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Halep dumps despairing Sharapova out of Beijing

BEIJING — Maria Sharapova opened up on the despair she feels in defeat after she was ruthlessly knocked out of the China Open in the third round by Romania’s Simona Halep on Wednesday.

The world number two was an emphatic 6-2, 6-2 winner to leave five-time Grand Slam champion Sharapova still searching for her first title since returning from a doping ban in April.

It was the 26-year-old Halep’s first victory over the Russian in eight meetings and she will play another Russian, Daria Kasatkina, in the quarterfinals.

The unseeded Kasatkina, 20, stunned defending champion Agnieszka Radwanska in the final match of the day, 4-6, 7-5, 6-2.

After her defeat Sharapova, a former number one now ranked 104 following her 15-month suspension for taking meldonium, gave an insight into the roller coaster of emotions in top-level tennis.

“Hard work is not good enough any more, maybe it was — I don’t know how many years ago — but that’s just not a factor any more,” said the 30-year-old, asked about comments in a book she recently released.

“The reason I say that is there’s some incredible moments, very high moments, and there are very low moments.

“There have been times where I get off the court and you think, I don’t wish this on my future child.

“The feeling is so tough and disappointing.”

Halep, the second seed on Beijing’s outdoor hard courts, is now the favorite with world number one Garbine Muguruza exiting in the first round with a virus.

Sharapova said it was the best Halep had played against her — and Halep agreed.

The two met in the first round at the US Open a few weeks ago and Halep said she was delighted to finally taste victory against Sharapova: “I’m really happy that I could do this. — AFP

Filinvest adds 5th tower in Studio City in Alabang

FILINVEST LAND, Inc. (FLI) has broken ground for the fifth tower in its Studio City development in Alabang, Muntinlupa City, amid the continued demand for living spaces from employees of business outsourcing firms in the area.

In a statement issued Thursday, the Gotianun-led property developer said Tower 5 will be an addition to the ready rental market amid the concentration of business districts in Alabang. This forms part of Studio City, FLI’s condominium community developed specifically for the needs of employees working within the area.

“We are proud of this development because we know that we have created a condo community that yuppies would be proud to call their own, as well as a lucrative choice for property investors because of the booming rental market from the large BPO (business process outsourcing) work force in Northgate Cyberzone,” FLI Senior Vice-President Francis V. Ceballos said in a statement. 

Tower 5 will house a total of 450 residential units spanning from 16 to 21 square meters. Unit prices range from P2.1 million to P2.3 million. Units are already equipped with a bunk bed, wardrobe close, working desk, and entertainment rack.

Among Studio City’s amenities include a game room, fitness gym, a gazebo, jogging path, and swimming pool. FLI will soon add a basketball court in Tower 5. The company noted that these amenities take into consideration the active lifestyle of its occupants.

Other than the amenities, FLI said that the tower is located in a prime spot, surrounded by major educational, medical, and commercial institutions.

“Professionals can reach their work destinations in Northgate Cyberzone, a premier IT park, Madrigal Business Park, and Makati Central Business District in no time. It is really an ideal residence where you can experience the live-work-play lifestyle,” Mr. Ceballos said.

FLI delivered an 7.2% increase in its net income attributable to the parent for the first half of 2017 to P2.66 billion, on the back of higher earnings from both its residential and leasing businesses. Revenues registered were at P9.5 billion.

Shares in FLI dipped by 0.96% or two centavos to close at P2.06 each at the Philippine Stock Exchange on Thursday. — Arra B. Francia

Catalans plan to unilaterally declare independence

BARCELONA — Spain’s government has defiantly rejected calls for mediation over Catalonia’s push for independence as the two factions headed towards another showdown.

The European Union has urged dialogue to ease the standoff between separatists in the northeastern region and Madrid, but Catalan leaders said they could unilaterally declare independence as early as Monday.

The tone of the crisis sharpened with Catalonia’s president denouncing the king’s intervention and Spain’s government rejecting any possible talks.

“The government will not negotiate over anything illegal and will not accept blackmail,” said a statement from Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s office.

