Home Blog Page 2639

PHL Senate to OK military pact with Japan by year-end

PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

By John Victor D. Ordoñez, Reporter

THE SENATE plans to ratify the Philippines’ reciprocal access agreement with Japan by year-end despite being busy with next year’s national budget, according to the Senate president.

At a forum with foreign journalists, Senate President Francis “Chiz” G. Escudero said they have enough time to take up the military pact in between deliberations on the national spending plan.

“Personally, I don’t see any reason why this should not be (ratified by the Senate),” he said. “Given the long queue of departments that need to be scrutinized, there’s usually a lull and we usually, by traditional practice, take up topics of legislation to maximize the time of the Senate.”

He said he is confident senators would back the deal when the chamber takes it up in session.

The Philippines and Japan signed the military pact in July to ease the entry of equipment and troops for combat training from Japan and to ensure stability in the region amid growing tensions with China.

The agreement is the first of its kind to be signed by Japan in Asia and coincides with increased Chinese assertiveness in the South China Sea, where Beijing’s expansive claims conflict with those of several Southeast Asian nations.

The treaty will take effect after being ratified by both countries’ Parliaments.

“Hopefully, this is ratified soon so we can get the implementing rules and regulations,” Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Eduardo Gerardo C. Teodoro, Jr. told reporters.

The Philippines has a visiting forces agreement with the United States and Australia. Tokyo, which hosts the biggest concentration of US forces abroad, has a similar deal with Australia and Britain, and is negotiating another with France.

A United Nations-backed tribunal based in the Hague in 2016 voided China’s expansive claims in the South China Sea for being illegal.

Beijing insists it has sovereignty over most of the South China Sea based on its old maps and has deployed hundreds of coast guard vessels deep into Southeast Asia to assert its claims, disrupting offshore energy and fishing activities of its neighbors including Malaysia and Vietnam.

Japanese Foreign Minister Yoko Kamikawa earlier told a news briefing during her visit to Manila that the defense pact is not targeted against any country.

Tokyo is committed to providing the Philippines with more patrol vessels and surveillance radar systems that can be deployed in the South China Sea, she said.

“In any long-standing relationship there would be disagreements,” Mr. Escudero said, referring to Manila’s sea dispute with Beijing. “The challenge is how, without really changing your position, to concentrate on and to focus on what you agree on and what you can work on together.”

DA probing firm behind overstaying containers with rice

PHILIPPINE STAR/RYAN BALDEMOR

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter

THE PHILIPPINES’  Department of Agriculture (DA) on Tuesday said it’s investigating one or two companies that were likely behind the overstaying of more than 800 container vans carrying rice imports at a Manila port.

“In two weeks, we would know the details of the company — whether it’s existing or not, and whether it still has offices and personnel,” Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr.  told a news briefing at the presidential palace. He declined to name the company.

Authorities at the weekend said 888 container vans carrying 23,000 metric tons (MT) of imported rice — or 0.75% of the total supply that has entered the country this year — had been sitting at the Manila International Container Terminal for months.

Mr. Laurel said most of the containers were still within the 30-day staying period allowed by ports.

He cited the Philippine Ports Authority’s (PPA) statement on Monday that more than 300 containers had been claimed by their consignees.

He added the Customs bureau has deemed abandoned shipments that had been sitting at the port since 2022 and 2023.

PPA General Manager Jay Santiago on Monday said that by Oct. 1, they would send a report to the Agriculture department on the overstaying shipments and would ask Customs to declare these abandoned.

They may be auctioned or donated to other agencies such as the Social Welfare department, he added.

The Customs bureau at the weekend said only 630 containers of rice remained at the port, with 492 containers having been cleared for release. None of the shipments had exceeded the 30-day period, it added.

Mr. Santiago said it’s possible that importers were awaiting higher rice prices in the market before taking their shipments out of the port.

Market conditions were not favorable to importers because of government efforts to lower rice prices including the reduction in tariffs, he said.

It’s also cheaper for importers to store rice supply at government ports than to lease private warehouses, he said, citing instances when containers have stayed at the port for as long as 275 days.

The government aims to reduce rice prices by P5 to P7.

Philippine inflation eased to 3.3% last month from 4.4% in July, due to a moderate rise in food prices and a decline in transport costs, according to the local statistics agency.

The price increase of nonalcoholic beverages slowed to 3.9% from 6.4% in July, while transport prices declined by 0.2%.

