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3 suspects yield P6.8-M drugs

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

COTABATO CITY — Anti-narcotics agents seized P6.8 million worth of “shabu” from two men and a woman entrapped in Barangay Cabingan in Marawi City on Wednesday, the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) in the Bangsamoro region reported Thursday.

PDEA-Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (PDEA-BARMM) Director Gil Cesario P. Castro said the suspects did not resist arrest during the buy-bust operation. Charges in violation of the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002 are now being prepared for filing against them, he said.

Gen. Prexy D. Tanggawohn, regional police director, said the arrest was made possible through the help of Lanao del Sur Gov. Mamintal A. Adiong, Jr., and Marawi City Mayor Majul U. Gandamra. — John Felix M. Unson

P1.2-B PhilMech inventory flagged

THE COMMISSION on Audit (CoA) has flagged the Philippine Center for Postharvest Development and Mechanization (PhilMech) over its unrecorded inventories worth P1.2 billion, resulting in inconsistencies in its financial statements.

In a Viber message to BusinessWorld, PhilMech Director Dionisio G. Alvindia said: “PhilMech’s accounting department has already derecognized P1.08 billion or 93% of the tagged unrecorded inventory. The remaining 7% or ₱87,431,506 are being prepared to be adjusted this June 2024.”

CoA auditors noted the unrecorded inventories of donated agricultural machinery resulted in the overstatement of the agency’s inventories and understatement of maintenance and operating accounts.

“The ‘unrecorded issued inventories’ pertain to the already received, possessed, and donated Property, Plant and Equipment (PPE) to rice farmers’ cooperatives and associations (FCAs), which were affected by the ‘record timing difference’ in recognizing the releases of those PPEs in our financial books of accounts,” explained Mr. Alvindia.

State auditors noted that a total of 1,855 donated machinery in the form of tractors, rice mills, and harvesters, among others, worth P1.2 billion has already been donated to farming cooperatives and local government units despite remaining in the agency’s year-end inventory account.

CoA recommended that PhilMech direct its accounting department to “implement and streamline control processes” to properly settle the inventory transaction of donated machinery.

PhilMech’s mandate is to commercialize and mechanize the domestic agriculture sector’s postharvest mechanisms to reduce agricultural product losses.

CoA also flagged PhilMech’s low disbursement rate of the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund’s (RCEF) mechanization program.

“The foregoing benefits notwithstanding, gaps in the implementation of the Program were noted such as low disbursement rate of 7.62% or ₱388.58 million of the ₱5.10-billion total cash allocations received for FY (Fiscal Year) 2023,” the audit agency said.

Mr. Alvindia said the low disbursement rate is due to incomplete billing documents filed by suppliers of agricultural machinery.

“The target disbursements did not materialize as expected, but we are now accelerating the disbursements of funds at the close of this first semester to P19.8 billion, or more than 76% of the total obligated amount, to be disbursed for prior year payables,” he added.

RCEF receives P10 billion a year from collected rice tariffs. Of the total, it sets aside P5 billion to fund farm mechanization. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

‘Men in white’ draw attention in Baguio

BAGUIO CITY — The Diocese of Baguio declared on Thursday that men roaming the city and parts of Benguet province in white robes or cassocks while seeking donations for the church are not in any way connected with the Roman Catholic Church.

The diocese said its offices have been flooded by queries about these “men in white” who call themselves members of “Filipino Katoliko,” which is “not affiliated with any Diocese or Religious Congregation or Institute of the Roman Catholic Church in the Philippines.”

These men in white reportedly show potential donors a letter claiming that the Filipino Katolikos are raising funds for the construction of their new church building in Bigaan, Hinatuan, Surigao del Sur since their old building has been affected by a road widening project.

“In this connection, we are knocking at your kind and benevolent heart to share with us your blessings through VOLUNTARY DONATION,” read part of the same solicitation letter.

In its Facebook (FB) pages, Filipino Katoliko and Filipino Katoliko Missionaries, the group posted photographs where some members with white folders paid courtesy calls to Baguio City Mayor Benjamin B. Magalong, Baguio City Police Chief Col. Francis Bulwayan and Mayor Romeo Salda of La Trinidad, Benguet.

In a post on its FB page, the Filipino Katoliko said they have no intention of creating confusion or disrespect to the existing denominations and the whole of the Roman Catholic Church or other Christian and Catholic churches.

In another letter, a certain Bishop Pedro P. Fenis, Jr. stated that they are soliciting heartily-given donations, of any kind for their congregation and missionary works. — Artemio A. Dumlao

Lawmaker pushes bigger funding for PHL Carabao Center

THE GOVERNMENT should look to increase the Philippine Carabao Center’s (PCC) budget to revive the domestic dairy industry post-El Niño season, a congressman said Thursday.

