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Venice Film Fest comes to PHL

THE OLDEST and one of the top three most prestigious festivals in the world, the Venice Film Festival, has found a home in the Philippines. The festival will be running from July 26 to 31 at Taguig City’s Venice Grand Canal Mall.

Sergio Boero, president of the Italian Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines, Inc. (ICCPI), said in a press conference on July 12 that the Philippine festival was born from his frustration when he could not find or buy locally a copy of Lav Diaz’s internationally acclaimed film The Woman Who Left (Ang Babaeng Humayo) when it won the prestigious Golden Lion award at the 73rd Venice Film Festival on Sept. 10, 2016. The four-hour film was commercially released in the Philippines on Sept. 28, two weeks after it bagged the award in Italy.

So, he coordinated with the Italian Embassy in the Philippines to bring the world’s oldest festival here.

“People are craving for different types of movies,” said Mr. Boero.

Launched in 1932, and one of the world’s most renowned festivals together with those of Berlin and Cannes, the Venice Festival in Manila will showcase eight Italian films and three Filipino movies. The Filipino films are Francis Xavier Pasion’s Jay, Brillante Mendoza’s Thy Womb, and Mr. Diaz’ Ang Babaeng Humayo, all of which have participated in previous Venice Festivals.

As in customary at the traditional Venice Festival, the 11 films included in the lineup were chosen and curated by the Biennale di Venezia, which organizes the festival. Two of the films to be shown are restored classic films, Profumo di Donna (1974) and Processo alla Citta (1952), while the rest of the Italian films were produced in 2016.

“We are certain that the selection of films that will be screened in Manila represents the most progressive and recent trends of Italian cinema… we hope that our proposed films will be received with enthusiasm, appreciation, and interest by Filipino cinephiles,” Biennale di Venezia organization said in a statement.

Organized by the Biennale di Venezia in collaboration with the Italian Embassy in Manila, and with the support of Manila’s Societa Dante Alighieri and ICCPI, the films include a veriety of genres — documentary, drama, comedy, crime and mystery.

The morning screenings are free while the afternoon screenings cost P50 per film.

The Italian films that will be shown during the Venice Film Festival in Manila are:

Piuma, directed by Roan Johnson. Nominated for the Golden Lion Best Film, it won special jury prize for best soundtrack. It tells the story of young couple who find their worlds turned upside down because of her unexpected pregnancy. The two navigate the most exciting and challenging nine months of their lives while juggling their passions.

Profumo di Donna (Scent of a Woman), directed by Dino Risi. The official Italian entry to the Oscar Awards in 1976. A blind captain, Fausto, is aided by his young assistant, Caccio, and together, they travel to Naples to meet a friend who was also disfigured in a military accident. While on journey, Fausto asks Caccio to help him find beautiful women and describe them to him. Unsatisfied with his description, he uses his nose to tell if a woman is beautiful or not.

Processo Alla Citta (Trial to the City), directed by Luigi Zampa. An entry to the Berlin International Film Festival, 1953. When a husband and wife are found dead, evidence points to the Camorra, a Neapolitan crime organization. In charge of the case is a young and courageous judge, who places the entire city under house arrest to get to the bottom of it.

L’Estate Addosso (Worn Summer), directed by Gabriele Muccino. It won the Venice Film Festival soundtrack award. A coming of age tale about four young people who despite their differences, discover that they have much in common. To achieve their own personal dreams, they will have to uncover and get to know themselves first.

Liberami (Free Me), directed by Federica Di Giacomo. The Venice Film Festival winner of the Horizon Award. A documentary, Liberami explores exorcisms done by Vatican-approved priests. It asks if the victims have mental disorders or are they really victims of demonic possession?

Tommaso, directed by Kim Rossi Stuart with Cristiana Capotondi and Jasmine Trinca. A perfectionist actor, Tommasso always ends his romantic relationships thinking that his partner is not the “one.” Until he meets Sonia.

Orecchie (Ears), directed by Alessandro Aronadio. A Venice Film Festival winner of the Arca Cinema Giovani Award. A man wakes up with a buzzing sound in his ears and finds a note that says: “Your friend, Luigi, has died. P.S. I took the car.” The problem is he cannot remember who Luigi is.

Questi Giorni (These Days), directed by Giuseppe Piccioni. Nominated for Golden Lion Best Film. This is a story of four college-aged girls from the countryside who are united by their habits, passions, and differences. — Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman

Downsizing to open Venice Film Festival

ROME — Oscar-winning US director Alexander Payne’s latest movie Downsizing is to open this year’s Venice Film Festival, while his compatriot Annette Bening will head the Mostra jury, organisers announced Saturday.

The sci-fi film, starring Matt Damon as a man who realizes he would have a better life if he shrank himself, will get its world premiere on Aug. 30 at the 74th Venice festival.

Co-starring Kristen Wiig as his wife Audrey, who is dreaming of a better life, the movie is due for general release at the end of the year.

Payne, who won the Academy Award for best adapted screenplay in 2004 and 2012, directed Mr. Schmidt starring Jack Nicholson in 2002, 2004’s Sideways, and 2013’s black and white Nebraska.

Oscar-nominated Bening, whose credits include American Beauty (1999) and The Kids are Alright (2010), will head the jury of the oldest film festival in the world.

