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ICI hands luxury cars to Ombudsman

ICI office facade — BW FILE PHOTO

THE GOVERNMENT’S anti-graft agency has taken custody of two luxury vehicles surrendered by a former Public Works official under investigation over the flood control mess.

The now-defunct Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI) said in a statement on Tuesday that it turned over a black GMC Yukon Denali XL and a navy-blue Lamborghini Urus Performante to the Office of the Ombudsman.

The vehicles were surrendered in September 2025 by former Department of Public Works and Highways engineer Brice Ericson D. Hernandez, following an inquiry into anomalous flood control projects. Mr. Hernandez is currently facing malversation and graft charges before the Sandiganbayan in connection with a “ghost” flood control project in Bulacan.

ICI Executive Director Brian Keith F. Hosaka said the turnover follows the submission of the commission’s investigative findings to the Ombudsman in March.

“The commission is hopeful that the turnover of these vehicles will further aid the Office of the Ombudsman with its ongoing investigations, and also support its restitution initiatives for the benefit of the Filipino people,” Mr. Hosaka said in a letter received by Assistant Ombudsman Eliseo DC. Cruz. — Erika Mae P. Sinaking

Tourists urged to visit quieter Baguio

BAGUIO CITY — With tourist arrivals noticeably down, Mayor Benjamin B. Magalong is urging travelers to seize what he calls a rare window to experience the country’s summer capital without its usual crowds.

“Now is the right time… expect really light traffic,” Mr. Magalong said in mixed English and Filipino, pointing to significantly lighter traffic conditions across the city as visitor arrivals decline.

Long known for its cool climate, pine-lined vistas, and vibrant cultural scene, Baguio City typically draws heavy foot traffic during peak months, often resulting in gridlocked roads and packed attractions. However, the lull has transformed the city into a more relaxed destination, with shorter queues and easier mobility.

For visitors, the change offers a different kind of Baguio — one where parks, markets, and scenic spots can be explored at a gentler pace.

For local businesses, especially in tourism and services, it presents both a challenge and an opportunity to draw guests seeking a more comfortable experience.

City officials say preparations remain in place to draw tourists, with continued efforts to ensure cleanliness, safety, and order.

Mr. Magalong expressed optimism that the current conditions could entice more travelers to return while supporting small enterprises affected by the slowdown.

As the city journeys into the economic impact of reduced tourist arrivals, Mr. Magalong said visitors can play a key role in sustaining livelihoods — while enjoying a calmer, more accessible side of Baguio rarely seen during peak travel periods. — Artemio A. Dumlao

DLSU closes in on second-round sweep vs listless Lady Warriors

DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY LADY SPIKERS — UAAP

Games on Wednesday
(UST Quadricentennial Pavilion)
9 a.m. – UE vs DLSU (Men)
11 a.m. – UE vs DLSU (Women)
3 p.m. – AdU vs UP (Men)
5 p.m. – AdU vs UP (Women)

BARRING a monumental upset, De La Salle University (DLSU) could move on the cusp of a second-round sweep on Wednesday to shore up its redemption tour in the UAAP Season 88.

The mighty DLSU Lady Spikers are heavily favored to post their 13th win in a row against the listless University of the East (UE) in the final week of the two-round eliminations for a goal of advancing straight to the finals at the UST Quadricentennial Pavilion.

La Salle is already assured of the top seeding and a twice-to-beat incentive given a traditional Final Four format but is determined on upgrading it to an outright berth in the best-of-three finals against whoever survives the grueling stepladder play.

The Lady Spikers attempt to zero in on that bid at 11 a.m. against UE (0-12) that’s in the middle of a 26-game skid before a final hurdle to pass against no less than titleholder National University (NU) (9-3) this Sunday. At 5 p.m., Adamson University (AdU) (7-5) clashes against the University of the Philippines (UP) (5-7) to break free from a logjam with University of Santo Tomas (UST) and Far Eastern University (FEU) at third to fourth place.

The spikers from Taft, however, would like to cross the bridge when they get there, wanting no stumble as they approach the homestretch with the target on their back getting bigger each day to spoil a 14-0 sweep.