Increasing the country’s dairy production output and further developing the industry requires a budget increase for the National Dairy Authority (NDA) and PCC, he added.

“For now, only around P89 million has been allotted for the research and development of the National Carabao Development Program under the Philippine Carabao Center, and around P274 million has been allotted for their Herd Build-up of genetically improved Dairy Buffallos,” Party-list Rep. Wilbert T. Lee said in a statement in Filipino.

The programs under the PCC will provide essential breeding services to dairy farmers and enhance agricultural buffalo facilities, improving dairy production output.

“The Herd Build-up program is set to bolster local dairy stocks and local milk production through a series of strategic initiatives,” Mr. Lee said. “Additional funds will facilitate the procurement of new dairy buffalos [and] enhance local production at PCC-operated nucleus dairy buffalo farms and agistment farms.”

Providing further funding to the PCC would ensure that research on “minimizing the impact of extreme weather conditions” on domestic carabaos would continue.

Increased funding would also be used to construct dairy farms with facilities that allow imported carabaos to acclimatize to the country’s weather.

“We cannot afford to import cattles used for dairy without proper acclimatization facility… because many of it dies during the importation [process],” he said in mixed English and Filipino.

There is a need to increase funding for government dairy agencies for the country to attain milk sufficiency, said Mr. Lee. “There are currently 2.6 million cows in the country but only 27,000 are used for dairy. On the other hand, there are 2.8 million carabaos but only 19,000 are dairy types.” — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

Private Funding Speeds up PH Aviation Projects – CAAP

CLARK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT

Private funding through Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) have contributed to speeding up aviation projects across the country, the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP) said on Tuesday. 

Pag pumasok ang private sector, malaki po ang capital investment na naitutulong nila para mas mapaganda ang paliparan [When the private sector is involved, the bigger capital investment helps in ensuring a great airport],” CAAP Deputy Director General for Administration Danjun Lucas said during the  Kapihan sa Bagong Pilipinas.   

Private funding is not limited to the improvement of airport facilities, but it also includes technology from different private sectors, he added.  

“Airport projects through the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) scheme address problems in lack of public funding and delay in improvement procurement,” Mr. Lucas added. 

The Public-Private Partnership Center report shows that 11 of PPP aviation projects are in the pipeline, 3 projects are operational, 2 are under construction, and 3 are under pre-construction project classification.    

Among the pipeline projects are:  

  • Upgrade, Expansion, Operations and Maintenance of Laguindingan International Airport in Misamis Oriental 
  • New Bohol International Airport Project 
  • Operations, Maintenance, and Upgrade of the Kalibo International Airport in Aklan 
  • Rehabilitation, Expansion, Operation, Maintenance of the Iloilo International Airport 
  • Rehabilitation, Operation, Maintenance and Expansion of Puerto Princesa International Airport in Palawan 
  • Laoag International Airport Development Project in Ilocos Norte 
  • New Surigao Airport Project 
  • Development, Expansion, Operations and Maintenance of Sayak Siargao Airport 
  • MRT 7 Airport Access-North Line Project 
  • Operation & Maintenance of the Francisco B. Reyes Airport and the New Busuanga Airport in Palawan 
  • Operations and Maintenance of the Bicol International Airport Project 

Projects that are operational:  

  • Cagayan North International Airport Project (Lal-lo Airport Project) 
  • Clark International Airport Expansion Project, Operation and Maintenance 
  • Mactan-Cebu International Airport Project 

Projects that are under construction:  

  • Caticlan Airport Development Project in Aklan 
  • Clark International Airport Expansion Project – Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC) 

Projects that are under pre-construction: 

  • New Manila International Airport (Bulacan International Airport) 
  • Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) Public-Private Partnership Project 
  • Sangley Point International Airport (SPIA) Project

– Edg Adrian A. Eva

SolGen seeks to maintain cooperation, dialogue, and peace in ASEAN waters

ASEAN Coast Guard Forum at Davao City | Source: https://shorturl.at/MPL7P

The importance of maintaining cooperation, dialogue, and peace was emphasized by Solicitor General Mernardo Guevarra in his speech at the opening ceremony of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Coast Guard Forum last Wednesday. 

“ASEAN’s approach to consensus-building and mutual respect for each other’s processes has effectively prevented conflicts from arising in our region,” Mr. Guevarra said. 

It is expected that the dialogue in the forum will further yield cooperative arrangements and other protocols that would maintain the peace and stability in the region.  

