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Dionne Warwick is no diva

EVEN IF she’s had earned her share of Grammy trophies and triumphs, Billboard achievements, and released a great number of popular ballads, Dionne Warwick does not like to be called a “diva.”

“The word or label ‘diva’ is an operatic term and I do not sing opera, therefore I cannot and do not accept being called as such,” she was quoted as saying in a press release.

The singing legend and popular music icon will be performing on Feb. 13 and 14 at the Grand Ballroom of Solaire Resort and Casino.

“I’ve been to Manila several times… Manila audiences are wonderful, they have always seemed to enjoy my show,” she said.

She described the repertoire for Dionne Warwick: A Valentine Concert as “Songs I am expected to sing and a few surprises… it will just be two nights of wonderful musical evenings.”

The singer is best known for songs like “Don’t Make Me Over,” “Walk On By,” “Do You Know The Way to San Jose?” “Alfie,” and “I’ll Never Love This Way Again,” among many others.

She shares, “All of my songs are close to my heart as they are like my children. The success of these songs; I attribute both to the wonderful composers and lyricists.”

What are the ingredients for a great song? Warwick replies, “Lyrics first, as I must believe in the words I sing, and of course, a memorable melody.” She has, after all, had long and successful partnerships with songwriters Burt Bacharach and Hal David.

In a career that spans five decades, Warwick ranks among the 40 biggest hit makers of the entire rock era, based on the Billboard Hot 100 Pop Singles Charts, with 56 of the legendary American singer’s singles making the Billboard Hot 100 between 1962 and 1998 and 80 singles making all Billboard charts combined.

Warwick received her first Grammy in 1968 for “Do You Know the Way to San Jose?” and her second in 1970 for “I’ll Never Fall In Love Again.” She won the Grammy for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance for “I’ll Never Love This Way Again” and Best Female R&B Vocal Performance for “Déjà Vu” in 1980. She became the first female artist in the history of the Grammys to win in two categories on the same year.

For tickets to Dionne Warwick: A Valentine Concert, visit solaireresort.com or call Ticketworld at 891-9999 or visit www.ticketworld.com.ph.

Magnolia shoots for top spot against Blackwater

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

HAVING won their last four games that has seen them move their way to a tie for the top spot in the PBA Philippine Cup, the Magnolia Hotshots look to extend it some more and seize solo lead when they go up against the Blackwater Elite today at the Mall of Asia Arena.

Currently in joint first place with the defending champions San Miguel Beermen at 5-1 midway into the elimination round of the season-opening tournament of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA), the Hotshots, which will take on the Elite in the 4:30 p.m. game, have shed their iffy start and gone on to become one of the formidable and hottest teams in the league right now, something they hope to sustain moving forward.

In its last game against the TNT KaTropa, Magnolia bucked an injury to key cog Paul Lee (ankle) early in the second half to get the better of their opponents, 91-83.

The rest of the team stepped up to compensate for the loss of Mr. Lee, resulting in a multipronged attack by Magnolia, which TNT had a hard time keeping in step with all the way to the end.

Mark Barroca came off the bench to lead the Hotshots with 20 points, eight rebounds and five assists.

Justin Melton finished with 14 points and 10 rebounds and Marc Pingris had 13 markers.

“With Paul going down, the players really stepped. They kept their focus and I’m happy and proud of their effort,” said Magnolia coach Chito Victolero.

He also made mention of the good defense they showed against TNT, limiting a potentially explosive squad to just 83 points.

As of this writing, there is no word yet if Mr. Lee, whose injury was ruled a sprain, would play today but Mr. Victolero said that in the event that the player has to miss games, he hopes it would not be long a time.

SLIDING
While the Hotshots are streaking upward, their opponents today, the Elite, have gone in the opposite direction.

After winning two of its first three matches, Blackwater has slid considerably, dropping its last three games that pushed it down in the standings at 2-4, good for joint ninth place.

The latest of the Elite’s defeat came at the hands of the Alaska Aces, 88-84, last Jan. 27, a game that the former was in a position to win but just could not deliver in the end.

JP Erram had a stellar double-double of 14 points and 21 rebounds, on top of five blocks, for Blackwater with Mac Belo and Michael DiGregorio each adding 15.

