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BIR confident digitalization timetable on track

People line up to file their income tax returns at the Bureau of Internal Revenue office in Intramuros, Manila, April 18, 2022. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ RUSSELL A. PALMA

THE Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) expressed confidence in meeting its internal deadline for fully digitalizing its services and operations by 2028.

“By 2028, the BIR needs to be fully digitalized. That’s our aspiration. With the ongoing digitalization process, we believe we can attain that by 2028,” BIR Regional Director Renato M. Molina said at a forum on Tuesday.

Mr. Molina said that most of the agency’s processes are currently digitalized, including filing and payment of taxes and submission of reports and documentation.

“Because of the passing of the Ease of Paying Taxes law, all taxpayers can file wherever. You can pay anywhere. With that, we are hopeful we can serve the taxpayers in the coming months and years.”

However, Mr. Molina noted that the BIR will need funding to support its digitalization initiatives.

“First of all, we need a budget… I know the Department of Finance (DoF) is helping here to give us what we need. By doing that, we can accomplish excellent taxpayer service.”

The BIR has been transitioning into digital operations after adopting a 10-year digitalization roadmap in 2019. — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson

S. Korean agricultural equipment firms setting up shop in Cabanatuan

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) said on Tuesday that it will build an agricultural machinery manufacturing complex in Cabanatuan in partnership with the Korea Agricultural Machinery Industry Cooperative (KAMICO).

“They will be constructing the first agri-machinery manufacturing and assembly line in the Philippines. This is the first in the country for this type,” Agriculture Assistant Secretary and Spokesperson Arnel V. de Mesa told BusinessWorld on the sidelines of a Senate budget hearing.

He added that about 30 South Korean agricultural equipment companies are expected to operate from the Korea Agri Machinery Industry Complex.

The DA said that complex hopes to stimulate manufacturing, enhance crop quality, increase farmer incomes, and produce agricultural machinery tailored to Philippine conditions.

“So… they can also help the Philippines, they have decided to invest here in an assembly plant,” Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr. said.

The DA and the KOICA signed a Memorandum of Understanding to build the facility in Nueva Ecija’s largest city.

“It’s about 20 hectares in Cabanatuan that will house the investments coming from the Korean companies,” Mr. De Mesa said.

The site will also host research and development and training facilities.

Mr. De Mesa said the site will be developed in phases over 10 years.

“This includes the initial assembly line, then manufacturing, and then lastly the research and development to adapt the products to local conditions,” he added.

He said that the facility is expected to start construction before the end of the year.

“We are just fixing the permits, documents, and other arrangements. So, we’re hoping to break ground before the year ends,” he said. — Adrian H. Halili

NFA sets palay buying price at P23-P25 per kilo

PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

THE National Food Authority (NFA) said it set the buying price of palay (unmilled rice) at between P23 and P25 per kilogram for dry and clean grain.

“Our pricing mechanism is a range, so the NFA will implement (a buying price) of about P23 to P25 per kilogram,” NFA acting Administrator Larry R. Lacson told reporters on Tuesday.

Earlier, the NFA Council approved a palay buying price between P23 to P30 per kilo for dry and clean palay and P17 to P23 per kilo for fresh palay.

“It’s not really an abrupt going down in price… In about eight to 10 days the buying price will go down,” he added.

The NFA is tasked with purchasing domestically grown rice and hold it in reserve in the event of shortages or calamities.

“At P23 per kilo, the farmer is still able to profit… So we are managing that we don’t forget our farmers,” Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr. told reporters.

The NFA earlier increased the buying price for palay to compete with prices offered by traders.

“World prices have gone down a bit and the price of rice in the market will not fall if the buying price of traders and the government remains high,” Mr. Laurel said.

Mr. Lacson added that the new pricing is part of the government’s effort to tame the price of palay, possibly leading to a fall in prices charged by millers.

“We have to tame the price of palay to pave the way for cheaper rice,” he said.

He added that the NFA will be able to procure more rice for farmers at the lowered price.

The NFA hopes to purchase up to 8.7 million bags of palay before the end of the year, equivalent to up to 435,000 metric tons (MT) of palay.

In the first half, the NFA paid P5.3 billion to purchase 175,000 MT of palay, equivalent to 3.5 million bags. — Adrian H. Halili

Meat imports from Turkey suspended after foot and mouth disease outbreak

REUTERS

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) said it has temporarily banned meat from Turkey made from animals prone to contracting foot and mouth disease (FMD).