Mr. Guevarra also thanked the ASEAN member-states for their cooperation in maintaining the peace and order of the waters within the region. 

“It is in your everyday patrolling the seas, consistent conduct of law enforcement activities, and aiding distress to mariners at sea that the purposes of the Convention are realized,” he said. 

Mr. Guevarra expressed that the Philippines will always uphold its maritime rights amid the formidable challenges but will always prefer peaceful resolution than conflict. 

“Peace and adherence to international law are values that are writ large in the Philippine Constitution,” he said. 

He also highlighted President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.’s statement at the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue: 21st Asia Security Summit in Singapore last Friday.   

Mr. Marcos emphasized the three constants that ASEAN should consider amidst the challenges in international landscapes: 

  • Sovereign equality of states must remain sacrosanct 
  • ASEAN and ASEAN-led processes must remain central 
  • The rule of law and integrity of multilateralism must prevail

Philippine Coast Guard Admiral Ronnie Gil L. Gavan, forum chairman, said that the forum is valuable for the Philippines as we face geopolitical challenges. 

The ASEAN Coast Guard Forum will be held until June 8. The participant countries will further discuss maritime security, which includes the safety and security in the West Philippine Sea (WPS). – Edg Adrian A. Eva

‘Five Eyes’ warn China recruiting Western military staff to train PLA

U.S. and Chinese flags are seen in this illustration taken, April 24, 2024. — REUTERS

WASHINGTON — The US and other “Five Eyes” countries on Wednesday warned that China has been circumventing measures aimed at halting its recruitment of current and former Western military pilots and other personnel to train the Chinese military.

“Western recruits who train the PLA (Peoples Liberation Army) may increase the risk of future conflict by reducing our deterrence capabilities,” said a public bulletin issued by the US, British, Canadian, Australian and New Zealand intelligence services.

The notice is the latest warning by the English-speaking “Five Eyes” intelligence-sharing alliance about rising concerns with Chinese government-directed espionage, cyber hacking and intellectual property theft as Beijing’s growing might has roiled relations with Washington and its allies.

China’s embassy in Washington did not respond immediately to a request for comment.

The PLA is using private companies in South Africa and China to hire former fighter pilots, flight engineers and air operations center personnel from Western countries to train its Air Force and Navy aviators, the services said in the notice.

“The PLA wants the skills and expertise of these individuals to make its own military air operations more capable while gaining insight into Western air tactics, techniques, and procedures,” the notice said.

It said the efforts represented a “persistent, adaptive threat,” with the insight gleaned by the PLA a threat to “US and allied security.”

EXOTIC AIRCRAFT
In one high-profile case, former US Marine pilot Daniel Duggan is fighting extradition from Australia on US charges of training Chinese military pilots through a South African flight school in how to land on aircraft carriers.

Mr. Duggan, a naturalized Australian citizen, faces US charges including money laundering and breaking arms control law. He denies the allegations.

Personnel are often contacted through headhunting emails or personal acquaintances from the military, or by privately owned companies with hidden ties to the PLA, the notice said.

The Five Eyes agencies asked people to guard against such offers, which they said often entail promises of lucrative salaries or excessive flattery, and to report any attempts to the Federal Bureau of Investigation or military investigators in their countries.

One official from the US National Counterintelligence and Security Center (NCSC), speaking on condition of anonymity, said the governments issued the warning at this time because China “has been adapting” to countermeasures aimed at thwarting recruitment.

Western pilots have been lured into training Chinese pilots by “tons of money” and opportunities “to fly really exotic” Chinese aircraft, said a US official familiar with the matter.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, added that the Chinese military had recruited at least five former pilots from New Zealand and some 30 from Britain, as well as former pilots from Germany and other countries.

The US Commerce Department last year sanctioned more than a dozen companies in China, Kenya, Laos, Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa, Thailand, the United Kingdom (UK), and the United Arab Emirates for their roles in recruiting Western military talent for PLA aviation training.

The US official said the Test Flying Academy of South Africa is “one of the biggest companies” that has been hiring Western former military pilots to train Chinese pilots and has continued doing so despite US sanctions.

The company did not respond immediately to Reuters’ request for comment.

In a statement on its website last year, the company said it “does not provide any classified military training, nor train frontline pilots, and all training is based on open-source material or material provided by clients.”

It has said it operates with the approval of South African government agencies, does not employ US nationals and had terminated the employment of British nationals following “legal challenges in the UK in 2023.” — Reuters

Person with bird flu dies in Mexico, WHO says

STOCK PHOTO

A PERSON with prior health complications who had contracted bird flu died in Mexico in April and the source of exposure to the virus was unknown, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday.