If La Salle is out for a steady momentum entering the postseason, Adamson is in a must-win set-to to gain a solo third spot and boost its Final Four chances since its last appearance in 2023. A win would also keep a slim hope of snatching the other twice-to-beat edge from the second-running NU.

The AdU Lady Falcons are gridlocked with UST Golden Tigresses and the FEU Lady Tamaraws for the last two semifinal spots as UP stays in contention but with the slimmest of chances by needing all other scenarios to fall in its favor, on top of needing to win its final two matches.

And Adamson has no plans of getting foiled.

In the men’s division, La Salle (5-7) tries to keep its playoff hopes alive against the also-ran UE (2-10) at 9 a.m. while eliminated squads UP (3-9) and Adamson (2-10) go for graceful exits at 3 p.m. — John Bryan Ulanday

Portland Trail Blazers out to end playoff drought, face host Phoenix Suns in play-in tournament game

PHOENIX coach Jordan Ott is confident regarding the host Suns’ mindset entering their play-in tournament game against the visiting Portland Trail Blazers on Tuesday.

“We’ll be juiced and ready to rock,” Ott said as the Suns look to return to the postseason after missing out last year.

Trail Blazers interim coach Tiago Splitter’s advice to his players comes from his seven seasons of NBA experience as a player, including five in the postseason.

Portland has not made the playoffs since 2021, and it has not won a playoff series since 2019, when it fell to Golden State in the Western Conference finals.

“Play free,” said Splitter, who won an NBA title with San Antonio in 2014.

“You know, you can play that game super tense. It’s a balance between playing hard and playing free a little bit. You cannot be in fear. You just have to play hard and enjoy that.”

The seventh-seeded Suns and eighth-seeded Trail Blazers begin the two-for-one round of the NBA extra season on Tuesday.

The winner advances to the eight-team playoffs, with Game 1 set for Sunday at the second-seeded San Antonio Spurs.

The loser has another chance — it will host a second play-in game on Friday against the winner of the Los Angeles Clippers-Golden State Warriors contest on Wednesday.

Phoenix won two of three in the season series, winning twice in Portland but losing at home in the most recent meeting Feb. 22, a 92-77 win for the Blazers with both teams missing key pieces.

Suns leading scorers Devin Booker and Dillon Brooks did not play, while Blazers leading scorer Deni Avdija left 59 seconds in after suffering a recurrence of a back injury.

Ott held out Booker, Brooks and his other starters in the regular-season finale, a 135-103 win at Oklahoma City on Sunday.

Booker and Brooks were rested, but questions surround the availability of Jalen Green (knee) and Jordan Goodwin (ankle), who left the Wednesday victory over Dallas with injuries.

“Whoever’s available, we’ll make it work,” Ott said. “We know we are a competitive group. We have more than enough to go out there and play and play as hard as we possibly can.”

Avdija had 25 points and 10 assists in the Blazers’ 122-120 victory over Sacramento that clinched the eighth seed on Sunday, and 7-foot-2 Donovan Clingan had his fourth straight double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds.

Clingan had 23 points and 13 rebounds in the Feb. 22 game.

The Blazers have won five of seven and seven of 10. The Suns have won six of the last 16, many of those without Brooks (fractured hand).

“They’ve been playing well lately,” Ott said of Portland. “It’s a really good defense. They’re in a different coverage, where they just funnel everything to the big (Clingan).

“They are super active, long on the wings, play super physical. Offensively they play fast in transition and they drive the basketball. It’ll be a challenge, the same challenge that we’ve seen with them before.”

Splitter took over when Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups was placed on administrative leave after being arrested in October in a federal illegal gambling investigation.

“Stuff happens,” Splitter said. “I think we went through everything you can imagine. Of course it is going to be a tough game. Jordan Ott is a great coach. A lot of pressure. You just have to enjoy that, knowing it is going to be part of their lives now, playing these important games.” — Reuters

Luka Dončić to return to LA Friday; game status unknown

LAKERS STAR Luka Dončić is expected to return to Los Angeles (LA) on Friday after receiving specialized treatment for his Grade 2 left hamstring strain in Europe, ESPN reported on Monday, though when he will return to game action remains unknown.

