and hopefully to participate and win in international pageants like the three Misses Universe and six Misses International who did our country proud: did they feel exploited? Did you feel exploited and used — a friend, a former international beauty queen — was asked? Think 50 years ago. Why have international beauty contests thrived in escalating popular excitement, despite righteous protests of exploitation from women’s groups?

Joining a beauty contest is a growing up, she said, surely speaking from experience, though certainly not conscious of any philosophy at that time, she clarified.

During the competition, you evolve into a woman — conscious of your advantages and limitations as you focus upon yourself and the other young women who are also visibly unfolding and blooming. You are the best you can be at that point, and you have formed in your mind what you can be in the future. Is it like a rite of passage, then? Yes, and specially for the ones who win, maturing in life and the world is jump-started miles beyond age. Would it be some kind of a realization of power? Yes, Woman Power.

The titling in a beauty contest is sadly tainted by the empirical premises of pulchritude and sexuality, when the winning is actually more intuitively based on the overall projection of idealized womanliness. Thus would the exploiters come into the picture — the commercial people creating the entertainment extravaganzas to make awesome profit, catering to chauvinists who want to sample the best in what they would look at as a smorgasbord of women in full bloom, and available for the picking. They think you’re easy, because you joined a beauty contest, and you are a trophy acquisition, if you are a winner, the former international beauty queen said.

But it is all up to you, she continued.

There’s the exploiter and there’s the one who agrees to be exploited. Some participants in a beauty contest come in with pre-existing baggage — some weakness of character from improper values from poor family upbringing or perhaps a twisted ambition to grab more than what is needed in life. Then they succumb to the “exploitation” or sometimes can be willing victims. Yet on the other hand, fame could easily bring fortune, and the titling in a beauty contest can quickly bring opportunities whether realized or not. Then some beauty queens knowing their extraordinary empowerment could very well be the exploiters, rather than the exploited as they leverage on their anointing and recognition to their advantage (the hapless chauvinist not realizing he was actually the victim).

Then what would women’s rights advocates be fighting against in a beauty contest?

Discrimination, sexual harassment, human trafficking, molestation, mental and physical battery and disrespect in its many forms are against human rights, not only against women rights. There are “beauty” contests of men in reverse discrimination to beauty contests of women (both grossly flaunting body exposure with heavy nuances of sexual peddling). Even the definition of “woman” has changed, legally and practically. In 2012, the Miss Universe Organization allowed a transgender woman, and any transgender woman thereafter to be among qualified contestants in the yearly pageants. Paula Shugart, president (until now) of the Miss Universe Organization said: “We have a long history of supporting equality for all women, and this was something we took very seriously,” following institutions that have taken a stand against discrimination of transgender women including the Olympics, NCAA, the Girl Scouts of America and others (Associated Press, 05.11.2012).

And the ambiguous definitions of exploiter and exploited become even more mangled in the jealous claims to women’s rights and privileges in the global society. Yet the sad part of it all is that culturally and religiously, some nations are so far behind with women’s rights and even human rights in general. The fight for inclusive and equal global development must go hand in hand with the fight for gender equality in laggard countries. Developed countries and countries like the Philippines who understand rights and privileges of equality and inclusiveness in democracy have the duty to educate its people in the proper values and ethics in a conducive climate to symbiosis and cooperative action rather than the self-punishing divisiveness in gender, race, and creed.

These beauty contests are a good thing, the husband of the former international beauty queen says. The Miss Universe, Inc. gives to many charitable institutions in less developed countries. And closer to his heart — these beauty contests honor Woman. They honor not only her beauty, her personality, intelligence, her willingness to help others. It enhances her, so it’s a good thing.

A Rite of Passage to Woman Power.

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

ahcylagan@yahoo.com

Gigi Reyes appeals to graft court anew on plunder case

JESSICA LUCILA “GIGI” G. REYES, former chief of staff of former Senator Juan F. Ponce-Enrile, has asked the Sandiganbayan to reverse its earlier ruling denying her bid to junk her P172.83-million plunder case in connection with the pork barrel scam.

