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Nadal exits

The first day of the second week of Wimbledon saw a shakeup at the top of the men’s draw. It was always possible, of course; defending titleholder Andy Murray came in with a hip problem, World Number Two Novak Djokovic struggled with form and confidence, and third seed Roger Federer competed off a controlled schedule that underscored his advancing age. When the battlesmoke cleared, however, it was two-time champion Rafa Nadal who made an early exit, a surprising development on the heels of a resounding French Open run.

Granted, Nadal and grass don’t exactly mix, hence his so-so slate at the All-England Club in recent memory. Including his Manic Monday defeat, he has had a first-round, two second-round, and two fourth-round departures, not to mention an absence due to injury, since reaching the final in 2011. Then again, this year was supposed to be different; it was supposed to go much, much better given his level of fitness and confidence. The fact that his seeming rejuvenation coincided with Federer’s served only to highlight the possibilities — and, in the end, intensify the disappointment.

To be sure, it didn’t help that Nadal wound up going against Gilles Muller, who, if nothing else, had the distinction of beating him once before in Wimbledon. And perhaps swayed by the memory, however, distant the fellow left hander hit the ground running, claiming the first two sets and putting him on the defensive. He fought back, and gallantly, but after 28 games in the fifth and final set, he was compelled to play the role of the vanquished. His indefatigable countenance was disturbed by an inspired showing, and he ultimately proved unable to take the measure of the only player left in the tournament unpredictable enough to flummox him in the crunch. As he noted in the aftermath, “Probably was not my best match, but, at the same time, I played against a very uncomfortable opponent.”

Up next for Nadal: The United States Open, where he hasn’t done well since going all the way in 2013, but where he figures to forge a third trip to a Grand Slam final in the current season. He has a month and a half to prepare for the challenge. As for getting over the loss? Considering how he remained in the sidelines of Court One to sign autographs, and how he answered queries in the post-mortem with a touch of humor, it’s fair to conclude that he’s already past it. There will be more contests, more marathons, maybe even against Muller once more, and precisely because he’s forging ahead.

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is the Senior Vice-President and General Manager of Basic Energy Corp.

16 dead in US military plane crash in Mississippi

FLORIDA/MILWAUKEE — A US military plane crashed in rural Mississippi on Monday evening killing at least 16 people, a regional emergency management official said.

No official details were immediately available on the circumstances of the crash in northern Mississippi’s LeFlore County, about 100 miles (160 km) north of Jackson, the state capital.

Captain Sarah Burns, a spokeswoman for the Marine Corps, said only that a US Marines KC-130 Hercules transport aircraft had “experienced a mishap,” with news media initially reporting five confirmed deaths.

Several hours later, Fred Randle, LeFlore County director of emergency management, told Reuters that at least 16 people had perished. Mr. Randle gave no further details of the incident.

WSOC-TV in Charlotte reported, citing the Federal Aviation Administration, that the flight originated from Cherry Point, North Carolina, where a Marine Corps air base is located.

FBI spokesman Brett Carr told the New York Times that the agency was sending officials to the scene, but authorities did not believe foul play was involved.

“We’re just trying to offer any type of assistance,” Mr. Carr, a spokesman for the bureau’s Jackson, Mississippi office, told the newspaper. “It could be anything from manpower to evidence response.”

Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant said in a statement on social media site Facebook that the incident was a tragedy, but provided no details.

Images posted online by news organizations showed the crumpled wreckage of a plane engulfed in flames in a field surrounded by tall vegetation, with a large plume of smoke in the sky above.

The aircraft is used for air-to-air refueling, to carry cargo and perform tactical passenger missions. The plane is operated by three crew members and can carry 92 ground troops or 64 paratroopers, according to a description on the US Navy website. — Reuters

UN rights chief urges justice and healing after Mosul liberation

GENEVA, SWITZERLAND — UN rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein called Tuesday for accountability and dialogue to heal the trauma of Mosul after Iraqi troops retook the country’s second city from the Islamic State (IS) group.

