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Alvarez-Golovkin rematch could be in the cards

LAS VEGAS — A somber Canelo Alvarez was left wondering what more he could have done to wrest the middleweight world titles away from Gennady Golovkin after their controversial 12-round draw on Saturday in Las Vegas.

The 27-year-old Mexican star said he executed his game plan the way he wanted to, but missed his big chance when he failed to knock the champion out in the 10th round.

“I wanted to finish him off, but he was a strong opponent with lot of experience. It didn’t unfold the way I wanted it too,” Alvarez said.

Former two division champion Alvarez connected with a devastating punch series about 30 seconds into the round. A rubbery-legged Golovkin then went into a defensive shell, shook the cobwebs off, and managed to stay on his feet.

It was a rare moment of vulnerability for Golovkin who has never been knocked down in his pro career and, before that, in 350 amateur fights.

Until his last two fights, which both went the distance, Golovkin had been jackhammering his way through the middleweight division. In March, he showed he could go the distance and win over Daniel Jacobs but their 12-round fight snapped a string of 23 consecutive knockouts for Golovkin.

“I thought I won the fight,” Alvarez said. “I was superior inside the ring. I won at least seven, eight rounds. I was able to counterpunch and even make Gennady wobble a couple of times.

“It is up to the people if we fight again. I felt frustrated over this draw.”

Golovkin and Alvarez now look set to rule the resurgent middleweight division for years after their slugfest ended in a stalemate.

The controversy came via the judges — one of whom scored the nail-biting fight 118-110 in favor of Alvarez. The evenly matched fight was so close it could have gone either way. Challenger Alvarez fought well enough to win on his own but Adalaide Byrd’s mind-boggling scorecard fueled conspiracy theories on social media.

Judge Don Trella had it 114-114 while Dave Moretti scored it 115-113 in favour of Golovkin.

Golovkin got his first taste of Nevada-style judging in his Sin City boxing debut, but despite the kerfuffle he still managed to keep his World Boxing Council, World Boxing Association and International Boxing Federation titles.

Asked about Byrd’s lopsided scorecard, which had Golovkin winning just the fourth and seventh rounds, he replied, “unbelievable.”

“Of course I want a rematch. This was a real fight,” Golovkin said.

So the stage is set for a Golovkin-Alvarez 2, likely sometime in the first half of 2018. — AFP

No change in fuel prices this week

OIL COMPANIES will not adjust the prices of petroleum products this week, keeping diesel at around P33.70 to P37.20 per liter (/L) after last week’s P1.30/L increase. Based on the Department of Energy’s (DoE) price monitoring after last week’s hike on all products, diesel’s retail cost was at a range of P29.40 to P37.47, with P33.70 as the common price. Diesel-plus was at a range of P32.60 to P39.25, with P37.20 as common price. For gasoline products, the common price is between P46.05 to P48.25/L. Kerosene, meanwhile, is selling at a range of P34.80 to P43.40/L, with P38.45 as the common price. Last week, oil retailers raised the prices of diesel products at their highest level so far this year. They also increased the cost of gasoline and kerosene by P0.45/L and P0.90/L, respectively. — Victor V. Saulon

US Ambassador Haley: UN has exhausted options on North Korea

WASHINGTON — US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said on Sunday the UN Security Council has run out of options on containing North Korea’s nuclear program and the United States may have to turn the matter over to the Pentagon.

“We have pretty much exhausted all the things that we can do at the Security Council at this point,” Ms. Haley told CNN’s State of the Union, adding that she was perfectly happy to hand the North Korea problem over to Defense Secretary James Mattis.

As world leaders head to the United Nations headquarters in New York for the annual General Assembly meeting this week, Ms. Haley’s comments indicated the United States was not backing down from its threat of military action against North Korea.

North Korea launched a missile over Japan into the Pacific Ocean on Thursday in defiance of new UN Security Council sanctions banning its textile exports and capping imports of crude oil.

China has urged the United States to refrain from making threats to North Korea. Asked about President Donald Trump’s warning last month that the North Korean threat to the United States will be met with “fire and fury,” Ms. Haley said, “It was not an empty threat.”

“If North Korea keeps on with this reckless behavior, if the United States has to defend itself or defend its allies in any way, North Korea will be destroyed. And we all know that. And none of us want that. None of us want war,” she said on CNN.

“We’re trying every other possibility that we have, but there’s a whole lot of military options on the table.”

Pyongyang has launched dozens of missiles as it accelerates a weapons program designed to provide the ability to target the United States with a powerful, nuclear-tipped missile.

North Korea said on Saturday it aimed to reach an “equilibrium” of military force with the United States.