Jessica Lucila “Gigi” G. Reyes arrives at the Sandiganbayan on September 5, 2014 for the arraignment on graft charges over the pork barrel scam.

In 69-page motion for reconsideration, Ms. Reyes said the Sandiganbayan Third Division was “mistaken” when it ruled that the charge sheet against her is valid when the Supreme Court (SC) granted her motion for a bill of particulars in August 2015.

According to Ms. Reyes’s motion, her plunder case cannot be deemed valid as the explanation of the SC in August 2015 granting the motion for a bill of particulars “should not be taken as categorical and jurisprudential findings by the Court on the validity of the Information filed against accused Enrile, accused Reyes and their co-accused.”

Ms. Reyes added that the SC’s “elucidations” were mere “obiter dicta” or incidental remarks “to guide the bench and the bar on the distinguishing features between a motion to quash and motion for a bill of particulars.”

Ms. Reyes’s co-respondents in the plunder case are Mr. Enrile and alleged pork barrel-scam mastermind Janet Lim-Napoles.

“What is clear from the decision in Enrile v. People is that the Supreme Court found the Information to be glaringly vague, ambiguous and insufficient. What is also clear is that the Supreme Court gave the Prosecution the opportunity to cure the defects in the Information via the submission of a Bill of Particulars containing necessary facts specified by the Supreme Court. However, the Prosecution still failed to cure the fatal defects of the Information,” the motion read.

Meanwhile, a Jan. 3 decision by the anti-graft court’s Third Division said that a motion to quash should be filed before arraignment, whereas Ms. Reyes had already been arraigned as the court entered a not guilty plea for her in July 2014.

Ms. Reyes said she could not file a motion to quash before the Sandiganbayan as she had a pending motion for certiorari with the SC during that time assailing the validity of the prosecution’s preliminary investigation.

“Accused Reyes could therefore not have filed a motion to quash with this Honorable Court prior to her arraignment, as she would have taken a position inconsistent with her stance on the nullity of the antecedent proceedings before the Office of the Ombudsman, which should not have given rise to the resent criminal case at all,” read the motion.

Ms. Reyes added that her participation in the present proceeding is not only out of “respect and fervent” to the court, but also because she has no choice “but to obey the orders of the Court in proceedings.”

“[A]ccused Reyes had to participate in the proceedings so that she may not be deemed to have waived her rights and remedies altogether,” the motion further read.

Ms. Reyes also cited the recent case of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo v. People, where the SC said that “the law on plunder requires that a particular public officer must be identified as the one who amassed, acquired or accumulated ill-gotten wealth.”

But in the information filed, Ms. Reyes said the prosecutors did not identify a “specific public officer” as the main plunderer.

The motion also stated that the use of the words “and/or” in the information “is not only confusing, it is also indicative that the prosecution’s failure to allege the predicative acts of plunder and the conspiracy of the crime.”

“[A]ccused Reyes respectfully pleads that the honorable court take a second hard look at the totality of the circumstances in appreciating, though the instant motion for reconsideration, her motion to quash and plea for discharge,” the motion further read. — Raynan F. Javil

Jessica Lucila “Gigi” G. Reyes arrives at the Sandiganbayan on September 5, 2014 for the arraignment on graft charges over the pork barrel scam.

Youth commission leader hopeful Duterte to sign development plan amid lack of funds

NATIONAL Youth Commission (NYC) Chairperson Cariza “Aiza” Y. Seguerra on Sunday expressed optimism that President Rodrigo R. Duterte will sign the Philippine Youth Development Plan (PYDP) amid the agency’s lack of sufficient funds to bankroll its projects.

People waving their flags and other memorabilia while
waiting for Pope Francis’ arrival at the University of Sto. Tomas grounnds in Manila on January18, 2015 for the meeting with the youth and different religious leaders

In a text message on Sunday, the NYC chair, who met with Mr. Duterte at Malacañang on Jan. 19, said Mr. Duterte was “supportive” of NYC: “[I] discussed with him the importance of the PYDP, [which] is described as the blueprint of all programs on youth as consolidated and contributed by all stakeholders[,] which includes youth and youth serving organizations and government agencies.”

