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CA overturns drug conviction

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

BAGUIO CITY — The Court of Appeals (CA) has reversed the conviction by a regional trial court (RTC) of the alleged right-hand man of a half-Somali, half-Filipino suspected drug boss here after police allegedly tampered with evidence.

The appellate court granted the appeal of Jeffrey Tolentino, 40, earlier convicted of drug trafficking.

“He is thus thereby ordered immediately released from detention unless there exist other lawful causes for his continued detention,” according to a copy of the ruling.

The defendant was caught in a drug sting in the village of San Vicente in Baguio City in August 2020. He was shot by law enforcers after trying to evade arrest.

A trial court convicted the defendant in November 2022 and sentenced him to two years and six months in jail.

The CA sided with the defendant, who argued the trial court erred in convicting him in the absence of witnesses during his apprehension. He also said police documented the seized drugs in his absence. — Artemio A. Dumlao

Woman killed by lighting

COTABATO CITY — A woman died instantly while another was badly hurt when lightning struck a roadside waiting shed in Kayaga village in Pandag, Maguindanao del Sur on Sunday.

The victim and her injured companion were riding a motorcycle together from Carmen town in Cotabato province on their way to Tacurong City, but had to stop by the waiting shed due to heavy rains.

Village officials and Lieutenant Ernesto M. Rivera, Jr. of the Pandag municipal police separately told reporters on Monday that the victim died on the spot, while her female companion was badly hurt. — John Felix M. Unson

Aira Villegas kicks off winning start for Philippine boxers

Yasmine Mouttaki (left) of Morocco in action against Aira Villegas (right) of the Philippines. — REUTERS

PARIS — Aira Villegas ably handled the gnawing pressure of being the first one from the Philippine Fighting Five to get into action, ending a lazy Sunday for the entire team with a crackling Olympic debut.

It’s near midnight in the City of Lights with Team Philippines smarting from the exit of fencer Sam Catantan and the struggle of the lady gymnasts when Ms. Villegas delivered a firebomb to set things off for the fancied boxing squad.

Ms. Villegas scored a unanimous win over Yasmine Mouttaki of Morroco in the Round of 32 of the women’s 50kg division at the North Paris Arena (early Monday in Manila), a victorious start that could serve as a good lead for the four other Filipino pugs set to climb the ring in the next few days.

It’s Nesthy Petecio’s and Eumir Marcial’s turns to kick off their Paris drives Tuesday.

Ms. Petecio fights an Indian foe in the 57kg Round of 32 while Mr. Marcial tackles Turabek Khabibullaev of Uzbekistan in the 80kg Round of 16.

Hopes are high both can go all the way to the medal rounds as they did in their part in the country’s breakthrough 1-2-1 gold-silver-bronze showing in Tokyo in 2021.

Also plunging into action Tuesday are swimmer Kayla Sanchez in women’s 100m freestyle and judoka Kiyomi Watanabe as rower Joanie Delgaco races in the women’s single sculls quarterfinals.

A large amount of pressure was off with Ms. Villegas, a 28-year-old fighter from Tacloban, getting things done in the opener versus Ms. Mouttaki.

There’s also Mr. Marcial who was up on his feet in the VIP section all throughout the fight, his thunderous voice also serving Ms. Villegas very well.

Up against a rival supported by the boisterous crowd, Ms. Villegas couldn’t be daunted or overwhelmed, beating the Moroccan in crisp exchanges and getting the nod of all the judges in the end.

Slovakian Radoslav Simon gave all three rounds (30-27) to Ms. Villegas while Canadian Wade Peterson, Guatemalan Emerson Alejandro Pastor Arreaga, Hungarian Veronika Szucs, American Shawn Reese and Germany’s Susann Kopke called it 29-28 also for the Filipina.

With the win, Ms. Villegas advanced to the Round of 16 versus second seed Roumaysa Boualam from Algeria.

Interestingly, the two know each other well as they trained together in Germany in the run-up to the Paris Games.

Moments earlier at the Bercy Arena, Filipina gymnasts Levi Ruivivar, Emma Malabuyo and Aleah Finnegan strutted their stuffs while all eyes were on US superstar Simone Biles.

Through the first three subdivisions, Ms. Biles, as expected, was up there on top of the all-around leaderboard while Mmess. Ruivivar, Malabuyo and Finnegan were 40th, 41st and 47th respectively.

At the conclusion of all five subdivisions, the top 24 qualify to the final.