‘ROCKET MAN’
Mr. Trump plans to meet with South Korean President Jae-in Moon on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

“I spoke with President Moon of South Korea last night. Asked him how Rocket Man is doing. Long gas lines forming in North Korea. Too bad!” Mr. Trump said in a Twitter post on Sunday morning.

White House national security adviser H.R. McMaster said on Friday, after the latest North Korean missile launch, that the United States was running out of patience: “We’ve been kicking the can down the road, and we’re out of road.”

On Sunday, he warned of imminent danger from Pyongyang.

“This regime is so close now to threatening the United States and others with a nuclear weapon, that we really have to move with a great sense of urgency on sanctions, on diplomacy and preparing, if necessary, a military option,” Mr. McMaster told the Fox News Sunday program.

Military options available to Mr. Trump range from a sea blockade aimed at enforcing sanctions to cruise missile strikes on nuclear and missile facilities to a broader campaign aimed at overthrowing leader Kim Jong Un.

Mr. Mattis has warned the consequences of any military action would be “tragic on an unbelievable scale” and bring severe risk to US ally South Korea.

Democratic US Senator Dianne Feinstein said on Sunday that Mr. Trump should not rule out talks with North Korea before it agrees to end its nuclear program.

“I think that North Korea is not going to give up its program with nothing on the table,” she said on CNN.

Ms. Feinstein said that a freeze of both its nuclear program and missile arsenal, rather than ending them, would be more palatable to North Korea and to China, who fears the US goal is toppling Kim.

The United States still wants a peaceful solution and has been waiting for the North Koreans to indicate they are ready to talk, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said on CBS’ Face the Nation.

“We have tried a couple of times to signal to them that we’re ready, when they’re ready,” he said. “And they have responded with more missile launches and a nuclear test.” — Reuters

Jailed mogul’s Wu-Tang Clan album goes for $1M

NEW YORK – An auction by disgraced pharmaceutical executive Martin Shkreli for his unique copy of a Wu-Tang Clan album has ended with a bid of more than $1 million – and plenty of questions.

The brash mogul, who bought the celebrated rap ensemble’s sole edition of Once Upon a Time in Shaolin in 2015, put it up for sale. But last Wednesday he was sent to jail, with a judge revoking his bail after he threatened Hillary Clinton.

The auction ended as scheduled Friday night on eBay with a winning bid of $1,025,100 – little moved since hitting $1 million on Sept. 7 despite a series of competing bids.

The winning bidder’s identity was not known but the user’s eBay profile shows that he or she has frequently sought out CDs and music memorabilia.

With Shkreli behind bars, it is unclear when or how Once Upon a Time in Shaolin will find its way to its buyer. Fans were already in for a wait; the Wu-Tang Clan had decreed that the music will not be available until the year 2103, although the owner is free to play it at private parties.

As the auction was winding down, questions also arose over the authenticity of Once Upon a Time in Shaolin.

Bloomberg News in an investigation published on Thursday said it was possible that Once Upon a Time in Shaolin was not an actual Wu-Tang Clan album but rather an elaborate set-up by the Moroccan producer Cilvaringz, who sought out contributions from members of the group. (Read Martin Shkreli’s Wu-Tang album might not be a Wu-Tang album: Ed.)

Shkreli, in selling the album, had voiced resentment over criticism toward him, saying he had made a gift to the Wu-Tang Clan by valuing the music.

Shkreli has been dubbed the most hated man in America after he jacked up the price of HIV drug Daraprim from $13.50 to $750 a pill overnight.

The 34-year-old New Yorker was convicted last month on unrelated securities fraud charges and had been out on $5-million bail pending sentencing.

The judge revoked the bail after he offered a reward for anyone who would grab a strand of former presidential candidate Clinton’s hair – remarks he insisted were a joke. – AFP

US health outsourcing firm to expand in Iloilo

SHEARWATER Health, a US outsourcing company for clinical services, will expand its Philippine operation to Iloilo City next year to meet growing demand from US clients, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said in a statement.

Formerly known as HCCA, Shearwater Health, which first invested in the Philippines in 2014 with a facility in Cebu City, opened a Taguig office last year. It currently employs about 1,500 nurses, pharmacists and physicians.

Last year, the company announced plans to increase its staff by 2,000.

Shearwater’s Philippine investments have totaled $4 million to $5 million as of 2016. The planned expansion in Iloilo City will boost the investment by $7 million and raise staffing levels to 3,000, DTI said.

The announcement of Shearwater’s Iloilo investment comes as the government bats for more investment from US firms.

Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez met in August in New York City with the American Apparel and Footwear Association (AAFA) in a bid to encourage firms already in the Philippines to expand their operations.

Textiles are among the industries granted favorable treatment under the European Union’s generalized system of preferences plus (GSP+) scheme, which imposes zero or minimal tariffs on 6,247 Philippine product categories. These include textiles, clothing, and certain food products.