“Negotiation in democracy only has one way, the way of the law.”

The dispute is Spain’s worst political crisis in decades and images of police beating unarmed Catalans taking part in Sunday’s banned independence vote sparked global concern.

Catalonia’s President Carles Puigdemont called the central government’s policies “disastrous” as the region’s leaders pushed on with its bid to break away from Spain, angering Madrid and raising the risk of further unrest.

Spain’s key IBEX 35 stock index plunged by more than three percent Wednesday in the ongoing turbulence, with some big Catalan banks down more than five percent.

“Political risk is back on the agenda in Europe,” NFS Macro analyst Nick Stamenkovic told AFP.

CATALAN ‘REPUBLIC’
After meetings in the regional parliament on Wednesday, pro-independence lawmakers called a full session next Monday to debate the final results of the vote.

“According to how the session goes, independence could be declared,” a regional government source told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Mireia Boya of the radical leftwing separatist CUP said it would be “a plenary to proclaim the republic” of independent Catalonia.

King Felipe VI on Tuesday branded the independence drive illegal and undemocratic, throwing his weight behind the national government.

Catalan leaders “with their irresponsible conduct could put at risk the economic and social stability of Catalonia and all of Spain,” he said.

Accusing them of “disloyalty,” the king said that the state had to “ensure constitutional order.”

Mr. Puigdemont angrily rejected this, saying in a televised address: “The king has adopted the (national) government’s position and policies which have been disastrous with regard to Catalonia. He is deliberately ignoring millions of Catalans.”

He also accused the national government of failing to respond to proposals for mediation in the crisis.

A declaration of independence would intensify the conflict with the central government, which along with the national courts has branded the referendum illegal.

Madrid has the power to suspend the semi-autonomous status that Catalonia currently enjoys under Spain’s system of regional governments.

That would further enrage Catalan protesters, who say they are being repressed by Spain.

The king’s intervention could clear the way for Prime Minister Rajoy to act. — AFP

Earning their wings

TCHAIKOVSKY’S Swan Lake has endured more than a century and is known to be one of the most popular ballets in the world – due to its tragic yet romantic narrative and technical difficulty. It is also a ballet that holds a special place in the heart of prima ballerina Lisa Macuja-Elizalde, and starting this weekend, her company, Ballet Manila, will restage the much-loved ballet.

This year’s restaging of Swan Lake will include the original Lev Ivanov choreography for the first act and feature the choreography of Sergey Vikulov and Tatiana Udalenkova in the succeeding acts.

Ms. Udalenkova was Ms. Macuja-Elizalde’s teacher (and her second mother) when she was training in the Vaganova Choreographic Institute (now the Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet) in St. Petersburg, Russia.

In a previous interview, Ms. Macuja-Elizalde told BusinessWorld that Swan Lake is one of the most challenging ballets she has ever performed (her teacher, Ms. Udalenkova, even told her she was never going to be a Swan Queen because she doesn’t look like one but the student has since proven her mentor wrong). Now, a new crop of talents from Ballet Manila will take a stab at the said ballet on Oct. 7-8 and 14-15 at the Aliw Theater in Pasay City.

“It not only calls for a chameleon-like change in character, but also for extraordinary technical requirements,” she said in a press release, further describing the White Swan/Odette character as someone “soft, pliant and lyrical with almost painful vulnerability” while the Black Swan/Odile character as one that needs “legs and arms of steel, a fiery technique, speed, and the ability to transform into evil personified.”

Principal dancer Katherine Barkman as well as soloists Abigail Lynn Oliveiro and Joan Emery Sia will debut as Odette/Odile for the full-length ballet opposite Ballet Manila guest artist Joseph Phillips, principal dancer Rudy de Dios, and soloists Mark Sumaylo and Elpidio Magat.

“This is my first – I’ve never done anything from Swan Lake before,” Ms. Barkman told BusinessWorld in an interview last month.

Ms. Oliveiro had danced both roles in a 2014 restaging while Ms. Sia has danced the White Swan previously.

