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Pegula knocks out Gauff in semis, defeats Kalinskaya in final to win Berlin Open

JESSICA PEGULA knocked out top seed and fellow American Coco Gauff 7-5 7-6(2) in a rain-interrupted semifinal clash and went on to beat Anna Kalinskaya 6-7(0) 6-4 7-6(3) in the final to win the Berlin Open on Sunday.

The semifinal was suspended on Saturday due to rain, with world number five Ms. Pegula leading 7-5 6-6(3-1). She wasted no time after the match resumed under a cloudy sky on Sunday, winning four of the last five points to reach the final.

Ms. Pegula lost a competitive first set to Russian Ms. Kalinskaya after both players broke the other three times each. But the American bounced back, breaking in the very first game to set up a win in the second set.

Ms. Pegula, 30, broke Ms. Kalinskaya to take a 3-1 lead in the third set, but the Russian 25-year-old fought back with a break of her own and saved four break points in the next game to make it 4-4.

Ms. Kalinskaya was on the verge of two more breaks that would have taken her to victory but the American saved five match points to win both games and take the set into tiebreaker, where she ultimately prevailed. 

The win marked Pegula’s fifth career singles title and the first on grass, days before she competes in the Wimbledon where she reached the quarter-finals last year. — Reuters

LA Lakers to hire JJ Redick as next coach

THE Los Angeles (LA) Lakers have reached an agreement to make JJ Redick their next head coach, ESPN reported Thursday.

Mr. Redick was offered a four-year contract on Thursday morning, according to ESPN. Financial terms were not yet known. Mr. Redick, 39, played 15 seasons in the NBA but has no prior coaching experience.

That didn’t matter to the LA Lakers, who reportedly made Mr. Redick their top target after UConn coach Dan Hurley rejected a six-year, $70-million offer to leave the college ranks  -— where he is a two-time reigning national champion — for Hollywood.

Mr. Redick co-hosts a basketball podcast with Lakers star LeBron James, launched last March. Mr. James is due to become a free agent at the start of the new league year but can opt into a $51.4 million player option to stay in Los Angeles.Reuters

Philippines won’t publish schedule of resupply missions to disputed shoal

BRP SIERRA MADRE, a marooned transport ship which Philippine Marines live in as a military outpost, sits on the disputed Second Thomas Shoal, part of the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea. — REUTERS

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter

THE PHILIPPINES on Monday said it would not announce the schedule of its resupply missions to Second Thomas Shoal in the South China Sea after a June 17 standoff with Chinese forces that has prompted calls for de-escalation.

“We seek neither confirmation nor consent from anyone in performing our sworn duties in the West Philippine Sea,” Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Eduardo Gerardo C. Teodoro, Jr. told a news briefing at the presidential palace.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. after visiting troops involved in the latest resupply mission on Sunday “reiterated that we will not publish schedules of any RORE (rotation and resupply),” he added.

Mr. Teodoro said the incident was neither a misunderstanding nor an accident but a “deliberate act” of Chinese forces.

“We are not downplaying the incident. It was an aggressive and illegal use of force,” he said, citing their visit to troops who were part of Manila’s June 17 resupply mission to BRP Sierra Madre, which was grounded in Second Thomas Shoal in 1999 to serve as an outpost for Filipino troops.

A political analyst said Mr. Teodoro’s remarks contradicted an earlier statement by Executive Secretary Lucas P. Bersamin, who on Friday said the incident was an “accident or a misunderstanding.”

Mr. Bersamin said the National Maritime Council had recommended that the Philippines publish the schedule of resupply missions to avoid tensions with China.

“The contradiction between the executive secretary and Defense secretary is a red flag that reeks of an uncoordinated Cabinet, and a President who may not exactly have full control of it,” said Hansley A. Juliano, who teaches political science at the Ateneo de Manila University.

The Philippines is a democratic state that does not bar public officials, including those under the Executive Branch, from discussing issues of public interest. China, on the other hand, is a one-party state that strictly controls free speech.

“In this case, it’s not really a question of ideology or form of government,” Mr. Juliano said. “It’s just basic leadership and internal management security which, despite Mr. Marcos’ previous actions, may still be compromised by remnants of Duterte loyalists inside the Cabinet.”