In Memorandum Order No. 42, the DA cited reports of an FMD outbreak in Turkey.

Turkish authorities reported to the World Organisation for Animal Health an outbreak of FMD affecting domestic cattle in September.

FMD is highly transmissible and causes lesions and lameness in cattle, sheep, goats and other cloven-hoofed animals. The disease does not affect humans.

“There is a need to prevent the entry of FMD to protect the health of the local animal population,” the DA added.

It added that all shipments coming from Turkey already in transit, loaded, or accepted at port will be allowed provided that the animals from which the products were derived were slaughtered or produced before Aug. 26.

The DA said that it also suspended the processing, evaluation of the application and issuance of Sanitary and Phytosanitary import clearances of meat from Turkey.

In October 2023, the DA lifted the ban on imports of poultry and its byproducts from Turkey after birds there were declared free of H5N1 Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza or bird flu. — Adrian H. Halili

DLSU’s Quiambao leads MVP race after UAAP 87 first round

KEVIN QUIAMBAO — UAAP

KEVIN QUIAMBAO is chasing far more valuable things than just winning his second straight Most Valuable Player (MVP) plum.

Poised to nab his second MVP in a row after bannering the race at the end of the UAAP Season 87 men’s basketball first round, a second consecutive title for reigning champion De La Salle University (DLSU) remains the top priority for the versatile national team forward.

“We are confident that we can beat them all,” declared Mr. Quiambao, who collected the 87.571 statistical points as La Salle topped the first round.

Mr. Quiambao, a Gilas Pilipinas standout, led the UAAP in scoring with 16.4 points laced by 8.9 rebounds, 5.4 assists and 1.29 steals for an all-around brilliance once again in La Salle’s 6-1 start highlighted by a 68-56 mastery of archrival University of the Philippines (UP).

In that game, Mr. Quiambao delivered a 20-point, 10-rebound double-double as La Salle cruised to a wire-to-wire win to snap UP’s unbeaten run and remind everyone of its championship status despite a stumble midway.

That slide was a 75-71 loss against the red-hot University of the East before the Green Archers strung three straight wins to stabilize their bid. Now, they’re looking unstoppable as ever for a huge momentum entering the second round.

Meanwhile, trailing behind Mr. Quiambao in the MVP derby are UP’s JD Cagulangan (77.0 SPs) albeit he missed the last two games, his teammate Mike Phillips (72.143), UE’s Precious Momowei (68.286) and FEU’s Mo Konateh (63.571).

In women’s play, reigning MVP Kacey dela Rosa (90.143) of Ateneo de Manila University is also in for a repeat behind averages of 21.43 points, 10.86 rebounds, 1.2 assists, 1.0 steal and 2.14 blocks. Competing the top five are Kent Pastrana (83.714) of reigning champion University of Santo Tomas, Ateneo’s Junize Calago (72.571), UP’s Louna Ozar (71.571) and Ateneo’s Sarah Makanjuola (67.429).

NOTE: The UAAP is already probing the alleged spitting issue that led to a commotion between La Salle and UP coaches last weekend to end the first round. The rift stemmed from UP forward Reyland Torres’ complaint that someone from La Salle’s bench spat on him in the heat of the rematch between last year’s finalists. The Archers won, 68-56. — John Bryan Ulanday

CSB Blazers rout JRU Bombers to  keep NCAA 100 lead

COLLEGE OF ST. BENILDE BLAZERS — FACEBOOK.COM/NCAA.ORG.PH

COLLEGE of St. Benilde (CSB) used its strong first half performance to counteract another poor finish in turning back Jose Rizal University (JRU), 84-69, on Tuesday and keeping its grip of the lead after the first round of NCAA Season 100 at the Filoil EcoOil Arena.

The Blazers had a magnificent start, seizing a commanding 26-point lead — their biggest of the game — late in the second quarter and leaned on it to offset whatever rally the Heavy Bombers tried to mount in the fourth quarter to claim their seventh win against two losses.

That kept CSB at the helm entering the final half of the double-round elimination although coach Charles Tiu felt they could have finished better, perhaps unbeaten in the first round.

“We could have been 9-0,” said CSB coach Mr.  Tiu.

After looking like a dominant force early, the Blazers went on a tailspin and suddenly played lackluster in their last two games entering this one including the last outing where they ended up suffering a stinging 73-71 defeat to Arellano University on Friday.

In those two, they turned the ball over around a disastrous 30 errors on average.

At least on this one, they had only 18, 12 of which came in the second half.