They just could not answer back to Alaska when push came to shove down the stretch en route to dropping another game.

“We had our chances during this losing streak but we just could not take advantage of them. We must do a better job in our next games,” said Mr. Erram.

Meanwhile, playing in the 7 p.m. game are the Rain or Shine Elasto Painters (3-3) and Meralco Bolts (2-4).

Glee actor Mark Salling, 35

LOS ANGELES — US actor Mark Salling, known for his role in the hit musical TV series Glee, died Tuesday, weeks before being sentenced for possession of child pornography, his lawyer said. He was 35.

News outlet TMZ, citing law enforcement, said Salling had committed suicide by hanging.

“I can confirm that Mark Salling passed away early this morning,” his lawyer Michael Proctor said in a statement.

“Mark was a gentle and loving person, a person of great creativity, who was doing his best to atone for some serious mistakes and errors of judgment.”

Salling faced a sentence of between four to seven years in prison under the plea agreement he reached with prosecutors, the Justice Department said in December. He had been arrested in late 2015, and charged in 2016.

He was allowed to remain free as his case was heard, and was scheduled to appear in court on March 7 for sentencing.

Authorities reportedly found more than 50,000 pornographic images and videos of children, mainly girls, on his laptop and an external drive.

On Glee, Salling played Noah Puckerman, an angry football player outside his comfort zone when he joins the high school glee club.

According to TMZ, he had previously attempted suicide in August.

Another actor on the hit series, Canadian Cory Monteith, died in July 2013 of an overdose of drugs and alcohol.

“The Salling family appreciates the support they have been receiving and asks for their privacy to be respected,” Proctor said. — AFP/Reuters

Communist consultant Baylosis nabbed for firearms possession

By Arjay L. Balinbin

A CONSULTANT and peace talks panel member of the communist group National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) was arrested last Jan. 31 on charges of illegal possession of firearms.

Rafael Baylosis, who sat at the now terminated negotiations with government as a member of the NDFP Reciprocal Working Group on Political and Constitutional Reforms, was nabbed by the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group-National Capital Region (CIDG-NCR), police Spokesperson John C. Bulalacao confirmed yesterday.

A companion of Mr. Baylosis, identified as Roque P. Guillermo, Jr., was also arrested.

Mr. Bulalacao said the operation against Messrs. Baylosis and Guillermo was based on intelligence information received by the CIDG last Tuesday, Jan. 30.

“They received information that two suspicious individuals carrying firearms were seen in the vicinity… near the corner of Katipunan and Aurora Boulevard,” Mr. Bulalacao said in an interview with ANC on Thursday morning.

“Dahil do’n (Because of that), they (the CIDG) launched an intel operation and they conducted surveillance. And Jan. 31… at 3:45 in the afternoon, they were able to arrest Rafael Baylosis and Roque Guillermo while they were in possession of firearms,” he added.

In a media statement, NDFP National Executive Committee member Luis G. Jalandoni said that the arrest and detention of Mr. Baylosis was “illegal” and “a flagrant violation of the GRP-NDFP Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees (JASIG, 1995).”

“President Duterte must be held accountable for this trampling upon a valid peace agreement that assures all consultants and those participating in peace negotiations immunity from surveillance, harassment, search, arrest, detention, prosecution and interrogation or any other similar punitive action,” Mr. Jalandoni said.

On the other hand, Presidential Spokesperson Herminio Harry L. Roque, Jr. said the JASIG is no longer in effect as the government has terminated the peace talks through an order issued late last year by the president.

“Wala namang saysay ang JASIG ngayon dahil wala nang peace talks,” Mr. Roque said at a press conference in Baguio City.

The spokesman also explained that “if there is an existing warrant of arrest or if there is a basis for a warrantless arrest, then they should be arrested… If they think the arrest was illegal other than on the basis of JASIG, they may file a petition for writ of habeas corpus, there is no martial law in Luzon.”

Mr. Roque stressed that “it is President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s duty to implement the law.”

“They (NDFP members) are not exempt from full compliance with our penal laws,” he further said.