‘ARMED ATTACK’
Chinese Coast Guard forces with bladed weapons on June 17 boarded Philippine rubber boats and looted several rifles stored in gun cases, actions that military chief Romeo S. Brawner, Jr. said only “pirates” do.

China’s coast guard also deployed tear gas, “blinding” strobe lights and sirens.

Despite their bladed weapons, Philippine Navy personnel “fought with bare hands,” Mr. Brawner said last week.

A Filipino Navy officer on a rubber boat lost his right thumb when the Chinese Coast Guard rammed it, he added.

“It is indeed within the Department of National Defense’s purview to showcase that Manila remains undeterred,” Joshua Bernard B. Espeña, vice president at International Development and Security Cooperation, said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

He said announcing resupply missions goes against the Philippines’ assertive maritime transparency strategy, which was launched last year to expose Chinese aggression at sea.

“The caveat is to back it up with all tactics available on the table without triggering the Mutual Defense Treaty at the operational level, while keeping the Chinese guessing whether Manila would invoke it at the strategic level,” he added.

“China will likely adjust to the Defense department’s newly announced recourse soon, but the point is to strengthen enablers of this resolve, which refers to speedy backward and forward linkages of defense industries from the Philippines and its allies and partners, as well as a comprehensive logistics system to ensure flexibility and lethality of this course,” Mr. Espeña said.

“We cannot classify it as an armed attack because by international definition of an armed attack, it is the use of military force and excessive use of force that could trigger collective self-defense,” National Security Adviser Eduardo A. Año told Monday’s news briefing.

But China violated international and domestic laws, including an international convention on collisions at sea and another one banning the use of illegal force, he added.

Still, the June 17 encounter does not call for the convening of the National Security Council since “issues in the West Philippine Sea are effectively managed” by the National Maritime Council,” Mr. Año said.

At this moment, we are not recommending the convening of the National Security Council. However, the President has the discretion to convene the full council or the executive committee anytime.”

Raymond M. Powell, a fellow at Stanford University’s Gordian Knot Center for National Security Innovation, has called on the Philippines to request formal consultations with the US under their Mutual Defense Treaty to assess “very clear threats to its sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Ma. Theresa P. Lazaro told the same briefing that Manila has discussed the issue with like-minded nations including the United States and continues to do something on the “diplomatic front.”

She said Philippines is still banking on a “bilateral consultative mechanism” with China on the South China Sea, which was a subject of her visit to Shanghai in January.

“There were discussions and some confidence-building measures that have been formulated,” Ms. Lazaro said. “And now, there are certain possibilities of us meeting again sometime in the near future.”

Senate likely to approve mandatory war training for college — lawmaker

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MOST PHILIPPINE senators favor a proposal to revive mandatory military training for college students to strengthen the country’s military force, according to a senator.

“We have reached a level of support where the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) program will be revived,” Senate Majority Leader Francis N. Tolentino said in a statement on Monday. “I’m confident.”

“The primary goal of the ROTC bill is to encourage and develop a deep sense of nationalism among our youth,” he added.

Mr. Tolentino said the priority bill is not meant to prepare the country for war, but it is crucial to “national interest with or without the conflict in the West Philippine Sea.”

Tensions between the Philippines and China have worsened in the past year as Beijing continues to block resupply missions to Second Thomas Shoal in the South China Sea, where Manila grounded a World War II-era ship in 1999 to bolster its sea claim.

Philippine military chief Romeo S. Brawner, Jr. said last week bolo-wielding Chinese Coast Guard men, China’s People’s Liberation Army Navy and maritime militia banded together to stop the delivery of food and supplies on June 17.

A Filipino sailor lost his thumb, and vessels were damaged during the encounter, he said.

Mr. Tolentino said the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council would tackle the measure at its meeting on Tuesday.

In April, Senator and former national police chief Ronald M. dela Rosa, the sponsor of the Senate bill, said most senators were in favor of the ROTC bill.

Seven of 10 Filipinos support the measure based on an April Pulse Research, Inc. poll commissioned by former Senator Juan Miguel F. Zubiri.