WHO said the current risk of bird flu virus to the general population is low.

The 59-year-old resident of the State of Mexico had been hospitalized in Mexico City and died on April 24 after developing a fever, shortness of breath, diarrhea, nausea and general discomfort, WHO said.

“Although the source of exposure to the virus in this case is currently unknown, A(H5N2) viruses have been reported in poultry in Mexico,” WHO said in a statement.

It was the first laboratory-confirmed human case of infection with an influenza A(H5N2) virus globally and the first avian H5 virus reported in a person in Mexico, according to the WHO.

Scientists said the case is unrelated to the outbreak of H5N1 bird flu in the United States that has so far infected three dairy farm workers.

Mexico’s Health Ministry also said in a statement the source of infection had not been identified.

The victim had no history of exposure to poultry or other animals but had multiple underlying medical conditions and had been bedridden for three weeks, for other reasons, prior to the onset of acute symptoms, the WHO said.

Mexico’s health ministry said the person had chronic kidney disease and type 2 diabetes.

“That immediately puts a person at risk of more severe influenza, even with seasonal flu,” said Andrew Pekosz, an influenza expert at Johns Hopkins University.

But how this individual got infected “is a big question mark that at least this initial report doesn’t really address thoroughly.”

In March, Mexico’s government reported an outbreak of A(H5N2) in an isolated family unit in the country’s western Michoacan state. The government said the cases did not represent a risk to distant commercial farms, nor to human health.

After the April death, Mexican authorities confirmed the presence of the virus and reported the case to the WHO, the agency said.

Mexico’s Health Ministry said there was no evidence of person-to-person transmission in the case and farms near the victim’s home were monitored.

Other people in contact with the person tested negative for bird flu, the health ministry and the WHO said.

Bird flu has infected mammals such as seals, raccoons, bears and cattle, primarily due to contact with infected birds.

Scientists are on alert for changes in the virus that could signal it is adapting to spread more easily among humans.

The United States has reported three cases of H5N1 human infection after exposure to cows since an outbreak was detected in dairy cattle in March. Two had symptoms of conjunctivitis, while the third also had respiratory symptoms.

Although the death in Mexico was not the same strain as the one that is currently infecting cattle in the United States, they are both H5 avian viruses.

Mr. Pekosz said that since 1997, H5 viruses have continuously shown a propensity to infect mammals more than any other avian influenza virus.

“So it continues to ring that warning bell that we should be very vigilant about monitoring for these infections, because every spillover is an opportunity for that virus to try to accumulate those mutations that make it better infect humans,” Mr. Pekosz said.

Australia reported its first human case of A(H5N1) infection in May, noting there were no signs of transmission. It has however found more poultry cases of H7 bird flu on farms in Victoria state. — Reuters

Vietnam tycoon on death row for fraud illegally moved money abroad

JOHN GUCCIONE-PEXELS

HANOI — Vietnam real estate tycoon Truong My Lan, sentenced to death in the country’s largest-ever financial fraud case, had illegally transferred money abroad, according to police, with state media on Thursday reporting $4.5 billion had been moved.

Police said late on Wednesday an investigation into those transfers and money laundering has been completed, but gave no further details.

State media said on Thursday that Ms. Lan had illegally transferred $1.5 billion out of Vietnam and moved $3 billion into the country. The reports did not specify which countries were the recipients or origins of that money.

A court in April sentenced Ms. Lan to death for her role in siphoning off more than $12 billion from Saigon Joint Stock Commercial Bank (SCB), which she effectively controlled through dozens of proxies, despite rules strictly limiting large shareholding in lenders.

SCB did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Thursday and Ms. Lan’s legal representatives could not be reached.

Ms. Lan is also accused of laundering 445.7 trillion dong, including the money she and her accomplices siphoned off from SCB and from her illegal bond issuance, Thanh Nien newspaper reported on Thursday. — Reuters

In apparent blow to Biden plan, Hamas leader demands full end to Gaza war

Palestinian group Hamas’ top leader, Ismail Haniyeh speaks during a press conference in Tehran, Iran, March 26, 2024. — MAJID ASGARIPOUR/WANA (WEST ASIA NEWS AGENCY) VIA REUTERS

CAIRO/JERUSALEM — The leader of Hamas said on Wednesday the group would demand a permanent end to the war in Gaza and Israeli withdrawal as part of a ceasefire plan, dealing an apparent blow to a truce proposal touted last week by US President Joseph R. Biden.

Israel, meanwhile, said there would be no halt to fighting during ceasefire talks, and launched a new assault on a central section of the Gaza Strip near the last city yet to be stormed by its tanks.