“Still a lot to clean up and turnovers are our No. 1 concern,” said Mr. Tiu.

If there was silver lining on this, CSB is still up there on top.

“We’re happy that we’re number 1, but obviously we would have wanted a bit more breathing room and definitely we want to get the twice-to-beat advantage in the Final Four if we do make it,” he said.

Jhomel Ancheta was man of the hour for this win by CSB as he fired 17 points that more than filled the vacuum left by Tony Ynot, who of their lead guys who sprained his left ankle in the opening canto and should miss time.

Kuya Ynot is a big factor,” said the 21-year-old Mr. Ancheta, a 21-year-old Export Management freshman from San Mateo, Rizal.

JRU skipper Joshua Guiab had a career 24-point game but it wasn’t enough to save the Heavy Bombers from falling to 3-6. — Joey Villar


The scores:

First Game

CSB 84 – Ancheta 17, Cometa 15, Liwag 12, Sangco 12, Sanchez 12, Ondoa 9, Torres 5, Jarque 2, Eusebio 0, Cajucom 0, Ynot 0, Serrano 0

JRU 69 – Guiab 24, Raymundo 12, Pangilinan 12, Argente 5, Mosqueda 5, Bernardo 3, De Jesus 2, Panapanaan 2, Garcia 2, Ferrer 2, Ramos 0, Benitez 0, De Leon 0, Sarmiento 0, Barrera 0

Quarter scores: 27-17; 55-29; 70-47; 84-69

Eala misses out on showdown with World No. 2 Sabalenka

ALEX EALA — FACEBOOK.COM/ALEXEALA

ALEX EALA missed out on a dream match with world singles No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka.

In line to face the Belarusian ace, the Filipina sensation stumbled right away against world doubles No. 1 Katerina Siniakova of the Czech Republic with a 6-3, 6-1 defeat in the opening round of the Wuhan Open on Tuesday.

Ms. Eala, world No. 148, showed some promise in the first set but was outclassed in the next frame for a shutout that spoiled her chance to arrange a showdown against the three-time Grand Slam champion Ms. Sabalenka in the second round.

The 28-year-old Ms. Siniakova who boasts four Grand Slam doubles titles and also No. 37 in the world singles ranking flaunted her experience on the 19-year-old Ms. Eala with crisp service game en route to three aces.

Ms. Siniakova faces Ms. Sabalenka, the tournament’s No. 1 seed, Wednesday for a slot in the Round of 16 while she’s also vying in the doubles division with Russian partner Ekaterina Alexandrova.

This was Ms. Eala’s first campaign in East Asia after continuous appearances in the WTA tournaments in Europe and North America.

The latest was in Mexico, where she had Round of 16 and Round of 32 finishes, last month on the heels of a foiled qualifying finals stint in the US Open that could have made her the first Filipina player ever to barge into the main draw.

In Wuhan, Ms. Eala was among the four wildcard players to qualify in the main draw led by no less than Ms. Sabalenka eyeing to bag another title after winning the Australian and US Open this year. — John Bryan Ulanday

Four competitors shooting for opening lead in Wednesday’s PBA Governors’ Cup semifinals

Games on Wednesday
(PhilSports Arena)
5 p.m. – San Miguel vs Ginebra  (Semifinals Game 1)
7:30 – Rain or Shine vs TNT (Semifinals Game 1)

IN A BEST-OF-SEVEN TUSSLE that could potentially go the full distance and be a back-and-forth, setting the tone early is of paramount importance.

So expect the four competitors in the Season 49 PBA Governors’ Cup semifinals to jump out of the gates with purpose in Wednesday’s series openers at the PhilSports Arena.

TNT, the defending champion, and Rain or Shine (ROS), the hungry aspirant, fight for the 1-0 running start at 7:30 p.m. while Barangay Ginebra, the runner-up of the last GC wars two seasons ago, and San Miguel Beer, the last to crack the final four, seek the same at 5 p.m.

For the Tropang Giga, there’s a revenge factor in play as it was the youth-laden but fast-maturing Elasto Painters who sent them off early in the playoffs of the previous conference. ROS wiped out TNT’s 1-0 lead in the Philippine Cup’s best-of-three quarterfinals with a reverse sweep capped by a 110-109 squeaker to come away with the final four berth.

That heartbreaker, according to Tropang Giga coach Chot Reyes, essentially led them to shift their orientation into a more defensive-focused one. And now this shot-stopping skill will be fully tested by the Elasto Painters, who have emerged as an efficient offensive crew this conference.

