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Tourism roads may boost economy

PIXABAY

THE GOVERNMENT’s proposal to allot P6.4 billion for the development of tourism road projects for next year could further spur tourism due to improved road connectivity to tourist attractions, a congressman said on Sunday.

The budget could also boost economic activity and provide jobs in the infrastructure and transportation sectors, among other industries, Quezon City Rep. Marvin D. Rillo said, citing the stimulus effect of a tourism boost in the country.

“The infrastructure projects create construction-related jobs that readily benefit low-income families,” he said in a statement.

“More importantly, the improved road access will boost tourist passage, thus spurring new jobs in accommodation, transport, food and beverage services, entertainment, and other activities,” he added.

The Tourism Road Infrastructure Program is a component of the Philippine National Tourism Development Plan, which seeks to improve connectivity to tourism sites and gateways, according to the Department of Public Works and Highways. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

Korean ‘fraud’ leader nabbed

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE BUREAU of Immigration (BI) arrested a South Korean man wanted for telecommunications fraud in his country.

Immigration Chief Norman G. Tansingco said the 32-year-old man was arrested in Mactan, Lapu-Lapu City last Aug. 14.

He added that the arrest was strengthened by a deportation warrant issued by the BI Board of Commissioners in October 2021, when it ordered the man’s expulsion from the Philippines for being an undesirable alien.

There is also a standing red notice from the International Police (Interpol) against the man, which came from an arrest warrant issued by the Suwon district court in South Korea in September 2019.

The Korean man had been overstaying in the Philippines since his arrival in July 2019.

Authorities said the man leads a voice phishing syndicate that operated since 2017. It had already defrauded victims of over $840,000.

The gang allegedly disguised themselves as bankers, managing to lure the victims to share personal information which they used to defraud and gain illegal profits.

The man is already an undocumented alien due to his canceled passport. He is currently detained at the BI facility in Taguig City while awaiting deportation. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

Cigarettes seized in Zamboanga

BW FILE PHOTO

COTABATO CITY — Policemen and agents of the Bureau of Customs (BoC) together foiled an attempt by smugglers to deliver to Zamboanga City P16 million worth of cigarettes from Indonesia.

Radio reports here on Sunday quoted Brig. Gen. Bowenn Joey M. Masauding, director of the Police Regional Office-9, as saying that personnel of units under him and BoC employees seized the contraband on Thursday, piled inside a van-type truck that has just moved out then from a roll on, roll off type vessel from Sulu that docked at the Zamboanga City Port.

The law-enforcement team involved in the operation found inside the truck 281 large boxes, containing cigarettes with Indonesian brands, amounting to P16 million, covered with other cargoes as concealment.

Mr. Masauding said the operation that led to the interception of the smuggled cigarettes was premised on tips by confidential informants. Among them were businessmen, supporting the government’s campaign against the entry into mainland Mindanao of cigarettes from Indonesia via the territorial seas of the southern Sulu and Tawi-Tawi island provinces. — John Felix M. Unson

3,044 NPAs have yielded since 2016

ARMY and civilian local executives inspect the military-type firearms turned in by 10 members of the New People’s Army before they pledged allegiance to the government in a simple rite in Maramag, Bukidnon. — PHILIPPINE STAR/JOHN FELIX M. UNSON

COTABATO CITY — The Army’s 10th Infantry Division (ID) and local government units had jointly secured the surrender of 3,044 New People’s Army (NPA) guerillas since 2016, a feat highlighted in last week’s commemoration of the unit’s 18th founding anniversary.

Radio reports here on Sunday quoted 10th ID’s commander, Major Gen. Allan D. Hambala, as saying that credit for the feat should partly go to different peace advocacy blocs, the municipal, provincial and city officials in areas covered by units of the division.

The 10th ID covers provinces and cities in Region 11 and the municipalities of San Fernando, Cadingilan, and Damulog in Bukidnon province in Region 10.

Sunday’s radio reports here also stated that units of the 10th ID had, with the support of the Philippine National Police and local executives, dismantled all armed groups under the NPA’s Southern Mindanao Regional Committee (SMRC) through combined tactical and diplomatic maneuvers in the past eight years.

The SMRC originally had five sub-regional committees, 16 guerilla fronts and nine other sub-groups, all feared for brutality on hapless villagers who had refused to provide members with money and food. — John Felix M. Unson

Israel, Hezbollah trade massive attacks as conflict escalates

TOY SOLDIERS, Hezbollah and Israel flags are seen in this illustration taken on Oct. 15, 2023. — REUTERS

JERUSALEM/BEIRUT — Hezbollah launched hundreds of rockets and drones against Israel on Sunday in retaliation for the assassination of a senior commander in Beirut last month, the Iranian-backed movement said, as Israel’s cabinet met to prepare a response.