Mr. Zeid demanded that offenders be brought to justice and all violations thoroughly probed, and urged Iraq to join the International Criminal Court.

“The root causes of violence and conflict in Iraq need to be addressed in terms of human rights violations suffered by all communities in the country over several decades. Only then can secure foundations be laid for the lasting peace that the Iraqi people deserve,” Mr. Zeid said.

“(…) Dialogue between communities needs to begin now to try to halt the cycle of violence, and to promote accountability for the crimes against Iraqis.”

Iraqi forces launched their campaign in October. The city was seized by the jihadists during a 2014 offensive that also saw them take control of large parts of Iraq and neighboring Syria.

“The women, children and men of Mosul have lived through hell on earth, enduring a level of depravity and cruelty that is almost beyond words,” Mr. Zeid said.

“ISIL forced tens of thousands of people from their homes in and around the city and used them as human shields, a war crime under international humanitarian law and a violation of the most basic standards of human dignity and morality,” he said.

He said other rights abuses included the sexual slavery of women and girls and the “abduction of 1,636 women and girls, and 1,733 men and boys from the Yezidi community who remain unaccounted for.”

Mr. Zeid also cautioned that although the IS had been ousted, their “fighters can still terrify and kill through bombings and abductions, and people are still being subjected to daily horrors and suffering in remaining ISIL strongholds.” — AFP

Local shares rebound as Wall Street posts gains

THE main index rebounded on Tuesday, tracking US stocks which edged higher overnight, led by gains in technology stocks as investors were optimistic ahead of earnings.

The bellwether Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) rose 0.26% or 20.67 points to close the session at 7,858.14.

The broader all shares index also inched up 0.02% or 1.17 points to 4,714.15 points.

“The PSEi bounced back after a rough start [on Monday], aligning with US equities, which closed mostly higher on Monday with the tech and material sectors rebounding further,” said Regina Capital Development Corp. Managing Director Luis A. Limlingan in a mobile message.

Overnight, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 5.82 points or 0.03% to end at 21,408.52,; the S&P 500 gained 2.25 points or 0.09% to 2,427.43; and the Nasdaq Composite added 23.31 points or 0.38% to 6,176.39.

Harry G. Liu, president of Summit Securities, Inc., said markets are “basically in technical consolidation,” a period wherein markets do not move beyond the support and resistance levels, which are seen at 7,700 and 8,000 for the PSEi, respectively.

“The longer the consolidation, the more that will be the direction we would take. Right now, it is lackluster, there’s no catalyst to bring it up, no negative big bad news to bring it down. All I can see from the technical point of view: should anything bridge the upper and the lower, definitely a decisive direction will occur,” Mr. Liu said in a phone interview.

Mr. Liu added that local markets will be turning to Wall Street for guidance especially after the semi-annual testimony of Fed Chair Janet L. Yellen before the US Congress scheduled overnight, wherein she is expected to speak on economic conditions and hint on the US central bank’s tightening plans.

Of the sectoral counters, only industrials ended in the red, declining 0.05% or 5.50 points to 11,062.94.

Services increased 0.61% or 10.41 points to 1,694.68; property climbed 0.60% or 22.11 points to 3,653.35; mining and oil expanded 0.30% or 38.68 points to 12,633.31; financials edged 0.10% higher or 2.03 points to 1,970.50; and holding firms inched up 0.03% or 3.08 points to 7,837.52.

Losers outnumbered advancers at 118 to 86, while 50 names were unchanged.

Value turnover climbed to P7.17 billion, slightly higher than the P7.09 billion logged on Monday, as 1.54 billion shares changed hands.

Foreigners turned net sellers anew at P63.60 million, reversing Monday’s net purchases worth P35.50 million in the prior trading day.

Most Southeast Asian stock markets moved sideways on Tuesday in thin trade as investors remained cautious Ms. Yellen’s monetary policy testimony.