The Venice Film Festival will run from July 30 to Aug. 9. — AFP

BBC television unveils first female Doctor Who

LONDON — British actress Jodie Whittaker was unveiled Sunday as the first woman to play Doctor Who, telling fans of the cult BBC science fiction series they should “not be scared by my gender.”

The 35-year-old, who starred in the British award-winning drama Broadchurch, will take over from Scottish actor Peter Capaldi later this year as 13th incarnation of the Time Lord.

Fans were treated to a brief glimpse of Whittaker, walking towards the Tardis in a forest, in a clip shown after the Wimbledon tennis final on BBC television.

Following the announcement, Whittaker said: “it feels incredible” to take on the role.

“It feels completely overwhelming, as a feminist, as a woman, as an actor, as a human, as someone who wants to continually push themselves and challenge themselves, and not be boxed in by what you’re told you can and can’t be,” she said.

The adventures of the doctor — a time travelling, humanoid alien who traverses the universe — have maintained a loyal following since they were first aired in 1963.

Whittaker anticipated some controversy over the choice of a woman as the new doctor despite such a move being well-trailed, but said viewers didn’t need to worry.

“I want to tell the fans not to be scared by my gender,” she said.

“Because this is a really exciting time, and Doctor Who represents everything that’s exciting about change. The fans have lived through so many changes, and this is only a new, different one, not a fearful one,” she added.

CHRISTMAS ‘REGENERATION’
Despite the high-profile announcement, viewers will have to wait until the end of the year before seeing Whittaker on screen.

Capaldi, who has held the role since 2013, will leave the show during the Christmas special by “regenerating” into the new doctor.

Whittaker will work alongside Broadchurch creator Chris Chibnall, who takes over as executive producer.

“I always knew I wanted the 13th Doctor to be a woman, and we’re thrilled to have secured our number one choice. Her audition for The Doctor simply blew us all away,” he said.

Chibnall remarked that there had been “a lot of secret-keeping” in the run-up to the announcement, while Whittaker said she had told “a lot of lies” to keep the news under wraps.

The show is aired around the world, and marked its 50th anniversary four years ago with a special episode screened simultaneously in nearly 100 countries.

Fans took to Twitter to air their views on the choice of the new doctor, with some accusing the producers of ruining the show.

Others were thrilled, with one post retweeted thousands of times showing a girl watching the trailer before exclaiming excitedly: “The new doctor is a girl!” — AFP

Film director George A. Romero, father of the zombie movie, 77

WASHINGTON — US filmmaker George A. Romero, whose 1968 cult classic Night of the Living Dead spawned the zombie movie genre, died on Sunday aged 77.

Tributes poured in from Hollywood and beyond for the legendary director who according to his manager Chris Roe passed away “listening to the score of The Quiet Man, one of his all-time favorite films.”

“He died peacefully in his sleep, following a brief but aggressive battle with lung cancer, and leaves behind a loving family, many friends, and a filmmaking legacy that has endured, and will continue to endure, the test of time,” Mr. Roe added in a brief statement.

Shot in black-and-white on a budget of just over $100,000, Night of the Living Dead daringly featured black actor Duane Jones as its lead in a script about a group of people attempting to survive an attack by reanimated corpses.

Some film scholars later suggested it was a subversive critique of US society during the 1960s, while its gory realism was reminiscent of footage from the Vietnam war that was airing on American TV at the time.

Besides the horror of flesh-eating zombies, the Dead films featured the theme of people who panic while under siege, turning on each other instead of uniting against their common enemy.

Romero, who was born in the Bronx borough of New York, was drawn to telling stories about monsters that are familiar to the people they terrorize, said his business partner, Peter Grunwald.

“They’re not crazy, fantastical monsters. They’re our neighbors, our relatives, our friends. They’re kind of scarier for that, scarier than big, special effects, sci-fi monsters,” Grunwald said.

The film went on to gross over $30 million worldwide, and led to five sequels including Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead — inspiring an entire genre that remains a Hollywood staple to this day, though the director admitted he was himself influenced by Richard Matheson’s 1954 novel I Am Legend.

Night of the Living Dead was added by the Library of Congress in 1999 to its National Film Registry for works considered “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”

Originally called Night of the Flesh Eaters, the title was changed by the film’s distributor, Walter Reade. Somehow, no copyright protection was filed after the name change, putting Night of the Living Dead into the public domain and allowing anyone to distribute it for free.

Romero told The New York Times in 2016 that many more people saw the movie as result, “keeping the film alive.”

His other notable works include 1981’s Knightriders, about a traveling medieval reenactment troupe that jousts on motorcycles, and 1982’s horror anthology Creepshow written by author Stephen King.

HORROR PIONEER
Leading tributes to the director, Mr. King tweeted: “Sad to hear my favorite collaborator — and good old friend — George Romero has died. George, there will never be another like you.”

Director Eli Roth meanwhile hailed Romero for “confront(ing) racism 50 years ago” with his casting of Jones in Night of the Living Dead while also inventing the genre’s tropes that remain to this day: “The infectious bite. Shoot the head. Everything.”

“George Romero deserved to get 5% of every zombie movie made after 1968. But he didn’t. And he was always classy about it,” added film critic Scott Weinberg.

