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Malampaya to fund grid interconnection projects

Malampaya offshore gas project — BW FILE PHOTO

NATIONAL Transmission Corp. (TransCo) plans to take over all of the country’s power grid interconnection projects and fund their construction by using P90-P110 billion of the government’s share in the revenue of the Malampaya offshore gas project, its president said.

“The direction of TransCo right now is to do all the interconnections,” Melvin A. Matibag, TransCo president and chief executive officer, told reporters in a recent gathering with Energy department officials.

He said the interconnection projects include the proposed P52-P53 billion submarine cable that will link the Visayas and Mindanao grids via Dipolog City and the southernmost tip of Cebu.

Also included is the interconnection of Antique province to Mindoro island, Bohol and Cebu islands and an additional facility linking Panay and Negros islands, Mr. Matibag said.

He said TransCo had used as a benchmark the cost cited by privately owned National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP), which he said previously presented plans to build the transmission facilities.

Asked about the funds from Malampaya, he placed the current available total at P193 billion. He said the total will still increase as the government has a share throughout the project’s duration. The gas reserves are expected to be depleted by 2022-2024.

Mr. Matibag also said he was considering the construction of a “redundancy” transmission facility that will connect the grids of the two island groups on the eastern side of the country — from Leyte to Mindanao. He said the transmission line would ride on the bridge proposed by the Department of Public Works and highways that will connect Visayas to Mindanao.

He said he was preparing a position paper on the interconnection projects, which he said had been approved in principle by the Department of Energy (DoE) and the Department of Finance.

In a Senate budget hearing on Tuesday, Energy Undersecretary Felix William B. Fuentebella told lawmakers that the DoE would seek clearance from the Office of the President to endorse the power transmission facilities as priority projects for the use of the Malampaya fund.

Asked about a possible conflict with NGCP, which has also proposed building the facilities, Mr. Matibag said: “My position is this, under the concession agreement, they are exclusively operation and maintenance.”

He said under the agreement, ownership of the existing facilities remain with TransCo.

“Since we are the owner, we can still do that (interconnection),” he said. “And I will invoke the benefits to the public.”

The benefits, he said, include that the cost of building the facilities will not be passed on to consumers, an arrangement that exists under current regulations issued by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC). He said NGCP would even benefit because as the grid operator, it can collect charges for maintaining the facilities.

Mr. Matibag said TransCo had to “benchmark” its pricing for the projects on the figures given by NGCP as his agency lacked the technical capability to do so.

“But I can always go lower than that…” he said, adding he was looking at a project cost that is lower by 20-30% than what NGCP quoted.

He also said that he expects to complete the project faster than the 2020 target previously given by NGCP for its proposal, saying that TransCo as a state agency can do away with the lengthy permitting process and the hearings at the ERC.

“So the chance of interconnection between Visayas and Mindanao is during the administration of the President (Rodrigo R. Duterte),” Mr. Matibag said. — Victor V. Saulon

Whereabouts of former Thai PM Yingluck unknown, minister says

BANGKOK — Thailand’s defense minister on Monday said he did not know the whereabouts of former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra, days after she failed to show up for a verdict in her trial for negligence at which she faced up to 10 years in prison.

Yingluck, whose government was ousted in a 2014 coup, fled to Dubai via Singapore, sources in her Puea Thai Party said on the weekend. Her departure leaves the populist movement that has dominated Thai politics for more than a decade leaderless.

Her brother, former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted by the military in 2006 and also fled Thailand to avoid a 2008 jail sentence for corruption, has a home in Dubai.

“We don’t know where Yingluck fled and whether she has asked for asylum anywhere,” Defense Minister Prawit Wongsuwan, who is also a deputy prime minister, told reporters.

“We haven’t asked for her extradition yet.”

Yingluck was often followed by plain-clothes police, her aides said. During a provincial tour last year men in military uniform would often follow her as she greeted supporters.

Critics are now asking how a person under close scrutiny by security forces could leave the country without being noticed.

“How should I know?” was Prawit’s response to reporters who asked him that on Monday.

Deputy national police chief General Srivara Ransibrahmanakul told reporters police intelligence showed Yingluck was still in her Bangkok home at least up until 2 p.m. on Wednesday. He did not elaborate.

An arrest warrant has been issued for Yingluck, 50, who had been due to appear at the Supreme Court on Friday to hear a verdict in a case against her, involving a rice buying scheme introduced by her government that lost an estimated $8 billion.

A former commerce minister in her government was jailed for 42 years on Friday for falsifying government-to-government rice deals in connection with the same subsidy scheme.

Reuters could not reach either Thaksin or Yingluck for comment on Monday. Yingluck, who is usually active on social media, has not posted on her Facebook page since Thursday, when she told supporters she would see them at the court.

Defense ministry spokesman Kongcheep Tanatravanich told reporters he was confident Yingluck was no longer in Thailand.

“We have to see first which country she’s in. The security side is working on this,” Kongcheep said.

Srisuwan Janya, secretary-general of the Association to Protect the Thai Constitution political group, said he would file a complaint on Monday with the National Anti Corruption Commission over what he called government officials’ failure to prevent Yingluck from fleeing.

By mid-morning on Monday Janya had yet filed the complaint.

Sentencing in Yingluck’s case has been moved to Sept. 27 and is expected to be delivered in absentia. — Reuters

Kasparov in Saint Louis

2017 Saint Louis Combined Standings
Saint Louis, USA
Aug. 17-18, 2017

Final Standings
(Rapid counts double)

1. Levon Aronian ARM, 24.5/36

2-3. Sergey Karjakin RUS, Hikaru Nakamura USA, 21.5/36

4. Ian Nepomniachtchi RUS, 20.0/36

5-7. Leinier Dominguez Perez CUB, Fabiano Caruana USA, Le Quang Liem VIE, 16.5/36

8. Garry Kasparov RUS 16.0/36

9. Viswanathan Anand IND 14.0/36

10. David Navara CZE 13.0/36

Levon Aronian scored a dominant victory in the Saint Louis Rapid and Blitz event, but the big story in Saint Louis is that former world chess champion Garry Kasparov, who many consider the strongest chess player in history, came back and played again after 12 years of retirement.

