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US aid freeze ‘decimates’ life-saving work globally, survey finds

A PERSON leaves flowers, next to a covered United States Agency for International Development (USAID) sign, at the agency’s headquarters in Washington, US on Feb. 7, 2025. — REUTERS

BANGKOK/NAIROBI — Aid groups across the world have closed operations, laid off staff and halted life-saving work, including with malnourished children, because of US President Donald Trump’s freeze on foreign assistance, according to a survey of 246 humanitarian organizations.

The US is by far the biggest contributor to global humanitarian aid, giving about $14 billion last year.

Yet Mr. Trump, as part of his “America first” policies, last month halted most government-funded aid for 90 days and began dismantling the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)which he said was run by “radical lunatics.”

The International Council of Voluntary Agencies (ICVA), a network of groups in about 160 countries, found that the US cuts had taken a devastating toll on crisis-hit populations.

Two thirds of the groups surveyed reported a negative impact ranging from downsizing to ending aid programs.

“Humanitarian architecture is being decimated,” the ICVA said on Tuesday in a report on the survey. “Therapeutic feeding centers have ceased operations, posing life threatening risks to malnourished children and pregnant women.”

The US State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The ICVA report did not name respondents to the Jan. 27-Feb. 7 survey, but its members include some of the biggest relief groups such as Save the Children, World Vision and Care.

Washington is issuing some waivers for life-saving aid, but groups say funding is held up. That is because USAID employees cannot access the payment system, five current and former agency officials familiar with the matter told Reuters.

“Waivers are a farce,” said one of the sources.

One Africa-based group said in the survey that more than 1,500 people with HIV could no longer access life-saving treatment, while another said 3,250 orphans and others suffering HIV/AIDS could not receive school support or malnutrition treatment.

Stop work orders by Washington forced the closure of sanitation facilities for Venezuelan migrants and refugees in Brazil and an end to life-saving support for more than three million internally displaced people in one unnamed Asian nation, the survey report said

‘THIS IS DESPERATE’
“We have had to lay off hundreds of staff … this is desperate,” one international aid group reported.

Reuters could not independently verify those accounts but has reported on the widespread impacts of the aid freeze, from a halt to anti-narcotics programs in Mexico to disruption of a push to hold Russia responsible for suspected war crimes in Ukraine. In South Africa, scientists have stopped testing a promising vaccine for HIV, while hundreds of millions of dollars worth of medical supplies have been stranded around the world.

In one case, a Burmese refugee with lung problems who was dependent on oxygen from a US-funded hospital on the Myanmar-Thai border died after it was ordered to close.

Local aid groups have been hardest hit, ICVA executive director Jamie Munn told Reuters, with 11 forced to cease operations in South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo and parts of Asia.

“National NGOs (non-governmental organizations), generally, do not have the infrastructure and reserves to get them through these 90 days, let alone what comes next,” he said.

Though many groups are wary of going public for fear of angering the US and further jeopardizing their work, some have spoken about the impact of the cuts.

The Norwegian Refugee Council said it has been forced to suspend some work in nearly 20 countries, including Ukraine, where it has halted emergency support to 57,000 people.

Catholic Relief Services, which has about 5,000 employees, has forecast layoffs. — Reuters

The country’s dengue problem

Dengue vaccines are safe, and they are one way of combatting the viral infection spread by mosquitoes, according to doctors at the February 18 launch of Empowering Networks to Defeat (E.N.D.) Dengue coalition.

E.N.D. Dengue, founded by the Philippine Medical Association (PMA), is the largest coalition of doctors dedicated to combating dengue. It aims to strengthen public awareness, prevention, and response efforts across the country.  

Dr. Lulu C. Bravo, head of the vaccine study group of the National Institutes of Health – University of the Philippines Manila, shares more.