The Israeli military said it had thwarted a much larger attack with preemptive strikes after it assessed that Hezbollah was preparing to launch the barrage.

Sunday’s violence was among the biggest exchanges of fire since hostilities began between Israel and Hezbollah in parallel with the eruption of Israel’s war against Palestinian group Hamas in Gaza.

Around 100 Israeli jets struck more than 40 Hezbollah launch sites in southern Lebanon shortly before the strikes, destroying thousands of launcher barrels that were aimed mainly at northern Israel but with some targets in central areas, the Israeli military said in a statement.

Hezbollah said it had launched drones and more than 320 Katyusha rockets towards Israel and hit 11 military targets. It said the barrage had completed “the first phase” of its response to Israel’s assassination last month of Fuad Shukr, a senior commander, in Beirut but that the full response would take “some time”.

It dismissed Israel’s account of the preemptive strikes but said in a statement its military operation had been completed successfully for the day.

Expectations of an escalation between the two sides had risen since a missile strike in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights last month killed 12 youngsters and the Israeli military assassinated Mr. Shukr in Beirut in response.

Israel’s cabinet met at 7 a.m. (0400 GMT), Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office announced, but there were no immediate details on any further response from Israel.

“We are determined to do everything possible to defend our country, to return the residents of the north safely to their homes and to continue to uphold a simple rule: Whoever harms us — we harm him,” Mr. Netanyahu said in a statement.

Foreign Minister Israel Katz said Israel would respond to developments on the ground but did not seek a full-scale war.

Most of the Israeli strikes were hitting targets in southern Lebanon but the military was ready to strike anywhere there was a threat, an Israeli military spokesperson said.

Defense Minister Yoav Gallant declared a state of emergency, and flights to and from Ben Gurion airport in Tel Aviv were suspended for around 90 minutes, but the airports authority said normal operations were expected to resume by 7 a.m.

WARNING SIRENS
In northern Israel, warning sirens sounded and multiple explosions were heard around several areas as Israel’s Iron Dome aerial defense system shot down rockets coming from southern Lebanon. Israel’s Magen David Adom ambulance service said it was on high alert all over the country.

The Israeli military issued civil defense instructions from central Israel to the north, limiting gatherings but authorizing people to go to work as long as they were able to reach air raid shelters quickly. There were no casualties immediately reported in Israel, according to the ambulance service.

A security source in Lebanon said at least 40 Israeli strikes had hit various towns in the country’s south in one of the densest bombardments since hostilities began in October.

One of the strikes on the town of Khiam killed one fighter from the Hezbollah-allied Shi’ite group Amal, two security sources told Reuters. Amal later announced his death.

A resident of the southern Lebanese town of Zibqeen, some 7 km (4 miles) from the border, told Reuters it was the first time he had awakened “to the sound of planes and the loud explosions of rockets — even before the dawn prayer. It felt like the apocalypse.”

Israel’s Army Radio, citing defense officials, said the military assessed that the Hezbollah barrage on northern Israel was “improvised” after the pre-emptive strike by Israeli jets on the Hezbollah launch sites.

REGIONAL CONFLICT
The Israel-Hezbollah escalation has drawn fears of a wider regional conflict, potentially involving both the United States and Iran. President Joseph R. Biden was following events closely, the White House said.

“At his direction, senior US officials have been communicating continuously with their Israeli counterparts. We will keep supporting Israel’s right to defend itself, and we will keep working for regional stability,” said National Security Council spokesperson Sean Savett.

The strikes came as negotiators were meeting in Cairo in a last-ditch effort to conclude a halt to fighting in Gaza and a return of Israeli and foreign hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners.

Hezbollah fired missiles in Israel immediately after the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas gunmen on Israel. Hezbollah and Israel have been exchanging fire constantly ever since, while avoiding a major escalation as war rages in Gaza to the south.

That precarious balance appeared to shift after the strike in the Golan Heights, for which Hezbollah denied responsibility, and the subsequent assassination of Shukr, one of Hezbollah’s most senior military commanders.

Mr. Shukr’s death in an air strike was quickly followed by the assassination of Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran, which led to vows of reprisal against Israel by Iran. — Reuters

‘Things will get worse’ — PM Starmer says fixing UK problems will take time

BRITAIN’S PRIME MINISTER KEIR STARMER — POOL VIA REUTERS

LONDON — Prime Minister (PM) Keir Starmer will warn Britons next week that the changes needed to fix Britain’s many problems will take time, saying “things will get worse before we get better” in a speech he describes as a chance to level with the public.