The House of Representatives in December 2022 passed a similar bill in which students who complete a two-year training program would become part of the country’s reserve force.

Congress passed a bill in 2001 making ROTC optional after the death of Mark Welson Chua, a sophomore college student from the University of Santo Tomas (UST) who died in the hands of his senior officers.

He had exposed corruption in the ROTC program to the UST college newspaper. His body, wrapped in a carpet, was found decomposing in the Pasig River.

Human Rights groups have opposed the proposal, saying it could expose students to abuse and promote violence and militarism in schools.

The College Editors Guild of The Philippines has said the ROTC had promoted killing, hazing, harassment, red-tagging and all other violence on young Filipinos in the past, calling mandatory student military training “fake nationalism.”

Opposition Senator Ana Theresia N. Hontiveros-Baraquel has said the government should boost funding for military modernization especially of the Philippine Navy instead of reviving the ROTC program.

Under the Senate bill approved by several committees, students with disabilities, those whose religion bars the use of firearms and convicts are exempted from military training.

ROTC grievance boards will be set up in schools to probe complaints of abuse, corruption and violence committed during military training. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

De Lima acquitted in last drug charge

SENATOR Leila de Lima attends the hearing at Regional Trial Court Branch 204 in Muntinlupa City on Nov. 4, 2022. — PHILIPPINE STAR/RUSSELL PALMA

By Chloe Mari A. Hufana

A MUNTINLUPA court on Monday acquitted former Senator Leila M. de Lima in her third and last drug trafficking case that she said was fabricated to muzzle her investigation of then-President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s deadly war on drugs

“The court meticulously analyzed the testimonies of all the witnesses for the prosecution and concludes that they were not able to clearly establish that there exists a conspiracy among them to commit illegal drug trading, and that they in fact committed illegal drug trading,” Presiding Judge Gener M. Gito said in a 107-paged decision.

“The court is of the firm resolve and so holds that the prosecution was not able to prove the guilt of all the accused beyond reasonable doubt,” according to the ruling, a copy of which was provided by her legal team.

“I am feeling immense relief and happiness right now,” Ms. De Lima, who is out on bail, told reporters in mixed English and Filipino after the court ruling. “I can be more at ease and sleep more peacefully.”

“With the grant of our demurrer to evidence, which is tantamount to acquittal, that means I am now completely free and vindicated. It’s very liberating,” she added.

The same court granted her bail plea in November, after almost seven years in detention. The prosecution had failed to prove her complicity in the drug case, it said when it granted her bail.

Ms. De Lima’s camp in March asked the court to dismiss the case.

She was accused of promoting the illegal drug trade inside the national penitentiary in Muntinlupa during her time as Justice secretary.

Convicts allegedly bribed her with P70 million, which she allegedly used during her campaign as a senator.

Ms. De Lima was also cleared in her two “disobedience” cases before a Quezon City trial court on.

The court reversed a Quezon City Metropolitan trial court’s decision rejecting her motion to dismiss the cases, which stemmed from her failure to answer summonses issued by the House of Representatives.

Congressmen who were allies of Mr. Duterte investigated her alleged drug links in 2016.

Ms. De Lima faced various charges in 2017 within months of launching a Senate inquiry into Mr. Duterte’s anti-illegal drug campaign, in which thousands of drug users and dealers were killed in police drug raids.

She incurred Mr. Duterte’s ire when, as chairwoman of the Commission on Human Rights, she started a probe in 2009 into extrajudicial killings by the so-called Davao Death Squad in the tough-talking leader’s hometown, where he was the long-time mayor. Mr. Duterte later vowed to “destroy” her.

Mr. Duterte’s drug war is now being investigated by the International Criminal Court for possible “crimes against humanity.”   

Mr. Duterte, whose term ended in 2022, accused her of colluding with drug syndicates while she was Justice secretary, which led to charges of conspiracy to trade narcotics.

Two of the three cases against Ms. De Lima were also dismissed.

Ms. De Lima has insisted the charges against her were baseless and politically motivated.

“She has faced public ridicule and injustice, yet she remained steadfast in her commitment to truth and justice,” Senator Ana Theresia “Risa” N. Hontiveros-Baraquel said in a statement in mixed English Filipino.