Read: https://www.bworldonline.com/health/2025/02/19/654463/dengue-vaccines-safe-doctors-say/

Interview by Patricia Mirasol
Editing by Jayson Mariñas

Figaro Coffee Group posts strong Q4 2024 profit

Figaro Coffee Group (FCG), a leading player in the Philippine food and beverage industry, reported strong financial performance for the fourth quarter of 2024, showcasing robust growth and a solid financial standing. The company achieved strong profitability, strengthened its operational capabilities, and expanded its market presence.

For the period Oct. 1 to Dec. 31, 2024, FCG recorded a net income
before tax of P291.8 million, reflecting a 12.4% year-on-year increase from same
period a year ago. This was driven by efficient overhead management and
continued store expansion.

Pet Español III, FCG’s Chief Financial Officer, emphasized the company’s ability to maintain financial stability amid economic challenges: “Revenues remained steady at P1.44 billion, closely aligned with last year’s performance. While global inflation pressured raw material costs, we successfully managed overhead and operating expenses while increasing capacity.”

With total assets reaching P5.47 billion, FCG remains well-positioned for continued growth in 2025, reinforcing its commitment to expansion, operational efficiency, and financial resilience. The company also improved its liquidity, with the current ratio increasing from 1.19x to 1.50x as of Dec. 31, 2024.

As of Dec. 31, 2024, FCG operated a total of 216 stores nationwide. Of these, 142 (66%) were under the Angel’s Pizza brand, followed by 63 Figaro Coffee locations, 8 Tien Ma’s branches, 2 Café Portofino outlets, and 1 Koobideh Kebabs store. In 2024, the company expanded its footprint by opening 34 new stores, including 28 Angel’s Pizza locations — 13 of which were launched in Q4 alone — along with 6 new Figaro Coffee stores. “We are looking forward to continuing our prudent expansion strategy together with launching more exciting and innovative menu items and promos this 2025,” Figaro Coffee Group Chairman Justin Liu said.

 


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Report misleading and deepfake posts, DICT advises

STOCK IMAGE | Image by macrovector on Freepik

by Patricia B. Mirasol, Producer

The Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) advises netizens to report misleading social media posts, even as posts manufactured by deep fake technology proliferate in such platforms. 

Deepfake technology is a type of artificial intelligence that creates fake images, videos, or audio recordings through algorithms that stitch together such multimedia materials. 

“Let’s look out for one another and stay vigilant,” said Ramon S. Ang, chairman of San Miguel Corporation, in a February 17 post on his Facebook wall. 

According to Mr. Ang, a fraudulent sponsored post featuring his interview with broadcast journalist Anthony T. Taberna, Jr. has recently been making rounds.

“Scammers have used deepfake technology to alter our conversation, making it appear that I am endorsing an investment opportunity,” the post read. 

“It’s frustrating how easily these fake videos spread, deceiving people and taking their hard-earned money.” 

Facebook has not responded to BusinessWorld’s emailed query about deepfake content on its platform as of press time. 

 

Responsibility of social media platforms 

Even government officials are not exempt from deepfake-generated posts, according to Jeffrey Ian C. Dy, DICT undersecretary for infostructure management, cybersecurity, and upskilling. 

There’s a deepfake post of him selling modems, Mr. Dy told BusinessWorld in a February 19 text. 

The hearings at the Lower House by the tri-com, Mr. Dy said, “took in the task to hard questions about social media platforms’ responsibility to police posts.”  

During a February 18 investigation into online disinformation at the House of Representatives (HoR), Surigao del Norte Representative Robert Ace S. Barbers revealed that a committee is evaluating a proposal to mandate social media companies to obtain a franchise to operate, aiming to curb the spread of disinformation.

“There needs to be regulation,” Mr. Barbers said in the vernacular. “There should be a policy for our social media platforms and actors because they shouldn’t be allowed to use it to spread fake news or baseless statements.” 

The DICT, Mr. Dy said, has partnered with platforms like Meta, Google, and TikTok to promote verified accounts, or accounts that have been verified as authentic by the platforms. 

“We also have a working relationship with fact checkers to empower them,” he said in the same February 19 text. “Yung nga lang, these solutions usually tend to act on sensational deepfake posts.” 