  The Philippines Investment Forum Mr. Lopez spoke at attracted 85 AAFA executives. Mr. Lopez also met with companies like Tellas Ltd, Under Armour, Inc., Michael Kors (USA), Inc., Ralph Lauren Corp., Coach, Inc., and the Ascena Retail Group, Inc. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

ERC approves Sacasun’s transmission facility

THE Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) has approved the application of San Carlos Sun Power, Inc. (Sacasun) to develop, own and operate a point-to-point transmission facility that will connect its 48.6-megawatt (MW) solar power plant to the Visayas grid.

“An approval of the instant Application will redound to the benefit of the consumers as it will translate to continuous, quality, reliable, and efficient power supply,” the ERC said in its decision.

Sacasun is among the solar farms that failed to secure a certificate of endorsement from the Department of Energy (DoE), an approval that would have paved the way for the company to receive a guaranteed rate of P8.69 for every kilowatt-hour it produces for 20 years.

The solar company, which is based in Barangay Punao, San Carlos City, Negros Occidental, plans to construct the dedicated facility along the San Carlos-Guihulngan 69-kilovolt (kV) transmission line.

The point of interconnection will require the construction of two 0.6-kilometer 69 kV lines. The solar plant intends to simultaneously inject power toward the Amlan and the San Carlos substations.

Aboitiz-led Sacasun will be spending around P84.37 million, which was arrived at only for the purpose of computing the applicable permit fee, which the ERC set at P632,797.82.

The company said although it filed for feed-in-tariff (FIT) eligibility with the DoE, the application is yet to be approved. In the event the project becomes FiT eligible, Sacasun said the cost of the limited transmission facility would be considered once the asset is transferred to privately owned National Grid Corporation of the Philippines, the grid operator, and National Transmission Corp., owner of the country’s transmission assets. — Victor V. Saulon

Vox populi vox Dei?

It is a common misapprehension that the essence of democracy is sufficiently defined as the popular will expressed through elections or plebiscites and as implemented by the rule of the majority. Vox populi vox Dei, the saying goes, and on this basis elected representatives believe they have carte blanche to change rules big and small, violate unwritten codes, deviate from customary behavior, and reduce established institutions. Such is the implicit justification cited by those who recently voted to impeach the chief justice (and who also threatened the vice-president, the ombudsman, and the Comelec chair), those who would kill the human rights commission by defunding it, and those who would short-circuit constitutional change in order to place the country under indefinite Dutertian rule.

Given the President’s high approval ratings, it is argued, it behooves everyone to move in lockstep, support his policies, ease his vexations, and disable his enemies. In the words of a senator: “Kung ikaw nagtatrabaho ka sa gobyerno at hindi mo gusto mga polisiya ng namumuno, eh di umalis ka.” The Speaker’s words carry a similar message, appealing to a putative majority: “Kung sinasabi na ng karamihan na hindi niya ginagampanan yung trabaho niya, hindi niya ginagawa, eh dapat mahiya ka na eh.” Either conform — or wither and die.

A similar urge to conformity was present at the beginning of the Nazi era in Germany when Hitler’s star was on the rise.

Following the Nazis’ popular electoral victory in 1933, the demand was for Gleichschaltung (“synchronization”), i.e., the reorganization of politics and society to conform to the victorious party’s ideology and policy. Existing institutions were pressured to prove that they had aligned themselves with the Nazi party line, being required to affiliate with Nazi federations, to change their leadership (especially pressuring Jews to resign), to dismiss problematic members, or simply to dissolve themselves if they were unwilling to adjust. More crucially, the elected parliament, with heavy Nazi representation, willingly surrendered its powers to Hitler as chancellor and president.

Question: were these “democratic” actions? They were after all enacted by an elected government with no doubt a substantial degree of support in popular opinion. Remember, Hitler had won 43% of the popular vote in the last elections. (President Rodrigo Duterte by comparison got only 39% of the vote, though since grown to 82% approval.) If vox populi is indeed vox Dei, then there should be no reason to object to such measures.

So suppose a majority of the electorate (not just 39%) decides to abrogate the present constitution, establish a dictatorship, and never hold elections again. Would that be democratic? That’s like asking: is a man free to sell himself into slavery? Can majority rule justify democracy committing suicide?

Herbert Spencer, the great Darwinian, sought a similar test of the reasonable limits of majority rule and popular opinion when he asked what people would think if parliament — perhaps heeding dire Malthusian warnings — were to pass a law ordering all infants born in the next decade to be drowned. He asked, “Does anyone think such an enactment would be warrantable? If not, there is evidently a limit to the power of a majority.” His example actually hits close to home. Congress only recently considered the president’s suggestion to lower the age of criminal responsibility to nine years (i.e., considered putting grade-three pupils in prison!). It is fortunate they chose not to heed his call — but only just.