Singapore was the biggest decliner in the region, shedding as much as 0.6%. Thai shares fell as much as 0.3% before paring some losses. Indonesian shares slipped to touch a three-week low. Malaysia and Vietnam were largely flat. — J.C. Lim with Reuters

Trump Jr. was told of Russian effort to help father’s presidential campaign — NY Times

NEW YORK — Donald Trump, Jr. was told in an e-mail before meeting a Russian lawyer who he thought had material damaging to Hillary R. Clinton that it was part of a Russian government bid to aid his father’s presidential campaign, the New York Times said on Monday.

Citing three people with knowledge of the e-mail, the paper said publicist Rob Goldstone indicated in the message to US President Donald J. Trump’s eldest son that the Russian government was the source of the potentially damaging information.

Mr. Trump Jr. did not indicate in a statement on Sunday that he had been told the lawyer might be a proxy for the Kremlin.

The e-mail is likely to be of interest to investigators examining whether any Trump associates colluded with the Russian government to sway last year’s election, the Times said.

Mr. Trump Jr. hired a lawyer on Monday to represent him in the Russia-related investigations as prominent Republicans voiced concern about the meeting between the president’s son and a Russian.

Allegations of the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia have cast a shadow over the Republican president’s first months in office and sparked investigations by congressional committees and a federal special counsel, Robert Mueller, into whether Russia interfered in the election and colluded with the Trump campaign.

Moscow denies interfering and Mr. Trump, who became president on Jan. 20, says there was no collusion.

“It’s a very serious development,” Representative Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, told MSNBC of the Times report. “It all warrants thorough investigation. Everyone who was in that meeting ought to come before our committee.”

Mr. Trump Jr. hired New York lawyer Alan Futerfas, who specializes in criminal defense and whose clients have included alleged organized crime figures, a Russian computer hacker and white-collar criminals.

“I look forward to assisting Donald Jr. and, quite frankly, there is nothing to all of the media buzz about the June 9th, 2016 meeting,” Mr. Futerfas told Reuters. “That will be proven to be the case.”

Mr. Futerfas would not say when he was retained or whether he played any part in the statements Mr. Trump Jr. made during the weekend about his June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower in New York with a Russian lawyer, Natalia Veselnitskaya, during the presidential election campaign.

Mr. Trump Jr. said he agreed to meet Ms. Veselnitskaya, described by the New York Times as having links to the Kremlin, after being promised damaging information about Democratic presidential candidate Hillary R. Clinton.

Mr. Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and Mr. Trump’s then-campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, also attended, the Times said. It called the encounter the first confirmed private meeting of members of Donald J. Trump’s inner circle with a Russian national during the campaign.

A Republican member of the US Senate Intelligence Committee, Susan Collins, called on Mr. Trump Jr. to testify before the panel, which is looking into accusations of Russian meddling in the election.

“Our intelligence committee needs to interview him and others who attended the meeting,” she told reporters at the US Capitol.

Senator Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the intelligence panel, said it “absolutely” wanted to speak to Mr. Trump Jr. about the meeting. Mr. Warner said he and the Republican committee chairman, Richard Burr, would decide later whether to ask Mr. Trump Jr. to testify in public or in a classified setting.

Mr. Burr would not say if the committee would talk to Mr. Trump Jr., but he told reporters the panel would look into the purpose of the meeting, who set it up and how the process unfolded before making a decision on who to interview.

“The committee will see everybody we think has value,” Mr. Burr said.

White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said there was nothing inappropriate about the meeting with lawyer Ms. Veselnitskaya. “Don Junior took a very short meeting from which there was absolutely no follow-up,” Ms. Sanders told reporters.

In Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Monday the Kremlin did not know the identity of the Russian lawyer.

“No, we don’t know who it is and, certainly, we cannot track down all movements of all Russian lawyers both within Russia and abroad,” Mr. Peskov said.