 

Recognizing Deepfakes 

On a February 4 House hearing, cybersecurity analyst Jan Marcelo “Marco” S. Reyes of the DICTs Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center (CICC) said the agency has a tool that can help law enforcement agencies detect deepfake videos. 

The CICC has acquired a tool called Aletheia Deepfake Agent to detect deepfake videos, Mr. Reyes told BusinessWorld in a February 20 Viber message.  

Once activated on a Windows computer, it automatically analyzes any video played on the screen—whether from Facebook, YouTube, or even Zoom. The software can flag potential deepfakes and notify the user within half a minute. 

“Right now, CICC has secured several licenses and is focusing on empowering online communities with large followings to help verify suspicious content,” Mr. Reyes said. 

“If someone comes across a possible deepfake, they can share it with these communities for quick validation,” he said. 

The CICC is looking into broader deployment, he added. 

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s media lab, via its Detect DeepFakes campaign, offers tips on how to better spot a deepfake:  

  • Pay attention to the face. High-end Deepfake manipulations are almost always facial transformations.  
  • Pay attention to the cheeks and forehead.  Deepfakes may be incongruent on some dimensions. 
  • Pay attention to the eyes and eyebrows. Deepfakes may fail to fully represent the natural physics of a scene.  
  • Pay attention to the glasses. Deepfakes may fail to fully represent the natural physics of lighting. 
  • Pay attention to the facial hair or lack thereof. Deepfakes may fail to make facial hair transformations fully natural. 
  • Pay attention to facial moles.  Does the mole look real?  
  • Pay attention to blinking. Does the person blink enough or too much?  
  • Pay attention to the lip movements. Some deepfakes are based on lip syncing.

“We can report [such posts] to Facebook and Facebook takes them down, but that can take weeks,” Mr. Dy said.  

“We can also report these cases to our hotline 1326. We collate these reports and act on them,” he added.

Trump ‘not happy with Boeing’ over Air Force One planes

RAWPIXEL.COM

 – U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he was not happy with planemaker Boeing and his administration might have to go a different route with Air Force One planes.

The comments were the White House’s latest attempt to ratchet up pressure on Boeing, which is at least three years behind schedule in delivering two new Air Force One jets.

Mr. Trump and the White House have recently railed against the jet maker, saying it has failed to deliver a new aircraft on time.

“I’m not happy with Boeing,” Mr. Trump told reporters on Air Force One, airing his frustration once again. “We gave that contract out a long time ago.”

The fixed-price contract was taking too long, he said, adding, “We may do something else. We may go and buy a plane, or get a plane or something.”

But he ruled out Boeing’s rival Airbus AIR.PA as an alternative.

There was no immediate comment from Boeing.

On Tuesday, a White House official said Boeing’s Air Force One program could be delayed until 2029, or beyond, citing supply chain issues and changing requirements, after White House remarks over the weekend that it had fallen behind.

The delays are frustrating, but little can be done to speed delivery, the official told Reuters, adding that Boeing faced problems after the makers of some components went out of business.

Mr. Trump has been deeply engaged with the program since his 2016 presidential campaign.

He extracted a promise from then-CEO Dennis Muilenburg to cap the program’s cost at $4 billion. Those fixed-price contract terms, questioned by analysts at the time and finalized in 2018, have cost Boeing more than $2 billion.

Mr. Trump’s renewed engagement could signal further problems for Boeing, which said the company was meeting his billionaire cost-cutting ally Elon Musk to get the plane updated quicker, according to analysts. – Reuters

Saudi Aramco to acquire 25% stake in Unioil Petroleum Philippines

source: https://1000logos.net/saudi-aramco-logo/

SINGAPORE – Saudi Arabia’s Aramco has signed an agreement to acquire a 25% equity stake in Unioil Petroleum Philippines, the company said in a statement late on Wednesday.

The company, however, did not disclose financial details of the transaction.