KATHERINE BARKMAN as the White Swan/Odette

“[Both roles are] difficult but if you ask me which one I enjoy doing a fraction more: I’d say the White [Swan] because I’m an adagio dancer – [the White Swan] is a lot more lyrical than Black, so there’s a lot more freedom in movement and expression. Black [Swan] is like a dot, very straight to the point, she makes a statement very clearly and whereas White goes through a whole range of things and I like White. It’s more me,” said Ms. Oliveiro in the same interview.

Though Ms. Macuja-Elizalde is still recuperating from hip replacement surgery she had in July, she was on hand to help the new Swan Queens gain their wings.

“Whenever we have time to work on the ballet we would spend… two hours just working on like, the head and arms for Odette and all the expressions of the upper body. Because you have to look like a swan, you have to look like a bird and not just any bird – a swan. And a swan is the symbol of grace and beauty in many, many cultures,” Ms. Barkman said.

“So you have to express those with your upper body and your legs have to be stable enough to execute the movements properly and I think that’s what makes it so challenging,” she added before saying that even if Ms. Macuja-Elizalde wasn’t there, she can hear her voice telling her to “use your head, use your neck, etc.”

But beyond all the technical training the prima ballerina has given her dancers, it’s her work ethic that has inspired them to do better.

“The best advice she has given is not particularly in words but how she embodies her work ethic because the first time I saw Swan Lake was when she was dancing, so that time when I saw her do it and saw the process of how she works through the ballet, through rehearsals. How many people can you count have seen her rehearse? I mean, a lot of people have seen her perform, but most haven’t seen her rehearse: the sweat, the tears, the studio time,” Ms. Sia said.

“I think witnessing all that – the process she goes through before going onstage – is the best example she can give. No words necessary,” she added.

Ballet Manila’s Swan Lake will also feature the original score by Tchaikovsky played live by the ABS-CBN Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Russian conductor Alexander Vikuloc of the Mariinsky Theater.

It will go on stage on Oct. 7 and 14 at 6 p.m. and on Oct. 8 and 15 at 3 p.m. at the Aliw Theater, CCP Complex in Pasay City.

For more information about the show, ticket prices and schedule, visit www.balletmanila.com.ph. Tickets are available through Ticketworld (www.ticketworld.com.ph, 891-9999). – Zsarlene B. Chua

17 hostages rescued but no sign of surrender yet from militants

AS THE gun battle in Marawi entered its 136th day yesterday, officials reported that government forces were able to rescue 17 hostages on Oct. 4, Wednesday, 9 of them male and 8 females. Defense Secretary Delfin N. Lorenzana confirmed the number of rescued who have been in the hands of the Islamic State-inspired members of local terror group Maute. Mr. Lorenzana did not give further information on the situation in the city, but Presidential Spokesperson Ernesto C. Abella said while the remaining terrorists are still showing tenacity and resistance, “military operations are focused and intense and necessitate time to rescue remaining hostages, and bring to a decisive conclusion the Marawi rebellion.” Mr. Abella also said the rescue is “a positive development towards the liberation of Marawi from the hands of terrorists.” — Rosemarie A. Zamora

17 hostages rescued but no sign of surrender yet from militants
#BrigadaMarawi
Members of various sectors — including the military, local government, and national agencies — clean the street and overgrowth around a house, with a white flag hanging, that appears to have been spared from the still ongoing gun battle between government troops and Islamic State-inspired Maute terror group since May 23. The clean-up activity is part of the Brigada Marawi program launched Wednesday, Oct. 4. The initial areas covered include the Old Capitol, Matampay, and Tampilong. — LANAO DEL SUR PROVINCIAL GOV’T

 

17 hostages rescued but no sign of surrender yet from militants
#BrigadaMarawi
Members of various sectors — including the military, local government, and national agencies — clean the street and overgrowth around a house, with a white flag hanging, that appears to have been spared from the still ongoing gun battle between government troops and Islamic State-inspired Maute terror group since May 23. The clean-up activity is part of the Brigada Marawi program launched Wednesday, Oct. 4. The initial areas covered include the Old Capitol, Matampay, and Tampilong. — LANAO DEL SUR PROVINCIAL GOV’T

WB sees some pain, net gain from foreign ownership easing

OPENING the economy to more foreign investment may pose problems for small- and medium-sized enterprises, but the country will still be a net gainer by improving its position in global value chains, the World Bank said.