The remarks by Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh appeared to deliver the Palestinian militant group’s reply to the proposal that Biden unveiled last week. Washington had said it was waiting to hear an answer from Hamas to what Mr. Biden described as an Israeli initiative.

“The movement and factions of the resistance will deal seriously and positively with any agreement that is based on a comprehensive ending of the aggression and the complete withdrawal and prisoners swap,” Mr. Haniyeh said.

Asked whether Mr. Haniyeh’s remarks amounted to the group’s reply to Mr. Biden, a senior Hamas official replied to a text message from Reuters with a “thumbs up” emoji.

Washington is still pressing hard to reach an agreement. Central Intelligence Agency director William Burns met senior officials from mediators Qatar and Egypt on Wednesday in Doha to discuss the ceasefire proposal.

Since a brief week-long truce in November, all attempts to arrange a ceasefire have failed, with Hamas insisting on its demand for a permanent end to the conflict, while Israel says it is prepared to discuss only temporary pauses until the militant group is defeated.

Mr. Biden has repeatedly declared that ceasefires were close over the past several months, only for no truce to materialize. Notably, Mr. Biden said in February that Israel agreed to a ceasefire by the start of the Ramadan Muslim holy month on March 10, a deadline which passed with military operations in full swing.

But last week’s announcement came with far greater fanfare from the White House, and at a time when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is under mounting domestic political pressure to chart a path to end the eight-month-old war and negotiate the release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas.

Three US officials told Reuters that Mr. Biden, having obtained Israel’s agreement for the proposal, had deliberately announced it without warning the Israelis he would do so, to narrow the room for Mr. Netanyahu to back away.

“We didn’t ask permission to announce the proposal,” said a senior US official granted anonymity to speak freely about the negotiations. “We informed the Israelis we were going to give a speech on the situation in Gaza. We did not go into great detail about what it was.”

Hamas, which rules Gaza, precipitated the war by attacking Israeli territory on Oct. 7, killing around 1,200 people and capturing more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies. Around half of the hostages were freed in the war’s only truce so far, which lasted a week in November.

Israel’s military assault on Gaza has killed more than 36,000 people, according to health officials in the territory, who say thousands more dead are feared buried under the rubble. 

ISRAEL LUKEWARM
Although Mr. Biden described the ceasefire proposal as an Israeli offer, Israel’s government has been lukewarm in public. A top Netanyahu aide confirmed on Sunday Israel had made the proposal even though it was “not a good deal.”

Far-right members of Mr. Netanyahu’s government have pledged to quit if he agrees to a peace deal that leaves Hamas in place, a move that could force a new election and end the political career of Israel’s longest-serving leader. Centrist opponents who joined Mr. Netanyahu’s war cabinet in a show of unity at the outset of the conflict have also threatened to quit, saying his government has no plan.

Meanwhile, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said there would be no let-up in Israel’s offensive while negotiations over the ceasefire proposal were under way.

“Any negotiations with Hamas would be conducted only under fire,” Mr. Gallant said in remarks carried by Israeli media after he flew aboard a warplane to inspect the Gaza front.

Israel announced a new operation against Hamas in central Gaza on Wednesday, where Palestinian medics said airstrikes had killed dozens of people.

Early on Thursday, the Hamas-run Gaza government media office said Israeli missiles killed at least 27 people and injured dozens who were sheltering at a U.N. school in Nuseirat in central Gaza.

Israel’s military said there was a Hamas compound inside the school and fighters who took part in the Oct. 7 attack on Israel “were eliminated.” It said that before the strike by Israeli fighter jets, the military took steps to reduce the risk of harm to civilians. There was no immediate comment from Hamas.

The armed wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad said they had fought gun battles with Israeli forces on Wednesday in areas throughout the enclave and fired anti-tank rockets and shells.

Two children were among the dead laid out on Wednesday in the city’s Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, one of the last hospitals functioning in Gaza. Mourners said the children had been killed along with their mother, who had been unable to leave when others in the neighborhood did.

“This is not war, it is destruction that words are unable to express,” said their father Abu Mohammed Abu Saif. — Reuters

Top news app in US has Chinese origins and ‘writes fiction’ with the help of AI

NORDWOOD THEMES-UNSPLASH

LONDON — Last Christmas Eve, NewsBreak, a free app with roots in China that is the most downloaded news app in the United States, published an alarming piece about a small town shooting. It was headlined “Christmas Day Tragedy Strikes Bridgeton, New Jersey Amid Rising Gun Violence in Small Towns.”