Established in 1966, Unioil is a downstream fuels operator with a network of 165 retail stations and four storage terminals in the Philippines, the statement said.

The deal follows Aramco’s previous retail acquisitions in Chile and Pakistan.

Aramco said the Unioil stake acquisition represents further progress in its strategic downstream expansion and growth of its global retail network.

It added that the deal aims to capitalize on anticipated growth of the high-value fuels market in the Philippines, and it planned to extend its brand and retail offerings such as Valvoline-branded lubricants to select retail stations in the country. – Reuters

South Korea’s Yoon attends his first criminal trial hearing

SOUTH KOREAN President Yoon Suk Yeol delivers an address to the nation at the Presidential Office in Seoul, South Korea, Dec. 12, 2024. — THE PRESIDENTIAL OFFICE/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

 – South Korea’s impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol appeared at a Seoul court on Thursday for the first hearing of his criminal trial over insurrection charges, during which his lawyers demanded his release from jail.

TV footage aired by local broadcasters showed justice ministry vehicles leaving the Seoul Detention Centre where Yoon is being held before arriving at the court where lines of police buses were parked outside to ensure security.

The court heard a bid by Mr. Yoon’s lawyers to cancel his detention as they argued that the insurrection probe had been conducted in an illegal manner, and that there was no risk of Yoon trying to destroy evidence.

Prosecutors last month indicted Mr. Yoon after accusing him of leading an insurrection with his short-lived imposition of martial law on December 3.

The charges are unprecedented for a sitting South Korean president, and if convicted, Yoon could face years in prison for his martial law decree, which shocked the country and sought to ban political and parliamentary activity and control the media.

His move set off a wave of political upheaval in Asia’s fourth-largest economy and a top U.S. ally, with the prime minister also impeached and suspended from power and a number of top military officials indicted for their roles in the alleged insurrection.

Prosecutors on Thursday called for quick proceedings considering the case’s “gravity”, but Mr. Yoon’s lawyers said they needed more time to review records.

Mr. Yoon had “no intention to paralyze the country,” one of his lawyers told the court, adding that his martial law declaration was to inform the public of the “legislative dictatorship of the huge opposition party”.

A judge said the court would hold the next hearing on the criminal case on March 24.

Mr. Yoon is also facing a parallel impeachment trial conducted by the Constitutional Court which has entered its final phase.

The top court will hear witnesses testify, including Prime Minister Han Duck-soo later on Thursday. Yoon will also attend the impeachment trial hearing, according to media reports.

The Constitutional Court is reviewing parliament’s impeachment of Yoon on December 14 and will decide whether to remove him from office permanently or reinstate him.

Mr. Yoon and his lawyers have argued that he never intended to fully impose martial law but had only meant the measures as a warning to break a political deadlock.

If Mr. Yoon is removed, a new presidential election must be held within 60 days. – Reuters

US appeals court rejects Trump’s bid to curtail birthright citizenship

FREEPIK

A U.S. appeals court on Wednesday let stand an order blocking President Donald Trump from curtailing automatic birthright citizenship nationwide as part of the Republican’s hardline crackdown on immigration and illegal border crossings.

The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the Trump administration request to pause the lower-court judge’s order. It was the first time an appellate court had weighed in on Trump’s executive order on birthright citizenship, whose fate may ultimately be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court. – Reuters

Key NASA officials’ departure casts more uncertainty over US moon program

Painting of the NASA logo, also called the meatball, continues on the 525-foot-tall Vehicle Assembly Build ing (VAB) at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on June 23, 2020. — NASA/BEN SMEGELSKY

 – NASA is losing four key senior officials close to its flagship moon program, according to people familiar with the changes, adding more uncertainty over the agency’s space exploration trajectory as Elon Musk and President Donald Trump play up missions to Mars.

Jim Free, NASA’s associate administrator who has been a central voice defending the agency’s Artemis moon program, will retire effective on Saturday, the agency said in a statement on Wednesday.