In practice many issues are placed beyond the reach of majority rule or public opinion — for good reason. One is simple efficiency. The innocence or guilt of accused persons, the valuation of damages and property claims, people’s tax liabilities, the incidence of poverty and the growth rate of GDP, the actual number drug-users — all these are (or ought to be) decided not by vote or influence but by bureaucrats and judges. Such is the pragmatic solution to a well-known result in public-choice theory — Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem — which implies that a universal application of majority rule in deciding issues is likely to be inefficient, inconsistent, or both. The solution is to remove such decisions from the political realm and leave them in the “undemocratic” care of specialists exercising informed discretion. The political independence and professionalism of the bureaucracy and the courts are part of constitutional design. It is foolish and uninformed of politicians to demand that they conform to political trends and opinions of the day, no matter how “popular.”

There is a deeper reason however for putting some things beyond the reach of majorities and public opinion: to avoid the possible tyranny of the majority. So much the worse if “the majority” is in reality being manipulated by demagogues.

In principle, civil liberties, and the bill of rights are really intended to protect minorities; a majority after all needs no protection from itself. And since none of us knows when and how we might be a minority in the future, such guarantees must be couched in universal terms. Rosa Luxemburg put it best: “Freedom only for the government’s adherents, only for the members of a party — no matter how numerous these are — that is not freedom. Freedom always means the freedom of those who disagree.” [Freiheit ist immer die Freiheit des Andersdenkenden.]

In placing human rights, civil liberties, and the administration of justice — including institutions that guarantee them, such as the Supreme Court, the Ombudsman, and the Human Rights Commission — beyond the pale of politics, society makes a credible commitment that it will not be arbitrary or be swayed by current political opinion and habit, e.g., that drug users are beyond salvation and so may be killed without too much compunction; or that “intelligence reports” are sufficient grounds to publicly denounce and persecute individuals.

To attack the integrity of these institutions is to place in doubt that universal commitment to due process and against arbitrariness. Yet this is exactly what politicians caught up in the hubris of commanding a majority do when they seek to bend independent institutions to their will.

Pushed further, this is bound to end badly. And — since this is a business paper — this also means ending badly economically.

Since the threatened institutions and constitutional guarantees are universal, their erosion is bound to affect business confidence as well. Viewed historically, most investment crises in this country (from Marcos’s original power grab to Arroyo’s desperate attempt at a second term) have mostly been related to attempts to improvise beyond limits set by the Constitution. That remains true today. As proof, we already witness how direct foreign investments, both in pledges and actual flows, have declined relative to year-ago levels under Duterte’s watch. Major fiddling around with the Constitution is bound to worsen investor’s hesitation, and Duterte’s charisma is not enough to offset it.

The point is made: without universal rights that extend to minorities, without autonomous institutions guided by reason and justice, the mere existence of a majority in numbers does not embody democracy. It is still only a mob. It is in this sense we should understand the words of Alcuin, the medieval scholar who was among the first to use the phrase when he advised Charlemagne: “Nec audiendi qui solent dicere, vox populi, vox Dei, quum tumultuositas vulgi semper insaniae proxima sit (Do not listen to those who like to say vox populi, vox Dei, for the noise of the mob always verges on madness).”

Emmanuel S. de Dios is professor at the University of the Philippines School of Economics and a fellow of IDEA Phils.

‘We will kill you all’: Rohingya villagers in Myanmar beg for safe passage

SITTWE, MYANMAR — Thousands of Rohingya Muslims in violence-racked northwest Myanmar are pleading with authorities for safe passage from two remote villages that are cut off by hostile Buddhists and running short of food.

“We’re terrified,” Maung Maung, a Rohingya official at Ah Nauk Pyin village, told Reuters by telephone.

“We’ll starve soon and they’re threatening to burn down our houses.”

Another Rohingya contacted by Reuters, who asked not to be named, said ethnic Rakhine Buddhists came to the same village and shouted, “Leave, or we will kill you all.”

Fragile relations between Ah Nauk Pyin and its Rakhine neighbors were shattered on Aug. 25, when deadly attacks by Rohingya militants in Rakhine State prompted a ferocious response from Myanmar’s security forces.

At least 430,000 Rohingya have since fled into neighboring Bangladesh to evade what the United Nations has called a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing.”

About a million Rohingya lived in Rakhine State until the recent violence.

Most face draconian travel restrictions and are denied citizenship in a country where many Buddhists regard them as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

‘COMPLETELY SAFE’
Tin Maung Swe, secretary of the Rakhine State government, told Reuters he was working closely with the Rathedaung authorities, and had received no information about the Rohingya villagers’ plea for safe passage.