“(It’s) a battle of contrasts. The No. 1 defensive team (TNT) versus the No. 1 in offense (ROS),” Mr. Reyes told The STAR of this matchup. “If we can limit their scoring, we have a chance.”

The Elasto Painters were good for an average of 112.2 points in the eliminations. However, this went down to 100.4 markers in their five-game duel with Magnolia in the quarterfinals.

TNT was tops in points allowed at 87 in the elims then maintained this form in holding NLEX to 95.5 over four matches in the last 8. At the same time, the Tropang Giga have cranked up their offense, going from 94.5 in group play to 107.8 in the playoffs.

The Tropang Giga’s transformation, according to Mr. Reyes, was the result of the likes of Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, Calvin Oftana, RR Pogoy, Rey Nambatac and veterans Jayson Castro and Kelly Williams buying into their new approach.

Coach Yeng Guiao and his spirited bunch of Aaron Fuller, Jhonard Clarito, Adrian Nocum, Andre Caracut and Beau Belga go to battle with a more refreshed TNT opponent merely four days after finishing off the Hotshots in a sudden death, 103-93.

It’s the same for the June Mar Fajardo and EJ Anosike-led Beermen, who are only three days separate from their grueling five-match series with Converge that was settled only last Sunday, 109-105.

In contrast, Tim Cone’s troops led by Justin Brownlee, Scottie Thompson, Japeth Aguilar and Stephen Holt had the luxury of a nine-day turnaround time due to their 3-0 sweep of Meralco. — Olmin Leyba

Sun, Lynx clash with trip to WNBA Finals on line

NAPHEESA COLLIER is the WNBA’s leading scorer in the postseason, but it isn’t her made baskets that matter when the Minnesota Lynx face the Connecticut Sun in the decisive Game 5 of their semifinal series on Tuesday night in Minneapolis.

It’s the opponents’ missed baskets that Collier will focus on as the two teams clash to determine who advances to play the New York Liberty in the WNBA Finals.

“Our offense was able to lift us up last game, but if that’s not working, we have to rely on our defense,” Collier said. “It’s not been good the last two games. We’re both playing for our lives, so we have to play at that level of intensity.”

Minnesota is trying to reach the WNBA Finals for the first time since 2017. That season, the Lynx won their fourth title in a seven-season span.

Collier is averaging 27.2 points and 9.3 rebounds in the postseason. The regular-season MVP runner-up had 29 points and 13 rebounds in Sunday’s Game 4 when the Lynx lost 92-82 on the road.

Collier wasn’t pleased that her squad allowed 77 points over the final three quarters.

Connecticut’s Tyasha Harris was the surprise star with 20 points after she shot 4-of-5 from 3-point range.

Harris was scoreless in 13 minutes in the series entering Game 4. She missed Game 1 with an ankle injury and mostly sat and watched the next two games.

But her minutes picked up Sunday and the production followed.

“Stay composed, be poised and be ready when your number is called,” Harris said of her approach. — Reuters

Fever’s Caitlin Clark to play in pro-am at LPGA’s The Annika

FRESH OFF being named the WNBA’s Rookie of the Year, Indiana Fever star guard Caitlin Clark will turn her attention to golf, at least for a day in November.

Clark, whose affinity for golf is well known, will participate in the pro-am competition at The Annika driven by Gainbridge on Nov. 13 at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Fla.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do tomorrow. I don’t know what I’m going to do the next day. Maybe play some golf,” Clark said last month. “That’s what I’m gonna do until it gets too cold in Indiana. I’ll become a professional golfer.” — Reuters

Liberty’s defense

The Liberty looked more relieved than jubilant as the final buzzer sounded. They claimed Game Four of their semifinal round series against the vaunted Aces with a finishing flurry befitting their status as favorites, but knew they dodged a bullet all the same. They had been flirting with danger from the get-go, and they understood the fickle nature of the sport enough not to count their blessings before the outcome was clear. And so they kept their focus on the task at hand, mindful that their opponents weren’t two-time defending champions for nothing, and would keep fighting until the end, especially in front of 10,374 loyal fans at the Michelob ULTRA Arena.

Regardless of sentiment, however, there can be no doubting that the Liberty deserved to win and advance to the Women’s National Basketball Association Finals. Throughout their campaign, they stayed focused on their ultimate goal, motivated by the need to move on from their disappointing performance in last year’s title set-to. And as they headed into the playoffs, they believed that their consistency would enable them to exorcise the demons of their past. In this regard, it helped that they had taken the measure of the Aces in all four regular season meetings, and that they made short work of the Dream in the first round.