And in Huntsville, Alabama, three key officials at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center – one of the agency’s 10 field centers and the epicenter of its Artemis moon program – had their retirements announced internally on Tuesday, according to a person familiar with the announcement.

Those roles at MSFC – chiefs of procurement, finance and information – were filled in an acting capacity by deputies and other NASA officials, the source said. No replacement for Free was announced.

NASA spokespeople did not return requests for comment.

The leadership shake-up adds more uncertainty over NASA’s direction in space as Musk, the CEO of SpaceX who has long envisioned crewed missions to Mars, oversees a sweeping review of NASA records as a “special employee” of the Trump administration seeking cuts to staff and programs.

Mr. Musk’s SpaceX has $15 billion worth of contracts with NASA, including a contract to land humans on the moon with its Starship rocket.

Some agency officials expected his eventual departure as many Trump advisors criticize elements of NASA’s moon program, such as its Space Launch System, an over-budget but operational moon rocket.

Mr. Musk and Mr. Trump in recent months have touted potential missions to Mars as a possible alternative to the moon, the much closer celestial body that Mr. Trump in his first presidential term had set as NASA’s core space exploration target, with long-term moon bases functioning as a proving ground for far-off Mars missions.

But with Mr. Musk’s roughly quarter-billion-dollar support for Mr. Trump and his influential new role in the White House, talk of prioritizing new, more difficult missions to the Red Planet has threatened to upend an agency that since Trump’s first term has reoriented its structure and roughly $25 billion annual budget to focus on the moon.

Jeff Bezos, whose space company Blue Origin has a multi-billion-dollar contract with NASA to land humans on the moon after SpaceX’s Starship, told Reuters in January the Trump administration should stay on course with the moon program.

But the Trump administration quickly sidelined Free and put Janet Petro, who was the director of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, in the acting role, a move seen by many officials in the agency as an attempt to prevent Free from potentially shielding the moon program from future changes.

Ms. Petro has said hundreds of NASA employees have accepted buyout offers from the Trump administration.

The shake-ups and looming strategic shift at NASA heap more uncertainty for the agency’s almost 18,000 employees who have been whipsawed this month between shifting expectations of indiscriminate layoffs.

NASA employees expected senior leadership to fire roughly 1,000 new employees with probationary status on Tuesday, pursuant to a Trump administration order.

But by Tuesday night, following pushback from scientists and staff, Petro told senior officials NASA would be exempt from the order, at least temporarily, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Mr. Trump’s nominee for NASA, private astronaut and billionaire entrepreneur Jared Isaacman, is in Washington this week to prepare for his confirmation hearing at the U.S. Senate. – Reuters

Inadequate devices, training roadblocks for digitalization in public schools

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by Almira Louise S. Martinez, Reporter

Slow devices and lack of proper training for teachers are some of the challenges of public schools going digital, according to a principal.

“If the government will invest in providing us with gadgets or devices with high-quality specs, it will be easier for teachers and students in schools,” Rudolph R. Abanto, principal III of Centex Batangas, told BusinessWorld in an interview.

“Yung mga computers namin na galing sa government, sobrang baba ng specs niya [The computers from the government have very low specs],” he said.

“We have a computer from the government that takes three hours to load before you can use the gadget,” he added.

During the 2025 budget hearing of DepEd, it was revealed that nearly P9 billion worth of laptops and e-learning equipment intended for 2023 remained undelivered.

The student-to-computer ratio is 1:9 while the teacher-to-computer ratio is at 1:30, DepEd ICT Director Ferdinand Pitagan said during the hearing.

“Although we have taken the first step already, I think we are far on where we need to be in terms of digital education, in terms of innovation in classroom teaching practices, in terms of equipment that we need,” Mr. Abanto said.

“Although we have the DepEd computerization program, I think the equipment, the devices, and the connection, they’re not enough to penetrate the whole public school system,” he added.

To help address the gap in sufficient devices, the Globe Telecom’s G-Gantic Goals donated 20 artificial intelligence-enabled tablets to Centex Batangas along with four other schools around the Philippines.