How did he do? Garry drew all his three games in the first day of the Rapid and had 5.5/9 in the last day of the blitz, not bad for someone who has not played in a long time, but for the rounds in between his rust showed.

Taking it all as a whole, in the Rapid Tournament Kasparov won once (Le Quang Liem), had five draws and three losses (Caruana, Nepom, Navara)

In the Blitz portion he had four wins (Nakamura, Dominguez twice, Caruana), 10 draws and four losses (Karjakin, Aronian, Le Quang Liem, Caruana)

Kasparov usually started well but lack of sharpness and the consequent missed opportunities were in evidence all throughout. For someone who used to lord it over the field this can be very painful — for example, he mentioned his “Navara moment,” that point in his game against the Czech no. 1 where he botched a winning position and then threw away the draw, and how it will haunt him for the rest of his life.

But c’mon guys it wasn’t that bad – even the online commentators Grandmasters Seirawan and Ashley did not see Navara’s saving resource until it was executed on the board.

* * *
Kasparov, Garry (2812) — Navara, David (2737) [B12]
Saint Louis Rapid 2017 Saint Louis (7), 16.08.2017

1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.e5 Bf5 4.Nc3

Kasparov plays one of the most aggressive lines, 4.Nc3 followed by g2–g4 then maybe Nge2, Be3 and then either Nf4 or h2–h4 or f2–f4. This is known as the Shirov Attack.

4…e6 5.g4 Bg6 6.Nge2 c5 7.Be3 Ne7 8.f4 h5 9.f5!?

The idea is to lock in the black bishop on g6 while making f4 available for his knight. Nobody seems to have ever played this before but it is a good plan.

9…exf5 10.g5 Nbc6 11.Nf4 a6 12.Bg2 cxd4 13.Bxd4 Nxd4 14.Qxd4 Nc6 15.Qf2 Bb4

Suicidal is 15…Nxe5? 16.0–0–0.

16.0–0–0 Bxc3 17.bxc3 Qa5 18.Rxd5 Qxc3 19.Qc5 Qxc5 20.Rxc5 0–0 21.Bxc6 bxc6 22.Rd1!

This should be winning for Kasparov. He continues with perfect play.]

22…Rab8 23.c4 Rfd8 24.Rd6! Kf8 25.Rcxc6 Rdc8 26.Kc2 h4 27.Rxc8+ Rxc8 28.Kc3 a5 29.Ra6 Rb8 30.Rxa5 Rb1 31.c5 Re1 32.Ra8+ Ke7 33.Ra7+ Ke8 34.Nd3?

Now Kasparov starts to unravel, voluntarily removing his knight from its great position. He could have crowned his great play with 34.e6! Re5 35.c6 Rc5+ 36.Kd4 Rxc6 37.e7 Black can resign as he will be mated.

34…Re3 35.Kd2 Rh3 36.c6 Rxh2+ 37.Ke3?

Another mistake — White should have played 37.Kc3. Why allow the black rook to get to c2?

37…Rc2 38.e6 h3

The win is no longer there and unbelievably Black’s h-pawn is two squares away from queening.

39.Nb4 f4+ 40.Kd4! h2 41.Ra8+ Ke7 42.Rh8 Rd2+

According to Navara he had already seen the possibility of his final winning maneuver hereabouts.

43.Kc5 Be4 44.c7! Bb7 45.Kb6 Bc8 46.Rxc8 h1Q! 47.Re8+ Kxe8 48.c8Q+ <D>

POSITION AFTER 48.C8Q+

Kasparov thought he was winning here. It turns out he had made a serious miscalculation.

48…Ke7! 49.Nc6+?

[49.Qc7+ will draw by perpetual, but a draw was farthest from Garry’s mind]

49…Qxc6+! 50.Qxc6

[50.Kxc6 Rc2+]

50…Rd6 0–1

Black’s f-pawn will queen.

To be fair to Garry we should show you his best game, which was played in the last round. Leinier Dominguez of Cuba played a bit passively but Kasparov receives full credit for the following positional masterpiece, motivated by (according to Garry) the thought that this might be his last Najdorf!

* * *
Dominguez Perez, Leinier (2739) — Kasparov, Garry (2812) [B81]
Saint Louis Blitz 2017 Saint Louis USA (17), 18.08.2017

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.h3 e6 7.g4 h6 8.Bg2 g5

This has to do with fighting for control of the e5 square. More people would play this line if most of Black’s pieces were not in their home squares. So, to summarize, White has to attack hard or otherwise Black will take over in the latter stages of the game.

9.Be3 Nbd7 10.Qe2 Ne5 11.0–0–0 Nfd7 12.h4?!

Dominguez’ play is uninspired. He has to start pushing hard already with 12.f4 gxf4 13.Bxf4 b5 14.Rhf1 with chances for both sides.

12…Rg8 13.hxg5 hxg5 14.Kb1

[14.Rh5 b5 15.Rdh1 Qf6 16.Nf3 Nxf3 17.Qxf3 Qxf3 18.Bxf3 Ne5 White is not making any headway. ½–½ (18) Mihok,O (2443)-Flumbort,A (2503) Budapest 2012]

14…b5 15.a3

Neither does 15.f4 gxf4 16.Bxf4 Bb7 17.g5 Qa5 18.Rh7 0–0–0 19.a3 Kb8 20.Qf2 Rc8 21.Na2 Ka8 achieve anything. ½–½ (21) Kasimdzhanov,R (2681)-Sasikiran,K (2679) Evry 2008.