The problem was, no such shooting took place. The Bridgeton, New Jersey police department posted a statement on Facebook on Dec. 27 dismissing the article — produced using artificial intelligence (AI) technology — as “entirely false.”

“Nothing even similar to this story occurred on or around Christmas, or even in recent memory for the area they described,” the post said. “It seems this ‘news’ outlet’s AI writes fiction they have no problem publishing to readers.”

NewsBreak, which is headquartered in Mountain View, California and has offices in Beijing and Shanghai, told Reuters it removed the article on Dec. 28, four days after publication.

The company said “the inaccurate information originated from the content source,” and provided a link to the website, adding: “When NewsBreak identifies any inaccurate content or any violation of our community standards, we take prompt action to remove that content.”

The operators of the website, findplace.xyz, did not respond to a request from Reuters for comment. The police declined to provide further comment.

As local news outlets across America have shuttered in recent years, NewsBreak has filled the void.

Billing itself as “the go-to source for all things local,” Newsbreak says it has over 50 million monthly users. It publishes licensed content from major media outlets, including Reuters, Fox, AP and CNN as well as some information obtained by scraping the internet for local news or press releases which it rewrites with the help of AI. It is only available in the US

But in at least 40 instances since 2021, the app’s use of AI tools affected the communities it strives to serve, with Newsbreak publishing erroneous stories; creating 10 stories from local news sites under fictitious bylines; and lifting content from its competitors, according to a Reuters review of previously unreported court documents related to copyright infringement, cease-and-desist emails and a 2022 company memo registering concerns about “AI-generated stories.”

Reuters spoke to seven former NewsBreak employees, including five who said most of the engineering work behind the app’s algorithm is carried out in its China-based offices. The former employees requested anonymity, citing confidentiality agreements with NewsBreak.

Two local community programs assisting disadvantaged people told Reuters they were impacted by erroneous stories produced by NewsBreak’s AI.

On three occasions in January, February and March, Food to Power, a Colorado-based food bank said it had to turn people away because NewsBreak stated incorrect times of food distributions. The charity complained to NewsBreak in a January 30 email to NewsBreak’s general customer support email address, which Reuters has reviewed. The charity said it received no response.

Harvest912, a charity in Erie, Pennsylvania emailed NewsBreak about two inaccurate, AI-based news stories which said it was holding a 24-hour foot-care clinic for homeless people, asking the outlet to “cease and desist” erroneous coverage.

“You are doing HARM by publishing this misinformation – homeless people will walk to these venues to attend a clinic that is not happening,” Harvest912 told NewsBreak, in a January 12 email seen by Reuters.

In response to Reuters’ questions, NewsBreak said it removed all five articles about the charities after learning they were erroneous and that the articles were based on incorrect information on some of the charities’ web pages.

Without providing a reason to Reuters, NewsBreak added a disclaimer to its homepage in early March, warning that its content “may not always be error-free”.

Newsbreak generates revenue by showing ads to its users, who are predominantly female, above the age of 45, without college degrees, and live in suburban or rural parts of the US, according to the seven former employees and a 2021 company presentation reviewed by Reuters.

The company launched in the US in 2015 as a subsidiary of Yidian, a Chinese news aggregation app. Both companies were founded by Jeff Zheng, the CEO of Newsbreak, and the companies share a US patent registered in 2015 for an “Interest Engine” algorithm, which recommends news content based on a user’s interests and location.

NewsBreak told Reuters that the patent was assigned by Zheng to both companies because “some of the concepts were developed from Jeff’s time at Yidian” and that NewsBreak is “US-based” and “US-invested.” The shared patent has “absolutely no bearing on the company and its operations,” NewsBreak said in written responses to Reuters, describing the technology referenced in the patent as “outdated”.

COMPANY MEMO
A May 2022 company memo from a NewsBreak consultant to Mr. Zheng, reviewed by Reuters, raised concerns about NewsBreak’s use of AI tools to re-publish stories from local news sites under five fictitious bylines.

“I cannot think of a faster way to destroy the NewsBreak brand,” Norm Pearlstine, former Executive Editor at the Wall Street Journal and the Los Angeles Times who was working at the time as a consultant to NewsBreak, wrote in the memo to Mr. Zheng.

In an interview after NewsBreak gave him permission to speak with Reuters, Mr. Pearlstine said he learned of the practice from a NewsBreak colleague.

“I question the legality of creating fake accounts using content publishers put behind their paywalls. If I had learned about the practice while at the LA Times, I would have instructed our lawyer to seek a restraining order and sue for damages,” wrote Mr. Pearlstine, whose six-month consulting role at NewsBreak in 2022 consisted of advising the company about US editorial businesses.