Mr. Goldstone said he arranged the meeting at the request of singer and businessman Emin Agalarov, a Moscow-based client of his. He told Mr. Trump Jr. the meeting was with a Russian lawyer who apparently claimed to have information regarding illegal campaign contributions to the Democratic National Committee. — Reuters

7 suspected Maute members stopped at NAIA

By Kristine Joy V. Patag
Reporter

SEVEN SUSPECTED members of the Islamic State-backed Maute terrorist group were barred from their flight to Kuala Lumpur by immigration officers at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) on Monday, July 10.

Citing reports from the Bureau of Immigration (BI), Justice Undersecretary Erickson H. Balmes said in a text message that the seven suspected Maute members were investigated by the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (ISAFP) at the NAIA Terminal 3.

The seven were identified as Mawiyag Ibrahim Cota, Acmali A. Mawiyag, Abdulcahar Racman Maute, Alnizar Palawan Maute, Abdulrahman Maute, Yasser Dumaraya Maute, Ashary Palawan Maute.

They were supposed to board a flight to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, via Cebu Pacific when they were stopped by immigration officers from boarding.

But Mr. Balmes in a later text message said three of the intercepted passengers were released “after determining that there is no derogatory record against their name.” They were Messrs. Cota, Mawiyag and Abdulcahar Racman Maute.

Meanwhile, the other four will be turned over to the Philippine National Police and National Bureau of Investigation “for further investigation and verification on their identity,” Mr. Balmes added.

Following President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s declaration of martial law and suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus over the island of Mindanao, government authorities have arrested suspected members of the terrorist group, including Cayamora and Ominta Maute, the parents of the Maute brothers said to be leading the siege in Marawi City.

Of the siblings, Mohammad Noaim Maute was nabbed at a checkpoint in Cagayan de Oro city last June. Omarkhayam Maute has been reportedly killed in the course of the clashes, but this has not been confirmed. His brother Abdullah is believed to be still leading the siege.

Ominta Maute’s alleged replacement as logistical supporter of the Maute group, her niece Monaliza “Monay” Romato, was also arrested early this month.

Under the 1987 Constitution, the government has three days, from arrest, to file appropriate charges against the detained before a local court.

PET holds preliminary conference on electoral protests of Marcos, Robredo

THE SUPREME Court (SC), sitting as the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET), holds a preliminary conference today on the electoral protest filed by former Senator Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr,. and counter-electoral protest by Vice-President Maria Leonor G. Robredo.

The case stemmed from Mr. Marcos’s protest after losing in the vice-presidential race by a slim margin of about 260,000 votes to Ms. Robredo after leading by almost a million votes early on election day, 2016.

Mr. Marcos raised three issues before the Tribunal: “the ‘flawed’ Automated Election System (AES), the failure of elections in several provinces in Mindanao, and the unauthorized introduction by Smartmatic’s Marlon Garcia of a new hash code (or a new script/program) into the Transparency Server on the day of the elections.”

The first part of Mr. Marcos’s protest centered on the “demonstrated capability” of the vote-counting machines (VCMs).

He identified Ms. Robredo’s home province of Camarines Sur, as well as Iloilo and Negros Oriental provinces as his camp’s pilot provinces they wish to be subjected to a manual recount.

He likewise asked the PET to designate three hearing officers, one each to hear on a specific issue he raised to the Tribunal.

Ms. Robredo, for her part, identified Capiz, Sulu, and North Cotabato as pilot provinces. Her camp listed 670 witnesses to attest to the merits of her counter-protest. Some of their witnesses are non-registered voters whose votes were counted in contested provinces.

Both camps were ordered by the Tribunal to pay, in two tranches, for the resolution of their protests. The PET, on March 21, ordered Mr. Marcos to pay P66,223,000, and Ms. Robredo to pay P15,439,000.

Mr. Marcos paid the first tranche of P36 million on April 17, claimed that his supporters pooled the money for the payment. In a statement ear on Monday, Mr. Marcos said he will join an overnight vigil by his supporters.

Ms. Robredo, for her part, paid P8 million on May 2. She said the amount she produced was loaned by relatives.