15…Bb7 16.Bc1 Rc8

With the idea of 17…Rxc3 18.bxc3 Nc5 19.Rh3 Na4 20.Rdh1 Qc7 21.Qe1 Be7 followed by …Ng6, …Bf6 and …Rgc8.

17.Rh3 Ng6 18.Bh1 Nde5 19.Rg3 Be7 20.Na2 Rh8 21.Rc3 Rxc3 22.Nxc3 Qc7 23.Bg2 Qc4 24.Qxc4 bxc4 25.f3 Rh2 26.Bf1 Nf4

Kasparov has taken over the board, but it is not yet clear where the breakthrough is going to come from.

27.Be3 Bd8!

This is it! He will switch the diagonal of the bishop. Please remember that this is a blitz game — most GMs would have been happy to see this move in standard time controls.

28.Rd2 Rxd2 29.Bxd2 Bb6 30.Bxf4

The point is that 30.Be3 Bxd4 31.Bxd4 Nxf3 32.Be3 (the bishop is en prise so White does not have time for Bxc4) 32…d5 33.exd5 Bxd5 next to fall will be the g4–pawn. Black is completely winning.

30…gxf4 31.Nce2 d5 32.exd5 Bxd5 33.Bg2 Nxg4! 34.Nxf4 Ne3

Of course not 34…Bxd4? 35.Nxd5 exd5 36.fxg4 the tables have turned.

35.Nde2 Nxg2 36.Nxg2 Bxf3 37.Nef4 Ke7 38.Kc1 e5 39.Nh4 Be3+ 40.Kb1 Bxf4 41.Nxf3 Ke6 42.b3 e4 43.Nd4+ Kd5 44.c3 Be5 45.bxc4+ Kxc4 46.Nf5 Kxc3 47.Kc1 Kd3 48.Kd1 e3 0–1

A textbook crush.

The games show us that Kasparov is still up-to-date in his theory — once bitten by the chess bug you are infected for life. Now we know what Garry does at night during his constant travel around the world.

Garry explained that the reason for his participation in this tournament was to show his appreciation for the sponsor of the Saint Louis Chess Club, Mr. Rex Sinquefield who has been his supporter for the past so many years. Mr. Sinquefield is a fund manager who manages more than $300 billion in assets. In 2007, he and his wife opened the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis to promote awareness of the educational value of chess. He also provided seed funding to relocate the World Chess Hall of Fame to Saint Louis.

Since then Saint Louis has become the de facto chess center of the United States and starting 2009 all of the USA Chess Championships have been played there.

At the closing ceremony, Garry Kasparov did not rule out coming back to chess in the future but he qualified that if and when he does it will be at the Saint Louis Chess Club.

Bobby Ang is a founding member of the National Chess Federation of the Philippines (NCFP) and its first Executive Director. A Certified Public Accountant (CPA), he taught accounting in the University of Santo Tomas (UST) for 25 years and is currently Chief Audit Executive of the Equicom Group of Companies.

bobby@cpamd.net

Foreign banks eye PHL presence

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez,
Senior Reporter

AT LEAST two global banks are looking to establish their presence in the Philippines, the central bank chief said, amid growing interest as more foreign players look to cash in on the country’s growth story.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr. said two foreign banks are in talks to set up representative offices here, on top of eight other lenders who want to put up branches in Manila.

Representative offices allow foreign banks to set up liaison desks for Philippine-based clients to their branches in their home country, enabling them to promote their financial products and services as they lure potential clients to transact with their branches located abroad.

These bank offices cannot take deposits, hand out loans, or offer foreign exchange.

Mr. Espenilla said the two banks considering to put up such offices come from outside Asia, showing broad interest among foreign firms towards the Philippines. He added that such applications also pose as a litmus test as the global lenders assess opportunities here.

“Representative offices are mainly focused on marketing. That’s important because representative offices are also useful in drawing in investments into the country,” the BSP chief told reporters in an ambush interview Friday. “If they see a really good market demand, it may progress into a branch application.”

There are 10 global banks with representative offices in the Philippines, according to central bank data.

The BSP evaluates applications to open representative offices by looking at the foreign bank’s liquidity and solvency positions; net worth and resources base; financial and credit standing in the global banking community; and its exposure in the Philippines, including the outstanding commercial and financial ties between Manila and the applicant bank’s home country.

Mr. Espenilla also said that there are live inquiries from eight Asian banks considering to set up branches in the Philippines. If these push through, the lenders would add to the 10 foreign players which have entered the country since the passage of Republic Act (RA) 10641 in 2014.

RA 10641 opened the Philippines to more foreign banks as it lifted the previous limit which allowed only 10 offshore lenders to do business in the country at a time, which meant that a new player could only set up shop here when one of the 10 accredited players pulled out.

Five of the new foreign bank branches that have set up shop here are from Taiwan: Cathay United Bank, Yuanta Commercial Bank Co. Ltd., First Commercial Bank, Hua Nan Commercial Bank Ltd., and the Chang Hwa Commercial Bank, Ltd.

Other banks that have launched operations here are the Japan-based Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.; South Korea’s Industrial Bank of Korea, Shinhan Bank, and Woori Bank; and the Singapore-based United Overseas Bank Ltd.

Life is beautiful

Twenty years ago, the film Life is Beautiful made its screen debut. In spite of being a non-Hollywood film, it became a commercial success. The film was controversial, especially for highbrow and politically correct critics, because it was shocking to introduce a comedy set in the period of the Holocaust. Why have comedy in a setting of terror and monstrosity, genocide and fascism?

Yet, for those who saw the film, what stood out was not the comedy but its severe poignancy — that the ultimate good happens after much suffering, pain, and death. Mae, my departed wife, and I did see Life is Beautiful, and we wept.

The film began brightly, depicting the life of a small Italian Jewish family — a dad, mom, and a small child — living a blissful petty bourgeois life in the medieval town of Arezzo in rustic and scenic Tuscany. But it was likewise a menacing time — the rise of dictator Benito Mussolini and the spread of fascism in Italy and elsewhere.