Ms. Finnegan was 17th of 20 in vault, Ms. Ruivivar was 40th of 80 in uneven bars while Ms. Malabuyo 57th of 79 in balance beam and 25th of 77 on floor exercise. The top eight in each event advanced. — Nelson Beltran

Shorthanded Creamline faces unbeaten Chery Tiggo in PVL showdown

CREAMLINE MICHELE GUMABAO — FACEBOOK.COM/PREMIERVOLLEYBALLLEAGUE

Games Tuesday
1 p.m. — Farm Fresh vs Galeries Tower
3 p.m. — Chery Tiggo vs Creamline
5 p.m. — Nxled vs PLDT

WITH practically its top three players out, Creamline was in desperate search for a star.

Enter Michele Gumabao.

“Creamline isn’t just one player, its really the whole team and we’re really one big family, same program, same training and our coaches treat us just the same,” said Ms. Gumabao, who is expected to step up anew against a shorthanded Creamline when it tangles with Chery Tiggo in Tuesday’s Premier Volleyball League (PVL) Reinforced Conference at the PhilSports Arena.

Ms. Gumabao has been providing not just strength but also leadership in the absence of Creamline’s three players — Alyssa Valdez, Tots Carlos and Jema Galanza — and averaged 16.5 points in its first two outings that saw the proud franchise drop a five-setter to PLDT and snatched a four-set triumph over Akari.

Mmess. Valdez and Carlos remained doubtful due to their minor injury that the team did not specifically identify while Ms. Galanza had already ruled out the whole conference due to Alas Pilipinas duties.

Despite these, Creamline coach Sherwin Meneses is confident it can defy the odds anew the way they did in the past that resulted to league-best eight championships including the last one in the All-Filipino Conference early this year.

They play the dangerous Crossovers, unbeaten in two games, at 3 p.m.

Also trying to stay atop Pool A is PLDT, which clashes with Nxled (1-1) at 5 p.m.

Galeries Tower (0-2) and ZUS Coffee (0-3) eye a first victory as they collide in the first game of a heavy three-game bill at 1 p.m. — Joey Villar

Soccer: Underfire Canadian women stun France with dramatic 2-1 win; US, Spain advance to quarterfinals

PARIS — Reigning champions Canada got a lifeline at the Paris Games following a 2-1 last-gasp win over hosts France, while Spain and the United States claimed wins to reach the quarterfinals on the second matchday of Olympic women’s football on Sunday.

Canada’s quest to defend their 2021 gold medal was marred following a drone spying scandal that led to a year-ban of coach Bev Priestman and a six-point deduction by world governing body FIFA from the Olympic tournament.

The top two teams in each three groups advance, along with two best third-placed sides, leaving Canada, now led by assistant coach Andy Spence, needing maximum points in their remaining Group A matches, on top of a favorable goal difference.

The slim Canadian hopes seemed to be dashed after France’s Marie-Antoinette Katoto struck in the 42nd minute following a neat passing move.

But captain Jessie Fleming equalized 13 minutes after the break. The match looked to be heading for a draw before Vanessa Gilles seized on a rebound from the goalkeeper in the 12th minute of stoppage time to fire home.

Canada faces Colombia in their final group match on Wednesday.

Four-time Olympic gold medalists US carried on their good form in Group B and secured a 4-1 emphatic win over Germany in Marseille, thanks to a first-half brace from Sophia Smith and goals from Mallory Swanson and Lynn Williams.

Ms. Smith gave Emma Hayes’ side an early lead with a simple finish in the 10th minute, before Giulia Gwinn equalized for the 2016 Olympic champions. Ms. Swanson, who scored a quick-fire double in the win over Zambia, made it 2-1, while Ms. Smith’s deflected goal before halftime and Ms. Williams’ late effort sealed the rout.

Earlier, world champions Spain secured a spot in the next round with a 1-0 win over Nigeria in Nantes, courtesy of Alexia Putellas’ late winner.

The world champions had to wait until the closing stages in their Group C clash to break the Nigerian wall with a wonder free-kick from former Ballon d’Or winner Ms. Putellas.

The Barcelona midfielder struck in the 85th beyond the Nigerian goalkeeper and defenders, who until then had frustrated Montse Tome’s side.

Also in Group C, Brazil missed the chance to progress after a late 2-1 loss to Japan at Parc des Princes.

Brazil were leading after the break with Jheniffer’s low shot in the 56th minute after a play created by six-time Olympian Marta, who left the pitch to a standing ovation in the 84th minute.