The 27-year-old reportedly spent a week in Spain receiving multiple injections for the injury sustained in a 139-96 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder on April 2.

The team announced the next day after an MRI that he will miss at least the remainder of the regular season. The Lakers have not shared any further updates on Dončić’s return since the initial announcement.

The typical recovery timeline for a Grade 2 hamstring strain is a month. That would keep the league’s leading scorer (33.5 points per game) and Los Angeles’ leader in assists (8.3) and steals (1.6) out for potentially the entire first round of the playoffs.

The No. 4 seed Lakers are set to kick off their first-round series on Saturday against the No. 5 seed Houston Rockets.

The Lakers are also without Austin Reaves (23.3 ppg, 5.5 apg) after he sustained a Grade 2 left oblique injury. He’s expected to be sidelined four to six weeks.

Los Angeles finished the season, 3-2, after the loss of Dončić and Reaves. — Reuters

Chance to reclaim top rank is extra motivation for Alcaraz in Barcelona

CARLOS ALCARAZ said the opportunity to quickly reclaim the world number one ranking from his big rival Jannik Sinner provided him additional motivation for this week’s Barcelona Open, but steady improvement during the clay season remained his top priority.

Alcaraz surrendered his Monte Carlo title and the top rank to Sinner after Sunday’s final in Monaco but the Spaniard will have the chance to climb back to his perch by capturing the trophy on familiar territory in Barcelona.

The twice champion’s hopes are boosted by the absence of Sinner in the draw, after the Italian took a break following back-to-back triumphs in Indian Wells, Miami and Monte Carlo over the last few weeks.

Alcaraz, who begins his campaign against Otto Virtanen later on Tuesday, will remain world number two if he fails to win the title.

The Spaniard hopes to play a full schedule on clay this season with events to follow in Madrid and Rome ahead of his French Open title defense beginning in Paris on May 24. — Reuters

After blasting 5 homers, Yankees walk off Angels on wild pitch

JOSE CABALLERO scored on a wild pitch by Jordan Romano as the host New York Yankees snapped a five-game losing streak with a wild 11-10 victory over the Los Angeles Angels on Monday night.

Trent Grisham homered twice, drove in five and his two-run drive into the right field seats off Romano (0-1) in the ninth forged a 10-10 tie.

After Caballero doubled down the left field line, the Angels pulled their infield in at the corners and the infielder stole third uncontested on a 1-1 pitch to Austin Wells.

The Yankees snapped their skid on a night when Aaron Judge homered twice for his 47th career multi-homer game. Judge hit a two-run homer in the first off Yusei Kikuchi and then saw his solo shot stayed just fair down the left field line for an 8-7 lead in the sixth.

Judge passed Mickey Mantle for the second-most multi-homer games in team history but his biggest night of the early going nearly was not enough since the Yankees could not get Mike Trout out.

Trout had his 31st career multi-homer game when he hit a three-run homer off Jake Bird to forge a 7-7 tie in the sixth and a two-run blast off Camilo Doval in the eighth to give the Angels a 10-8 lead.

Trout, who also drove in five runs, passed Duke Snider into sole possession of 58th place on the all-time list by hitting his 407th and 408th career homers.

Caballero also hit a two-run homer in the second inning to give the Yankees a 4-0 lead, but the shortstop made a critical error that set up the Angels’ four-run fourth. Grisham connected on a pinch-hit homer off reliever Shaun Anderson in the fifth to give the Yankees a short-lived 7-4 lead. — Reuters

McIlroy brilliance

Rory McIlroy made it look easy. He also made it look hard. And then, just as abruptly, he made it look inevitable once more. For much of the week at the Masters, the narrative seemed preordained. The defending champion opened with rounds of 67 and 65, surging to a six-shot lead, the largest ever at the halfway mark in tournament history. For conventional wisdom, his was a story of control; it was as if the long arc of his career (years of near-misses leading to his eventual breakthrough last year) had finally settled into place.