The bank said the Philippine government should leave the development of domestic companies to market forces, which will hone their competitiveness and in turn give households better goods and services and generate more jobs.

“Frankly the best conditions for firms to develop are competitive conditions,” Birgit Hansl, World Bank’s program leader and lead economist for the Philippines said in a news conference yesterday in Taguig City when asked whether the government should provide protection for local firms once they ease restrictions on foreign ownership, including those industries currently on the Foreign Investment Negative List (FINL).

This comes as state economic managers are eyeing an aggressive overhaul of the upcoming 11th FINL expected to come out before yearend.

“Unfortunately the best condition is to really let them learn and compete first on the domestic side before competing further in the global market,” said Ms. Hansl.

“I think every country is in discussions… should we ultimately first give some protection? But the global experience is not showing that these are the right conditions to prepare these firms for real competition,” she added.

Ms. Hansl said that a liberalization of foreign ownership would move the Philippines further up the global value chain.

“Global trade is an important driver, not just in poverty reduction but also in inclusive growth. That’s why it’s also important to every country to really make sure that these efforts of increasing globalization and global trade, including higher competition. If you open your markets for foreign investment (it will produce) more inclusive growth for the country,” she said.

“Ultimately, that is the stepping stone of citizens, to be able to take part in this global value chain and get jobs from foreign investors coming in that have high demand for a certain skill,” added Ms. Hansl.

Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia said earlier that the government will allow foreign equity of up to 100% from the current 40% cap on those industries currently blocked for foreign participation under the constitution or Philippine laws.

Such moves to liberalize industries will “easily” double foreign direct investments, he said. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

Tricky goes clean and gets darker

PARIS — After a string of releases over the past decade, Tricky found himself in an unfamiliar state. The influential trip-hop producer didn’t need money to settle past debts.

Freed from the burden, Tricky turned back to the hard-hitting beats and vocal refrains that made him a key player in the Bristol scene of the 1990s, while still delving into his demons.

On his latest album, ununiform, Tricky works again with his signature vocal collaborator and former girlfriend Martina Topley-Bird — and also, reflecting a more recent passion, with Russian rappers.

“I’m still learning stuff, and I’ve still got ideas that I want to chase,” Tricky told AFP on a visit to Paris ahead of the release.

The 49-year-old DJ became a cultural force with his 1995 debut album Maxinquaye, a work of dark layers and diverse musical roots that he put together after leaving his limited role in Massive Attack.

But Tricky said that his more recent albums have come with a weight — he knew he had to do them to make money.

Tricky, whose real name is Adrian Thaws, said he had faced legal action and was forced to pay “a tax bill for hundreds of thousands of pounds” in both Britain and the United States.

“So every album I’ve been doing for the last few years has been going straight to the taxman,” he said.

“This album, ununiform, I didn’t even have to record it if I didn’t want to. I could have just taken two, three years off now. So this was done because I wanted to do it — rather than I had to do it.”

ununiform is also Tricky’s first album since moving to Berlin where he lives a self-described boring lifestyle. Despite the German capital’s vibrant club scene, Tricky said he rises early, goes to bed before midnight and makes sure to exercise and eat healthy food.

EARLIEST MEMORY OF DEAD MOTHER
Even if Tricky’s life is looking up, his subject matter on ununiform is hardly cheery.

“When We Die,” a steadily churning, rap-rooted track with Topley-Bird, asks questions about the afterlife. “Dark Days” similarly heads into bleak territory but through charging synths.

Tricky said that he remained haunted by his life’s first memory — seeking the body of his mother, who died when he was four.

“When my mother died, we had the coffin at home. Like, old-school — you have the coffin at home so all the people can come and see the person,” Tricky said.