“Technology is a way to bring your ideas to life. We know it’s a powerful tool for education,” Anne Calma, head of subcultures at Globe Telecom, said.

“It’s not just the apps that we use but also devices like tablets, mobile phones that will help us achieve this,” she added.

 

Teachers’ training

The public school principal noted that ensuring the quality of equipment must come hand-in-hand with the training of teachers in public schools to ensure that the technology is being utilized “to make classroom teaching easier and interactive.”

“Back when we’re still studying to be teachers, we we’re only taught basic computer skills like Microsoft office,” he said.

“If the government would invest on quality trainings, invite organizations, invite networks that would really help teachers maximize technology, it will be a big help for us,” he added.

Last December, the Philippine Congress trimmed down the proposed P12.379 billion budget of the Department of Education (DepEd) for its computerization program to P2.43 billion.

The department said the proposed P12 billion budget is intended for P7 billion worth of laptops and smart televisions, P1.5 billion for satellite-based internet devices, P2.4 billion for software subscriptions, and P1.5 billion for capacity-building purposes.

Potential impact of Trump policies stirring inflation concerns at Fed, minutes show

A sign for the Federal Reserve Board of Governors is seen at the entrance to the William McChesney Martin Jr. building in Washington, D.C. — REUTERS

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump’s initial policy proposals raised concern at the Federal Reserve about higher inflation, with firms telling the U.S. central bank they generally expected to raise prices to pass along the cost of import tariffs, policymakers said at a meeting held about a week after Trump’s January 20 inauguration.

Participants at the U.S. central bank’s January 28-29 meeting “generally pointed to the upside risks to the inflation outlook,” rather than risks to the job market, according to the minutes from the meeting, which were released on Wednesday. “In particular, participants cited the possible effects of potential changes in trade and immigration policy, the potential for geopolitical developments to disrupt supply chains, or stronger-than-expected household spending.”

While still having faith that price pressures will ease in coming months, “other factors were cited as having the potential to hinder the disinflation process,” the minutes said, including the fact that “business contacts in a number of (Fed) districts had indicated that firms would attempt to pass on to consumers higher input costs arising from potential tariffs.”

Participants also noted that some measures of inflation expectations, a key concern for the Fed, “had increased recently.”

In comments to Yahoo Finance after the release of the minutes, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic walked through the tangle of issues the Fed is trying to unravel. Business leaders are telling Fed officials they want to raise prices but are uncertain how consumers will respond; tariffs may add to costs, but steps to deregulate some industries may offset those pressures.

At this point, Bostic said, the net result for policymakers is less confidence about what comes next.

“I had an outlook that 2025 would proceed at a very positive level. We’d see solid growth. We’d see inflation continue to move to 2%, we’d see labor markets stay solid,” Bostic said. “Now, all this potential change … means that the confidence bands, the precision of that estimate … has reduced somewhat and we’ll just have to see how things play out.”

Financial markets were little changed after the release of the minutes, with interest rate futures indicating the Fed’s likely first, and perhaps only, rate cut of 2025 would occur in July. U.S. stocks wavered between slight gains and losses.

‘NOT HAPPENING ANYTIME SOON’

Policymakers at last month’s meeting agreed they should hold interest rates steady until it was clear that inflation, largely stalled since the middle of 2024, would dependably fall to the central bank’s 2% target.

The uncertainty surrounding Trump’s plans has added to their reluctance to reduce rates any further.

“It’s clear from the minutes that rate cuts are not happening anytime soon, and the Fed will likely wait for some of the dust to settle on tariffs before providing better forward guidance,” said Ryan Sweet, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics. “The minutes support the recent changes to our baseline forecast that the Fed will be cautious this year, cutting rates only once in December.”

A “few” officials, Sweet noted, even hinted that there may not be much more room to cut, given the uncertainty about where the Fed’s proper stopping point may be.