Mr. Pearlstine, who confirmed the memo was authentic, attributed the lapse to a lack of journalistic experience. “A fair number of people on the staff were either new to journalism or new to the US market. That was part of the reason I felt I had to be very direct and very explicit in explaining why I thought this was important,” he told Reuters.

NewsBreak said the news stories referenced in Mr. Pearlstine’s memo were a “limited experiment in three US counties” to aggregate third-party content, and that the effort was disbanded after producing ten articles. The company denied going behind paywalls and said it used “snippets” of articles that were publicly visible to produce complete news stories using OpenAI.

NewsBreak also pointed Reuters towards Mr. Zheng’s emailed response to Mr. Pearlstine, saying he recognized the problem and asked his team to fix it.

OpenAI told Reuters its policies prohibited using its technology to mislead people.

In 2022, Patch Media, which operates digital local news feeds in every US state, reached a $1.75 million settlement in a lawsuit against NewsBreak for copyright infringement, according to court documents reviewed by Reuters, which alleged that NewsBreak republished Patch’s news stories without permission or credit.

Patch Media did not respond to a request for comment. NewsBreak said the settlement was not an admission of wrongdoing.

Emmerich Newspapers, which operates newspapers in Mississippi, Arkansas and Louisiana, reached a 2021 settlement with NewsBreak in a lawsuit alleging copyright infringement related to NewsBreak’s use of Emmerich’s content without permission. NewsBreak said the settlement was “amicable.”

Another copyright lawsuit is ongoing. The two parties are “embroiled in additional lawsuits which we are vigorously defending against,” NewsBreak said.

Wyatt Emmerich, the company’s president, said the lawsuit against NewsBreak involved “verbatim copying of content”. He added: “What worries me in the future is that news aggregators could use artificial intelligence to slightly rewrite our stories which would make proving copyright infringement much more difficult. I have witnessed instances of this happening already on news aggregation sites.”

CHINA ROOTS
NewsBreak is a privately held start-up, whose primary backers are private equity firms San Francisco-based Francisco Partners, and Beijing-based IDG Capital, NewsBreak told Reuters.

Francisco Partners declined to answer questions about its investment in NewsBreak. IDG did not respond to repeated emailed requests for comment.

In February, IDG Capital was added to a list of dozens of Chinese companies the Pentagon said were allegedly working with Beijing’s military. IDG Capital told Bloomberg in February that it has no association with the Chinese military and does not belong on that list. NewsBreak did not comment on the finding.

Yidian, the Chinese aggregation company, divested from NewsBreak in 2019 because “its management team at the time did not understand the U.S. market”, Zheng said. Until then, Li Ya, the president of Phoenix New Media, a Chinese state-linked media firm which held a 46.9% stake in Yidian, had been a director at NewsBreak, according to corporate records.

Yidian continued to describe NewsBreak as its U.S. version on its website until 2021, according toThe Wire China.

Yidian in 2017received praise from ruling Communist Party officials for its efficiency in disseminating government propaganda. Reuters found no evidence that NewsBreak censored or produced news that was favourable to the Chinese government.

A NewsBreak spokesperson said there was no ongoing commercial relationship with Yidian. Yidian, Phoenix New Media and Li Ya did not respond to requests from Reuters for comment.

About half of NewsBreak’s 200 employees are China-based where they are engaged in R&D, the company said.

A 2022 company roster reviewed by Reuters showed that 100 of NewsBreak’s 137 engineers at the time were based in China.

Five of the former NewsBreak employees said CEO Zheng divides his time between China and the United States.

Zheng, who was born in China, is a permanent resident of the United States and his family relocated to the U.S. early last year, the company said.

Reuters found five job advertisements NewsBreak posted on Chinese job sites seeking data analysts or engineers for its Beijing and Shanghai-based offices capable of “in-depth mining” of “massive user behaviour data” from the app’s U.S. users.

A Republican aide to the US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee told Reuters the use of Chinese-based engineers by Newsbreak raised possible concerns that American user data can be accessed in China. The aide declined to be identified because they were not authorised to speak to the media.

In a recent high-profile case, US officials warned that TikTok, whose parent company is the Chinese firm ByteDance, could be compelled by the Chinese government to use its algorithm to control what kind of news is viewed by Americans and hand over their data.

TikTok, the most downloaded short video app globally, with 170 million U.S. users, now faces a forced sale or a US ban.

In response to Reuters questions, TikTok said it was planning to offer third parties more access to examine its code and verify the app functions as intended.