As McIlroy’s tumultuous love affair with Augusta has shown time and again, however, golf’s premier event has a way of testing conviction. The third round stripped away the illusion of ease. The lead evaporated, swallowed by a 73 and the charge of Cameron Young, who drew level heading into Sunday. And for longtime habitués of the sport, it was a development that had hitherto defined his fraught relationship with the course. By early Sunday, the cracks deepened: a double bogey at the fourth hole, another dropped shot soon after, and suddenly the tournament seemed to tilt away from him.

What followed spoke volumes of McIlroy’s newfound temperament. He steadied himself with calm and precision, piecing together birdies at the seventh and eighth to remain within reach. He then asserted control through Amen Corner, where champions often separate themselves from pretenders. Others faltered in turn. Justin Rose surged, then slipped. Scottie Scheffler mounted a flawless weekend charge, only to come up a stroke short. And by the time he reached the 18th, his task simplified: manage the moment, accept the bogey, and claim the Green Jacket once more.

In doing so, McIlroy joined distinguished company; not since Tiger Woods at the turn of the century had a player won back-to-back titles at Augusta. The victory, his sixth major overall, was as much a coronation as a reaffirmation of a career that has, in recent memory, moved from promise to permanence.

If the Masters revealed anything, to be sure, it is that McIlroy remains decidedly human even at his most complete. “I don’t make it easy,” he conceded, not by way of self-deprecation, but of acknowledgment. The brilliance has always been there; what has evolved is the capacity to endure the times when the light flickers. After all, the Masters does not reward perfection. It demands recovery, insists on recalibration, and, in the end, honors those who persist. Which is to say he did not so much dominate as survive. He got burned and tested, and, in the end, stayed unbroken. Well done.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

China’s export engine stutters as Iran war wipes out AI-driven gains

A drone view shows shipping containers from China at the Port of Los Angeles in Wilmington, California, Feb. 4, 2025. — REUTERS

BEIJING — China’s export engine slowed in March as buyers chasing an artificial intelligence (AI)-fueled future ran into the hard reality of war in the Middle East, which has sparked an energy shock and complicated Beijing’s push to keep growth on track.

Outbound shipments from the world’s second-largest economy grew an annual 2.5%, customs data showed on Tuesday, a five-month low, and slowing from a 21.8% gain in the January-February period. They sharply undershot forecasts for 8.3% growth in a Reuters poll.

Imports rose 27.8%, the best performance since November 2021, compared with a 19.8% increase over January and February and forecasts for 11.2% growth.

March marks the first real stress test of whether enthusiasm for artificial intelligence — and the chips and servers it demands — could offset gloom unleashed by the global energy shock after Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the strategic waterway for the world’s 20% of oil and gas flows.

Natural gas imports for March dropped an annual 10.7%, the lowest level since October 2022, while crude imports fell 2.8%, with Chinese vessels also getting stuck in the Strait.

China roared into 2026 with outbound shipments far outstripping forecasts, powered by tech exports, raising the prospect it could smash last year’s record $1.2-trillion trade surplus. The Iran war casts doubts about that trajectory.

Even China, long criticized by trading partners for subsidy-backed, cut-price manufacturing, is not insulated from the hit to buyers’ purchasing power as fuel and transport costs rise.

Still, Chinese producers may yet gain ground as buyers seek cheaper options, said Fred Neumann, HSBC’s chief Asia economist. Decades of commodity stockpiling have also helped blunt the impact of raw material shocks on factory gate prices, he said.

China’s exports of refined oil products rose 20.5% month on month, totaling 4.6 million metric tons.

The figures were further muddied by the seasonal effects of a late Lunar New Year national holiday, said Xu Tianchen, senior economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit, during which factories shut as workers down tools to celebrate.

“This explains the decline across the low-value added sectors, textiles, garments, bags, toys, furniture, as they are reliant on migrant workers,” Mr. Xu said.

A high base is also a drag, after Chinese factories rushed shipments a year earlier to beat US President Donald J. Trump’s April 2 “Liberation Day” tariff deadline.

South Korea’s exports to China — a bellwether for Chinese demand — rose 62.4% in March, led by a 151.4% surge in global semiconductor shipments on higher memory prices and robust AI-driven server demand.