Both camps are expected to pay the second tranche of the election bond on Friday, July 14. — Kristine Joy V. Patag

Visa-free travel to Taiwan tied to Marawi outcome

By Zsarlene B. Chua
Reporter

THE implementation of visa-free travel to Taiwan hinges on how soon the Marawi clashes will end, according to Taiwan’s official post in Manila.

“The crisis in Marawi is one of the considerations,” Gary Song-Huann Lin, representative of the Taiwan Economic Cooperation Office (TECO) in Manila, said at a luncheon with reporters on Monday, July 10.

“We are reviewing the administrative and security procedures to ensure that people like [Abu Sayyaf terrorist Isnilon] Hapilon don’t enter Taiwan,” he added.

Hapilon has links with the Islamic State and had been at the forefront of the Marawi siege also led by the Maute group in efforts to establish a “caliphate” in Southeast Asia.

The military campaign against the Maute group is believed to be winding down but has dragged on for almost two months, despite a state of martial law in Mindanao that is set to end this month.

Despite concerns about the siege, Mr. Lin said this would not affect Taiwanese tourist arrivals in the Philippines.

“I assured the Taiwanese that the siege is an isolated case and the fighting (is) only in four barangays now. Other areas are not affected,” he said.

“I’m sure the Marawi situation will not last long,” he added.

Mr. Lin hopes they can push through with visa-free implementation by September, or at least within the year.

Last year, 200,000 Taiwanese tourists came to the Philippines up 30% from 2015, according to TECO.

Department of Tourism (DoT) statistics for May 2017 showed Taiwan as the fifth largest market with 22,429 arrivals, 23.67% higher than in May the previous year.

South Korea remains the country’s largest tourism market with 128,691 arrivals in May (up 35.4% from the same period last year), followed by the US with 83,056 arrivals in May (up 12.78%)

In comparison, 170,000 Filipinos visited Taiwan in 2016, up from 130,000 in 2015.

Mr. Lin said they are expecting the number of Taiwanese visitors to the Philippines and vice-versa to increase with the introduction of Taiwan’s “Southbound” policy.

Visa-free travel is part of this policy, as announced by President Tsai Ing-Wen, last year, with the aim of strengthening the Taiwanese economy and its relations with the member-states of ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations), South Asia, Australia and New Zealand.

AFP cool on 5 years of martial law

By Ian Nicolas P. Cigaral
Reporter

FIVE YEARS of martial rule in Mindanao, as proposed by House Speaker Pantaleon D. Alvarez, “might be too long,” the military said on Monday.

New reports earlier quoted Mr. Alvarez as saying he would convince other lawmakers to extend martial law’s duration in Mindanao to the remainder of President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s term.

‘INTELLIGENT BASIS’
In response, Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Spokesperson Brigadier-General Restituto F. Padilla, Jr. said at Monday’s press briefing in Malacañang:

“Actually, five years might be too long for the moment.”

He added, “’Di ko alam kung ano ang pinagbabatayan ni Speaker. Maaring may impormasyon siya na di namin hawak (I don’t know the Speaker’s basis. He might have information that we don’t have).”

Mr. Padilla said the Army’s job is to make a recommendation on the suitability of rescinding martial law based on “intelligent basis,” noting that the judgement on whether the proclamation must be extended is a “political decision.”

Clashes between government forces and the pro-Islamic State (IS) Maute militants broke out in Marawi on May 23 — triggering what may be the biggest internal security crisis in the Philippines since the siege of Zamboanga City in 2013.

Mr. Duterte, in his Proclamation 216, declared martial law and enforced warrantless arrests over Mindanao on the first day of the battle to foil what he said was Maute’s plan to establish a caliphate for IS.

Yet the urban warfare, despite being under a regime of martial law, has dragged on for seven weeks — surpassing the three-week siege of Zamboanga City in 2013.

Proclamation 216 is only effective for one more week.