Fed staff had already changed their outlook at the December 17-18 meeting to show expected slower growth and higher inflation based on “placeholder assumptions” about Trump’s likely actions when he began his second term in the White House. The president started providing details in his first days in office, including proposed 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico, and a lockdown of the U.S.-Mexico border.

The Fed kept its benchmark interest rate in the current 4.25%-4.50% range at its meeting last month, and officials since then have said they are in no rush to cut rates again until they are more certain inflation will decline to the 2% target from current levels around half a percentage point above that level.

DEBT CEILING, FRAMEWORK

In another sign of how fiscal policy may impact central bank decision-making, the minutes said “various” policymakers noted it may be appropriate to consider slowing or pausing the Fed’s ongoing shrinking of its balance sheet in light of federal “debt ceiling dynamics.”

Current federal funding runs out after March 14, and lawmakers will need to act by the summer to raise their self-imposed debt ceiling or risk a default.

Fed officials used the January meeting to kick off what’s expected to be a months-long review of the central bank’s policy framework, including potential revisions to the policy statement’s focus on the risks to the economy when the benchmark interest rate is near the zero level.

They also made it clear they would not change their commitment to a 2% inflation goal, or to achieving maximum employment.

The review is expected to wrap up by the end of next summer, the minutes said. — Reuters

Filipinos advised to apply for visas early, be alert against visa frauds

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Aum Global from Pixabay

by Patricia B. Mirasol, Producer

Filipinos are advised to apply for visas early to avoid delays even as they’re cautioned against visa scams that include the issuance of fake appointment letters or the promise to influence visa decisions. 

Bernard Vijaykumar, Head – North Asia & Philippines, VFS Global

Selling appointments is one of the top visa fraud scams, according to Bernard Vijaykumar, head of North Asia & Philippines of VFS Global, a company that helps governments and diplomatic missions with visa, passport, and consular services. 

Visa appointments, he said, are free. VFS Global, moreover, is neither involved in job placement nor immigration services.  

“Do not fall for VFS Global dupes promising [such services],” he said in a February 12 media event. “We will not ask applicants to deposit money to any accounts.” 

Visa applications in the Philippines in 2024 rose 3% as compared to 2023, Mr. Vijaykumar also said at the event.  

There was likewise a 38% growth in 2024 versus 2019. 

The most popular travel destinations observed in the Philippines are – in alphabetical order – Australia, Canada, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland, and the U.K. 

VFS Global offered tips to avoid visa-related frauds:  

  1. Know that you can apply early – Most countries accept visa applications up to 90 days before the travel date. For a Schengen visa, one can apply up to 6 months prior to the date of travel.
  1. Know that visa appointments are free – There could be a nominal service fee to prepay for select countries.
  1. Know that VFS Global has no role or influence on the decision of the visa application – The decision on visa applications, the visa tenure, and the timelines to process them lie in the hands of the concerned embassies or consulates. 
  1. Know that VFS Global does not work in association with any third-party entities – Beware of scammers who claim to be associated with, or pose, as VFS Global and guarantee appointments or positive visa decision
  1. Know that VFS Global is neither involved in job placement nor immigration-related services. – Be cautious of scammers offering spurious job or immigration opportunities in exchange for money.  

In addition, travelers are reminded to review their visa applications to avoid these common mistakes: 

  1. Information mismatch – The details on the application forms, such as name, passport number, and date of birth, must match the official documents. 
  1. Incorrect photo format – Check the photo guidelines specific to one’s target destination.
  1. Incomplete documentation – Refer to the checklist for one’s target destination.
  1. Unauthenticated bank statements – For certain destinations, applicants should ensure their bank statements are updated and authenticated as required. While most travelers know they need to present bank statements, failing to have these statements authenticated remains a common mistake.

Peak travel seasons can cause delays, which is why it’s advisable to apply early, Mr. Vijaykumar said. 

“Waiting until the last moment not only increases the risk of delays but also exposes applicants to fraudulent entities seeking to exploit their urgency,” he said.