When World War II broke out, the fascists forcibly removed the Jews from their home, and sent them to a concentration camp. Among those caught and detained were the dad Guido and his son Giosuè. The wife Dora, in search of her husband and son, voluntarily submitted herself to be interned in the concentration camp.

Meanwhile, to protect the boy from the horror, Guido created a fantasy that their confinement was a game. The object of their game was to find Dora and then free themselves.

In the end, the son was reunited with his mom, and they attained freedom. But Guido had to sacrifice his life for this game to be won.

“Life is beautiful” is an apt description of how my wife Mae lived her life.

Yeb, Mae’s sister, describes Mae as a happy, bubbly baby. She was everyone’s favorite, especially her dad. In her childhood, Mae was full of gaiety and high spirits, sprinkled with pleasant naughtiness.

Once, an adult neighbor found small Mae straying away from her home in Area 1 on the UP campus. Asked by a neighbor where she was going, innocent Mae said she was headed towards 11th Jamboree to visit her grandparents, an almost five-kilometer walk from her home.

And once at dawn, she went to the neighbor’s yard, watered the plants, and then from the window facing the garden, peeked at the master’s bedroom to find out what the English professor and wife were doing.

In her teens and young adulthood, Mae had diverse circles of friends — the scholars, the idlers, the hippies, the fratmen and their sisters, the barbarians (those who didn’t belong to fraternities or sororities), the leftists, and the professors. She was a “crush ng bayan,” and had many suitors.

She overstayed in the university, for it took her a long time to finish her thesis. Yet, she earned good grades, qualifying her to become a member of a Greek-lettered honor society,

Mae described herself as a “hedonist-activist.” Jokingly, she said that despite her mom’s karitela income as a UP professor, the children had the Cadillac taste. At the same time, she and family were exposed to progressive ideas and translated them into action. Mae was a constant companion of her mom, who became an anti-dictatorship activist and a member of Ka Pepe Diokno’s nationalist and democratic group named Kaakbay.

As a couple, Mae and I celebrated life. We dined, traveled, saw concerts and movies, attended family or social gatherings. Mae was with me in my activism — giving advice, editing my articles, joining me in forums and demonstrations.

But the beauty of life for Mae was not just about fun, merriment, adventure, and promoting a good cause. It was about the primacy of relationships. She valued relationships. She unconditionally loved me (despite our quarrels). She unconditionally loved her mom (despite their quarrels). She was most devastated by her dad’s early death (she was only seven years old when her dad died). She expressed her love to siblings, in-laws and friends in many ways — letters, calls, visits, listening, story-telling, hugs and kisses, etc.

The seriousness and sincerity of her relationships extended beyond me, her relatives, and her friends. In our neighborhood where everyone can live in anonymity, Mae befriended everyone — the street sweeper and her son, the bank teller and the bank manager, the key maker, the tambays or loafers, the pest control guy.

Mae helped a bank teller named Ferdie, still young but, like Mae, stricken with diabetes and undergoing dialysis treatments. Mae opened special accounts, which were unnecessary for us, to accommodate the requests of Ferdie who earned a commission for every new account.

I share the story of Marlon, the guy who does pest control. In one visit, he congratulated me about the freedom of information or FoI being signed as an Executive Order. I asked, how did he know? He said that he learned about the FoI and the work we do on the FoI from Mae. Mae had long conversations with him, from the trivial to the serious. Sometimes, Marlon said, he was late for his next appointment because of the extended chat with Mae.

I also recall the times Mae criticized me, that my idea of serving the people is abstract, in the sense that I focus on systemic change. For Mae, helping the people included giving money to the street children, which I objected to. We agreed that instead of giving cash, providing food to the poor children is better.

Thus, the beauty of life for Mae was essentially about love and relationships. For Mae, it was not just love for kin and tribe, but also for the common people, the strangers, the poor, and the downtrodden.

“Life is beautiful” is to uphold the value of life, to love humankind.

Yet, especially today, dark forces trample the value of life; thousands of people, especially the poor, are killed, murdered. We are going through our own version of the Holocaust. Mae would have wept; she would have stood up for the victims and the oppressed.

Mae embraced the beauty of life in spite of her pain and suffering. She, too, had her emotional trauma in life, and she had many health issues, including ovarian cancer and an irreversible diabetes that claimed her life.

For society, can the beauty of life coexist with pain, suffering, and crimes against humanity? The film Life is Beautiful gives us the answer. The bad and the evil cannot be permanent. Ultimately, justice and the good will overwhelm evil. As portrayed in Life is Beautiful, victory can be attained through patience, intelligence, and determination. And it is in the most painful struggle to banish the bad can we fully appreciate the beauty of life.

The author writes this piece to remember wife Mae on the occasion of her second death anniversary.

Filomeno S. Sta. Ana III coordinates the Action for Economic Reforms.

www.aer.ph

More MyTown dorms to open in next 12 months

SM INVESTMENTS Corp. (SMIC) expects a total of 12 dormitory buildings under the MyTown brand to be up and running within the next 12 months.

MyTown
SMIC

MyTown, a chain of dormitories by Philippines Urban Living Solutions, Inc. (PULS), currently has five operational properties in the Bonifacio Global City (BGC) area in Taguig City and Makati City, with seven more under construction.

“They currently have a total of 12 properties, five of them have been developed. All of the 12 they are hoping to open within the next 12 months,” SMIC Senior Vice-President and Investor Relations Head Corazon P. Guidote told reporters last Friday, adding that the mature developments currently enjoy an occupancy rate of around 90%.

SMIC completed its acquisition of a 61.2% stake in PULS in April this year, allowing the Sy-led company to enter the dormitory development sector.