“There is nothing to be concerned about,” he said when asked about local tensions. “Southern Rathedaung is completely safe.”

National police spokesman Myo Thu Soe said he also had no information about the Rohingya villages but that he would look into the matter.

Asked to comment, a spokeswoman for the US State Department’s East Asia Bureau made no reference to the situation in the villages, but said the United States was calling “urgently” for Myanmar’s security forces “to act in accordance with the rule of law and to stop the violence and displacement suffered by individuals from all communities.”

“Tens of thousands of people reportedly lack adequate food, water, and shelter in northern Rakhine State,” spokeswoman Katina Adams said.

“The government should act immediately to assist them.”

Ms. Adams said Patrick Murphy, the US deputy assistant secretary of state for East Asia, would reiterate grave US concern about the situation in Rakhine when he meets senior officials in Myanmar this week.

Britain is to host a ministerial meeting on Monday on the sidelines of the annual United Nations General Assembly in New York to discuss the situation in Rakhine.

NO BOATS
Ah Nauk Pyin sits on a mangrove-fringed peninsula in Rathedaung, one of three townships in northern Rakhine State.

The villagers say they have no boats.

Until three weeks ago, there were 21 Muslim villages in Rathedaung, along with three camps for Muslims displaced by previous bouts of religious violence. Sixteen of those villages and all three camps have since been emptied and in many cases burnt, forcing an estimated 28,000 Rohingya to flee.

Rathedaung’s five surviving Rohingya villages and their 8,000 or so inhabitants are encircled by Rakhine Buddhists and acutely vulnerable, say human rights monitors.

The situation is particularly dire in Ah Nauk Pyin and nearby Naung Pin Gyi, where any escape route to Bangladesh is long, arduous, and sometimes blocked by hostile Rakhine neighbors.

Maung Maung, the Rohingya official, said the villagers were resigned to leaving but the authorities had not responded to their requests for security. At night, he said, villagers had heard distant gunfire.

“It’s better they go somewhere else,” said Thein Aung, a Rathedaung official, who dismissed Rohingya allegations that Rakhines were threatening them.

Only two of the Aug. 25 attacks by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) took place in Rathedaung. But the township was already a tinderbox of religious tension, with ARSA citing the mistreatment of Rohingya there as one justification for its offensive.

In late July, Rakhine residents of a large, mixed village in northern Rathedaung corralled hundreds of Rohingya inside their neighborhood, blocking access to food and water.

A similar pattern is repeating itself in southern Rathedaung, with local Rakhine citing possible ARSA infiltration as a reason for ejecting the last remaining Rohingya.

Maung Maung said he had called the police at least 30 times to report threats against his village. On Sept. 13, he said, he got a call from a Rakhine villager he knew. “Leave tomorrow or we’ll come and burn down all your houses,” said the man, according to a recording Maung Maung gave to Reuters.

When Maung Maung protested that they had no means to escape, the man replied: “That’s not our problem.”

On Aug. 31, the police convened a roadside meeting between two villages, attended by seven Rohingya from Ah Nauk Pyin and 14 Rakhine officials from the surrounding villages.

Instead of addressing the Rohingya complaints, said Maung Maung and two other Rohingya who attended the meeting, the Rakhine officials delivered an ultimatum.

“They said they didn’t want any Muslims in the region and we should leave immediately,” said the Rohingya resident of Ah Nauk Pyin who requested anonymity.

The Rohingya agreed, said Maung Maung, but only if the authorities provided security.

He showed Reuters a letter that the village elders had sent to the Rathedaung authorities on Sept. 7, asking to be moved to “another place.” They had yet to receive a response, he said.

VIOLENT HISTORY
Relations between the two communities deteriorated in 2012, when religious unrest in Rakhine State killed nearly 200 people and made 140,000 homeless, most of them Rohingya.

Scores of houses in Ah Nauk Pyin were torched.

Since then, said villagers, Rohingya have been too scared to leave the village or till their land, surviving mainly on monthly deliveries from the World Food Programme (WFP). The recent violence halted those deliveries.

The WFP pulled out most staff and suspended operations in the region after Aug. 25.

Residents in the area’s two Rohingya villages said they could no longer venture out to fish or buy food from Rakhine traders, and were running low on food and medicines.

Maung Maung said the local police told the Rohingya to stay in their villages and not to worry because “nothing would happen,” he said.

But the nearest police station had only half a dozen or so officers, he said, and could not do much if Ah Nauk Pyin was attacked.

A few minutes’ walk away, at the Rakhine village of Shwe Long Tin, residents were also on edge, said its leader, Khin Tun Aye.

They had also heard gunfire at night, he said, and were guarding the village around the clock with machetes and slingshots in case the Rohingya attacked with ARSA’s help.