Japan claimed victory with two stoppage-time efforts by Saki Kumagai’s from the penalty spot and substitute Momoko Tanikawa from long range after a misplaced pass by Rafaelle.

Australia and Colombia boosted their chances of making it to the next round with their first wins in the competition.

In a goal feast in Nice, the Matildas rallied from two goals down to clinch a stunning 6-5 win over Zambia in Group B, with Australian Steph Catley and Zambia’s Racheal Kundananji scoring doubles, while Barbara Banda netted a hat-trick, the third to her name for an Olympic record.

Colombia edged Group A rivals New Zealand 2-0 in Lyon thanks to Marcela Restrepo’s volley and a fine goal from Leicy Santos. — Reuters

Rower Joanie Delgaco faces tall odds for the biggest race of her life

ROWER JOANIE DELGACO — FACEBOOK.COM/PHILIPPINEROWINGASSOCIATION

PARIS — Rower Joanie Delgaco returns to the posh Vaires-sur-Marne Nautical Stadium Tuesday afternoon for the biggest race of her life.

Drawn with no less than the reigning champ and tough bets from Europe on Heat 3 of the quarterfinals, Ms. Delgaco faces tall odds in the race for the top three who will advance to the semifinals A and B (medal contention).

But there’s no turning back for the 26-year-old Iriga native, one of only four Asians who made the top 24 of the women’s single sculls in the Paris Games.

She has achieved the goal to be among the top five Asians here, and she now wants to raise the bar of cracking the top 20 overall.

Ms. Delgaco will automatically be in the top 12 if she makes the semifinals A and B.

But with mere clocking of 7:55.00 in the repechage and 7:56.26 in the heats, Ms. Delgaco would definitely need miles of waters to navigate if she’s ever to catch up on the world powers.

In her quarterfinals heat alone, there are Tokyo gold medalist Emma Twigg from New Zealand, former under-23 world champion Katharina Jansen of Switzerland, Virginia Diaz of Spain, Diana Dymchenko of Azerbaijan and Jovana Arsic of Serbia.

Ms. Twigg, also a former world champion, four-time silver winner and three-bronze holder, had a remarkable 7:13.97 clocking in taking top podium finish in Tokyo.

And the rest clocked better than Ms. Delgaco in the previous races here.

The call by the Filipino officials on Ms. Delgaco is just to stay focused and give her best.

The other Asians vying in the quarterfinals are Iranian Fatemeh Mojallaltopraghghale, Vietnamese Thi Hue Pham and Uzbek Anna Prakaten. — Nelson Beltran

Fil-Am Lee Kiefer wins second straight Olympic gold in fencing

FENCING is one sport in the Paris Olympics where the country has “technically” three reasons to be proud about.

Lee Kiefer, a Filipino-American, was the biggest of them all, delivering an effort for the ages by capturing her second straight Olympic gold medal in women’s individual foil at the expense of fellow American Lauren Scruggs in a one-sided 15-6 victory.

While she carried the United States flag, the country somehow cheered for the 30-year-old Lexington, Kentucky native as her mother, Teresa, was from Tagum, Davao del Norte.

It was a proud moment not just for Ms. Kiefer, but also for a gold-starved country like the Philippines, which is still in search of a second Olympic gold after weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz’s breakthrough triumph in Tokyo three years ago.

Filipinos also rooted for Sam Catantan, the country’s top fencer who was valiant before falling short in a heartbreaking 15-12 defeat to top seed Arianna Errigo of Italy in the table-of-32.

Same with Maxine Esteban, also Filipina who represented Ivory Coast and eventually succumbed in the same round to France’s Pauline Ranvier, 15-7.

Good thing Ms. Kiefer was there to save the day and give the country something to celebrate about. — Joey Villar

Quad foreign ministers decry dangerous South China Sea actions

PHILIPPINE STAR/RYAN BALDEMOR

TOKYO — Foreign ministers from Australia, India, Japan and the United States said on Monday they were seriously concerned about intimidating and dangerous maneuvers in the South China Sea and pledged to bolster maritime security in the region.

The joint statement came after talks between the so-called ‘Quad’ countries in Tokyo, attended by Australia’s Penny Wong, India’s Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, Japan’s Yoko Kamikawa and Antony Blinken from the US.

In security talks between the US and Japan on Sunday, the two allies labeled China the “greatest strategic challenge” facing the region.

“We are seriously concerned about the situation in the East and South China Seas and reiterate our strong opposition to any unilateral actions that seek to change the status quo by force or coercion,” the ministers said in the statement, which did not directly mention China.