MyTown rents out rooms at P17,000 per month, with a maximum of four people allowed to share a unit and split the rental costs. All rooms come with built-in Wi-Fi access, while amenities include a 20-meter lap pool, movie theater, game rooms, a gym, KTV rooms, study rooms, and a roof deck.

Each development also has leasing spaces for convenience stores, internet cafes, and laundromats, among others, according to its Web site.

Asked for expansion plans after the completion of the 12 properties, Ms. Guidote noted the company will “just keep expanding within the BGC area.”

Ang laki ng gap. Most of the accommodations in BGC are very expensive then maraming mga BPO (business process outsourcing) workers who need some kind of parang transient living type. Yung dorm accommodation is very practical for them. So during the weekdays they stay in MyTown and during the weekends umuuwi sila,” she added.

The company, however, may target areas outside BGC once operations in the area are successful.

“They can go elsewhere also where there’s a need for the same kind of service,” Ms. Guidote said.

In a property market report for the second quarter of 2017, property consultancy Colliers International noted that real estate firms should target these kinds of dormitory developments given the continued expansion of BPO firms in the country.

“These halfway residential units are for professionals who want to live near their place of work. The worker-accommodation units are also more practical for employees working in CBDs (central business districts) as the worsening traffic in Metro Manila only makes their commute to and from work more unbearable,” according to Colliers.The holding firm of country’s richest man Henry Sy, Sr. reported an attributable profit of P16.59 billion in the first semester, up 9.03% year on year.

Shares in SMIC added P4.50 or 0.55% to P821 each at the close of trading last week. — Arra B. Francia

Braving security fears, Chinese seek ‘Silk Road’ riches in Pakistan

LAHORE, PAKISTAN/SHANGHAI — Zhang Yang, a businessman from Chongqing in southwest China, is searching online forums for fellow stout-hearted entrepreneurs willing to cast aside security concerns and join him on a scouting mission to Pakistan.

Zhang, 48, is one of a growing number of Chinese pioneers sensing an opportunity across the Himalayas in Pakistan, where Beijing has pledged to spend $57 billion on infrastructure projects as part of its “Belt and Road” initiative.

Numbering in the thousands, this second wave of Chinese arrivals are following in the wake of workers on Belt and Road projects. Some are opening restaurants and language schools, while others are working out what products they could sell to a market of 208 million people, or what goods they could make cheaply in Pakistan to sell around the world.

“A lot of industries are already saturated in China,” said Mr. Zhang, who has worked in property, electrical appliances and household goods in China and says he wants to explore the potential for setting up factories or importing Chinese goods.

“Pakistan’s development is behind China, so it will hold better opportunities compared to home.”

But the new arrivals face dangers, creating a headache for Pakistani security officials.

Islamic State’s killing of two Chinese nationals in the restive Baluchistan province in June highlighted the risks posed by Islamist militants, who may see them as soft targets in their war with the state.

Beijing has also long fretted about hardened Pakistani Islamist fighters linking up with the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, a Uigher militant group Beijing accuses of seeking to split off its western region of Xinjiang, Pakistani officials say.

Islamabad does not release immigration data but a source in the foreign ministry said about 71,000 Chinese nationals visited in 2016. A senior immigration official added 27,596 visa extensions were granted to Chinese that year, a 41% increase on 2015, suggesting more are staying in the country for longer.

For Pakistan, the stakes in keeping all those Chinese nationals safe are high.

Beijing’s infrastructure splurge has helped revive Pakistan’s sputtering economy, and deepening ties between the two nations have turned Pakistan into a key cog in China’s grand plan to build a modern-day “Silk Road” of land and sea trade routes linking Asia with Europe and Africa.

While the first phase of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), as the Pakistan leg of this new Silk Road is called, concentrated on infrastructure projects, the second part will focus on setting up special economic zones and integrating Chinese firms into the local economy to help Pakistan develop its industries ranging from mining to agriculture.

China has also surged to become by far the biggest source of foreign direct investment for Pakistan, topping $1 billion in 2016/2017, and is betting on its neighbor at a time when many Western companies are still put off by security concerns and corruption.

“Pakistan really needs foreign investment and we are not going to miss out on this because of some idiots with a gun,” said Miftah Ismail, a special adviser to Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi. “We won’t let them mess with the Chinese.”

SECURITY CHALLENGE
Pakistan receives friendly coverage in Chinese media and regularly features in state broadcaster CCTV’s programs on the Belt and Road initiative, which include promotions of CPEC and interviews with Chinese workers living in the country.

That has not been enough to assuage concerns about security for Mr. Zhang and other Chinese businessmen and women who spoke to Reuters.

“It’s a big lesson for us,” said Derek Wang, referring to the Baluchistan killings.

Mr. Wang, deputy chief executive of Infoshare, an Islamabad-based consultancy assisting Chinese entrepreneurs and businesses, said security was the number one concern of Chinese newcomers.

Pakistan is taking the threat seriously. Guards and police with automatic rifles shield Chinese-staffed offices and language schools, while security officials say plainclothes officers form a less visible layer of protection at such sites.

Unlike the engineers and construction workers who reside in heavily guarded compounds while building the roads and power plants that make up CPEC, the entrepreneurs seeking riches on the back of it mostly arrive on their own and disperse across the country. Few inform authorities of their plans.

“This is the biggest challenge right now,” said Muhammad Faisal Rana, who heads an 8,000-strong Special Protection Unit set up by Punjab province in 2014 to guard foreigners. Ninety percent of those it protects are Chinese, he said.

Mr. Rana said growing numbers of Chinese entrepreneurs turn up with tourist visas. Many are conducting market research, while some launch their products and then flit back to China.

“All these elements are sometimes out of our radar, and we have no idea from which flight they are coming in and where they are heading towards,” he said.

SPU officials have cultivated ties with guesthouses popular with Chinese and set up liaison desks at airports to register the Chinese entrepreneurs before they vanish, while governments in Sindh and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces are accelerating plans to build up special protection units akin to the one in Punjab.