“We’re also terrified,” he said.

He said he told his fellow Rakhine to stay calm, but the situation remained so tense that he feared for the safety of his Rohingya neighbors.

“If there is violence, all of them will be killed,” he said. — Reuters

UST vows thorough probe into student’s death

THE UNIVERSITY of Santo Tomas (UST) on Monday condemned the death of a freshman law student allegedly linked to fraternity hazing rites. Horacio Tomas Castillo III, 22, was found on a sidewalk in Balut, Tondo Sunday morning. He was brought to the Chinese General Hospital where he was declared dead on arrival. “We condemn in no uncertain terms hazing in any form or manner. Violence has no place in an academic institution, particularly in our University that values and promotes charity and compassion,” UST said in a statement. “We will leave no stones unturned to ensure that the perpetrators be meted the appropriate sanctions and brought to justice,” it added. — philstar

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Nike, National Basketball Association highlight renewed partnership with uniform innovations

USHERING their renewed partnership, Nike, Inc. and the National Basketball Association (NBA) recently unveiled three uniform innovations designed to further enhance fan experience.

In an event held in Los Angeles at the weekend that featured players from all 30 NBA teams, the two major global basketball stakeholders showed to the public for the first time the Nike NBA Connected Jersey, Statement Edition uniforms, and the Nike Therma Flex Showtime Warm-up Jacket.

The latest league apparels, officials said, serve to underscore the strong link between Nike and The Association throughout the years while also exploring the potential for continued growth.

“When you think about basketball, you think of Nike and the NBA,” said Mark Parker, Chairman, CEO and President of Nike in a statement during the unveiling of the new and innovative league apparels.

“After helping fuel the sport’s impact for years, we are thrilled to now be able to push the boundaries of what’s possible directly with the NBA. From modernizing the look of the game to revolutionizing how fans can be a part of it, we can’t wait for the season to start,” the Nike official said.

The significance of their partnership and the uniform innovations that have been introduced is not lost to the NBA, seeing how it would only redound on the fans and how they follow the league.

“Our Nike uniforms set a new standard for connecting our most passionate fans with their favorite NBA teams and players,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said.

Nike, National Basketball Association highlight renewed partnership with uniform innovations
AFP

Adding, “Nike has once again taken the game of basketball to a new level, this time with one of the most advanced jerseys in sports.”

CLOSER TO THE GAME
Using new NikeConnect technology, each adult-sized Nike NBA Connected Jersey will have an embedded NFC (near field communication) chip that will launch real-time team and player content such as pregame arrival footage, highlight packages and top players’ favorite music playlists — all on the jersey owner’s mobile device. Throughout the season, a wealth of exclusive offers and experiences will bring fans closer to the game they love.

To unlock it all, fans will download the NikeConnect app and tap the jersey with their smartphone.

The Statement Edition uniforms, meanwhile, is inspired by teams’ desire to make a bold statement the moment they step on the court. Nike’s designers worked with the teams and the brand’s roster of athletes to create new and updated uniforms for the third of four core team uniforms after the Association and Icon Edition uniforms. The fourth team edition will be released later this year.

The Nike Therma Flex Showtime Warm-up Jacket, for its part, is the first on-court warm-up jacket with a performance hood. Celebrating the style of the game, Nike designers refreshed a beloved apparel staple into a new performance product for athletes on and off the court.

It is created with new Nike Therma Flex fabric which helps athletes maintain the right body temperature during pregame warm-ups and downtime during a game. The jacket is developed with input from top NBA athletes and features a reimagined hood that allows for optimal vision, hearing and warmth, delivering a greater intersection between performance and style.

The Nike NBA Connected Jersey is available exclusively online starting Sept. 29, and the Nike NBA uniforms and Nike Therma Flex Showtime Warm-up Jacket will debut on-court on Sept. 30, the start of the NBA preseason. All Statement Edition jerseys will be available at retail on Nov. 20, and will begin being worn on-court on Nov. 25. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Martin Shkreli’s Wu-Tang album might not be a Wu-Tang album

THE RAPPER Killa Sin didn’t think he was contributing verses to a Wu-Tang Clan record a few years ago when he stood before a microphone in a hotel room in Staten Island, NY. A Moroccan producer known as Cilvaringz had flown in for the sessions because Killa Sin, whose real name is Jeryl Grant, was barred from travel by the terms of his parole.

Like any good clan, Wu-Tang is a network that extends from core members to bit players; it can be hard for outsiders to say with complete confidence who’s in or out at any time. Killa Sin is a gifted lyricist with a different crew, Killarmy, which is part of the Wu-Tang’s extended “family,” but as he understood it, the work he was doing with Cilvaringz wasn’t an official Wu-Tang project.