Guillermo del Toro, who wrote and directed creepy 2006 fantasy classic Pan’s Labyrinth and produced 2013’s supernatural horror Mama wrote: “Romero has passed away. Hard to find words right now. The loss is so enormous.”

Much of Romero’s work was shot in or around Pittsburgh, where Romero had attended Carnegie-Mellon University after moving away from his hometown New York where he was born in 1940 to a Cuban father and a Lithuanian-American mother.

He is survived by his wife and daughter, who were by his side when he passed, according to Mr. Roe. — AFP/Reuters

Disney builds buzz with superheroes, Star Wars and Mary Poppins

LOS ANGELES — Avengers, Mary Poppins, and Luke Skywalker brought star power to Walt Disney Co.’s annual D23 fan convention on Saturday, as the studio drummed up excitement for upcoming films including a live-action Lion King, Aladdin, and Dumbo.

From Iron Man to Spider-Man, the cast of the upcoming ensemble Avengers: Infinity War gathered on stage for a superhero-sized selfie and debuted new footage for fans.

The May 2018 film, which Marvel studios President Kevin Feige said was the biggest production so far in the franchise, will unite Marvel superheroes from the last decade, including Captain America, Thor, Hulk, Black Panther, and Doctor Strange, to battle intergalactic overload Thanos.

New scenes showed Thor being rescued by the Guardians of the Galaxy, teaming up with Iron Man and Doctor Strange in ravaged other-worldly landscapes where Loki wages destruction.

Disney has dominated the box office with animated and live-action films, which include the Marvel superheroes, Star Wars, princesses, pirates, and musicals.

For the lead role in live-action Arabian tale Aladdin, Disney introduced newcomer Mena Massoud, after trade publications reported this week that the studio had trouble finding an actor of the right ethnicity. Naomi Scott will star as Princess Jasmine and Will Smith will play the Genie.

Upcoming films include writer-director Ava Duvernay’s star-studded reimagining of A Wrinkle In Time, Mary Poppins Returns, Mulan, and Dumbo.

Fans on Saturday expecting a new trailer for the upcoming Star Wars: The Last Jedi were instead shown behind-the-scenes footage that included scenes with the late Carrie Fisher, who played Princess Leia.

“It’s all about family, that’s what’s so powerful about it,” Fisher said of the film in interviews taped before her sudden death in December.

Mark Hamill, who plays Luke Skywalker, said the new film had “so many unexpected elements, which is great in a Star Wars film because it’s getting harder and harder to bring new things to the table.”

The announcement of a live-action Lion King film based on the 1994 animated classic, to be directed by Jon Favreau, received the warmest welcome.

Footage showed a vibrant sunset across the African plains as photo-realistic computer-generated animals congregate to welcome a baby lion.

A first look at Mary Poppins Returns showed Emily Blunt’s take on the singing, no-nonsense nanny with magical powers made famous in the 1964 musical starring Julie Andrews.

Scenes showed Mary Poppins floating from the skies holding a kite, pulling an umbrella out of her magic bottomless bag and riding in a car with lamplighter Jack (Lin-Manuel Miranda) in a part-animated sequence echoing the original film. — Reuters

Walking Dead halts production after stuntman dies

LOS ANGELES — Hollywood paid tribute Friday to Walking Dead stuntman John Bernecker after he was killed in a fall on set.

Bernecker died in hospital Wednesday after falling 22 feet from a balcony headfirst onto concrete, according to The Hollywood Reporter, citing a county sheriff’s report.

An assistant director told police the stuntman missed a safety cushion “by inches” and tried to break his fall by grabbing a railing after he slipped, celebrity news Web site TMZ reported.

AMC said in statement circulated among US media outlets that it was temporarily shutting down production of the hit show, which is filmed in Georgia.

The actors’ union SAG-AFTRA issued its own statement describing Bernecker as an “accomplished stunt performer.”

“This tragic and untimely loss of a member of the SAG-AFTRA family is heartbreaking, and our thoughts are with his loved ones and his friends and colleagues in the Georgia production community,” it said.

“The safety of our members is paramount. We will work with the authorities and closely monitor their investigations into this tragic incident.”

Bernecker’s resume included stunt performances in several recent films, including Get Out, Logan, and The Fate of the Furious.

His family said they would donate his organs, according to a statement posted on the website of the LifeLink Foundation, an organ donor network based in Florida.

“The family of John Bernecker is heartbroken to confirm that John has passed away from injuries sustained earlier this week,” the statement said. — AFP

Jay-Z extends record for No. 1 albums — 1 week late

NEW YORK — Rap mogul Jay-Z on Sunday extended his record as the solo artist with the most number-one US albums, after a one-week delay when his Tidal streaming service declined to release data.

4:44 debuted at the top of the Billboard album sales chart for the week through Thursday, replacing rapper DJ Khaled’s Grateful and marking Jay-Z’s 14th number one, tracking service Nielsen Music said.

Jay-Z expanded his lead as the solo artist with the most number-one albums since the chart’s creation in its current form in 1956. Bruce Springsteen and Barbra Streisand are tied in second place at 11.

Among all artists, Jay-Z trails only The Beatles who have 19 number-one albums in the United States.

Unusually for such a high-profile release, 4:44 entered the chart only on its second week after Jay-Z released it on CD, Apple’s iTunes, and rival streaming services — with the exception of Spotify. It sold 262,000 units.