LANGUAGE SCHOOLS
In Islamabad, where Chinese visitors were seldom seen before 2014, their prominence is growing. They now outnumber other foreigners, and the country’s first-ever Chinese-language newspaper, Huashang, has been launched.

Visitors arriving at the capitals airport are handed flyers written in Mandarin advertising a Chinese courier service, and in the city shop signs in the Chinese language are increasingly common.

Chinese restaurants are sprouting to cater for new arrivals who are rarely fond of Pakistani food.

Pakistanis, sensing their neighbor’s growing power, are flocking to study at new Chinese language schools.

A boom in business has prompted Ami Quin, a Chinese restaurateur and owner of a guesthouse for employees of Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE, to open a spa and a second guesthouse.

“More and more people are very interested to come to Pakistan after CPEC,” she said. “They are looking for partners all the time.”

In one of Ms. Quin’s restaurants in Islamabad, civil engineer Pan Denghao lamented the oppressive Pakistani heat but conceded the money and jobs on offer exceeded what young people like him could expect back home.

“Every year in China you have so many graduates from colleges and universities, but the opportunities and chances for jobs are limited,” said Pan, 25, whose company is building Islamabad’s new airport.

Chinese businessmen who arrived before CPEC was unveiled in 2014 are capitalizing on their experience to launch consultancies, advising newcomers how to circumnavigate the country’s notorious bureaucracy or match them with Pakistani partners.

Another Chinese businessman who did not wish to give his name, said he and fellow Chinese executives often pay bribes to speed up imports or obtain government permits. That used to be a regular aspect of Chinese life before President Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption drive of the past few years.

“This is one of the reasons why us Chinese are comfortable here. We know how to deal with this,” he said.

SALARY, THEN SAFETY
Although Chinese habits sometimes clash with local customs in a deeply conservative Muslim nation — Chinese restaurants, for example, sometimes turn a blind eye to customers drinking smuggled alcohol — there is little sign of hostility to the new arrivals from ordinary Pakistanis.

Unlike Western nations, China is widely seen as having been a consistent ally to Pakistan, and Chinese visitors often recount stories of being let off minor misdemeanors — such as driving without a license — by police and government officials with comments like “you are our friends.”

Officials have portrayed the Islamic State killings in Baluchistan as a one-off, saying the two Chinese victims were targeted because they were Christian missionaries masquerading as business people.

But at least one Chinese business delegation canceled its trip to Pakistan as a result of the attack.

Pakistan has since tightened business visa rules for Chinese nationals and vowed improved security.

At a CPEC site guarded by the Punjab SPU in Lahore, policemen clad in bullet-proof vests demonstrated to Reuters how armed officers sitting on the back of pick-up trucks shield Chinese executives when transporting them in convoys.

One Chinese executive said police provided her with an armed convoy for a four-hour trip from the disputed Kashmir region to her office in Islamabad. “It was quite touching,” she said.

But security officials concede not everyone can be given round-the-clock protection, and many businessmen do not want their freedom curbed.

Still, China-based recruiters such as Ms. Yang, of Zaozhuang Xincai Services, say the Islamic State killings have not dented the stream of applicants seeking work in Pakistan, thanks to pay that can be more than four times what they would earn at home.

“First concerns are about how high or low the salary is, when it will be paid,” she said. “And then safety.” — Reuters

Kendrick Lamar dominates politically tinged MTV awards

LOS ANGELES – Rapper Kendrick Lamar dominated the MTV Video Music Awards on Sunday as the glitzy gala took a political turn with impassioned denunciations of white supremacists in America. Lamar took the most prestigious award of Video of the Year for “HUMBLE.,” his ironic look at his growing fame in which he dresses up as everything from the pope to Jesus in The Last Supper.

Lamar opened the show in Los Angeles with a martial arts-themed performance of the song with ninja dancers, one of which eerily appeared to set himself ablaze.

One of the most acclaimed rappers of recent times, Lamar took home six statuettes – rechristened the “Moon Person” from “Moonman” to be gender-neutral.

English songwriter Ed Sheeran won Artist of the Year, a new prize after the separate male and female categories were merged, while rapper Khalid won for new artist.

While Lamar’s latest album DAMN. has toned down his earlier political bent, the globally televised awards gala itself did anything but.

The mother of Heather Heyer, the 32-year-old anti-racism protester killed when an avowed white supremacist drove into a crowd during the Aug. 12 unrest in Charlottesville, Virginia, took the stage to announce a foundation in honor of her daughter.

Saying she wanted to “make Heather’s death count,” Susan Bro – controlling her emotions as the crowd applauded – said the foundation would offer scholarships to students who pursue social justice.

Bro presented “Best Fight Against the System,” a new award that recognizes activism in a music video. In the spirit of equality, Bro said all six contenders would share the prize.

The songs ranged from attacks on racism to “Scars to Your Beautiful” by rising star Alessia Cara, an ode to healthy body image which she performed at the awards, dancers around her rustling her hair and removing her oversized dress.

SHARP WORDS FOR TRUMP
Paris Jackson, a model and the daughter of the late “King of Pop” Michael Jackson, also took aim at the white supremacists who marched in Charlottesville.

“We must show these Nazis,” she said to cheers, “that we have zero tolerance for their violence and hatred.”

With Texas being whipped by massive storm Harvey, the gala also sent best wishes to residents in harm’s way. Host Katy Perry asked viewers to consider donations to the American Red Cross.

Perry used wires to float onto the stage in an MTV-style moonsuit before an evening of shifting attire, ending with the singer back in the air to slam-dunk basketballs as she performed her song “Swish Swish.”

Perry took aim at President Donald Trump as she urged fans to choose a winner in a category that remained open to online voting.