“And her coffin was next to my room, so I used to go in and stand on a chair and look at her. You know, it’s open coffin and stuff,” he said.

Tricky on the album also enlists the actress Asia Argento and one of the most prominent Russian-language rappers, Scriptonite.

With his severe voice, Scriptonite brings an element of horrorcore to his tracks on ununiform.

Tricky, born in Bristol of Caribbean ancestry, does not understand Russian but said that it made no difference to him aesthetically.

He calls Moscow his favorite city and spent several weeks in the Russian capital recording and relaxing in the bitter winter.

His inclusion of Russian-language lyrics doesn’t mean Tricky has run out of things to say.

“I’ve had a bit of a crazy life,” he said. “So writing lyrics in songs is easy for me.” — AFP

Time out: Dangers of disrupting your body clock

PARIS — Messing with your body’s clock is dangerous business, in fact it could make you sick — or worse.

The inner timekeeper dubbed the “circadian clock,” governs the day-night cycle that guides sleep and eating patterns, hormones and even body temperature.

It is important enough that the Nobel Medicine Prize was awarded on Monday to three US scientists whose work illuminated the fundamentals of how it ticks.

The trio identified genes that regulate the clock, and the mechanism by which light can synchronize it.

Yet humans have a long history of overriding the circadian-driven need for sleep, Russell Foster, a professor of circadian neuroscience at Oxford University told AFP — the most obvious example being night work.

Such tinkering with Mother Nature can have serious consequences ranging from impulsive behavior to life-threatening conditions such as obesity and cancer, the experts say.

Just look at the poor health records of shift workers such as nurses or factory laborers.

The World Health Organization has already raised the red flag, with a 2007 report noting that “circadian disruption” is “probably carcinogenic” — which means cancer-causing.

The trouble is that the human body never really adapts to operating outside the normal cycle of working by day, and sleeping at night.

Like everyone else, shift workers’ biological clocks are set by the rising and setting of the sun — not their work schedule.

“There is no medicine in the world that allows you to… speed up or slow down your body clock,” said Claude Gronfier, a neurobiologist at France’s Inserm research institute.

AN ‘EXCITING STAGE’
When workers force themselves to stay awake, it triggers the release of stress hormones such as cortisol — the same one that rushes into your blood in a life-or-death situation.

The chemicals may keep you on your feet, but they are a bargain with the devil.

For example, cortisol works to suppress the immune system and in the long run can make you more susceptible to a range of illnesses, including cancer.

Such a lifestyle also opens one up to eating outside of normal times, when the body’s metabolism might be lower and the calories are more likely to be converted into fat instead of being burnt up.

“You’re raising your heart rate, raising your blood pressure and insulin levels at a time that you would not ordinarily do that,” Hugh Piggins, a neuroscience professor at the University of Manchester, told AFP.

“You’re body is basically not ready for it and you’re giving it a bit of an insult.”

Even short-term disruptions of the circadian clock can wreak havoc with your body. Just think jet lag.

Flying from Paris to Los Angeles deposits travelers nine hours earlier in time, upending eating and sleeping patterns.

The results can be blunted interaction with the world and a lack of empathy, complex thinking, or even clear memories.

In such a state, people can do “overly impulsive things — jump the red traffic light and fail to see the consequences of actions,” explained Foster.

Better understanding of the workings of the body clock has opened up a fascinating field of scientific quest.

Circadian dysfunction has been linked to depression, bipolar disorder, cognitive function, memory formation, and even some neurological diseases.

Over the past two decades, scientists have been studying how the timing of administering a medicine can impact how well it works.

Already they have found that changing the timing can reduce the toxicity of some compounds.

“Now we are moving to the exciting stage where we can start translating some of this knowledge into understanding what happens when these systems go wrong and more importantly to develop new therapeutic interventions,” Foster said. — AFP

Contrasting offering seen at UFC 216 in Las Vegas

THE Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) will push through with “UFC 216” on Sunday (Manila time) in Las Vegas despite the recent shooting incident that happened in the area where some 59 people were killed and hundreds injured. Featuring two title fights, the event is seen to present contrasting offering.