Jay-Z released the album on June 30 as an exclusive on his Tidal streaming service, which is partly owned by telecom operator Sprint.

Tidal, which has been trying to close Spotify’s sizable lead as the biggest streaming service, did not release data for its first week.

Tidal, which is privately held by entrepreneurs led by Jay-Z, has been guarded about releasing its streaming figures publicly.

Sprint also gave away free downloads of 4:44, which would be ineligible for the chart under Nielsen Music’s criteria.

The album, Jay-Z’s first in four years, won favorable reviews and marked growing introspection from the 47-year-old rapper.

Jay-Z on the album apologizes to his wife, pop superstar Beyonce, for infidelity, references their newborn twins, and supports his mother as she comes out as lesbian. — AFP

Apes flicks Spider-Man side to win box-office war

LOS ANGELES — New release War for the Planet of the Apes won this weekend’s war for box-office supremacy in North America, riding on strong reviews and ever more natural-looking apes to take in an estimated $56.5 million.

The Fox/Chemin Entertainment production managed to outdraw Spider-Man: Homecoming, which fell by more than half from its opening three-day weekend to pull in $45.2 million, Web site Exhibitor Relations reported.

War, directed by Matt Reeves, tells the continuing story of how intelligent primate Caesar (Andy Serkis) and other apes battle the forces led by an evil human dictator (Woody Harrelson). The film, made for $150 million, scored a glowing 94% on the Rotten Tomatoes site.

Its closest weekend competition, Sony’s Spider-Man, draws a similarly strong 93% on Rotten Tomatoes. The film stars Tom Holland as a young Peter Parker, ably mentored by Robert Downey, Jr. as Iron Man as he takes on bad guy Vulture (Michael Keaton). In third place was Despicable Me 3, far behind at $18.9 million. In Universal’s animated offering, Steve Carell stars as the voice of bad guy-turned-protagonist Gru — and his twin brother Dru, while Kristen Wiig voices Gru’s wife Lucy and South Park co-creator Trey Parker plays villain Balthazar Bratt.

The film has done much better overseas than at home, according to Hollywood Reporter, which says its global gross of $519.4 million includes a whopping $113.6 million from viewers in China.

Placing fourth was Sony’s heist thriller Baby Driver, with Ansel Elgort (The Fault in our Stars) starring as a gifted getaway driver with a hearing problem. It netted $8.8 million.

And in a surprising fifth place among the big-studio blockbusters was independent rom-com The Big Sick from Lionsgate, taking in $7.6 million in its first week in wide release.

Sick stars Kumail Nanjiani in the semi-autobiographical role of a Pakistani-American stand-up comic who resists his parents’ insistent efforts to find a wife for him, and instead falls in love with comedy-club customer Emily, played by Zoe Kazan.

The film, co-written by Nanjiani and the real-life Emily, his wife, rates a resounding 97% on Rotten Tomatoes and is credited by the New York Times with no less than “revitalizing an often moribund subgenre with a true story of love, death and… everyday comedy.”

Rounding out the top 10 were: Wonder Woman ($6.9 million); Wish Upon ($5.6 million); Cars 3 ($3.2 million); Transformers: The Last Knight ($2.8 million); and The House ($1.8 million). — AFP

Oscar-winning actor Martin Landau, 89

LOS ANGELES — Martin Landau, a talented and prolific character actor who achieved TV stardom in Mission: Impossible and won an Oscar for his portrayal of a washed-up Bela Lugosi in the sweetly bizarre 1994 film Ed Wood, has died at age 89.

Landau died at UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles on Saturday from unexpected complications during a short hospitalization for an undisclosed illness, publicist Dick Guttman said in a statement on Sunday.

His long career had remarkable ups and downs. He delivered acclaimed performances in movies by top directors including Francis Ford Coppola, Woody Allen, and Tim Burton, was nominated three times for Oscars, and co-starred in the spy series Mission: Impossible in the 1960s alongside then wife Barbara Bain.

But during career doldrums, the New York-born Landau languished in third-rate projects such as the laughable 1981 TV movie The Harlem Globetrotters on Gilligan’s Island and the dispensable 1983 mutant monster movie The Being.

“You know, I’ve always felt, pound for pound, I’m one of the best guys around; but you get stuck in people’s eyes in a certain way, and it takes an imaginative director who will look at you and realize you can play different kinds of parts because you are an actor,” Landau told the New York Times in 1988. “I don’t like to sound immodest but I believe in what I can do.”

Landau was named best supporting actor for his portrayal in Ed Wood of the fading, morphine-addicted Hungarian horrormeister Lugosi, star of Dracula. The quirky cast in Burton’s homage to fabled bad-movie director Wood included Johnny Depp, Bill Murray, Sarah Jessica Parker, and wrestler George “The Animal” Steele.

“It’s impossible to overestimate the job that Landau does here as this sepulchral Hungarian,” Washington Post critic Hal Hinson wrote in his review of the 1994 film. “Both vocally and physically, he’s simply astounding.”

After winning the Oscar in March 1995, Landau gushed, “My God! What a night. What a life. What a moment. What everything!”