“The way he presented it,” Killa Sin says of his recording with Cilvaringz, “was it was going to be basically his album, and he wanted me to do some work for him.” He later learned his verses ended up on the Wu-Tang Clan’s Once Upon a Time in Shaolin, the most expensive record ever sold. Virtually nobody has heard the entire recording, perhaps not even the jailed executive who owns the only copy in existence.

Martin Shkreli, who became notorious as the boyish Pharma Bro after he raised the price of a lifesaving drug by 5,000%, paid $2 million in a 2015 auction for the album. He owns the rights to do anything he pleases with it, except sell copies. But interviews with rappers and managers involved in the recording raise questions about its provenance and value: Is Once Upon a Time in Shaolin a true Wu-Tang Clan album? Or did Shkreli pay lavishly for the work of a little-known producer with a peripheral link to the storied rap group?

Shkreli, who currently faces a prison sentence for fraud, may himself have been played.

The 34-year-old founder of the pharmaceutical company Turing Pharmaceuticals, Shkreli took possession of the 31-track double CD and its ornate, hand-carved box around the time he became a public pariah for raising the price on an antiparasitic pill called Daraprim from $13.50 to $750. He would later be convicted in August of defrauding investors, a consequence of his previous incarnation as a hedge fund manager. While awaiting sentencing in that case, he managed to get into more trouble: A federal judge on Wednesday revoked Shkreli’s bail after he offered his Facebook followers $5,000 for a lock of Hillary Clinton’s hair.

Now, as Shkreli sits in a federal jail in Brooklyn, the fate of Once Upon a Time in Shaolin appears to be up in the air again. Shkreli posted the one-and-only copy to eBay, and the online auction for the record is scheduled to end Friday night. (Read Jailed mogul’s Wu-Tang Clan album goes for $1M. – Ed.) “I have not carefully listened to the album,” Shkreli wrote in his description of the auction.

Killa Sin isn’t the only person involved in the mysterious, years-long production of the record who doesn’t see it as a Wu-Tang project. Two charter members of the rap group, through their managers, also described it as an undertaking of Tarik Azzougarh, the real name of Cilvaringz.

“It’s not an authorized Wu-Tang Clan album,” says Domingo Neris, the manager of the rapper U-God, a charter member of the Clan. “It never was.”

“When we did the verses, it was for a Cilvaringz album,” says James Ellis, manager of Method Man, another core member of the group. “How it became a Wu-Tang album from there? We have no knowledge of that.”

Cilvaringz chose not to respond in detail to questions about the record’s genesis. “The album and its concept were an evolutionary process that spanned six years, too complex to explain in a soundbite,” he said in a statement. “All participating Wu-Tang artists were paid in advance while RZA and I bore the financial risk of the project.”

Shkreli also declined to discuss Once Upon a Time in Shaolin. He responded to an e-mail earlier last week with “hahahahahahahahahahahaha” before castigating Bloomberg LP, which publishes financial data and news. “Bloomberg is an overpriced, legacy software system that subsidizes a money-losing media company,” Shkreli wrote. “This state of affairs will soon change.”

The accounts of Killa Sin and the representatives of U-God and Method Man echo a tale circulating on hip-hop Web sites: Once Upon a Time in Shaolin began as an undertaking by Cilvaringz, who later persuaded RZA, the de facto leader of the Wu-Tang Clan, to endorse the project and make the record more valuable. (RZA and his representatives did not respond to interview requests.)

This differs from the story given by RZA and Cilvaringz when they were auctioning the album through Paddle8, an online auction start-up. The two men, who were identified during the auction as co-producers, described the album as an effort by the entire Clan to restore the value of music at a time when listeners can download almost any release without paying. They said members recorded their parts separately and that only the two producers had heard the entire finished product.

“The album was recorded in secret with the members not knowing the exact outcome,” RZA said in March 2015. “But when we announced it to them that this was the plan, everybody agreed that this was a very unique idea.”

Neris, who manages U-God, says the real story is that Cilvaringz gathered verses over the years from Clan members for his own projects and later stitched them together to make Once Upon a Time in Shaolin without the full group’s permission. “We’re very detailed about the quality and how we put our best foot forward,” Neris says. “We would never have authorized anyone to put together a project and call it a Wu-Tang Clan record without us ever looking at it, hearing it, or being in the same room together. That’s just the way these guys work.”

U-God sued Wu-Tang Productions, Inc. and RZA in New York State Supreme Court last year, saying he hadn’t been paid for his work on Once Upon a Time in Shaolin, among other things. His manager says that case is pending.

The rapper Shyheim Franklin, another member of the extended Wu-Tang network whose work has been praised by Jay-Z, tells a similar story. He says he went into a studio on Staten Island with Cilvaringz about five years ago to add verses to one of the producer’s records. “He did mention it being a project he was trying to produce with everyone on it,” Franklin says. “There wasn’t the assumption that it would be a Wu-Tang album.”