After being elected as prime minister at a July landslide election, Mr. Starmer has repeatedly blamed the former Conservative government for leaving Britain in a parlous state, something he said allowed “thugs” to spark this month’s anti-migrant riots.

In a speech due on Tuesday, a week before Britain’s parliament returns to work after a summer break, Mr. Starmer will say that “change won’t happen overnight” but that his government is determined to tackle a multitude of problems ranging from overflowing prisons to long waiting lists for health services.

“I said change would not happen overnight. When there is rot deep in the heart of a structure, you can’t just cover it up. You can’t tinker with it or rely on quick fixes. You have to overhaul the entire thing,” Mr. Starmer will say, according to excerpts of his speech provided by his office.

“We have inherited not just an economic black hole but a societal black hole and that is why we have to take action and do things differently. Part of that is being honest with people about the choices we face and how tough this will be. Frankly, things will get worse before we get better.”

Mr. Starmer, a former Director of Public Prosecutions, was forced to cancel his summer holiday this month to tackle riots that targeted Muslims and migrants. The riots began after the killings of three young girls in northern England was wrongly blamed on an Islamist migrant based on online misinformation.

Mr. Starmer said the Conservative government’s failure to tackle problems had widened cracks in society making it harder to deal with rioters than when he was Britain’s top prosecutor from 2008 to 2013.

“And those people throwing rocks, torching cars, making threats, they didn’t just know the system was broken. They were betting on it, they were gaming it, they saw the cracks in our society after 14 years of populism and failure and they exploited them. That’s what we have inherited,” he will say.

Appealing to what he calls Britain’s working people such as teachers, nurses, small business owners and firefighters, Mr. Starmer will say his government has taken the “first steps towards the change people voted for” on July 4.

But he will say the poor state of Britain’s public finances — which his finance minister says are on course to show a 22-billion pound ($29 billion) overspend this year — mean his government will have to make tough decisions.

“If we don’t take tough action across the board, we won’t be able to fix the foundations of the country like we need,” he will say. “I won’t shy away from making unpopular decisions now if it’s the right thing for the country in the long term. That’s what a government of service means.” — Reuters

Telegram CEO Durov arrested in France — media

DIMA SOLOMIN-UNSPLASH

PARIS — Pavel Durov, the Russian-French billionaire founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Telegram messaging app, was arrested at Bourget airport outside Paris on Saturday evening, TF1 TV and BFM TV said, citing unnamed sources.

Mr. Durov was traveling aboard his private jet, TF1 said on its website, adding he had been targeted by an arrest warrant in France as part of a preliminary police investigation.

TF1 and BFM both said the investigation was focused on a lack of moderators on Telegram, and that police considered that this situation allowed criminal activity to go on undeterred on the messaging app.

The encrypted Telegram, with close to one billion users, is particularly influential in Russia, Ukraine and the republics of the former Soviet Union. It is ranked as one of the major social media platforms after Facebook, YouTube, WhatsApp, Instagram, TikTok and Wechat.

Telegram did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. The French Interior Ministry and police had no comment.

Russian-born Mr. Durov founded Telegram with his brother in 2013. He left Russia in 2014 after refusing to comply with government demands to shut down opposition communities on his VKontakte social media platform, which he sold.

“I would rather be free than to take orders from anyone,” Mr. Durov told US journalist Tucker Carlson in April about his exit from Russia and search for a home for his company which included stints in Berlin, London, Singapore and San Francisco.

After Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Telegram has become the main source of unfiltered — and sometimes graphic and misleading — content from both sides about the war and the politics surrounding the conflict.

The platform has become what some analysts call ‘a virtual battlefield’ for the war, used heavily by Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky and his officials, as well as the Russian government.

Telegram — which allows users to evade official scrutiny — has also become one of the few places where Russians can access independent news about the war after the Kremlin increased curbs on independent media following its invasion of Ukraine.

The Russian foreign ministry said its embassy in Paris was clarifying the situation around Mr. Durov and called on Western non-governmental organizations to demand his release.

Russia began blocking Telegram in 2018 after the app refused to comply with a court order to grant state security services access to its users’ encrypted messages.

The action interrupted many third-party services, but had little effect on the availability of Telegram there. The ban order, however, sparked mass protests in Moscow and criticism from non-government officials.

‘NEUTRAL PLATFORM’
TF1 said Dubai-based Mr. Durov had been traveling from Azerbaijan and was arrested at around 8.00p.m. (1800 GMT).

Mr. Durov, whose fortune was estimated by Forbes at $15.5 billion, said some governments had sought to pressure him but the app should remain a “neutral platform” and not a “player in geopolitics.”