The tall, lanky Landau also was nominated for Oscars as best supporting actor for his role as a visionary car maker’s partner in Coppola’s 1988 Tucker: The Man and His Dream — the role that revived his career — and as a man who kills his mistress in Allen’s 1989 Crimes and Misdemeanors.

NOT MR. SPOCK
Landau also is remembered for a role he did not get. He was Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry’s first pick to portray pointy eared Vulcan Mr. Spock, an iconic role that eventually went to Leonard Nimoy.

Nimoy then replaced Landau on Mission: Impossible when he left in a salary dispute.

Landau was friends in the 1950s with screen legends James Dean and Steve McQueen and studied under famed “method acting” proponent Lee Strasberg. His career included diverse roles in films, television and stage and was still going strong in the 2010s.

Early in his career, he made an impression with a villainous turn in director Alfred Hitchcock’s classic 1959 thriller North by Northwest. His character, a henchman who menaces star Cary Grant, meets his demise beneath the Mount Rushmore busts of US presidents.

It was the role of master of disguise Rollin Hand on Mission: Impossible that propelled Landau to stardom. He was married to co-star Bain from 1957 until their divorce in 1993. In 1968, Landau took the Golden Globe award as best male television star.

He also co-starred with Bain in the 1970s sci-fi series Space: 1999 and appeared in Rod Serling’s acclaimed series The Twilight Zone. In 2011, he lent his voice to an episode of the venerable animated series The Simpsons. — Reuters

Fighting for survival

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The livelihood of Masinloc fishermen hangs in the balance as the Duterte government mulls its next step after Hague victory.

Panting as if in chorus, a group of men hoisted a banca off a truck on which 10 other boats were stacked.

Those motorized bancas — donated by the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) to the Masinloc fisher folk — can carry a catch of up to 300 kilos.

That’s just a fraction of the five-ton commercial fishing vessels these men rode off Zambales’ coastlines to the fishing grounds of Scarborough Shoal, where the bigger, more valuable mackerel (tanigi), yellow tail fusilier (dalagang bukid) and trevally breed.

Simula nung matigil kami, ngayon lang kami nakatikim ng biyaya sa gobyerno. (This is the first time we’ve received aid from the government since we were driven away from the shoal),” said Miguel Batana from the coastal town of Sta. Lucia who had Bajo de Masinloc (Scarborough Shoal) as his fishing ground for two decades until 2013.

It was that year when the Philippines haled China to an arbitration court in Hague following a standoff in the flashpoint area in 2012 that started when the Philippine Coast Guard tried to arrest Chinese poachers who had looted giant clams, endangered turtles and sharks.

Over a month has passed since the Permanent Court of Arbitration issued the July 12 ruling against China — declaring Beijing’s claim over much of South China Sea has no legal basis and that all its actions there were out of bounds — but Mr. Batana and his friends still fear going near Scarborough Shoal.

His last encounter with what he described were “armed Chinese” men aboard “rubber boats” were still vivid in his memory. “Nitong huli talagang may dalang armas. Hindi naman nagpaulan ng bala. Pero pinaligiran ng rubber boats ang bangka namin. (They were armed. We weren’t shot at, but they surrounded and intimidated us aboard their rubber boats,” the 48-year old Filipino fisherman said in an Aug. 2 interview.

Given their size and capacity, the boats from BFAR are good just for municipal waters that stretch up to 15 kilometers from the coastline. Scarborough Shoal lies 124 nautical miles (199.5 kilometers) off Zambales, according to the Philippine Coast Guard.

That meant a smaller catch for Mr. Batana whose earnings now shrank to less than P1,000 a day from P5,000 before. “It’s better than nothing,” the father of three said in Filipino.

The boats too would allow another beneficiary, Biany Mula, who used to sail commercial fishing vessels, to return to the seas but this time staying close to the shore with the artisanal fishermen.

“I’ve been driving only tricycles since 2013,” he said, referring to his means of living after the commercial fishing operator who hired him and Mr. Batana ended their Scarborough trips given the maritime dispute.

The BFAR lists 3,330 Masinloc fishermen registered with it, about “20-30%” of them made long distance trips out to Scarborough Shoal, Provincial Fisheries Coordinator Neil D. Encinares said in an Aug. 11 interview. The agency, which has the mandate to partly ensure food security through laws and policies governing the use and conservation of the country’s fishery resources, distributed 65 boats to Masinloc municipality this month.

But the BFAR can’t govern municipal waters, which are instead under the local government’s ambit.

The municipal mayor’s office was crowded with fisher folk, farmers and community workers seeking a few minutes with Masinloc Mayor Arsenia Lim.

She was barely two months old in her post when the July 12 historical Hague ruling was handed down and yet her constituencies wanted to know how soon they can return to Scarborough Shoal without being sprayed with water cannons.

Mahirap na habang may negotiation, pupunta kami doon na para kaming sutil. Magugulo pa usapan. (We don’t want to appear strubborn, going there and compromising negotiations),” Ms. Lim said in an Aug. 2 interview at her office.

She was referring to the Duterte government’s decision to take the diplomatic route in resolving the maritime dispute with Beijing. “We will follow the President’s directive. Bilang ina ng Masinloc, ayokong may anak na masasaktan. Hahanap kami ng hanapbuhay. (As Masinloc’s mother, I don’t want my children hurt. I will find livelihood for them.),” Ms. Lim said.