In a statement released early this week, the UFC said it is not pulling the plug on “216,” which will be headlined by the fight for the interim lightweight title between Tony “El Cucuy” Ferguson (#2) and Kevin “The Motown Phenom” Lee (#7) with the flyweight title fight between champion Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson and Ray “The Tazmexican Devil” Borg as co-main event, albeit expressing its support to the community and donating $1 million to the victims of the attack.

It went on to say that plans will push through at the T-Mobile Arena “as scheduled until further notice.”

If UFC 216 does push through, local combat sports writer and observer Mike Miguel said fans should be in for an engaging mixed martial arts action for the “mix bag” it brings forth.

“UFC 216’s two title fights provide contrasting backgrounds with the fighters involved. With current lightweight champ Conor McGregor’s plans still up in the air, the interim title fight between Tony Ferguson and Kevin Lee provides the most significance in the stacked division. “El Cucuy” aims to finally win one this weekend and place his name among the best in the division after Khabib Nurmagomedov fell ill prior their UFC 209 fight,” said Mr. Miguel when asked by BusinessWorld for his thoughts on the upcoming UFC event.

“Looking to hijack his hopes is the likewise streaking Kevin Lee. Currently on his own winning stretch, ‘The Motown Phenom’ can give Ferguson a run for his money, both standing and on the ground,” he added.

Entering the contest, Mr. Ferguson (22-3) has won nine straight that has propelled his impressive ascent in the division while Mr. Lee (16-2) has racked up five consecutive wins of his own.

In the co-main event, Mr. Johnson (26-2-1) goes for a record 11th straight successful title defense that will break the record of 10 he currently shares with legendary middleweight champion Anderson “The Spider” Silva.

Mr. Miguel said Mr. Johnson should expect a tough challenge from challenger Borg (11-2), one of the top prospects in the weight class. “Demetrious Johnson has been a picture of dominance at flyweight, clearing almost the entire division. Challenging him is number three-ranked Ray Borg, who has recently moved to Jackson-Winklejohn camp. Expect a highly technical affair as the two are coming off from the best coaching minds — Matt Hume and Greg Jackson. However, Mighty Mouse’s championship experience will very important for him to retain the belt,” said Mr. Miguel.

He went on to say that he expects Messrs. Ferguson and Johnson to win but not counting out their respective opponents outright.

Also on tap for UFC 216 are heavyweight clash between former champion Fabricio Werdum (#2) and Derrick Lewis (#6), women’s flyweight Mara Romero Borella against Kalindra Faria, and lightweight Beneil Dariush (#12) versus Evan Dunham (#14).

UFC 216: Ferguson vs. Lee will be shown live on Sunday beginning at 10 a.m. over Hyper Ch. 91 in SD or 261 in HD on Cignal TV. Replay is at 6 p.m. on the same day.

In the Philippines, Cignal TV, the country’s foremost direct-to-home (DTH) company, is the home of the UFC after the two groups agreed to an extensive deal that will see the UFC beamed on various platforms. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Las Vegas gunman’s girlfriend says no advance knowledge of massacre

LAS VEGAS — The girlfriend of the Las Vegas gunman who killed 58 people and himself in the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history was questioned by the FBI on Wednesday and said she had no idea he was “planning violence against anyone.”

Marilou Danley, who returned late on Tuesday from a family visit to the Philippines and is regarded by investigators as a “person of interest,” said through a lawyer that the carnage Stephen Paddock unleashed while she was abroad caught her completely unaware.

“He never said anything to me or took any action that I was aware of that I understood in any way to be a warning that something horrible like this was going to happen,” Ms. Danley, 62, said in a written statement read to reporters by her attorney in Los Angeles, where the FBI was questioning her.

A Federal Bureau of Investigation official in Las Vegas, meanwhile, said no one has been taken into custody.

But Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo told reporters he found it hard to believe that the arsenal of weapons, ammunition and explosives recovered by police in their investigation could have been assembled by Paddock completely on his own.

“You have to make an assumption that he had some help at some point,” Mr. Lombardo said at a news briefing. Mr. Lombardo said the attack was the obvious outcome of meticulous planning.

“What we know is that Stephen Paddock is a man who spent decades acquiring weapons and ammo and living a secret life, much of which will never be fully understood,” the sheriff said.

Nearly 500 people were also injured when Paddock, 64, strafed an outdoor concert with gunfire on Sunday night from his 32nd floor suite of the Mandalay Bay hotel on the Las Vegas Strip.

He took his own life before police stormed his room, bringing the total death toll to 59.

Police recovered nearly 50 firearms from three locations they searched, nearly half of them from the hotel suite. Twelve of the rifles there were fitted with so-called bump stocks, officials said, allowing the guns to be fired almost as though they were automatic weapons.

In response to a question, Mr. Lombardo said investigators were examining the possibility Paddock’s purchase of more than 30 guns in October 2016 may have been precipitated by some triggering event in his life. He did not elaborate.

If Paddock did have any accomplice, there remained no evidence as yet “to indicate terrorism” in the shooting spree, said Aaron Rouse, FBI special agent in charge of the Las Vegas field office.

Earlier in the day, US President Donald J. Trump visited Las Vegas, marking the first time since taking office that he has had to confront a major mass shooting.

‘CARING, QUIET MAN’
In her statement after being questioned in Los Angeles, Paddock’s girlfriend Ms. Danley insisted she knew Paddock as “a kind, caring, quiet man.”

“It never occurred to me in any way whatsoever that he was planning violence against anyone.” Her lawyer, Matt Lombard, said Ms. Danley was “fully cooperating” with the investigation.

Ms. Danley, an Australian citizen of Filipino heritage, said she flew back to the United States voluntarily “because I know that the FBI and Las Vegas Police Department wanted to talk to me, and I wanted to talk to them.”

Ms. Danley, who was twice married before her relationship with Paddock, became a focus of the investigation for having shared his retirement community condo in Mesquite, Nevada, northeast of Las Vegas, before leaving the United States for the Philippines in mid-September.

FBI agents met her plane at Los Angeles International Airport before interviewing her, two US officials briefed on the case told Reuters. As of midday Wednesday, there was no indication she was aware of Paddock’s plans, they said.

Investigators questioned her about Paddock’s weapons purchases, a $100,000 wire transfer to a Philippine bank that appeared to be intended for her, and whether she saw any changes in his behavior before she left the United States.

“Assuming she had no role in his actions, the most important thing is any light she can shed on Paddock’s motive,” said one official, who spoke about the investigation on condition of anonymity.

Ms. Danley said Paddock had bought her an airline ticket to visit her family and wired her money to purchase property there, leading her to worry he might be planning to break up with her.

Paddock’s brother Eric told reporters the $100,000 transfer was evidence that “Steve took care of the people he loved,” and that he likely wanted to protect Ms. Danley by sending her overseas before the attack.

She arrived in Manila on Sept. 15, flew to Hong Kong on Sept. 22, returned to Manila on Sept. 25 and was there until she flew to Los Angeles on Tuesday night, according to a Philippine immigration official.

Discerning Paddock’s motive has proven especially baffling given the absence of the indicators typical in other mass shootings. He had no criminal record, no known history of mental illness and no outward signs of social disaffection, political discontent or extremist ideology, police said.

Mr. Trump, touring a hospital in Las Vegas, told reporters Paddock was “very demented,” and he asked Mr. Lombardo if investigators were any closer to establishing a motive.

“We’ve had a couple good leads and we’re working our way through it,” the sheriff told the president. — Reuters

Payoneer looking to expand PHL client base

FINANCIAL SERVICES company Payoneer, Inc. is hoping to attract more clients in the Philippines, amid its bullish outlook on the growth of online outsourcing in the country.

“We want to grow our user base,” Payoneer Regional Head for Southeast Asia, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan Miguel Warren said in a media roundtable on Thursday.