Mr. Duterte has maintained he wants the conflict to be over soon but his decision on whether or not to prolong martial law in Mindanao would depend on the recommendation of troops on the ground.

According to Mr. Padilla, security officials are still evaluating the developments in the besieged southern city, adding that the martial law recommendation for the President is “already being done.”

“In a few days it will be submitted to the [Defense] secretary for his consideration because he is the administrator of martial law, and that recommendation will make its way up to the commander-in-chief who will be provided an advance copy,” he said.

For his part, Presidential Spokesperson Ernesto C. Abella said of Mr. Alvarez’s remarks that the Speaker has “clarified that his remarks to extend martial law until 2022 is his personal opinion.”

The 1987 Constitution has set safeguards on martial law by limiting its enforcement to 60 days and allowing the Supreme Court and Congress to review the proclamation.

This is to prevent a repeat of the abuses under dictator Ferdinand E. Marcos, who detained his critics during his martial rule and used this to stay in power for another 14 years. Mr. Marcos was overthrown in 1986 by a People Power revolution.

Voting 11-3-1, members of the High Court sitting in full court last week dismissed the consolidated petitions challenging the sufficiency of the factual basis of Mr. Duterte’s martial law declaration.

However, the court has yet to act on two other petitions filed against Proclamation No. 216 seeking to compel Congress to convene and deliberate on the declaration.

‘IMBECILIC’
For its part, the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) slammed the government’s “plan” to extend martial law in Mindanao and criticized Mr. Duterte’s decision to solely rely on the military in deciding when to end the declaration.

“It is imbecilic to seek advi(c)e from the AFP whose officers now admit it did not even know the strength of the so-called Maute Group when the AFP laid siege on Marawi,” the CPP said.

“Now Duterte listens to it to tell him when it will be over,” it added.

The communist rebels also denounced the intensified offensives by state forces against leftist fighters amid the military rule, adding that sustained aerial bombardments in Marawi “(have) been proven a failure.”

“Civil and political rights continue to be violated by checkpoints, random searches by AFP soldiers, threats against the right to express views, and so on,” the CPP said.

‘DISTURBING NARRATIVES’
Mr. Padilla, also in his briefing on Monday, said Maute gunmen are forcing children and their hostages to participate in the firefight in Marawi based on “disturbing narratives” from escapees.

He said those who disobeyed the extremists’ order were shot dead — prompting other captives to fight alongside Maute.

“Disturbing as it is, our troops are doing their best to avoid any casualty among these children that are being employed,” the military spokesperson nonetheless assured the public.

However, Mr. Padilla also emphasized that in the event that the hostages and children are “armed” and “involved” in the crossfire, there is “nothing much” that the soldiers can do.

“When our soldiers’ lives are at risk, they take appropriate measures to defend themselves and that is allowable even by the Geneva Convention. So there’s no question about that,” he said.

“But every time we have an opportunity to rescue a child or an individual who is being forced into the fight, we will do that,” he added.

More than 500 people have been killed in the fighting, including 89 soldiers and police, 39 civilians and 379 militants, according to figures released by the government on Monday.

Nearly 400,000 civilians have fled their homes.

Mr. Padilla said troops are still pursuing 80 to 100 militants in the war-torn city, among them, hostages coerced to fight and foreign combatants who have joined forces with the Maute terrorists.

The military earlier said Islamist fighters are using children and women as human shields, while earlier reports claim that the Maute group has been training kids, believed to be aged 7 to 16 years old, for combat.

“Our efforts on the ground are also focused (on) rescuing civilians who are still trapped. And there are still quite a number, especially elderly (who) are monitored to still be in the area and we will seek to rescue them,” Mr. Padilla said. — with AFP

5.4-magnitude aftershock rocks Leyte; Initial damages from 6.5 earthquake estimated at P52M

DAMAGES from the 6.5-magnitude earthquake that struck Leyte on July 7 has been initially estimated at P52 million, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) reported yesterday as a 5.4-magnitude tremor again rocked the province mid morning.