But the new Masinloc mayor, whose May 9 election win ended what she said was a three-decade rule by the same clan, inherited headaches associated with managing the municipal waters.

Fish cages have been owned by just five operators since the municipality began issuing permits in 1997. In 2002, Masinloc’s policymaking municipal council issued a moratorium on fish cage applications, further limiting the number of operators.

“There’s a moratorium [still in place]. No new operators,” said Olivia E. Gregorio, environmental management specialist at the Masinloc municipal office, adding that the same lot get to renew their permit annually after securing clearance from the Environment department.

Now, Ms. Lim said she plans a review of the guidelines in issuing permits. “When I took over, the fish cages were owned by the rich and the shoreline could no longer accommodate new ones, thus sidelining our smaller fishermen,” the mayor said in Filipino.

Also, rogue fishing vessels from as far as Nasugbu in Batangas and in Cavite, she said, had been poaching from the payao built supposedly for Masinloc artisanal fishermen — the bandits’ dynamite fishing methods killing what’s left for the real owners.

Republic Act No. (RA) 8550, or the Philippine Fisheries Code of 1998 and amended by RA 10654, defines payao as “a fish aggregating device consisting of a floating raft anchored by a weighted line with suspended materials such as palm fronds to attract pelagic and schooling species common in deep waters.”

“The payao is the best option for now for those vessels that cannot go to Scarborough. It attracts the yellow fin, tuna and other bigger species like salmon,” the municipal mayor said. “But our Masinloc fishermen are up against an armed syndicate.”

It’s a menacing problem that Ms. Lim has written a letter directly addressed to President Rodrigo R. Duterte asking the Chief Executive “to help our fishermen in any way you may.”

“As someone new in the field of politics and with the situation that I and my town people are faced with in regard to our ongoing dispute in territory particularly in Bajo de Masinloc, I am thankful and yet a little concerned of the decision that was handed down by the UN Arbitral Tribunal on July 12, 2016,” read the mayor’s draft letter dated Aug. 1 and seen by BusinessWorld.

In her letter to the President, Ms. Lim cited dynamite fishing that destroys the payao, theft at fish cages and the use of superlight by foreign fishermen as “challenges” that “make fishing even more difficult” for her constituents.

“I appeal for protection of our fishermen both from local and foreign ones who are into illegal activities. I strongly believe that some of the difficulties do not only arise from the bullying of the China government but also from our own ranks,” the letter read.

With neither municipal waters nor the fishing grounds of Scarborough Shoal entirely safe for them and without guarantee there will be enough food on their tables everyday, the fishermen of Masinloc still look to Mr. Duterte for long-term solutions and watch how he will deal with the Chinese in bilateral talks that are about to unfold.

Nitong huli talagang may dalang armas. Hindi naman nagpaulan ng bala. Pero pinaligiran ng rubber boats ang bangka namin. (They were armed. We weren’t shot at, but they surrounded and intimidated us aboard their rubber boats,” Miguel Batana said as he described an encounter with “armed Chinese” men aboard rubber boats.

Sixty-three-year-old Fred Manzano earnestly remembers how he and his fellow fishermen would hop onto Vietnamese boats those nights they navigated the waters surrounding Scarborough Shoal, a fishing ground whose resources he said were shared with their peers from another part of Asia.

Sailing off the coast of Masinloc to Scarborough Shoal would take them 18 hours when the waves were kind, and with their boats moored there for three nights, a drink freely offered by the Vietnamese fishermen was a relief.

“The Vietnamese would wave at us gesturing like ‘come.’ I’d jump onto their boat and there they’d give us hot coffee or tea. I really like their coffee,” Mr. Manzano, whose last trip to Scarborough was three years ago, said in Filipino.

“We understood each other only by hand signals,” he recounted, adding that the foreign-speaking strangers had become his “friends.”

The accounts of fishermen from this coastal community — which while tiny could play a big role in an entire nation’s fight for traditional fishing rights in the resource-rich area — could be proof that Scarborough Shoal, or Bajo de Masinloc to the Philippines, is common fishing ground for Filipinos and Vietnamese alike as well as for the Chinese and other nationalities.

The Permanent Court of Arbitration at the Hague, in its landmark July 12 decision, did not rule on sovereignty over Scarborough Shoal but said that China’s blocking of access to it since 2012 is illegal.

The arbitration court hammered home its finding that the “Scarborough Shoal has traditionally been used as a fishing ground by fishermen from different states” in a statement that followed the Hague ruling.

“Although the Tribunal emphasized that it was not deciding sovereignty over Scarborough Shoal, it found that China had violated its duty to respect the traditional fishing rights of Philippine fishermen by halting access to the Shoal after May 2012,” read the Hague court statement released also on July 12.

“The Tribunal noted, however, that it would reach the same conclusion with respect to the traditional fishing rights of Chinese fishermen if the Philippines were to prevent fishing by Chinese nationals at Scarborough Shoal.”

Since which party owns it was an issue not settled, Scarborough Shoal is low-hanging fruit that could provide the take-off point for bilateral talks between Manila and Beijing, two members of the delegation that fought the Philippine case at the Hague said.