Still and all, rest did not come for the Liberty until they huddled in front of their bench to acknowledge their 76-62 Game Four triumph to close out the series and send the Aces home. They began the fourth quarter just two points ahead, but then conducted a masterclass on defense that allowed only 11 points, less than half their output. So outstanding were they in their coverage that unanimous Most Valuable Player awardee A’ja Wilson managed to take only two shots, forcing others to pick up the slack and deliver under pressure. And even then, they proved relentless in their efforts to prevent any easy baskets; they gave up only four out of 17 attempts.

The Liberty were understandably respectful in their post-mortem, in no small measure because they know three wins still separate them from the hardware. As challenging as the Aces may have been, more obstacles await. The only consolation is the momentary reprieve they get while awaiting the result of the winner-take-all affair between the Lynx and the Sun today. And though they match up better against the latter, they don’t care who the competition will be at this point. What matters is that they’re back in the Finals, and that they have all the confidence in the world to make sure they’ll be the last women standing this time around.

 

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.

Myanmar and South China Sea to test ASEAN relevance at upcoming summit

In this photo illustration, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) emblem is seen on a smartphone screen in front of the ASEAN flag. — PAVLO GONCHAR / SOPA IMAGES/SIPA VIA REUTERS CONNECT

VIENTIANE — Southeast Asian leaders will meet in Laos this week as Myanmar’s civil war and mounting tensions in the South China Sea risk corroding the ASEAN grouping’s central role in the region.

The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has, since it was founded in 1967, created complex political structures and processes that have largely enabled peaceful cooperation within the region of over 685 million people.

But its inability to address difficult issues in a timely way may reflect a deeper differences emerging within the regional grouping, said former Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa.

“Both the South China Sea issue, as well as Myanmar, constitute litmus tests for ASEAN’s relevance,” Natalegawa told Reuters.

“My main concern… is that the sense of ASEAN cohesion and sense of common purpose has been fraying somewhat in recent years.”

Known as the “Five Point Consensus,” the ASEAN-led peace effort for Myanmar has made scant progress since its unveiling in April 2021, just months after the country’s military staged a coup and unseated the elected government.

Instead, violence has spiraled, with the emergence of an armed resistance movement that has loosely allied with several ethnic minority rebel groups to hammer the military on multiple fronts.

Under ASEAN chair Laos, the bloc’s approach has somewhat shifted from previous chair Indonesia’s largely unsuccessful approach by enlarging the peace process to include Myanmar’s other neighbors such as China and India, said Dulyapak Preecharush, a Southeast Asian studies scholar at Thailand’s Thammasat University.

“It creates more space and less pressure for the Myanmar military,” said Dulyapak.

Still, the Myanmar junta has refused to engage in talks with rivals, calling them terrorists bent on destroying the country, while ASEAN continues to bar the generals from its summits over their failure to comply with the peace plan they had initially agreed to.

On Monday, Thailand’s Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra said she would work with Malaysia to use diplomatic means to resolve the conflict, underscoring what may be a renewed effort by the bloc.

CODE OF CONDUCT
The meeting in Laos will be followed by two days of summits with leaders and top diplomats from other countries, including the United States, Japan, South Korea, China and Russia.

Of concern to many of them are escalating tensions in the South China Sea between China and the Philippines, and more recently, Vietnam.

That has renewed attention on ASEAN’s protracted negotiations with Beijing towards creating a code of conduct for the vital waterway, a process in motion since 2017.

China claims almost the entire South China Sea as its territory and has deployed an armada of coast guard deep into the exclusive economic zones of ASEAN members the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei.

While some ASEAN countries are hopeful the code can be concluded in a few years, prospects for a legally binding text remain distant, according to many analysts and diplomats.

“Negotiations on the code of conduct continue at a snail’s pace,” former Thai Foreign Minister Kantathi Suphamongkhon told Reuters.

“Some parties to the negotiation are now hinting that the code of conduct should also not be legally binding,” he said adding, “this would be unfortunate.”

Ties between US defense treaty ally the Philippines and China have been strained by confrontations between vessels near disputed features, triggering regional concerns of an escalation.

Last week, Vietnam also protested what it called a Chinese attack on its fishermen near disputed, Chinese-occupied islands.

China maintains its responses have been appropriate. — Reuters