They also expressed serious concern about the militarization of disputed features and coercive and intimidating maneuvers in the South China Sea, including dangerous use of coast guard and maritime militia vessels.

Chinese vessels have repeatedly clashed with Philippine ships seeking to resupply its troops on the disputed Second Thomas Shoal in recent months, although the two countries in July reached a provisional agreement that aims to ease tensions.

The Quad group said they were working on a series of initiatives to maintain “the free and open maritime order” including helping partners improve domain awareness via satellite data, training and capacity building. They also announced a plan to set up a new maritime legal dialogue.

“We are charting a course for a more secure and open Indo-Pacific and Indian Ocean region by bolstering maritime security,” Mr. Blinken said in remarks to reporters after the meeting.

“In practical terms what does this mean? It means strengthening the capacity of partners across the region to know what’s happening in their own waters,” he added.

He said the US would continue to work with its partners to ensure freedom of navigation and the unimpeded flow of lawful maritime commerce.

The US announced plans on Sunday for a major revamp of its military command in Japan. It was among several measures announced by the allies to address what they said was an “evolving security environment,” noting various threats from China including its muscular maritime activities.

“Uncertainty surrounding the international order as well as the international situation has been increasing with Russia continuing its aggression in Ukraine, attempts to unilaterally change the status quo by force in the East China Sea and South China Sea, and the launch of ballistic missiles by North Korea,” Japan’s Ms. Kamikawa said after the talks.

The Quad ministers also pledged to advance cooperation in cybersecurity to protect supply chains and critical infrastructure, including undersea cables.

After leaving Tokyo, Blinken and Austin will hold security talks with another Asian ally, the Philippines, as the Biden administration seeks to counter an increasingly bold China. — Reuters

Climate threat spurs London’s Kew Gardens to look for resilient trees

THE PALM HOUSE is seen at Kew Gardens, as Kew says around half of its trees may be at long-term risk from climate change, South West London, Britain, July 26, 2024. — REUTERS

LONDON — Behind the lush greenery, roses in bloom and birdsong at London’s famous Kew Gardens lies the darker reality of climate change, which threatens to kill thousands of its trees in the coming decades.

Some trees at the botanical gardens, which were first opened in 1759 and today are a UNESCO World Heritage Site, are already in a state of irreversible decline.

Experts at Kew have used climate modeling to show that over half of the gardens’ 11,000 trees may be at risk of dying by 2090, as a warming climate makes the soil drier and reduces the amount of water trees can access.

Kew’s problem is worsened by the warmth radiating from London’s dense metropolis towards the gardens, known as the urban heat island effect, which makes night-time temperatures much warmer than in rural regions.

Kew’s 8.5 million plant and fungal specimens have long been drawn not just from Britain but from around the world — from the cherry blossoms of Japan to the water lilies of the Amazon — and solutions to withstanding climate change may also lie thousands of miles away.

Plant material from the Hyrcanian forest of Iran and Azerbaijan, the great steppes of Eurasia, the southwestern United States or parts of continental Europe would all be resilient enough to withstand climate change in Britain, experts said in a report published last week.

This sort of replacement could also become a model for urban planners to mitigate the effects of climate change, the report said.

Kew is warmer by about 3 degrees Celsius than it was in the 1980s, putting much-loved British natives such as the English oak (Quercus robur) at risk, said Kevin Martin, head of tree collections at the gardens and a former tree surgeon.

A drought in 2022, when temperatures around the British capital reached a record 40 C (104 Fahrenheit), killed 400 of Kew’s trees, spurring the need to think about introducing more resilient species, said Martin, who will travel to Georgia in September to collect seeds to plant at Kew.

“It’s going to be vitally important, not only for our generation, but for the next generation,” he said, standing beside a 124-year-old weeping beech (Fagus sylvatica ‘Pendula’) in decline. — Reuters

Beirut flights canceled, delayed amid fears of Israeli attack

STOCK PHOTO | Image from Pixabay

FLIGHTS at Beirut airport have been cancelled or delayed with Lebanon’s Middle East Airlines (MEA) saying disruptions to its schedule were related to insurance risks, as tensions escalate between Israel and armed political group Hezbollah.

Lufthansa on Monday said it had suspended five routes to and from Beirut by the group’s carriers Swiss International Air Lines, Eurowings and Lufthansa up to and including July 30 “in an abundance of caution.”

A rocket strike that killed 12 teenagers and children in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights on Saturday has added to concerns that Israel and the Iran-backed group could engage in a full-scale war.