It’s neutral ground for discussions that would not be tantamount to giving up gains from the arbitration — nor would it mean abandoning the legal track which was something critics of bilateral talks earlier feared given mixed signals from the Duterte administration on its China policy.

“We have to sit down with China and decide the ground rules on fishing in a common area — what’s the allowable catch for each country, what are the protocols so they would not quarrel because we have to have sustained fishing there… We must agree on how many tons a year each country can take. That shoal cannot satisfy everybody,” Supreme Court Senior Associate Justice Antonio T. Carpio told BusinessWorld in an interview on Aug. 11.

Albert F. Del Rosario, under whose term as Foreign Affairs secretary the Philippines sought arbitration on its maritime dispute with a regional power and scored a historical victory, said: “It’s a good idea especially as both China and the Philippines are allowed to fish there.”

“There should be a modus vivendi that could be established. That could be a beginning,” he said.

“At the end of the day, you’re looking for a finality in terms of adhering to what has been passed by the award.”

The Philippines has not gone that far yet. But at the conclusion of his visit to Hong Kong last weekend, former President Fidel V. Ramos — whom President Rodrigo R. Duterte sent as personal envoy — hinted that Manila and Beijing could sit down for “formal” talks soon.

In what’s viewed as symbolic confidence-building rather than a substantial gesture, Mr. Ramos said his meeting with Fu Ying — chairperson of the foreign affairs committee of the National People’s Congress and herself China’s former ambassador to the Philippines — covered fishing rights.

“Cooperation” — mentioned in the joint statement issued by the two from Hong Kong and dated Aug. 11 — is emerging as the option for a country that cannot hope to match China’s military and economic prowess.

The Philippine Coast Guard stationed at Masinloc confirmed at least nine reported incidents between 2012 and August 2016 of Philippine fishing vessels being rammed by Chinese boats in an attempt to drive them away from Scarborough Shoal.

Two coast guards interviewed by BusinessWorld believe sovereignty of Scarborough Shoal — which in the 1990s was used by the US as a shooting range given its proximity to the naval base in Subic — lies with the Philippines, as it is located 124 nautical miles off Masinloc’s shoreline and within the country’s 200 nautical miles exclusive economic zone.

But the Hague ruling read in part: “In the Tribunal’s view, Scarborough Shoal is a ‘rock’ for purposes of Article 121 (3).”

Geographic features are crucial in determining maritime zones and exploitation rights, and Article 121 (3) of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea — which the Hague court cited — provides that “[r]ocks which cannot sustain human habitation or economic life of their own shall have no exclusive economic zone or continental shelf.”

Fishermen from Masinloc town, who fish at the Scarborough Shoal, and activists carry a wooden fishing boat during a protest outside the Chinese consulate in Manila on July 12, 2016, ahead of a UN tribunal ruling on the legality of China’s claims to an area of the South China sea contested by the Philippines. AFP

International law expert Gilbert Andres, counsel for Masinloc fisherfolk who are asking the United Nations to step in and urge China to respect their right to food, said China only has “de facto control over Scarborough Shoal and that force can never be a means of acquisition of territory.”

Still, the Philippine Coast Guard discourages the fishermen from going beyond 90 nautical miles off Zambales coastline.

Pinapakiusapan po namin na hwag muna silang pumunta (We’re urging them not to go to Scarborough Shoal),” Masinloc Coast Guard Sub-Station (CGSS) Commander Franklin M. Catiggay said in an interview on Aug. 2, adding that his team did not know how much restraint Chinese coast guard will show if Filipino fishermen resist.

In late July, after the Hague court handed down its ruling, the CGSS in Zambales was ordered by Philippine Coast Guard Commandant Rear Admiral William M. Melad to step up monitoring of poachers.

Several other proposals have been offered in dealing with the dispute but the resounding theme is cooperation: a joint fishing agreement with China or declaring some disputed areas as a marine eco park.

But the solution should be one that lasts even after Mr. Duterte ends his six-year term in June 2022, especially for a country that has seen its leaders change policy towards China.

Jose T. Almonte, former security adviser to Mr. Ramos, said China’s ambitions are long-term — unfolding in the next 100 years — while its Presidents serve for up 10 years, consisting of two five-year terms.

“If you look at South China Sea and look at China’s core interest, we cannot expect to resolve this in a few years. You cannot,” Mr. Almonte said in an Aug. 10 interview at his office.

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This is how you can reach out to Marawi through Coins.ph

Onto some serious news. Since the war between government troops and terrorists led by the Maute and Abu Sayyaf groups broke in Marawi City, Lanao del Sur, on May 23, many residents have been forced to flee their homes.

According to the Department of Social Welfare and Development, the nearly 2‑month siege in the predominantly Islamic city has already displaced a total of 101,013 families or 471,224 people. Nearly 4,000 of the families are sheltered in 78 evacuation centers established by the government in Lanao del Sur, Lanao del Norte, and Misamis Occidental while the rest stay in villages in seven Mindanao regions.

A recent report by Lanao del Sur’s local government said 33 evacuees have died due to diarrhea, severe dehydration, sepsis, and pneumonia.

In a bid to help the displaced residents in the besieged city, fintech startup Coins.ph has launched a fund raising program called #TogetherForMarawi.

Through the campaign, the company aims to raise ₱250,000 from its users. As of press time, the company has already raised ₱147,410.