Rice inflation slowed to 14.7% from 20.9%. Still, it remained the top contributor to August’s 3.3% inflation, which was within the government’s 2-4% target for the year.

Guo to reveal POGO mastermind in executive session

ALICE L. GUO — SENATOR RISA HONTIVEROS FACEBOOK PAGE

DISMISSED Bamban Mayor Alice L. Guo told senators on Tuesday she would be willing to reveal the supposed international crime syndicate pulling the strings behind the offshore gaming operations in Tarlac province in an executive session.

“I am not the mastermind, you can say that I am a victim,” she said in Filipino before a senate committee, looking into her involvement in crimes linked to Philippine Offshore Gaming Operations (POGOs).

“The committee probably figured out who is behind everything over the course of the investigation.”

The senators and Ms. Guo met in a closed-door session right after the hearing ended.

In the same hearing, Senator Ana Theresia N. Hontiveros-Baraquel lifted the contempt order against Shiela Guo, Alice’s sister, and transferred her to the custody of the Bureau of Immigration from the Senate.

The dismissed Mayor and her siblings were cited in contempt in July for failing to show up in several Senate hearings investigating their involvement in POGO-linked crimes.

Authorities are also looking into a former national police chief who had been allegedly bribed by Ms. Guo to help her escape the country.

The dismissed mayor, who was arrested in Jakarta on Sept. 4, earlier told senators that she fled the country via a yacht.

She has been accused of coddling an illegal POGO in Bamban, Tarlac, where she ran and won for the first time as mayor in 2022. Raided by authorities in March, an illegal hub on land she partially owned had been linked to scamming operations.

In his third State of the Nation Address, Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr.  ordered the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. to shut all POGO companies by the end of the year, citing their links to organized crime.

“This blatant abuse of our institutions must stop, these human trafficking activities must stop,” Ms. Hontiveros said. “We must eradicate these syndicates.” — John Victor D. Ordoñez

VP Sara resignation sought

VICE-PRESIDENT Sara Duterte-Carpio, in this Aug. 27, 2024 photo, attended the deliberations on the proposed 2025 budget for the Office of the Vice-President at the House of Representatives in Quezon City. — PHILIPPINE STAR FILE PHOTO/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

VICE-PRESIDENT Sara Z. Duterte-Carpio should resign from public office if she has no interest in defending the Office of the Vice President’s (OVP) proposed budget for next year before the House of Representatives, a lawmaker said on Tuesday.

“Our Vice President is consistent… in the sense that she didn’t attend the [House] committee on appropriations budget hearing, and she didn’t attend the plenary session either,” Party-list Rep. Raul Angelo D. Bongalon said in a press briefing.

“If that’s the case, it shows that she’s not interested in her duties as the Vice President of the Philippines. If she’s not interested…, we can ask the Vice President to step down,” he added.

The OVP did not immediately reply to an e-mail seeking comment.

Ms. Carpio has snubbed the House’s deliberations on the OVP’s proposed P2.03- billion budget for next year, drawing the ire of congressmen. This led to a 64% cut to her budget, as lawmakers argued social development projects of the OVP were redundant with the Health and Social Welfare departments.

She also refused to meet Lanao del Sur Rep. Ziaur-Rahman Alonto Adiong, who is the designated sponsor of the OVP budget during plenary debates.

In a letter dated Sept. 11 addressed to Mr. Adiong’s office, published online on Sept. 23, the OVP reiterated that it “leaves the deliberation of our budget proposal in the plenary entirely to the pleasure of the House of Representatives.” — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

Budget in line with gov’t agenda

A VIEW of residential condominium buildings in Mandaluyong, Metro Manila, Aug. 22, 2016 — REUTERS

THE PROPOSED P6.352-trillion national budget for next year is still consistent with the Marcos administration’s socioeconomic development plan despite budget cuts to several socioeconomic agencies, a congressman said, citing convergence programs among them.

The 2025 national budget was crafted with the goal of achieving “economic and social transformation” by meeting the objectives set under the Philippine Development Plan 2023-2028, according to a summary from the Department of Budget and Management (DBM).

Under the 2025 National Expenditure Program, the DBM slashed the proposed budgets for agriculture, health, and social welfare by 4.7%, 7.6%, and 3.4%, respectively. Allocations for labor were also decreased by 26.1%, with trade and industry receiving a 3.9% cut.

“We have a lot of interrelated projects. While you may see a slash in a certain department, sometimes they’re boosted by programs which fall under other departments,” Party-list Rep. Ramon Rodrigo L. Gutierrez said in a media briefing on Tuesday.