The company offers a cross-border payments platform to its clients. Globally, Payoneer has four million international users in over 200 countries, with clients ranging from young entrepreneurs to corporations like Airbnb and Amazon.

In the Philippines, Mr. Warren said that they have almost 200,000 clients, with freelancers as its core market.

Mr. Warren said that they want to “start talking to other businesses,” including business process outsourcing firms, e-commerce sellers, and online small and medium enterprises.

Payoneer said it experienced a 359% growth in monthly payment volume from January last year, when the company opened its Philippines office, to August this year. It also saw 327% increase in billing service year-to-date payment volume during the same period.

Mr. Warren said the company is targeting small businesses run by freelancers, particularly in the provinces.

“We see them becoming entrepreneurs in their own right,” he said.

Mr. Warren cited a survey they conducted which indicates that Filipino freelancers are generally more satisfied with their level of income (averaging from $9 to $17 per hour, and buoyed by the fact that 75% of those surveyed work from home) gives Payoneer a “very encouraging sign” for its growth.

He also said that they look to expand their client base not only in the Philippines but the rest of the region as well: “We look to be increasing our head count in the Philippines and in other countries in 2018.” — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Replicant or human? Blade Runner 2049 reignites existential debate

LOS ANGELES — Was Harrison Ford’s Officer Rick Deckard a human or a Replicant robot in 1982’s Blade Runner?

That is the question that fans of Ridley Scott’s sci-fi thriller have been pondering for 35 years and now in a long-awaited sequel, that question is explored further.

Blade Runner 2049 takes place 30 years after the original film, when human-like robots called Replicants were hunted by police officers called “blade runners” in a dystopian Los Angeles.

In the new film from Time Warner, Inc.’s Warner Bros, LAPD Officer K (Ryan Gosling) hunts illegal Replicants hiding on a decaying Earth and he stumbles across something that can disrupt the current strained coexistence between humans and Replicants. He is tasked with finding Deckard (Ford) for answers.

“It’s an existential story,” director Denis Villeneuve told Reuters.

“It says a lot about reality. It says a lot about our relationship with broken dreams. It says things about as human beings we are programmed by our genetic background and our education, and that we are like trapped by that background and it’s very difficult for us to get free out of it,” he added.

Before journalists including Reuters saw Blade Runner 2049 at advance press screenings, they were read a note from Villeneuve urging not give away any key plot points.

What is known is that an older, rugged Ford reprises his role as Officer Deckard. The veteran actor called the film an “experiential opportunity” for audiences to engage in the philosophical rhetoric.

“There’s a wonderful emotional context in the film, which is one of the things I most admire about it,” Ford said. “So much of what I had an ambition for seems to have been achieved.”

Scott’s Blade Runner envisioned Los Angeles in 2019 as a sprawling urban metropolis infused with Eastern and Western cultures. In Blade Runner 2049, Los Angeles has sprawled across much of California, and is built on top of Scott’s world, the gritty city a melting pot of English, Japanese, and Russian influences.

Villeneuve said he made Blade Runner 2049 as a standalone movie but given the new film’s higher stakes and bigger scope, a continuing franchise is not out of the question.

“The idea was to make a movie inspired by the universe of Blade Runner with a very specific story and, yes, I’m positive that if (it) ever is welcomed, Ridley will come up with another idea,” the director said. — Reuters


Replicant or human? Blade Runner 2049 reignites existential debate

Blade Runner 2049

THIRTY YEARS after Ridley Scott’s 2019-set film, LAPD officer K, the new blade runner, unearths a secret to stop the earth from further chaos and destruction. His mission leads him to find former LAPD blade runner, Rick Deckard. Directed by Denis Villeneuve, it stars Ryan Gosling, Harrison Ford, Jared Leto, and Ana de Armas. The Verve’s Bryan Bishop remarks, “His (Villeneuve) intentions with the film are often quite evident: he’s interested in agency, and the way free will can define our humanity, whether we were born or built.”

MTRCB Rating: R-13

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