Meanwhile, the Public Interest Law Center that serves as counsel for Mr. Baylosis said in a statement that its client “was surveilled and arrested by a joint team of the police and military despite no pending warrant of arrest against him.”

“He had just alighted from a tricycle and was walking along Katipunan Avenue in Quezon City, when six men pounced on him and whisked him off in a white van to PNP CIDG-NCR, together with Roque P. Guillermo, Jr.,” reads the statement with Atty. Rachel F. Pastores cited as managing counsel.

“The armed men who took him forcibly and violently did not read him his constitutional rights, or even present him with any charge sheet, contrary to the PNP press release. He was not allowed access to family, lawyers, or even to a phone, until the following morning. In a worn-out attempt to legitimize his arrest, he and Guillermo now face fabricated, trumped up charges of illegal possession of firearms,” Mr. Baylosis’ counsel said.

UAAP volleyball time

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter

COLLEGIATE volleybelles from the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) now take front and center with the start of the volleyball tournament for Season 80 this weekend.

Happening at the Mall of Asia Arena, all eight competing teams get to take the floor in the first two play dates of the new season and all aiming to get their respective campaigns to a winning start.

Defending champions De La Salle Lady Spikers, gunning for their third straight UAAP title and 11th overall, open their title defense against the University of Santo Tomas (UST) Golden Tigresses in the 4 p.m. match on opening today.

On Saturday, Feb. 3, the Adamson Lady Falcons taking on the National University (NU) Lady Bulldogs in the curtain-raiser at 2 p.m.

On Sunday, Feb. 4, the University of the Philippines (UP) Lady Fighting Maroons and University of the East (UE) Lady Warriors open the festivities at 2 p.m. to be followed by the Ateneo Lady Eagles against the Far Eastern University (FEU) Lady Tamaraws at 4 p.m.

Still under multi-titled coach Ramil De Jesus, Taft-based La Salle will be bannered by reigning league most valuable player Majoy Baron, libero Dawn Macandili and finals MVPs Kim Dy and Desiree Cheng.

Star setter Kim Fajardo, a key component in the La Salle program in the last couple of years, has played out his eligibility but the Lady Spikers have expressed their “readiness” to pick up the cudgels.

In place of Fajardo is Michelle Cobb, who had her moments in La Salle’s championship run last year as an understudy.

UST GOLDEN TIGRESSES
Looking to spoil La Salle’s Season 80 debut while exacting some payback on the team for booting it out in the Final Four last season is UST.

Some stalwarts from last season, notably EJ Laure and Rhea Meneses, are not suiting up this time around for varying reasons, leaving the likes of Sisi Rondina and Dimdim Pacres to carry the bulk of the load and tow their team in the tournament.

UST coach Kung Fu Reyes said they will rely on team effort for Season 80 and that he is hopeful that other players would step up, including hitter Carla Sandoval, who is expected to take the place of Laure, who is skipping the season to have a chronic shoulder injury heal properly.

“We will try to play as a team and get contributions from as many people as possible,” said Mr. Reyes.

The Tigresses finished third in the standings with a 9-5 record in Season 79 before losing to eventual champion La Salle in the semifinals.

Ateneo had the best record of 12-2 at the end of the elimination round last year, beat number four team FEU (8-6) in the Final Four but fell to the Lady Spikers in the finals.

UP and NU narrowly missed the playoffs with identical 7-7 records while UE and Adamson scrapped the bottom with similar 1-13 cards.

Japanese experts auditing MRT-3 ahead of rehabilitation

JAPANESE experts have begun an audit of the Metro Rail Transit (MRT)-3 system ahead of the system’s rehabilitation, the Department of Transportation (DoTr) said.

In a statement, the DoTr said that more than 50 railway engineers and experts engaged by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) started performing due diligence on the commuter rail line yesterday.

The department said that the audit is part of an agreement with the Japanese government for the rehabilitation works of the train system.

Last month, the Philippine and Japanese governments exchanged notes on official development assistance (ODA). The arrangement with Japan involves ODA financing under JICA’s Special Terms for Economic Partnership (STEP).

The Japanese government will nominate a rehabilitation provider. The department said that the joint venture of Sumitomo and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries is being considered due to their previous experience of designing and maintaining the MRT.