Israel’s security cabinet on Sunday authorized the government to respond to the strike. Hezbollah denied any responsibility for the attack, the deadliest in Israel or Israeli-annexed territory since Hamas’ Oct. 7 assault sparked the war in Gaza, which has since spread to several fronts.

Beirut airport’s flight information board and flight tracking website Flightradar24 show Turkish Airlines also cancelled two flights overnight on Sunday.

Turkey-based budget carrier SunExpress, Turkish Airlines subsidiary AJet, Greek carrier Aegean Airlines, Ethiopian Air and MEA have also canceled flights scheduled to land in Beirut on Monday, Flightradar24 shows.

The airlines did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Beirut-Rafic Hariri International Airport is Lebanon’s only airport. It has been targeted in the country’s civil war, and previous fighting with Israel, including in the last war between Hezbollah and Israel in 2006.

On Sunday, MEA said it had delayed the departure of some flights set to land in Beirut overnight. Additional delays to flights landing on Monday were then announced due to “technical reasons related to the distribution of insurance risks for aircraft between Lebanon and other destinations,” MEA said.

Hezbollah and the Israeli military have increased cross-border exchanges of fire since the Gaza war began. The conflict has disrupted flights and shipping across the region, including during reciprocal drone and missile attacks between Israel and Iran in April.

Lufthansa has already suspended night-time flights to and from Beirut for July due to “current developments” in the Middle East. — Reuters

Trump effect in clean tech sector deepens angst in Europe’s boardrooms

JEAN LUI-PISTON-UNSPLASH

FRANKFURT/GDANSK – European companies focused on clean energy are abandoning expansion plans, bracing for lower sales or see funding of U.S projects in doubt because of fears over what a potential election victory for Donald Trump could mean for their sector.

Mr. Trump has dismissed President Joe Biden’s policies to fight climate change as a “green new scam” and is expected to try to undo much of his administration’s work, including the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) that offers tax breaks and subsidies to U.S. and foreign companies investing in sustainable energy.

The law passed in 2022 has acted as a powerful incentive for European companies from the sector to expand or establish their U.S. presence, but a specter of a second Trump presidency is giving them a pause.

“With a Donald Trump who A) is very opportunistic, B) is also very polemic and C) is also fairly unpredictable, you have to ask yourself whether it makes sense to make such a bet,” Peter Roessner, chief executive of Luxembourg-based hydrogen firm H2Apex told Reuters.

Under the IRA, the company could have built a hydrogen tank production plant in the United States for around a third of the $15 million in costs. In February, however, Roessner decided to cancel the plan over concerns that Trump could be reelected even though the company already had held initial talks with potential customers.

Market bets that Mr. Trump would win back the White House in November have intensified this month after he was shot at during an election rally and days later secured the Republican Party nomination.

Recent polls show a narrowing gap between Mr. Trump and Kamala Harris, the likely Democratic candidate with similar views on climate to Biden’s. Yet Mr. Roessner’s comments reflect anxiety among Europe’s clean tech firms over what a Trump presidency could mean and how they are trying to prepare for such a scenario.

Wood Mackenzie energy data and analytics company reckons it would put a projected $1 trillion in low-carbon energy investments at risk by 2050.

Consultancy Roland Berger said that while a full repeal of the IRA was improbable, a Trump administration could still jeopardize incentives for electric vehicles, EV charging, solar power and energy efficiency.

German solar firm SMA Solar issued a profit warning last month, citing a possible government change in the United States, the world’s second-largest solar market after China, as one of the risk factors.

The world’s largest maker of solar inverters initially aimed to choose a location for a planned factory in the United States by the end of June, but is yet to find one, saying it is still evaluating possible sites in a number of states.

‘BOARDROOM HEADACHES’
While SMA is not abandoning its expansion plans for now, the company told Reuters on July 4 that it “is observing that the unclear outcome of the presidential elections in the USA is currently leading to a certain reluctance to invest in renewable energies locally.”

That hesitation is reflected in the performance of clean tech shares, with the RENIXX index, which tracks the world’s 30 biggest renewable firms, underperforming global stocks since the assassination attempt.

Orsted, the world’s largest offshore wind farm developer, has been hit particularly hard after Trump said in May he would target the sector on his first day in office if he got reelected. Orsted declined to comment.

Some renewable energy companies appear undeterred by the uncertainty.

German wind turbine maker Nordex, for example, last month said it would resume production at a mothballed plant in Iowa, saying the U.S. would remain an important and sufficiently big market in the future “regardless of political developments”.