“For example, we’re talking about the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Public Works and Highways, the component of the flood control projects now also includes rainwater catchment so that actually comes into irrigation,” he added. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

More MSU teaching positions OKd

THE Budget department has greenlit the creation of 175 teaching positions at the Mindanao State University (MSU).

The new teaching positions will help strengthen the quality of education and human capital development in the Mindanao island, Budget Secretary Amenah F. Pangandaman said in a statement.

“We are not only simply filling the staffing gaps in MSU but elevating the quality of education across the region so that our students have access to top tier learning opportunities,” she was quoted as saying.

Of the total, 100 teaching positions for Assistant Professor IV were created for MSU-Iligan Institute of Technology. Its Personal Services (PS) requirements, which cover the payment of salaries, wages, honoraria and other types of compensation, are estimated at P81.11 million, according to the department.

Likewise, 75 plantilla positions for Instructor I will be assigned to 12 secondary MSU schools, DBM said. It has an estimated PS requirement of P39.22 million.

The additional teaching staff will address the demand for qualified faculty and increase the university’s enrollment count, the Budget department said.

The department has issued the Notice of Organization, Staffing, and Compensation Action for authorizing the new positions on Sept. 17.

Alongside its main campus in Marawi City, the MSU System operates seven other schools in Mindanao. These are located at Iligan City, Tawi-Tawi, Misamis Oriental, Maguindanao, General Santos, Jolo, and Zamboanga Sibugay. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

PEZA-IEK HQ to power Baguio ecozone

THE Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) tapped IEK HQ Special Energy Philippines, Inc. to partner in powering the Baguio City Economic Zone (BCEZ) with renewable energy (RE).

In a statement on Tuesday, PEZA said that it signed a memorandum of understanding with the power company to formalize their partnership for a rooftop solar installation project within the BCEZ.

Slated to be one of the largest solar energy installations in the region, the project aims to transform unused rooftop spaces into energy-generating assets to supply clean and RE power to the locators.

“The project will likely be implemented in phases, with the first phase targeting key industrial buildings within BCEZ. As more rooftops are outfitted with solar panels, the total capacity will grow incrementally,” the company said in a press release.

Meanwhile, PEZA said that the company presented plans for multiple solar power plants in the country, which have a total installed capacity of seven megawatts-peak.

“These solar facilities are set to power the Baguio City Economic Zone, based on initial assessments and site information provided by PEZA Pampanga,” the investment promotion agency said.

According to the company, the project aims to position the BCEZ as a model for other economic zones looking to adopt green technology.

The Department of Energy plans to increase the share of RE in the country’s power generation mix to 35% by 2030 and 50% by 2040. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

Baguio taps students for smart city project

DOT.GOV.PH

BAGUIO CITY — Baguio City government’s Management Information and Technology Division and the Department of Information and Communications Technology Cordillera are tapping college students to pitch in their ideas for the city’s sustainable and smart city project.

The “Smart City Challenge 2024” is calling on all students from all disciplines in Baguio, La Trinidad, Itogon, Sablan, Tuba, and Tublay (BLISTT) to join.

Students coming from multidisciplinary fields of study, such as engineering, computer science, business, environmental science, urban planning among others are encouraged.   

The participating students should form teams each consisting of three to four members. Each team is also required to have a faculty adviser or mentor, the public information office of the Baguio City government said.

The participants are expected to develop ideas or concepts of enhancing quality of life, improve environmental sustainability, and shape smarter cities using emerging technologies.

Each team will pitch their proposals to a panel of experts, with top solutions having the potential to be adopted and implemented by the city.

Registration of teams starts on September 24 until Oct. 4. They can download the form from the website of the “Smart City Challenge.” — Artemio A. Dumlao

Thousands join MILF’s grand consultative assembly

COTABATO CITY — Thousands of members and supporters participated in the general assembly and consultative dialogue of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) in Sultan Kudarat town in Maguindanao del Norte on Monday.

The MILF’s figurehead, Ahod B. Ebrahim, chief minister of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), and BARMM’s education minister, Muhaquer M. Iqbal, also a senior official of the front, together led the activities in the day-long event, held at Darapanan area in Sultan Kudarat.

BARMM’s health minister, Kadil M. Sinolinding, Jr., told reporters on Tuesday that he and members of the emergency response contingent that he deployed in Darapanan last Monday were surprised seeing no fewer than 300,000 participants to the event.