The DoTr said that the due diligence performed by JICA experts is separate from the ongoing Independent Audit and Assessment (IAA) by TUV Rheinland for the entire MRT-3 system. DoTr last month awarded TUV Rheinland the contract for the IAA to evaluate the 48 train cars procured by the past government from CRRC Dalian.

DoTr in November terminated its contract with Busan Universal Rail, Inc. (BURI), citing BURI’s alleged failure to ensure efficient operations and the availability of trains, as well as failure to procure spare parts.

BURI said in a statement that since the contract was terminated, the DoTr inherited a total of 21 running trains ready for revenue service. Currently, there are between five and eight trains running during peak hours, as against the contract requirement of 18 running trains. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Parreño chosen acting Comelec chair

AL A. PARREÑO has been chosen to become acting chair of the Commission on Elections (Comelec) when his predecessor, Christian Robert Lim, retires on Friday, Feb. 2.

The selection of Mr. Parreño by the Comelec en banc was disclosed Thursday during a hearing by the Joint Congressional Oversight Committee on Automated Elections.

Mr. Lim also announced that Comelec director Teopisto Elnas Jr. has been designated Project Management Office (PMO) head.

The PMO director is charged with the implementation of the Comelec’s automated elections system program. — JV Arcena, News5/interaksyon.com

Women react to male-heavy Grammys

NEW YORK — New Zealand pop prodigy Lorde has thanked her fans for supporting female musicians, as artists hit back amid controversy that the Grammy Awards neglected women — a spat fueled by comments from the Recording Academy’s president seen as disparaging.

The 21-year-old’s Melodrama was the only work by a woman nominated for the most prestigious prize of Album of the Year on the music industry’s biggest night Sunday.

She not only was bested by Bruno Mars’ 24K Magic but she was not given a spot to perform at the televised show in New York. The Recording Academy, which administers the awards, said the roster was full.

Lorde took out a full-page advertisement in The New Zealand Herald with doodlings about the Grammys and a handwritten note that thanked readers “for loving and embracing Melodrama the way you did.”

“Thank you, also, for believing in female musicians. You set a beautiful precedent!” she wrote.

The Grammy winners slanted overwhelmingly male at a time of mounting activism by women against sexual harassment and discrimination in the workplace.

The Grammy show’s most memorable performer may have been Kesha, who fiercely sang her track “Praying” about a producer she says raped and psychologically tormented her — allegations he denies.

Recording Academy president Neil Portnow told reporters that the music industry needed to show a “welcome mat” to women, but drew controversy as he explained how female artists could win more awards.

“I think it has to begin with women who have the creativity in their hearts and their souls who want to be musicians… to step up, because I think they would be welcome,” he said.

CRITICISM BY POP STARS
Pop singer Pink struck back without naming Portnow: “Women in music don’t need to ‘step up’ — women have been stepping since the beginning of time.”

Honoring women would show “the next generation of women and girls and boys and men what it means to be equal, and what it looks like to be fair,” she wrote in a handwritten note on Twitter.

Pink was backed by pop superstar Katy Perry, the most followed person on Twitter, who hailed women “making incredible art in the face of continual resistance.”

“We ALL have a responsibility to call out the absurd lack of equality everywhere we see it,” Perry, whose latest album was not nominated for any Grammys, wrote to her more than 108 million followers.

ALESSIA CARA DISMISSES BACKLASH
Despite this year’s controversy, the Grammys have not lacked female victors in the past.

The last two winners of Album of the Year were both women — Adele and Taylor Swift. And on Sunday, Canadian soul-pop singer Alessia Cara won one of the top awards, Best New Artist.

But Cara also faced criticism on social media with users saying the 21-year-old singer, whose breakthrough hit “Here” came out in early 2015, did not qualify as new.

Cara — whose socially conscious lyricism wrestles with issues such as poor self-image — responded on Instagram that she had not sought the award and added, “I am not going to be upset about something I’ve wanted since I was a kid.”

“I will not let everything I’ve worked for be diminished by people taking offense to my accomplishments and feeling the need to tell me how much I suck,” she wrote.