“Even before, I knew that Senator Leila was innocent, and my heart overflows with joy now that she has finally achieved justice.”

Ms. Hontiveros-Baraquel urged authorities to hold accountable those who filed unfounded charges against Ms. De Lima, adding that these false charges compromised her reputation and the integrity of the Philippine justice system.

“Justice must be served, and those who have wronged her and our legal system must face the consequences of their actions,” she added.

Lawmaker says Philippines provoked China

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By Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

WAR GAMES with Washington and other western allies in the South China Sea might have provoked Chinese aggression at sea, a lawmaker said on Monday.

The Philippines should uphold its sovereignty and territorial integrity independent of the United States, Party-list Rep. France L. Castro said in a statement.

“It seems that in recent months, the Philippine government has deliberately provoked China through Navy resupply missions, coast guard activities, joint military exercises with Western countries and other overtly pro-US acts,” she added.

Manila and Beijing have been involved in an escalating sea row where China has fired water cannons to block missions to deliver food and other supplies to a handful of Filipino soldiers at Second Thomas Shoal.

The Philippine grounded a World War II-era ship there in 1999 to assert its sea claim.

China claims almost the entire South China Sea, through which about $3 trillion worth of trade passes yearly.

The Chinese Coast Guard last week foiled a routine rotation and resupply operation of the Philippine Navy to the grounded ship BRP Sierra Madre.

The Philippine military said bolo-wielding Chinese coast guard and militia men threatened Filipino soldiers at the shoal.

“We condemn in the strongest terms China’s shameless lies and continued bullying in our own maritime territories,” Ms. Castro said. “However, we must also be wary of the US government’s intentions and their potential to provoke China, leading to a dangerous escalation.”

Georgi Engelbrecht, a senior analyst at nongovernment Crisis Group, called Ms. Castro’s claims “far-fetched.”

“To argue that there is a deliberate provocation is a bit far-fetched,” he said in an X message to BusinessWorld. “From the Philippine side, joint exercises and training have value in their own right, serving as possible deterrence.”

Deepening defense ties with western allies are minor considerations for China’s aggression, said Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco, a senior research fellow at the Ateneo de Manila University Policy Center.

“A lot can be said about Beijing’s aggression in the South China Sea but for me it can be distilled down to two points — the leaders of the Chinese Communist Party firmly believe in their expansive claim and Chinese President Xi Jinping’s vision of a unified China and that they have the naval power to apply this firm belief,” he said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

“Their main aim is to assert ownership over the entire South China Sea regardless of whoever opposes them,” he added.

Manila’s joint military exercises present challenges to China’s security interests in the waterway, said Andy Mok, a senior research fellow at the Beijing-based think tank Center for China and Globalization.

“Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has expanded military ties with the US, which is seen by China as provocative and destabilizing,” he told BusinessWorld in an X message.

“From a Chinese perspective, the Philippines’ alignment with western powers aims to counter China’s rise, risking greater conflict,” he added.

The Philippines should reduce its military dependence on the US and pursue “peaceful negotiations” for mutual economic development, he added.

The AFP should look at building marine defense capability to help the country achieve self-reliance in safeguarding national territory and sovereignty, Mr. Yusingco said.

The Philippines should also think of “creative strategies” to maintain presence in contested maritime features and come up with “nontraditional ways” of conducting resupply missions, Mr. Engelbrecht said.

Bamban, Porac POGOs linked

REUTERS

PHILIPPINE police on Monday said it found links between Philippine Offshore Gaming Operator (POGO) hubs in Bamban, Tarlac and Porac, Pampanga.

“We have seen connections between the Bamban and Porac POGOs,” Leo M. Francisco director of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG), told a virtual news briefing on Monday. “Those documents are still being studied and aside from that, we’re in the process of applying for computer data seizure warrant.”

During the briefing, Interior and Local Government Secretary Benjamin C. Abalos, Jr. said there are only two licensed POGO hubs in the country — one in Metro Manila and the other in Kawit, Cavite.

The public should report suspicious operations resembling POGO compounds outside the capital region and Kawit, he added.