“This is one election where the popular vote actually matters,” quipped Perry, one of the most vocal celebrity campaigners for defeated candidate Hillary Clinton. “But hurry up before some random Russian pop star wins.”

MTV invited a number of transgender US service people to attend the show – two days after Trump ordered a ban on new transgender recruits in the military.

TAYLOR GOES GOTHIC
Fellow pop A-lister Taylor Swift used the awards to unveil the video for her latest song, “Look What You Made Me Do,” in which she showed a new dark, bad-girl image.

The camera opens with imagery of a cemetery and a grave that says “Here Lies Taylor Swift’s Reputation” – a theme that will apparently weigh heavily on Swift’s newly announced album, which is entitled Reputation and comes out on Nov. 10.

The video proceeds to show Swift in Halloween-like makeup and then crashing a car, with paparazzi quickly appearing to show her mishap to the world.

The singer, 27, usually known for her squeaky-clean image, appears in the video smashing up a store with a baseball bat and riding on top of a motorcycle in a spiked leather jacket.

Jared Leto of Thirty Seconds to Mars offered a tribute to two rock singers who committed suicide this year – Chester Bennington of Linkin Park and Chris Cornell of Soundgarden – before putting on a trippy performance with thermal cameras.

The rapper Logic and Cara reinforced the anti-suicide message as they put on “1-800-273-8255” – the title a reference to a help line, with the number emblazoned on the T-shirts of dozens of people who had attempted suicide and joined them on stage.

On a lighter theme, pop great Rod Stewart sang a new take on his 1978 hit “Da Ya Think I’m Sexy?” – this time with the much younger dance group DNCE. – AFP

 

Davao-Tagbilaran route still under review

AIRLINE CEBU-PACIFIC is still studying the proposed Davao-Tagbilaran route that has long been sought by the Davao City Council. Charo L. Lagamon, director of corporate communications for Cebu Pacific, said factors being considered in opening the said route include the capacity of the two airports. “Davao is OK but Tagbilaran we still have to check out,” she said, referring as well to the provincial capital of Bohol in the Visayas. The city council has filed recent resolutions appealing and requesting for the said route. “It’s a lot of details that go into (the) launching of a route. But definitely it is something that we are working on,” Ms. Lagamon said. Cebu Pacific recently launched the Davao-Dumaguete (three times a week) and Davao-Tacloban (four times a week) routes. — Maya M. Padillo

Bases authority to harmonize Clark projects with new Freeport master plan

THE Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) said it will study the upcoming redesign of the master plan of Clark Freeport Zone to ensure it properly integrates projects planned for the area.

Clark Freeport Zone
Vicinity map of Clark Freeport Zone — www.denr.gov.ph

“[Clark Development Corp. (CDC)] is doing a redesign of Clark Freeport Zone… Palafox [Associates] won the bid. They’re reviewing the master plan. We’re going to wait for the results at the end of the year so we can plan well where to put the housing, where the malls will be… that’s going to be part of the plan,” BCDA President and Chief Executive Officer Vivencio B. Dizon told reporters in a recent interview.

The CDC entered into an agreement with architecture and urban planning firm Palafox Associates in January to redesign the master plan of Clark Freeport Zone.

Mr. Dizon said that the review was because the master plan is “quite old,” and has not undergone a review in over 10 years.

“Other projects will affect Clark, like the railway, the airport… With New Clark City, we have to incorporate everything,” Mr. Dizon said.

The Manila-Clark railway is set to be completed in 2021, while the construction of the new terminal of the Clark International Airport  is set to start in December and operations are planned for the first quarter of 2019.

One of the components of New Clark City that will draw particular interest is the New Clark City-Mixed Income Development Housing project.

“The prices will be affordable… (compared to) Makati, BGC [Bonifacio Global City], even Quezon City,” Mr. Dizon said. — Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

Houston crippled by catastrophic flood; evacuations ordered

HOUSTON — Tropical storm Harvey was set to dump more rain on Houston on Monday, worsening flooding that has paralyzed the country’s fourth biggest city, forced thousands to flee and swollen rivers to levels not seen in centuries.

Harvey, the most powerful hurricane to hit Texas in more than 50 years, first hit land late on Friday and has killed at least two people. It has since stayed around Texas’ Gulf of Mexico Coast where it is forecast to remain for several more days, drenching parts with a year’s worth of rain in the span of a week.

Schools, airports and office buildings in Houston, home to about 2.3 million people, were ordered shut on Monday as scores of roads turned into rivers and chest-high water filled neighborhoods in the low-lying city.

Torrential rain also hit areas more than 150 miles (240 km) away, swelling rivers upstream and causing a surge that was heading toward the Houston area.

Authorities ordered more than 50,000 people to leave parts of Fort Bend County, about 35 miles (55 km) southwest of Houston as the Brazos River was set to crest at a record high of 59 feet (18 m) this week, 14 feet above its flood stage.

Brazos County Judge Robert Hebert told reporters the forecast crest represents a high not seen in at least 800 years.

“What we’re seeing is the most devastating flood event in Houston’s recorded history,” said Steve Bowen, chief meteorologist at reinsurance firm Aon Benfield.

Total precipitation could reach 50 inches (127 cm) in some coastal areas of Texas by the end of the week, or the average rainfall for an entire year, forecasters said. Nearly 24 inches fell in a span of 24 hours in Baytown, a city home to major refineries about 30 miles east of Houston, the National Weather Service said early on Monday.

“Water started flooding our house and by last night we were unable to leave,” said Maria Davila, one of about 1,000 people in a makeshift shelter at Houston’s sprawling convention center.

US President Donald J. Trump plans to go to Texas on Tuesday to survey damage from the storm, a White House spokeswoman said on Sunday.

Mr. Trump, facing the first big US natural disaster since he took office in January, signed a disaster proclamation on Friday, triggering federal relief efforts. Texas Governor Greg Abbott said on Sunday 54 counties had been declared state disaster areas and he plans to add 1,000 more National Guard personnel to the flood battle.