“Here’s something fun! I’ve been thinking I suck since I was old enough to know what sucking meant.” — AFP

Local Korean embassy touts upcoming Winter Olympic Games

THE 2018 Winter Olympic Games in PyeongChang, South Korea, is a sporting spectacle that should not be missed not only for the action on ice but for other facets as well, the Korean embassy in the country had said.

In a special ceremony held yesterday at the South Korean Embassy in Taguig City, Korean officials as well as representatives from the Philippine Olympic Committee and Philippine Sports Commission expressed their anticipation and excitement for the quadrennial Games happening from Feb. 9 to 25.

While they are no longer strangers to hosting events of such magnitude, having taken duties for the Summer, Asian and other regional games, newly appointed Korean Ambassador to the Philippines Han Dong-Man said the PyeongChang Games takes special significance.

“South Korea hosting the Winter Games this year is in line with our thrust as a nation to bring people together and uphold the true spirit of sport,” Mr. Han said in an interview with BusinessWorld at the sidelines of yesterday’s celebration of the Winter Games.

“One of the highlights of this Games is we were able to bridge the gap with North Korea and that they are participating which is truly significant,” he added.

The South Korean ambassador went on to say that high technology will be showcased as well throughout the Games, including the use of robots for the first time as guides and translators.

“We will be using robots as guides and translators for the event so that is something to look forward. But apart from that, participants and visitors will also get the hospitality from the Korean people,” Mr. Han said.

For Philippine chef de mission to the Winter Games Tom Carrasco, South Korea hosting this year is something they welcome, citing the good experience they had in the past.

“This is the second time that I’m going to South Korea as chef de mission. The first one was 18 years ago in Busan for the Asian Games. Our experience then was great as it was well-organized and I’m looking forward to experiencing the same in PyeongChang,” Mr. Carrasco said.

For the 2018 Winter Olympics, PyeongChang will be the stage for the Opening and Closing Ceremonies and most snow sports.

Alpine speed events will take place in Jeongseon, and all ice sports will be competed in the coastal city of Gangneung.

The Philippines will have two representatives, namely alpine skier Asa Miller and figure skater Michael Martinez.

Meanwhile, in conjunction with the opening of the Winter Games on Feb. 9, the Korean Embassy in the Philippines will host special screenings of the movies Take Off and Rub-Off.

These will be held from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the Korean Cultural Center Wave Hall at the second floor of the Mancor Corporate Center, 32nd Street, Bonifacio Global City. Admission is free. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Mining council to consider tax reform impact on industry

THE Mining Industry Coordinating Council (MICC) will meet this month to study the proposed fiscal reforms for the mining industry that are part of the Finance department’s upcoming tax reform package.

“I think they will submit (the proposal) to us, the MICC. So we’ll have a meeting toward the end of the February,” Finance Undersecretary Bayani H. Agabin told reporters on the sidelines of the Competition in Development Countries forum yesterday in Makati City.

However, he did not elaborate on any possible adjustments to taxes.

“We’re looking not only at the tax component, but also the royalties side,” Mr. Agabin said.

“I don’t think there is (a proposal for) a new fiscal regime for mining,” he added.

He said that there are proposals in Congress that ban the country from exporting raw minerals, which Mr. Agabin said is a “technical issue. So we would rather leave that to the DENR (Department of Environment and Natural Resources).”

“And there is a bill which says that we have to get a franchise from Congress to be able to mine — that is also a policy issue so we will leave that to the discretion of the Congressmen and Senators,” he added.

Mr. Agabin said that the interagency committee will take into consideration  environmental impacts while deliberating on the proposed measure.

“When it comes to mining, we don’t just have to look at the revenue side… it’s not only revenue but also changing behavior,” he said.

“I think when it comes to mining, we cannot isolate revenue. There has to be some balancing there, for the environment, future generations, adverse impacts; its a one-time resource,” Mr. Agabin added.

Republic Act No. 10963 or the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion law, which became effective last month, provided for a doubling of excise taxes for minerals.

Input from the MICC meeting — in which the Department of Finance (DoF) and the DENR are co-chairs — will be factored into the next round of tax reform measures.

Aside from higher taxes for the mining sector, the Finance department is also looking at further increases for tobacco and alcohol taxes.