March factory activity data out of China showed goods exports continued to support growth, but the war in Iran weighed on sentiment as commodity prices rose sharply, lifting input costs.

China’s trade surplus came in at $51.13 billion in March from $214 billion over January and February.

Mr. Trump is expected to visit China for a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in May, where analysts see scope for deals on farm goods and aircraft parts but little chance of movement on flashpoints like Taiwan. — Reuters

EU agrees on halving of steel imports via doubling of tariffs

REUTERS

BRUSSELS — The European Union (EU) reached a preliminary deal on Monday to nearly halve imports of steel and impose tariffs of 50% on excess shipments to protect the bloc’s steel industry from overproduction elsewhere.

EU steel producers are operating at only 65% capacity due to rising imports and 50% tariffs imposed by US President Donald J. Trump. The new measures are designed to push capacity utilization up to 80%.

Representatives for the European Parliament and the Council, the body representing EU governments, agreed late on Monday to limit tariff-free imports to 18.3 million metric tons per year, a 47% cut compared to 2024, with a doubling of the out-of-quota duties.

Last year, the main sources of steel imports into the EU were Turkey, South Korea, Indonesia, China, India, Ukraine, and Taiwan.

EU steel is currently protected by safeguards, put in place during Mr. Trump’s first term, with import quotas and 25% tariffs above those limits. However, under World Trade Organization rules, they must expire after eight years — on June 30.

The European Commission, which proposed new measures in October, said the EU steel sector has lost some 100,000 jobs since 2008, and output would decline even further without extended restrictions.

The new measures will take more into account where imported steel was originally melted and poured to avoid circumvention and be regularly reviewed to ensure they are effective.

The parties also committed to phaseout imports of steel from Russia swiftly, possibly by September 2028. Some 3.7 million tons of steel slabs came from Russia to the EU last year.

The parliament and council will need to vote on Monday’s agreement for the measures to enter force. — Reuters

US officials underwhelmed by French far-right’s plans for economy

A PROTESTER holds a French national flag as people gather to protest against the French far-right Rassemblement National (National Rally - RN) party, at the Place de la Republique following partial results in the first round of the early 2024 legislative elections, in Paris, France, June 30, 2024. — REUTERS

PARIS — US officials who met leaders of France’s far-right National Rally (RN) were underwhelmed by their economic plans, two diplomatic sources said, in a blow to the party’s efforts to present itself as a credible steward of the euro zone’s No. 2 economy before next year’s election.

The National Rally has become France’s largest parliamentary party — and a potential victor in 2027 — by coupling a hardline stance on immigration with populist pledges to defend jobs and purchasing power. But its longstanding rhetoric around state interventionism and protectionist policies worries French blue-chips and investors.

US Ambassador Charles Kushner and his team have met with most of the likely presidential contenders from across France’s political spectrum, including National Rally party chiefs Marine Le Pen and 30-year-old protege Jordan Bardella.

While they were not particularly swayed by any of the candidates they met, the RN’s views on how to cut a yawning deficit, win US investment and get the economy moving were a concern, the sources said.

Reuters granted the sources anonymity to allow them to speak frankly about private discussions.

Their conclusion echoed concerns among many in France’s business elite about whether the RN has the experience or expertise to steer the highly indebted $3.5-trillion economy back to robust growth and steady the country’s public finances.

The RN did not respond to a request for comment on the US officials’ view. A senior aide to Mr. Bardella said the party was working to develop its economic program, including politically sensitive structural reforms to France’s costly pension system.

A State Department spokesperson declined to comment on “private diplomatic exchanges.”

ELECTION HEADACHE
Doubts over the RN’s economic program may pose an electoral hurdle in France and shape US thinking on whether to vocally support the RN in 2027, when polls suggest it could win.

US President Donald J. Trump’s administration has backed ideological allies in Europe, but with mixed results. A US push to help Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban win re-election backfired when he lost power after 16 years on Sunday.

One of the diplomatic sources said there were no signs RN leaders were seeking US support, and European far-right and populist parties that once cheered Mr. Trump are increasingly wary of being seen as too close.