Two people died in Friday’s earthquake, while the number of injured has gone up to 329 as of 8:00 p.m. on Sunday. The NDRRMC also reported an increase in road sections and bridges damaged to 14 and 10, respectively.

Meanwhile, yesterday’s tremor was felt strongest in Ormoc City, which was also one of the hardest hit by the July 7 earthquake.

The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) has confirmed that it was an aftershock from the 6.5-magnitude earthquake.

Intensity VI was felt in Ormoc, followed by Kananga with Intensity V. The cities of Mayorga, Tacloban and Mandaue felt Intensity IV; Loay and Jagna in Bohol, and Cebu City, Intensity III; Lapu-Lapu City in Cebu and Cadiz, Negros Occidental, Intensity II.

Meanwhile, a full complement of Cabinet Secretaries and representatives met with local government officials yesterday in Ormoc City for a situation briefing and to discuss the relief and rehabilitation plan.

The meeting, presided by Defense Secretary Delfin N. Lorenzana, DND, was attended by, among others, Ormoc City Mayor Richard I. Gomez and Kananga Mayor Rowena N. Codilla. Both Ormoc and Kananga have been declared under a state of calamity.

Mr. Gomez stressed their need for clean, potable water, particularly for evacuees whose homes have been damaged.

The National Economic and Development Authority assessed that the energy situation needs to be addressed immediately to minimize impact on the economy.

The Department of Energy has earlier assured that repair works are being undertaken round the clock to restore supply in the province.

In Metro Manila, Office of Civil Defense Assistant Secretary Kristoffer James E. Purisima said in an interview with ANC that the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) will lead a region-wide earthquake drill from July 14-17.

“We will have scenarios, the MMDA has come up with scenarios that will be implemented to test the readiness and the capacity of all local government units here in Metro Manila,” Mr. Purisima said. — Jil Danielle M. Caro with a report from Ian Nicolas P. Cigaral

Data gathering slows down planned integration of police, military pensioners into GSIS

THE STUDY for the new pension scheme integrating police and military uniformed personnel into the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) has yet to commence as it awaits the list of beneficiaries.

As of end June, the Finance department has compiled pensioners only from 2010.

“I just wrote letters to get an updated list of the pensioners because the latest list we have is from 2010. So I don’t want to give you any numbers because from 2010 to 2017 there must have been a lot more coming in,” Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III told reporters last week.

Mr. Dominguez said despite this setback, the department is still confident that it will complete its study for the new pension scheme this year.

“We will finish the study maybe by the end of the year, and then we will present that obviously first to the Cabinet and then if required, which I think is required, it has to be legislated,” he said.

The study will include the cost of the new scheme as well as possible amendments to Republic Act 8291, or the GSIS Act.

The proposed scheme will only be applicable to new retirees, while the same pension will be retained for who have already retired.

GSIS Chairman Francisco T. Duque III previously said that the actuarial life of existing pensioners under its insurance system won’t be affected by the integration of uniformed personnel.

The Budget department flagged the ballooning uniformed personnel pension cost, as it is non-contributory, meaning the amount is taken solely from the appropriated budget. It estimates that the budget will more than double in eight years to P187.9 billion from the current P71 billion. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

Diesel, kerosene price hike highest this year

OIL COMPANIES will be raising this week the prices of diesel products by P1.20 per liter (/L), the biggest increase so far this year. They will also be increasing the cost of gasoline by P0.70/L. Kerosene will climb by P0.90 per liter, also the biggest rise so far this and matching the same price hike on the second week of April this year. For most of the retailers, the price hike will start at 6:00 a.m. today, July 11. The increase follows last week’s rise of P0.70/L for diesel, P0.30/L for gasoline, and P0.55 for kerosene. As in previous advisories, the oil companies said the increase reflects movements of oil prices in the international market. This month’s two straight weeks of increase follows June’s four consecutive weeks of rollbacks. — Victor V. Saulon

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