MASSIVE DAMAGE
Harvey is expected to produce an additional 15 inches to 25 inches of rain through Friday in the upper Texas coast and into southwestern Louisiana, the National Hurricane Center said.

“The storm isn’t moving much. If it doesn’t move much, it keeps throwing rain into the same area,” Steve Wistar, a senior meteorologist with AcuWeather, said in a telephone interview.

The Harris County Sheriff’s Office used motorboats, airboats, humvees and other vehicles to rescue more than 2,000 people in the greater Houston area on Sunday, a spokesman said.

The US Coast Guard and Houston police rescued hundreds more as residents brought boats to staging centers to help and helicopters were deployed to save others stranded by the floods.

The National Weather Service has issued flood watches and warnings from near San Antonio to New Orleans, an area home to more than 13 million people.

Federal authorities predicted it would take years to repair the damage caused by Harvey.

Forecasters could only draw on a few comparisons to the storm, recalling hurricane Katrina, which devastated New Orleans and killed 1,800 people in 2005.

Katrina resulted in more than $15 billion in flood insurance losses in Louisiana and Mississippi.

Flood damage in Texas from hurricane Harvey may equal that from Katrina, the costliest natural disaster in US history, an insurance research group said on Sunday.

The Gulf is home to almost half of the nation’s refining capacity, and the reduced supply could affect gasoline supplies across the US Southeast and other parts of the country. Shutdowns extended across the coast, including Exxon Mobil’s Baytown refinery, the second largest US refinery.

The outages will limit the availability of US crude, gasoline and other refined products for global consumers and further push up prices, analysts said.

All Houston port facilities will be closed on Monday because of the weather threat, a port spokeswoman said.

More than 224,000 customers in the Houston area were without power on Monday morning, utilities CenterPoint Energy and AEP Texas said.

Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport, one of the nation’s busiest, and William P. Hobby airport halted all commercial flights on Sunday. The airports remained closed to commercial traffic on Monday.

Jose Rengel, a 47-year-old construction worker who lives in Galveston, helped rescue efforts in Dickinson, southeast of Houston, where he saw water cresting the tops of cars.

“I am blessed that not much has happened to me, but these people lost everything. And it keeps raining,” he said.

“The water has nowhere to go.” — Reuters

Peso to trade sideways ahead of key US reports

THE PESO will likely trade sideways versus the dollar in the coming days after the much-awaited speeches of central bank officials failed to shed light on next policy moves in the United States and Europe, and ahead of key economic data to be released later this week.

The local unit closed at P51.08 against the greenback on Friday, slightly weaker than the P51 finish it logged the previous day, which was its best showing in nearly two weeks.

Week on week, the peso appreciated by 41 centavos coming from the P51.49-per-dollar rate logged on Aug. 18.

Financial markets were closed on Monday for the National Heroes’ Day, a public holiday in the Philippines.

Traders interviewed late last week said they expect the exchange rate to stand little changed from Friday’s level after the heads of the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank (ECB) bared no hints about their next moves during their much-awaited remarks last Friday.

“The dollar might initially move sideways in the first two business days of the week amid mixed signals from the US last Friday. Policy makers gave no concrete leads regarding monetary policy during the Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium,” said Guian Angelo S. Dumalagan, market economist at the Land Bank of the Philippines.

US Fed chair Janet L. Yellen and ECB president Mario Draghi did not drop hints on future policy moves during their public appearances in Wyoming, leaving market players with no new leads as to when the monetary authorities will next tweak rates.

Mr. Dumalagan also noted that investors will instead look for new leads as they anticipate key economic data from the US on employment, growth, and personal spending later this week.

A currency trader said separately that although market players were looking forward to Ms. Yellen and Mr. Draghi’s speeches, the currency is unlikely to see significant swings given that the initial expectation was that the two central bankers would not “veer away from their usual rhetoric.”

The trader also expects trading volumes to return to the average $500-600 million level after the previous week saw two straight days of roughly $1 billion which exchanged hands.

Analysts said the bigger amounts seen last week may have been due to inflows of foreign investments likely stemming from the acquisitions of Japan Tobacco International of the local cigarette firm Mighty Corp., as well as offers from foreign private equity funds to acquire a third of Energy Development Corp.

Some intervention from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) may have also contributed to the bigger volume.

For this week, Mr. Dumalagan said he expects the currency to trade within P50.90 to P51.40 versus the dollar this week, while the trader sees a P51-P51.25 range.

NEW STRATEGY
Traders have also noticed the BSP’s different take on exchange rate intervention under Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr., as they noted that the new chief appears to be more “tolerant” of greater volatility than his predecessor.

Mr. Espenilla took office on July 3, succeeding Amando M. Tetangco, Jr. who served as BSP chief for 12 years.

“The BSP appears to be more tolerant for a weaker peso,” one trader said by phone. “The BSP is controlling the peso’s descent, but if it’s going higher it doesn’t really mind… A weaker peso is fine; it’s not so bad for BSP.”

The trader said daily foreign exchange trading has seen a “little bit more volatility” and a wider trading range under Mr. Espenilla, against an established trend under Mr. Tetangco where there was a specific “band” which the central bank maintains over a number of months.

Another trader echoed this view, noting that there was greater volatility and a perception that the BSP is relying on the market for the exchange rate to “self-correct.”

“Before, there was demand — you’ll see a certain level that BSP will try to offer, and that will cap the market,” he said separately. “In terms of presence in the market, mas mahirap basahin ngayon (it’s harder to predict), but with what he (Mr. Espenilla) is saying, he’s very clear that the currency will find its true value.”

Mr. Espenilla said the BSP allows the peso to “adjust moderately and gradually” versus the dollar, as it assured that it was in firm control of the exchange rate especially in tempering any sharp swings during trading. — Melissa Luz T. Lopez