France’s economy is mired in a morass of feeble growth, high borrowing costs and a debt burden that is one of Europe’s heftiest at 115.6% of gross domestic product.

The RN says its economic priorities include boosting household purchasing power through tax cuts, reducing public spending and France’s EU budget contribution, and restructuring welfare to prioritize French citizens.

But detailed plans have yet to emerge. Critics say the party lacks a coherent economic manifesto.

US officials were concerned by a combination of mixed messaging on the economy, including the RN’s desire for a costly rollback of a 2023 pension reform that raised the retirement age, and unclear plans on how to trim the deficit, the sources said.

They were also irked that the RN voted in favor of a budget amendment doubling to 6% a digital services tax that Washington opposes on the grounds it targets US tech giants, the sources added. The amendment never made it to the final 2026 budget.

RN’S LE PEN MET CEOS
Business leaders earlier this year told Reuters they were confused by the divergent economic currents within the party leadership, with Ms. Le Pen seen as a big-spending populist, and Mr. Bardella seeking to chart a more pro-business path.

That ambiguity initially helped the RN broaden its support but has become a liability as the party seeks to present itself as a credible government-in-waiting, executives say.

Despite making headway with voters, the RN, a party long shunned by France’s political and economic elites, has been struggling to make headway with France Inc.

But in a sign chief executive officers (CEOs) want to understand the party’s economic program as the April 2027 election edges closer, Ms. Le Pen met with the bosses of luxury group LVMH, oil major TotalEnergies, insurer AXA and Renault among others on April 7, two other officials said.

Fund manager François Durvye, whom Mr. Bardella brought on as an economic adviser, helped facilitate the meeting, one official said. The same official summarized the meeting as a heated Q&A session.

The second official, a senior figure in the RN, said the meeting was designed to dispel “the caricatures that are often painted of our program, which is in fact the most pro-growth and pro-business program across the political spectrum.” — Reuters

240 online shops selling fake Super Vulcaseal shut down

Bostik Philippines, the nation’s leading elastomeric sealant manufacturer, has facilitated the closure of at least 240 online stores caught selling counterfeit Super Vulcaseal products.

The crackdown, carried out in coordination with e-commerce platforms, came following reports of unauthorized sellers peddling fake versions of the popular sealant brand.

The operation is part of Bostik’s commitment to consumer safety and brand integrity, ensuring that Filipino DIYers and professionals receive the high-performance quality they have trusted for decades.

“At Bostik Philippines, we take the safety of our consumers seriously just as much as we safeguard our brand. Our goal is to clean up marketplaces, both physical and virtual, of counterfeit products exploiting our brand name,” said Fides Kasman, Director of Market Development at Bostik Philippines.

Counterfeit sealants often fail to meet basic industry standards, leading to chemical instability, poor adhesion, and property damage in the long run.

“In any repair, the quality and authenticity of materials spells the difference between a successful fix and a disastrous do-over,” Kasman said. “Let’s be vigilant against fake sealants using our brand name. Using unverified products not only compromises repairs but can also lead to higher repair costs.”

To make sure they are getting authentic products, Bostik Philippines advised consumers to purchase Super Vulcaseal and other Bostik products only in reputable hardware stores and official flagship stores in e-commerce sites.

Buyers should also note the quality of the product they purchase. Authentic Super Vulcaseal is known for its distinct smell, consistency, and durability. If the product feels unusually runny or fails to set, it may be a fake.

Consumers must also be wary of products that appear cheaper than authentic ones, as counterfeiters often lure buyers with big discounts.

Lastly, they should also check product packaging for red flags, including blurred printing, inconsistent logos, or missing batch numbers and expiration dates.

Bostik proactively monitors online and physical marketplaces to protect its consumers. The company encourages the public to report any suspicious products or listings they encounter.

“This is just one salvo of our ongoing campaign. We are sweeping online platforms to find more sellers listing counterfeit Bostik products. To anyone planning to dupe consumers with fakes, our message is clear: we are hunting you down,” said Kasman.

Information on counterfeit products may be reported via Bostik Philippines’ hotline number (02) 7900-5656 and email address bostiksmartadhesives@bostik.com.

 


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