The DoF initially planned to submit the reform package as a draft bill to Congress on Jan. 31, but said it will be delayed for two weeks.

The second package highlights include the lowering of corporate income taxes to 25% from 30% and removing value-added tax exemptions on coal and casinos. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

Cavaliers edge Heat; Celtics thump Knicks

LOS ANGELES — LeBron James scored 24 points and came up with a crucial late block as the Cleveland Cavaliers edged the Miami Heat, 91-89, on Wednesday in a duel for third place in the NBA’s Eastern Conference.

“King” James prevented James Johnson from getting a shot off at the final buzzer as Cleveland held on for the win in their first game since Kevin Love was sidelined with a broken hand.

Love is expected to miss six to eight weeks — just more bad news in a tough January for the Cavs, who finished the month with a 6-8 record.

“I just wanted to keep the ball between me and the basket,” James said of his late-game stop. “That’s just the rules I’ve always been taught and I was happy to be able to get that last stop.

“It’s a good win for us.”

Jae Crowder drained a three-pointer from a James assist with 1:21 left to play to give Cleveland a three-point lead.

Miami’s Josh Richardson answered with a floater with a minute remaining before Cleveland’s Isaiah Thomas made two freethrows to build the margin to 90-87 with 18.8 seconds to play.

Kelly Olynyk’s layup trimmed the deficit to one point with 12.1 seconds remaining. With seven left Cleveland’s Kyle Korver made the first of two freethrows and Johnson, with James defending him, was unable to release the potential game-tying jump shot before time expired.

“We needed a win like this, where we win a game on our defense,” said James.

The Cavs entered the contest as the NBA’s worst-ranked defensive team but limited Miami to three-of-28 from three-point range.

They harried the Heat into 20 turnovers as they held an opponent to less than 90 points for the first time since November.

“It’s a good step in the right direction,” James said.

James added 11 rebounds and five assists but coughed up seven of the Cavaliers’ 16 turnovers in the victory.

“I just keep making the same mistake over and over,” he said of the turnovers — most of which came on lackadaisical passes. He entered the game averaging 4.5 turnovers per game in January.

“I’ve got to change that,” James said. “I had six in the first half — ended up with seven. You have to be responsible with the ball.”

Goran Dragic scored 18 points to lead the Heat, who trailed Cleveland by half a game for third place in the Eastern Conference going into the contest.

Elsewhere, the Orlando Magic rebounded from a heartbreaking loss to the Houston Rockets with a 126-105 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers.

Marreese Speights scored a game-high 21 points and Evan Fournier added 20 points for the Magic, who made 18 of their 32 three-point attempts and set a season-high for three-point percentage.

The Brooklyn Nets snapped a four-game skid with a 116-108 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers.

Spencer Dinwiddie scored nine of his 27 points in the fourth quarter for the Nets and D’Angelo Russell, playing his fifth game back after knee surgery, added 22 points.

BLOWOUT IN BOSTON
It was a blowout in Boston, where the Eastern Conference-leading Celtics overcame the absence of Kyrie Irving to down the New York Knicks, 103-73.

The Celtics, up by five midway through the third quarter, more than doubled that lead in less than two minutes, seizing an 11 point lead and never letting the Knicks get within single digits again.

Terry Rozier, making his first career NBA start, produced his first career triple-double with 17 points, 10 assists and 11 rebounds for Boston, adding two steals and two blocked shots.

Six Celtics players scored in double-figures, led by 20 points off the bench from Marcus Morris. — AFP

Operatic night of love at the museum

TENOR Arthur Espiritu will be joined by sopranos Stefanie Quintin and Mheco Manlangit, and pianist Najib Ismail for a pre-Valentine concert, A Night of Love, featuring opera arias and duets about love, on Feb. 10, 7 p.m., at Makati City’s Ayala Museum. They will perform love arias and duets from Puccini’s La Boheme, Gounod’s Romeo et Juliette, Meyerbeer’s Les Huguenot, Bizet’s Carmen, and Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress, to name a few. Tickets to the concert are available at TicketWorld (891-9999, www.ticketworld.com) and at the Cultural Arts Events Organizer (782-7164, 517-3763, 0920-954-0053, 0918-347-3027 or 0920-465-5725).

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