Franklin, whose name is on a track list for Once Upon a Time in Shaolin that has circulated online, says he can’t be sure he’s on the record but he’d like to find out. “I’d like my cut of that $2 million,” Franklin says by telephone from Washington Correctional Facility in upstate New York, where he’s serving a maximum sentence of 14 years for second-degree manslaughter.

He also wouldn’t mind having a conversation with Shkreli: “Tell him there is an unreleased Shyheim album he can buy if he wants,” Franklin says, laughing.

For Killa Sin, the experience has been particularly disheartening. He says he had been off the scene for a while and was looking for a way to get back in front of the public. He had previously worked with Cilvaringz, an RZA protégé, and liked his style. When he complained about the low fee Cilvaringz offered, the response underscored that this wasn’t a project affiliated with one of the most beloved rap groups. “He said, ‘I’m doing this all out of my pocket, and I don’t have a big budget,’” Killa Sin recalls.

Killa Sin says he pressed Cilvaringz to let him hear some of the record so he could write better verses and immediately recognized old friends from the Wu-Tang Clan such as Raekwon and Inspectah Deck. “Of course,” he says, “I’ve been associated with those guys for the better part of 20 years.” He figured the Cilvaringz album would be a good one and he’d have more chances to record.

But in 2015, Killa Sin was convicted of criminal weapons possession and received a 16-years-to-life sentence. He’s currently at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Ossining, NY. Later that same year, RZA and Cilvaringz sold Once Upon a Time in Shaolin to Shkreli, who has kept the album under wraps for the most part, although he did play some of it online after the election of Donald Trump.

In a telephone call from prison, Killa Sin laments that he wasted his verses on an album that may never be heard by Wu-Tang Clan fans. He also resents the way Cilvaringz treated him and the rest of the Clan members and their affiliates.

“It’s an insult,” Killa Sin says. “It’s like f— everybody else. I’m going to get mine. He probably thought, ‘We’re onto something. We can really get some money for this.’ But you got to stop and say, ‘How would my brothers feel?’”

Among Wu-Tang fans, there’s also been the perception of insult around the album – only it’s Shkreli who supposedly denigrated the rap group by withholding the music from the public and using his control over the album to draw attention to himself. A potential juror dismissed from Shkreli’s fraud trial articulated this view. “Your Honor, totally he is guilty and in no way can I let him slide out of anything,” explained Juror No. 59, according to a court transcript. After the judge dismissed the candidate, Juror No. 59 added, “And he disrespected the Wu-Tang Clan.”

Shkreli used the eBay auction for Once Upon a Time in Shaolin to express his own hurt feelings at being misunderstood. His purchase was intended to be “a gift to the Wu-Tang Clan,” he wrote. “[T]he world at large failed to see my purpose of putting a serious value behind music. I will be curious to see if the world values music nearly as much as I have.”

The highest bid so far: $1,006,400. (It finally sold for $1,0025,100. – Ed.)Bloomberg

NFA wants to buy palay at P22/kg in 2018

THE National Food Authority (NFA) is hoping to raise its buying price for palay, or unmilled rice, to allow the agency to increase its purchase volume, though it faces budgetary hurdles in doing so.

“We will recommend a higher buying price from P17 to P22 per kilogram so we can purchase more palay,” NFA Grains Marketing Operations Director Rocky L. Valdez said in an interview with BusinessWorld.

The new purchase price will follow President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s directive to increase palay procurement.

Next year, the state-run grains agency is aiming to purchase about five times its 2017 palay procurement target.

Last month, the NFA during a Congressional budget hearing said its 2018 plan is to procure 1.2 million metric tons (MT) of palay from domestic farmers.

NFA’s palay purchasing target this year is 230,367 MT.

“As of Sept. 14, we have only bought 283,166 bags (or 14,158.3 MT),” NFA Spokesperson Rebecca C. Olarte said in a text message on Monday, noting that the dry-season harvest makes up only 30% of the agency’s annual procurement. 

The proposed 2018 palay procurement suggests a funding requirement of P21.6 billion, though the NFA’s approved budget at the House is only P7 billion.

“With the P7 billion, we will not be able to procure much,” said Ms. Olarte.

Ms. Olarte added that the NFA may submit its proposed increase in palay buying price to the interagency NFA Council after the Senate approves the agency’s 2018 budget proposal.

But NFA’s Mr. Valdez said economic managers may still veto the plan due to the inflationary impact of higher rice prices.

“The share of rice in the food basket is high. I am not certain the economic managers will allow it,” Mr. Valdez added. — Janina C. Lim