Telegram’s increasing popularity, however, has prompted scrutiny from several countries in Europe, including France, on security and data breach concerns.

Russia’s representative to international organizations in Vienna, Mikhail Ulyanov, and several other Russian politicians were quick on Sunday to accuse France of acting as a dictatorship — the same criticism that Moscow faced when putting demands on Mr. Durov in 2014 and trying to ban Telegram in 2018.

“Some naive persons still don’t understand that if they play more or less visible role in international information space it is not safe for them to visit countries which move towards much more totalitarian societies,” Mr. Ulyanov wrote on X.

Elon Musk, billionaire owner of X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, said after reports of Mr. Durov’s detention: “It’s 2030 in Europe and you’re being executed for liking a meme.”

Several Russian bloggers called for protests at French embassies throughout the world at noon on Sunday. — Reuters

SpaceX to return Boeing’s Starliner astronauts from space next year — NASA

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

WASHINGTON — Two NASA astronauts who flew to the International Space Station in June aboard Boeing’s faulty Starliner capsule will need to return to Earth on a SpaceX vehicle early next year, NASA officials said on Saturday, deeming issues with Starliner’s propulsion system too risky to carry its first crew home as planned.

Veteran NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, both former military test pilots, became the first crew to ride Starliner on June 5 when they were launched to the ISS for what was expected to be an eight-day test mission.

But Starliner’s propulsion system suffered a series of glitches in the first 24 hours of its flight to the ISS that has so far kept the astronauts on the station for 79 days as Boeing scrambled to investigate the issues.

NASA officials told reporters during a news conference in Houston that Wilmore and Williams, both former military test pilots, are safe and prepared to stay even longer. They will use their extra time to conduct science experiments alongside the station’s other seven astronauts, NASA said.

In a rare reshuffling of NASA’s astronaut operations, the two astronauts are now expected to return in February 2025 on a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft due to launch next month as part of a routine astronaut rotation mission. Two of the Crew Dragon’s four astronaut seats will be kept empty for Wilmore and Williams.

The agency’s decision, tapping Boeing’s top space rival to return the astronauts, is one of NASA’s most consequential in years. Boeing had hoped its Starliner test mission would redeem the troubled program after years of development problems and over $1.6 billion in budget overruns since 2016.

Five of Starliner’s 28 thrusters failed during flight and it sprang several leaks of helium, which is used to pressurize the thrusters. It was still able to dock with the station, a football field-sized laboratory that has housed rotating crews of astronauts for over two decades.

NASA said in a statement Starliner will undock from the ISS without a crew in “early September.” The spacecraft will attempt to return to Earth autonomously, forgoing a core test objective of having a crew present and in control for the return trip.

“I know this is not the decision we had hoped for, but we stand ready to carry out the action’s necessary to support NASA’s decision,” Boeing’s Starliner chief Mark Nappi told employees in an email.

“The focus remains first and foremost on ensuring the safety of the crew and spacecraft,” Mr. Nappi said.

Several senior NASA officials and Boeing representatives made the decision during a Saturday morning meeting in Houston.

NASA’s space operations chief Ken Bowersox said agency officials unanimously voted for Crew Dragon to bring the astronauts home. Boeing voted for Starliner, which it said was safe.

Mr. Nelson told reporters at a news conference in Houston that he discussed the agency’s decision with Boeing’s new Chief Executive Officer Kelly Ortberg and was confident Boeing would continue its Starliner program. Mr. Nelson said he was “100 percent” certain the spacecraft would fly another crew in the future.

“He expressed to me an intention that they will continue to work the problems once Starliner is back safely,” Mr. Nelson said of Mr. Ortberg.

Boeing struggled for years to develop Starliner, a gumdrop-shaped capsule designed to compete with Crew Dragon as a second US option for sending astronaut crews to and from Earth’s orbit. The company is also struggling with quality issues on production of commercial planes, its most important products.

Starliner failed a 2019 test to launch to the ISS uncrewed, but mostly succeeded in a 2022 do-over attempt where it also encountered thruster problems. Its June mission with its first crew was required before NASA can certify the capsule for routine flights, but now Starliner’s crew certification path is uncertain.

The drawn-out mission has cost Boeing $125 million, securities filings show. The company arranged tests and simulations on Earth to gather data that it has used to try and convince NASA officials that Starliner is safe to fly the crew back home.

But results from that testing raised more difficult engineering questions and ultimately failed to quell NASA officials’ concerns about Starliner’s thrusters and its ability to make a crewed return trip, the most daunting and complex part of the test mission.