Zheng told Reuters that NewsBreak complies with US data and privacy laws and is maintained on US-based Amazon (AWS) servers. “Staff in China only access anonymous data stored on AWS servers in the US,” he said. Amazon declined to comment.

NewsBreak also said that as a US-based business it was not subjected to Chinese data laws.

Pearlstine, the former NewsBreak consultant, said NewsBreak’s ability to demonstrate it is a US company was critical.

“The long term health of NewsBreak was dependent on its being perceived as a California company and that the more the leadership was in Mountain View, the better it would be for the company,” he said. — Reuters

Working with McDonald’s: More than a job, it’s a journey

Behind the golden arches and heartwarming aesthetics of McDonald’s branches are their dedicated employees who work tirelessly to ensure that every customer receives their favorite meal with exceptional service. From the smiling faces who take your order to the skilled kitchen staff who prepare your food, the McDonald’s crew remain true to their commitment to transforming a simple meal into a happy meal.

Before stepping through the doors of a branch and embarking on their professional careers, the journey of a McDonald’s employee, whether service crew or manager, begins with world-class training programs designed to equip them with the skills and knowledge needed to excel in their roles. These programs serve as launchpads for service crew members before they work in the counter or the kitchen, as well as for aspiring managers before they take the lead at their respective branches.

After completing their training, McDonald’s employees are ready to step into their roles with excellence and a day-to-day drive to deliver the best results. Armed with knowledge from its training programs, its customer-driven employees strive to exceed the needs and requirements of customers dining in and taking out.

With compassion and integrity instilled in them, McDonald’s employees demonstrate their concern and care in their interactions with customers, colleagues, and community members alike while upholding the highest standards of honesty, responsibility, and professionalism.

These world-class employees are supported by an inclusive culture that makes employees feel valued, respected, and empowered to bring their authentic selves to work and bring out their best service. Through recognition programs and engaging activities, McDonald’s also fosters a positive employee experience that keeps its workforce motivated and connected.

Breaking fast-food work stereotypes, McDonald’s Philippines employees are given different opportunities to advance their careers and different options for growth. Precy M. Tongol, a former manager trainee who is now a restaurant general manager at McDonald’s, went through the company’s development programs and is a living testament to the career pathways available in fast-food service.

“I have built my identity as a career woman here at McDonald’s Philippines.” Mrs. Tongol proudly shared in an article shared by McDonald’s Philippines last International Women’s Month. “Running a restaurant of a million-dollar business is not that easy, but McDonald’s has equipped me with enough knowledge and skills to perform at my best. I am empowered to decide what is best for my restaurant.”

McDonald’s Philippines also takes pride in being an equal-opportunity employer. The company has provided career opportunities to working students, part-timers, and, recently, even senior citizens (SC) and persons with disabilities (PWD) regardless of background, religion, gender, or sexual orientation.

The quick service restaurant giant (QSR) has also given access to training development and advancement opportunities to more members of the community with programs like the Workforce Immersion Program (WIP) and the Special Program for Employment of Students (SPES). Through these projects, McDonald’s Philippines has employed over 16,000 Filipino youths and close to 100 SCs and PWDs nationwide.

One of these senior citizens is 63-year-old Larina Castro who is working as a crew member at McDonald’s Bluebay in Pasay City. A retired seamstress, Ms. Castro joined McDonald’s as her son lost his job and her husband didn’t have work.

“Enjoy po ako kasi lahat ng tao dito mabait sa akin. Masarap magtrabaho na welcome ka ng lahat — simula sa mga managers hanggang sa mga crew. Lahat sila mababait (I enjoy working here because everybody is nice. It’s great to be working in a place where everyone is welcoming — from the managers to the crew. They are all very nice),” Ms. Castro was quoted as saying.

As a result of this harmonious workplace culture, McDonald’s Philippines has been recognized as one of the Philippines’ best employers in the inaugural list of The Philippines’ Best Employers for 2023 and 2024 via international market research firm Statista.

One of the country’s biggest employers with more than 60,000 employees in over 740 stores nationwide, the QSR was awarded by Statsita a commendable rating of 8.31 out of 10, based on respondents’ likelihood to recommend the company to friends or family, with 0 indicating the least likelihood and 10 signifying the direct recommendation.

Recognized as a top employer, the company continues to set the standard for excellence in the fast-food industry. Through rigorous training, recognition programs, and opportunities for advancement, McDonald’s empowers its workforce to thrive and excel. With their dedication, employees deliver exceptional service, leaving a positive impact on customers, colleagues, and communities.

At McDonald’s Philippines, it’s more than just taking orders and assembling them. It’s a journey made possible by a supportive and fulfilling environment for its employees.

 


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