“There really is a need to amend our Charter.”

According to the NYC chief, the government appropriated around P145 million for the youth commission in 2017, of which P50 million was spent on the training module of the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK). The remaining approximately P90 million was used to pay for the salaries of its personnel and implement the commission’s programs, on the face of an estimated 30 million youth in the country.

NYC was created under the administration of Fidel V. Ramos in 1995 though Republic Act (RA) No. 8044 or “Youth in Nation-Building Act.” Under Section 6 of the said law, NYC acts as “the policy-making coordinating body of all youth-related institutions, programs, projects and activities of the government.”

Last year Mr. Duterte signed a law postponing the elections for barangay and SK officials to prevent the supposed proliferation of drug money in small communities. SK, or youth council, is among the components of NYC.

BW File Photo

Highway Patrol Group officer in Dela Riarte slay missing

AN OFFICER of the Highway Patrol Group (HPG) accused in the killing last year of motorist John B. dela Riarte is reportedly missing, Justice Secretary Vitaliano N. Aguirre II said last week.

Speaking to reporters, Mr. Aguirre relayed that “up to now, ay hindi pa makuha ’yung person (we cannot get hold of the person).”

This comes on the heels of a warrant of arrest on Police Office (PO)1 Jonjie M. Manon-og, issued by Judge Carlito B. Calpatura of the Makati Regional Trial Court Branch 145 last Monday, Jan. 16.

The arrest was in connection with the murder of Mr. Dela Riarte, who was arrested by Mr. Manon-og and deceased P03 Jeremiah A. de Villa following a road accident in Makati City on July 29, 2016. The victim was handcuffed and brought to Camp Crame, but was killed along the way.

Mr. De Villa reportedly jumped to his death at a building in Camp Crame on Aug. 27 that year.

Eto (Mr. Manon-og) hindi natin malaman kung nasan, (We don’t know where Mr. Manon-og is), so because of the warrant of arrest and the order of the court, the [Philippine National Police (PNP)] is duty bound, kung sino man ang may hawak sa kanya (whoever has custody) to produce him,” Mr. Aguirre said.

The HPG received the arrest warrant on Jan. 18, 2017.

Assistant State Prosecutor George H. Yarte Jr., in a resolution dated Dec. 20, 2016, accused Mr. Manon-og of “taking advantage of his position as a Police Officer, conspiring with the deceased [Mr. De Villa], with intent to kill, qualified by abuse of superior strength, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously attack, assault and employ personal violence upon the person of [Mr. Dela Riarte].”

The National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) had earlier submitted an examination which stated that Mr. Dela Riarte was killed with multiple gunshot wounds to the chest, abdomen and right thigh.

The Public Attorney’s Office (PAO), which served as the counsel of the victim’s kin, also filed an autopsy report that is consistent with the NBI findings.

PAO Chief Persida V. Rueda-Acosta, for her part, said she will coordinate with the PNP on the arrest of Mr. Manon-og.

Sought for comment, PNP Spokesperson Dionardo B. Carlos directed the issue to the HPG.

Human rights body in talks launched

DUBBED as an “initial victory” in the third round of peace talks in Rome, the Philippine government and the National Democratic Front (NDF) on Saturday activated a joint monitoring body tasked to address and investigate alleged human rights abuses by state forces and communist rebels.

The two negotiating panels agreed on supplemental guidelines for the full operation of the Joint Monitoring Committee (JMC) under the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL), which came on the heels of warnings by the NDF that a peace pact was unlikely to be achieved before 2019, three years into President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s term.

JMC’s supplemental guidelines, which was also signed by NDF panel Chair Fidel Agcaoili, is a set of mechanisms addressing complaints of human rights and international humanitarian law violations by government forces and the armed wing of the NDF — the New People’s Army (NPA).