Several others, however, report delays as prospective partners expected to co-fund projects hold off with their commitments.

Hydrogen firm Thyssenkrupp Nucera has spoken of delays to final investment decisions concerning U.S. projects, a factor that drove an outlook cut at its alkaline water electrolysis unit earlier this year.

The company said while it continued to focus on the U.S., it was vital how the IRA program would look like after the election. It said strategic investors with a long-term focus on the cleantech sector were likely to resume projects earlier in the face of continuing uncertainty than those who are more opportunistic.

Norwegian rival Nel said it was yet to make a final investment decision for a planned production facility in Michigan, which was contingent on the demand for its products in the U.S. market.

The uncertainly over the U.S. election outcome and its impact is starting to affect industries beyond the clean tech sector. For example, German machinery firm Trumpf reported earlier this month a 12% drop in U.S. sales for its 2023/24 fiscal year, blaming “geopolitical uncertainties” that made industrial customers cautious.

This growing complexity companies have to navigate globally can create “analysis paralysis” when it comes to investment decisions, said Marcus Berret, global managing director at Roland Berger.

“Boardroom headaches have increased considerably as a result.” — Reuters

Nominations ongoing for ING-FINEX 2024 top CFO Award

Now in its 18th year, the Award accepts entries until Aug. 31

The beacon of excellence in financial leadership shines anew with the return of the ING-FINEX CFO of the Year Award, back for its 18th year to honor the practice’s most impactful game-changers.

Nominations are now open for the 2024 edition of the Philippines’ longest-running and most prestigious award for outstanding chief financial officers. Launched in 2006 to recognize the country’s top CFOs and inspire the next generation of Philippine financial leaders, the ING-FINEX CFO of the Year Award is presented through a permanent partnership between Dutch financial giant ING Bank N.V. and the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines (FINEX), the country’s premier organization for finance and business professionals.

“We’ve seen a tremendous impact on the perception of financial leadership in the Philippines over the years, as the ING-FINEX CFO of the Year Award highlighted the CFO’s role as a strategic driver of change, not just a number cruncher,” says Jun Palanca, country manager of ING in the Philippines. “The Award has helped elevate the understanding that CFOs are instrumental in achieving long-term organizational growth. Today, CFOs are seen as strategic partners, shaping the overall direction of the company.”

This year, the search focuses once more on game-changing CFOs who perform a multi-faceted function, including being a strategist and catalyst to create value for the corporations, as well as a steward and operator. These four qualities serve as the guidelines for the search’s rigorous selection process, which utilizes clearly defined qualitative and quantitative criteria designed by the FINEX Foundation and the Ateneo Graduate School of Business. The search involves a thorough endorsement and nomination system to go with a stringent set of panel interviews.

“The game-changing CFO leads the ‘Transformational Growth’ agenda for his or her company, incorporating sustainability, diversity and digitalization initiatives, and creating value for all stakeholders,” says FINEX President Augusto D. Bengzon.

The search for the ING-FINEX CFO of the Year is open to CFOs of any company operating in the Philippines, whether local or foreign-owned, privately held or publicly listed. Nominations for this year’s award is open until Aug. 31, 2024.

The winner will be honored in an exclusive awarding ceremony in November, and will receive the prestigious trophy designed by renowned Filipino artist Ramon Orlina, titled The Everlasting Light. The awardee will also have the opportunity to share their insights and experiences during a thought leadership event jointly organized by ING and FINEX, providing inspiration to aspiring financial leaders.

Past winners of the ING-FINEX CFO of the Year Award include Delfin Gonzalez, Jr., who won the inaugural trophy when he was CFO of Globe Telecom, followed by Sherisa Nuesa, who was recognized as CFO of Manila Water. The awardees in the succeeding years were Jose Sio, Ysmael Baysa, Jaime Ysmael, Jeffrey Lim, Felipe Yalong, Jose Jerome Pascual III, Luis Juan Oreta, Danny Yu, Jose Teodoro Limcaoco, Ferdinand Constantino, Augusto D. Bengzon, Mylene Kasiban, Anabelle Lim-Chua, and Grant Cheng. Last year, the coveted award went to Cora Dizon of ACEN.

For more information about the ING-FINEX CFO of the Year Award and the nomination process, visit www.ingfinexcfooftheyear.com, or contact michael.vinluan@finex.org.ph or +63 917-312-3044. Follow the ING-FINEX CFO of the Year on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn.

 


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