Early this month, police raided the POGO operated by Lucky South 99 Corp. in Porac for alleged worker torture and scams.

In March, a Bamban POGO operated by Zun Yuan Technology, Inc. was shut down for alleged scams and human trafficking. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

Smuggled cigarettes seized in Sulu

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COTABATO CITY — Police seized P10.6 million worth of cigarettes in an anti-smuggling operation in the village of Kajatian in Indanan, Sulu on Friday.

Brigadier General Prexy D. Tanggawohn, director of the Police Regional Office-Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, told reporters on Monday the Indonesian-made cigarettes were found neatly piled inside a warehouse in Sitio Smart in Indanan by a police team, led to its exact location by vigilant villagers.

The Indanan Municipal Police Station and Sulu Provincial Police Office were now in joint custody of 297 large boxes containing 14,850 reams of cigarettes with Indonesian brands.

“Credit for this feat should partly go to the vigilant residents of Indanan and local officials who helped carry out this anti-smuggling operation,” Mr. Tanggawohn said.

He said he had ordered the provincial police to immediately turn over the contraband to the Bureau of Customs for proper disposition. — John Felix M. Unson

Cabanatuan inefficiency flagged

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

THE COMMISSION on Audit (CoA) has flagged the city government of Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija province for allegedly failing to collect P1.5 billion in property taxes and underperforming in its tax collection last year.

The local government only reached 58.82% of its tax collection goal last year, state auditors said in a report.

“The city fared poorly in the collection of property taxes as collection efficiency only reached 58.82% of the targets set in the calendar year 2023 real property tax administration program,” CoA said.

The city failed to collect ₱1.64 billion in taxes last year, it added.

The local government did not immediately reply to a Facebook Messenger chat and e-mail seeking comment. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

Transnational education pushed

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THE BRITISH COUNCIL in the Philippines said it is working with the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) for a transnational education strategy that will boost links with higher education systems overseas.

“The British Council’s transnational education program has enabled Philippine institutions to develop and implement these programs in their respective universities, empowering them to nurture academic excellence and build linkages between the Philippines and the United Kingdom,” Country Director Lotus Postrado in a statement.

The British Council, CHEd and British charity for higher education Advance HE have developed a transnational education toolkit to guide local and foreign universities in developing programs in the Philippines. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

Bantag plea to dismiss case junked

Former Bureau of Corrections chief Gerald Q. Bantag gives a thumbs up sign to the media after attending the preliminary investigation on the murder of broadcast journalist Percy Lapid on December 5, 2022 at the Department of Justice in Manila. — PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

THE COURT of Appeals (CA) has denied the plea of former Bureau of Corrections chief Gerald Q. Bantag to dismiss murder charges against him for the killing of a radio journalist Percival C. Mabasa in 2022.

In a four-page decision written by Justice Ronaldo Roberto B. Martin, the appellate court’s Second Division said Mr. Bantag, who has gone into hiding, failed to follow procedural rules in the filing of a petition.

For one, he failed to get the Office of the Solicitor General’s (OSG) approval in filing his petition. “In any criminal case or proceeding, only the OSG may bring or defend actions on behalf of the Republic of the Philippines, or represent the people or state before the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals.”

“We urge Mr. Bantag to demonstrate a little courage by facing the truth in the court of law,” Roy C. Mabasa, brother of the victim, told BusinessWorld in a Facebook Messenger chat. “Time is running out for him.”

The ex-BuCor chief has been accused of masterminding the murder of the TV journalist. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

Dried cannabis seized in Kalinga

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BAGUIO CITY — Authorities on Sunday seized P3.6 million worth of dried cannabis, supposedly out for delivery, after responding to a road mishap in Nasquedan in the village of Appas, Tabuk City in Kalinga province

Police said a suspicious motorcycle rider lost control of his vehicle after hitting the door of a car in the opposite direction.

The driver of the car then called police for help. But the motorcycle rider fled on foot toward Dagupan Sentro.

When the police arrived at the scene, they discovered 25 dried marijuana bricks and three dried marijuana leaves in tubular form tucked inside a paper box tied to the motorcycle. — Artemio A. Dumlao