“I view the signing today of the supplemental guidelines, therefore, not only as affirmation of the Duterte administration’s commitment to human rights protection and to IHL adherence, but likewise a concrete dividend of this round of talks,” government panel chair and Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III was quoted as saying in a statement on Saturday by the Office of the Presidential Adviser for Peace Process (OPAPP).

Mr. Bello also assured the full operation of JMC “should not be difficult” under Mr. Duterte’s administration, citing “new and bold laws” such as “the law against enforced disappearance, Anti-Torture Act, International Humanitarian Law Act, Human Security Act, Writ of Amparo and the Writ of Kalikasan, among others.” These current laws date back to the Arroyo administration.

“The guidelines were crafted in 2004 but the draft of its supplement was not signed after the peace negotiations bogged down in 2011,” OPAPP explained in the same press release, adding:

“This initial victory also bodes well for the possible signing of the bilateral cease-fire, a most-awaited agreement to benefit the Filipino people, especially those living in conflict-affected areas.”

CARHRIHL is an agreement where “persons liable for violations and abuses of human rights shall be subject to investigation and, if evidence warrants, to prosecution and trial.”

The said pact also states that victims of human rights abuses or their survivors “shall be indemnified.”

Before the new round of talks started in Rome, the NDF had cautioned that government troops on the ground were jeopardizing the five-month old unilateral cease-fire. The organization had also expressed frustration with what it called the government’s “broken promises,” including the release of around 400 political detainees.

Mr. Duterte, who describes himself as a socialist, has expressed commitment to ending one of Asia’s longest-running insurgencies. He reactivated the peace process soon after taking office in June last year and appointed three leftists to his Cabinet.

Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III

Labor group seeks abolition of placement fees

DAVAO CITY — A group representing trade unions, migrant workers groups, civil society organizations, recruiters and governments has signed a manifesto calling for the abolition of recruitment fees for migrant workers.

Unemployed Filipinos visit a job fair for local and international jobs at the Philippine Overseas Employment Agency (POEA) as the agency hosts a job fair on Feb. 25, 2011. — BW File photo

The Public Services Labor Independent Confederation (PSLINK) is calling on President Rodrigo R. Duterte to abolish all types of recruitment fees being asked from workers who want to work abroad. PSLINK, which now has 387 members, is a national confederation of government employees and their unions and associations.

“The imposition of recruitment fees has only led to the exploitation of overseas Filipino workers (OFW),” PSLINK President Annie E. Geron told BusinessWorld in an interview. Ms. Geron is also vice-president of the International Public Services International-Global Union which is a federation of 21 million workers in 154 countries.

PSLINK led the rollout of the campaign in Davao City last week.

“Up to 10% of the Philippine population are OFWs, most of whom are in deep indebtedness because of the high recruitment fees being collected by agencies,” Ms. Geron said.

Rule V, Section 50 of the Revised Rules and Regulations governing the recruitment and employment of landbased OFWs provides that among the fees that should be charged to OFWs are documentation costs, competency certificates and medical examinations prescribed by the Health Department.

Section 51 allows the charging of placement fees but this should only be equivalent to a month’s basic salary as specified in contracts approved by the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA). Exempted from placement fees are domestics workers and those deployed to countries where the system does not allow the collection of said fees.

“But most of the time the agencies collect from P80,000 to P120,000 which is way more than the allowable amount,” Ms. Geron said. Abusive agencies exploit the domestic helpers and get exorbitant recruitment fees from them, she added.

Ms. Geron said only 10 out of the 2,000 big recruitment agencies in the country registered with the POEA do not collect recruitment fees from workers. How much more the agencies not registered with POEA, she added.

She said this is a global campaign considering there are other countries without regulatory bodies like the POEA where collection of such fees have become the norm.