The proceeds of this initiative will be donated to non‑profit organizations Philippine Red Cross and Save the Children to buy food, water, and sanitary items for the refugees in Marawi, Coins.ph said in a press release.

Five pesos for every load purchased or unique bill paid through Coins.ph’s mobile app on July 17 will also be donated to the program.

“The humanitarian crisis in Marawi continues to grow worse every day and we realized that we cannot simply stand by while this happening,” Ron Hose, CEO of Coins.ph, was quoted as saying.

Coins.ph said other fintech companies have also committed to donate “a day’s worth of salary“ for the initiative. These companies include Kickstart VenturesSatoshi Citadel IndustriesTalaBlastAsia, CapChain, PaidUp, QuickReach, WaveMaker PartnersQuona CapitalPawnHero, and Kalibrr.

“Marawi hits close to home for Kalibrr as we have a team member from there, and we’re glad to partner with Coins.ph to enable those with the ability to help those in need,” Paul Rivera, CEO of Kalibrr, was quoted as saying.

Updates about the campaign can be viewed through www.coins.ph/marawi.

Money lessons from Robert Kiyosaki

Money is pretty intimidating for most people, and learning about money is probably even more daunting. But, here are two books by Robert Kiyosaki that will slowly ease you into the wonderful world of money the same way they have for us.

“Rich Dad Poor Dad” and “Retire Young Retire Rich” are among the first few books that jumpstarted our financial journey. Kiyosaki’s books are very inviting. He writes in such an easy‑to‑understand manner and newbies will find terms and concepts relatable and digestible. What’s also nice about Kiyosaki is that he has the tendency to repeat topics he wants to emphasize, and he does this with such ease and clarity. By doing so, readers will definitely remember his insights and will surely leave you with much to think about.

Here are our 5 most memorable takeaways from Kiyosaki’s Money 101 books:

    • Think rich.

There’s a certain way of thinking you get from wealthy people, so if you want to be wealthy, you need to associate with them and learn how they think, act, speak and interact. It’s exactly this frame of mind that separates the rich from the middle class and the poor. Instead of thinking “I can’t afford it,” the rich would rather think “How can I afford it?” making it more actionable and doable. It’s this kind of point of view that gets them ahead of the pack. It builds them a strong and sound financial foundation that will withstand any kind of roadblock, like fluctuations in the economy or any financial drawback.

    • Identify your sources of income.

Assets and liabilities are easily mistaken for one another. It’s important to know the difference because one gets more money into your pocket and the other pushes money out of it. According to Kiyosaki, most people think that a house is an asset. He challenges this by saying that a house can only be an asset if it lets you earn from it. Otherwise, it’s a liability.

He also teaches us the cashflow quadrant (E‑S‑B‑I). This quadrant identifies four sources of income: E for employment, S for Self‑employment/ Small business, B for big business and I for Investments. E and S are sources where people should work for money while B and I earn passive income, where money works for them. Knowing exactly these kinds of delineations make big differences in learning more and more about managing your finances.

Art Samantha Gonzales

    • Make money work for you.

Once you’ve identified your sources of income, it’s important to know how to maximize them. Kiyosaki teaches us the magic of passive income. Passive income can be earned from real estate properties, various kinds of investments, and businesses. By doing so, you earn regularly without having to really work for it physically. That’s the beauty of it: you are making money work for you instead of the other way around.

    • Use other people’s time and money.

Through Kiyosaki’s books, we have been exposed to many other sources of income by using OPM (Other People’s Money) and OPT (Other People’s Time). We’ve learned to use good debt from banks and investors to grow our businesses and passive income in real estate. You may even use other people’s education too, and get yourself good financial advisors to help you with your businesses. It’s all about using the available resources around you and maximizing them to your advantage.

    • Leverage.

The concept of leverage is one of Kiyosaki’s most important and interesting lessons. According to him, if you want to retire young and retire rich, you need to use the leverage of your mind in your favor. Once you’re able to do that, the leverage of your plan and the leverage of your actions will follow.

Kiyosaki discusses the difference between people without leverage working for those with leverage. The poor and the middle class often shy away from financial tools of leverage thinking that they are too risky. Instead, they like using physical leverage—or also called hard work. While there really is nothing wrong with hard work, it does not get you to your goal as fast, as easy and as much as you want it to. Imagine these people working hard day‑in and day‑out with only having 24 hours a day. Working hard physically is not enough and will not get you ahead financially. You’ll most likely just end up in someone else’s leverage. Think about this, if you are working hard physically, how long do you think it would take you to save $1 million? Compare it to someone borrowing $1million at 10% interest, receiving 25% returns per year. Who do you think will get richer in the long run? This is what financial leverage is all about.

Already feeling quite an expert after that crash course, right? Kiyosaki’s books are just the beginning of your exciting journey about money. We invite you to start reading up and starting thinking rich because we want nothing more than to see all of us retiring rich and retiring young.


Clarissa Seriña‑de la Paz and Sharon W. Que are financial literacy advocates and the bestselling authors of “I Wish They Taught Money in School” and “Money Grows on Trees” Check out their books at www.lifestyleupgrade101.com. Get 10% off, plus a free notepad and bookmark, by sharing this story with the hashtags #MoneyMonday and #SparkUp. Remember to make your post public!

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