“There was just too much uncertainty in the prediction of the thrusters,” NASA’s commercial crew program chief Steve Stich told reporters.

Starliner’s now-uncertain path to receiving a long-sought NASA certification will add to the crises faced by Ortberg, who started this month with the goal to rebuild the planemaker’s reputation after a door panel dramatically blew off a 737 MAX passenger jet in midair in January. — Reuters

Anthony Fauci, former top US disease expert, recovering from West Nile virus — news report

REUTERS

FORMER top US infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci is recovering from West Nile virus after being hospitalized with the mosquito-borne illness for nearly a week, he told Stat News on Saturday.

Mr. Fauci, 83, became the face of the US government’s efforts to contain the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. He retired in December 2022 after 54 years at the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) including 38 serving as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).

In an interview with Stat News on Saturday, Mr. Fauci said he had spent six days in a hospital starting Aug. 16 while doctors tried to discern the source of his weakness, fever and chills. He then tested positive for West Nile virus, and he told the digital news outlet: “I’ve never been as sick in my life.”

Reuters could not immediately reach him for comment.

The virus is spread by infected mosquitoes. There were about 2,500 cases reported in the US last year and 182 deaths from the disease, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). There are no specific treatments or vaccine for the disease.

Mr. Fauci said he expects to make a full recovery although it may take several weeks for him to return to normal, Stat reported. — Reuters

Unilab announces passing of its first president Amb. Howard Q. Dee

 


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Philippines could provoke China at ‘another Chinese island’, says Global Times

PHILIPPINE COAST GUARD/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

 – The Philippines could “stir up trouble” at yet another “Chinese” island in the South China Sea, China’s state-backed Global Times reported, after what it said were Manila’s “provocative intrusions” into waters at two other reefs in the region.

The Philippines is expanding military infrastructure on Thitu Island, which Beijing calls Zhongye Dao, to potentially invite warships and warplanes from countries outside of the region such as the United States and Japan, sabotaging peace and stability in the South China Sea, the nationalist tabloid reported, citing Chinese experts.

Zhongye Dao is a part of Nansha Qundao, as the Spratly Islands are known in China, but “illegally occupied” by the Philippines, Global Times reported late on Thursday.

The Philippines national security council and defense ministry did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment.

China claims sovereignty over nearly the whole South China Sea, deploying an armada of coast guard vessels to protect what it considers its territory. An international arbitral tribunal has said Beijing’s claim has no basis under international law.

The Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam and Brunei contest the claims.

The Philippines occupies nearly 10 locations in the South China Sea, including Thitu Island. Manila will develop islands in the South China Sea that it considers part of its territory to make them more habitable for troops, Philippine military chief Romeo Brawner said in January.

In the latest clash between China and the Philippines in the South China Sea, Manila and Beijing accused each other on Monday of ramming vessels and performing dangerous maritime maneuvers.

The Philippines said two of its coast guard vessels “encountered unlawful and aggressive maneuvers” from Chinese vessels near Sabina Shoal while on their way to supply Filipino personnel stationed in two occupied islands.

Sabina Shoal is part of the Spratly Islands, which are claimed by China, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam.

The United States condemned China’s actions. Its ambassador to Manila, MaryKay Carlson, said the US “stands with the Philippines in condemning the China Coast Guard’s dangerous maneuvers”.

The encounter came less than two weeks after an air incident between the Chinese and Philippines militaries in Scarborough Shoal, also in the South China Sea. – Reuters

Kamala Harris says she will aim to pass middle class tax cut as president

KAMALA HARRIS — GAGE SKIDMORE/WIKIMEDIA.ORG

 – Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris said in her Democratic National Convention speech on Thursday that as president she will aim to pass a middle class tax cut.

Ms. Harris said her opponent, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, was not concerned about the middle class.

“Instead of the Trump tax hike we will pass a middle class tax cut that will benefit more than 100 million Americans,” Harris said in her speech, without giving further details.

Ms. Harris argued that the Republican former president’s plan for tariffs will serve as a price hike. Mr. Trump has threatened to use tariffs to achieve what he terms as fair trade relations and deals with other countries.

Ms. Harris called building the middle class “a defining goal of her presidency” and vowed, if elected, to create an “opportunity economy” where “everyone has the chance to compete and a chance to succeed.”

Last week, Ms. Harris outlined proposals to cut taxes for most Americans, ban “price gouging” by grocers and build more affordable housing.

Her agenda may run into resistance from both corporations and the US Congress, which rejected similar proposals when they came from Democratic US President Joe Biden.

Ms. Harris is aiming to draw a contrast with her opponent on broad economic policies, specifically on tariffs and taxes. – Reuters