PSLINK aims to have countries of origin and destination ratify and implement key international instruments to protect the rights of migrant workers in the recruitment process. Among the instruments she identified are the following: UN Convention for the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers; ILO Convention 87 on the Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize; ILO Convention on Migration for Employment; and ILO Convention 189 on Decent Work for Domestic Workers and the different conventions against forced labor

“The problem [of] illegal recruitment fees is more serious in Africa, South Asia like Bangladesh, Nepal,… and other countries in the Middle East,” Ms. Geron said.

POEA Davao Region Director Maria Carolina B. Agdamag said the rules are very clear on what are the specific fees that employers should collect. Among the fees chargeable against the employer are the visa and stamping fee, work and resident permit, round trip airfare, transportation from airport to jobsite, POEA processing fee, OWWA membership fee and additional trade assessment if required by the employer.

Unemployed Filipinos visit a job fair for local and international jobs at the Philippine Overseas Employment Agency (POEA) as the agency hosts a job fair on Feb. 25, 2011. — BW File Photo

Yields fall ahead of Trump

BOND YIELDS moved south last week on the back of safe-haven buying by investors as news of upbeat economic data in the US was offset by anxiety due to new leadership in the US as well as Britain’s exit from the European single market.

During the week, yields on government securities (GS) fell 8.91 basis points (bps) on average, data from the Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp. as of Jan. 20 showed.

In the secondary market, rates of the debt papers were mixed. In the short end of the yield curve, the 91- and 364-day Treasury bills (T-bills) rallied, with rates going down by 20.65 bps and 0.84 basis point respectively to fetch 1.8381% and 2.6875%. Meanwhile, the yield on the 182-day T-bills rose 25.18 bps to 2.4286%.

In the belly, yields on the five- and seven-year Treasury bonds (T-bonds) went down respectively by 67.41 bps (3.8598%) and 59.41 bps (4.1255%), offsetting the yield increases seen in other tenors. The two-, three-, and four-year T-bonds saw yields go up by 10.18 bps (3.7036%), 4.68 bps (3.4035%) and 5.67 bps (3.6055%).

In the long end, yields on the 10- and 20-year papers increased by 3.35 bps (4.3975%) and 10.18 bps (5.3125%)

For Carlyn Therese X. Dulay, vice-president and head of institutional sales at Security Bank Corp., the higher rates seen early in the week are attributable to the movement of US Treasuries and “global risk events including the statements of Fed Chair Janet L. Yellen.”

Guian Angelo S. Dumalagan, market economist at Land Bank of the Philippines (Landbank), was of the same opinion, saying that upbeat inflation and initial jobless claims data in the US supported Ms. Yellen’s assessment of the US economy requiring gradual interest rate hikes this year “in order to avoid financial risks ahead.”

However, the rise in yields was “tempered by safe-haven buying amid renewed ‘Brexit’ fears and caution ahead of the US presidential inauguration” which happened after local markets closed on Friday.

“[M]ajority of the decline occurred [last] Friday afternoon, offsetting the upward bias a of [last] Friday morning. Safe-haven would be the most logical reason, as the inaugural speech of Mr. Trump poses great political risk.”

Inflation in the US rose 2.1% last December after November’s 1.7%. Similarly, initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell unexpectedly by 15,000 to a seasonally adjusted 234,000 for the week Jan. 14, the US Labor Department reported.

Meanwhile, British Prime Minister Theresa B. May in her speech reaffirmed the government’s commitment of a “stronger Britain” but clarified that the referendum to leave the European Union “was not a decision to turn inward and retreat from the world.” Nevertheless, critics call Ms. May’s speech a confirmation of Britain “heading for a hard ‘Brexit.’”

“[This] week, Mr. Trump’s inaugural speech might take the spotlight. Expectations of euphoric statements from Mr. Trump about his plans for the US economy could push yields higher next week by supporting views of more US rate hikes this year,” Landbank’s Mr. Dumalagan said. “However, lack of clarity about his policy agenda could reverse the projected trend in yields.”

Security Bank’s Ms. Dulay added that yield movements will also depend on this week’s auction of T-bonds. The Bureau of the Treasury will offer fresh five-year bonds worth P15 billion tomorrow. — Leo Jaymar G. Uy