“All went well in that event. Participants were briefed by top MILF officials on the goings-on in the Bangsamoro government, particularly on its activities aimed at fostering lasting peace and sustainable development in the autonomous region,” Mr. Sinolinding said.

Mr. Ebrahim, who is at the helm of the 80-seat interim parliament of BARMM, said among their objectives now in regional governance is to maximize programs related to the peace and socioeconomic agenda of the MILF’s peace overture with Malacañang.

He said they would no longer ask for an extension, via a presidential initiative, of the tenure of the 80-member regional parliament, whose members, including him, are appointees of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. — John Felix M. Unson

PBA Governors’ Cup quarterfinals kick off with TNT vs NLEX clash

TNT TROPANG GIGA — PBA.PH

Games on Wednesday
(Ninoy Aquino Stadium)
5 p.m. – TNT vs NLEX (Quarterfinals Game 1)
7:30 p.m. – Magnolia vs Rain or Shine (Quarterfinals Game 1)

GIVEN the different format in play in PBA Season 49 Governors’ Cup, top-seeded squad TNT of Group A and Rain or Shine (ROS) of Group B aren’t enjoying the usual win-once incentive in the quarterfinal round.

Instead, the defending champion Tropang Giga and the Elasto Painters stand on equal footing with their respective rivals — Group B No. 4 NLEX and Group A No. 3 Magnolia — in a best-of-five quarterfinal series played practically every other day.

Thus, without the built-in advantage of old, gaining the running start in Wednesday’s Last-8 curtain-raiser at the Ninoy Aquino Stadium is doubly important for the two most dominant teams of the previous double round-robin pool play.

TNT shoots for 1-0 against the Road Warriors at 5 p.m. while ROS seeks the same versus the Hotshots at 7:30 p.m.

“We knew from the start that this was going to be the format (three-games-a-week, race-to-three series) and my job is to deliver a team that is as ready and as sharp as possible for this stage of the playoffs,” said Tropang Giga coach Chot Reyes.

More than the tight scheduling, the headache to be posed by NLEX, led by Robert Bolick and import DeQuan Jones, is a major concern for Mr. Reyes’ crew of Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, RR Pogoy, Jayson Castro, Rey Nambatac and Calvin Oftana.

“They’re going to give us a lot of problems. They have Berto and they have a very good import as well,” noted Mr. Reyes, who himself will be matched up against fellow veteran mentor Jong Uichico.

The Road Warriors have shown their resilience amid adversity in climbing out of a four-game skid and hurdling their closing games of the elims, 104-79 over Phoenix and 103-99 (overtime) over Barangay Ginebra, to catch the last bus to the playoffs.

“What’s good about this team is even if we’re losing games, we don’t start bickering or blaming each other. We’re just sticking together as a team. That’s a positive culture of the team that we are trying to imbibe,” said Mr. Uichico.

The Tropang Giga have depended heavily on their stifling defense in the group stage, allowing opponents only 87 points — a gold standard in the tournament. But Mr. Reyes maintained they have to do better than their conference-low 40% shooting with the stakes higher now.

“Our offensive efficiency has to pick up for the playoffs while at the same time keeping our defensive intensity. Our defense is what has carried us through when our offense has been struggling. So we have to maintain that and improve on the offense.

“But one thing’s for sure: what got us here won’t get us to the next level. So we have to now focus on getting to the next level if we want to go deep in the playoffs,” said Mr. Reyes. — Olmin Leyba

DLSU eyes quick turnaround against winless FEU

DLSU GREEN ARCHERS

Games on Wednesday
(Smart Araneta Coliseum)
11:30 a.m. – DLSU vs FEU (women)
1:30 p.m. – AdU vs NU (women)
4:30 p.m. – DLSU vs FEU (men)
6:30 p.m. – AdU vs NU (men)

THE REIGNING CHAMPIONS are down but not definitely out.

After absorbing its first scar in an anticipated tough title defense bid, De La Salle University (DLSU) is determined to move forward and vent its ire instead on the winless Far Eastern University (FEU) to get back on track in the UAAP Season 87 men’s basketball tournament on Wednesday at the Smart-Araneta Coliseum.

Game time is at 4:30 p.m. with the Green Archers (3-1) wanting a quick turnaround versus the FEU Tamaraws (0-4) on the heels of a stunning 75-71 defeat at the hands of the streaking University of the East (2-2) last weekend. At 6:30 p.m., National University (1-3) and Adamson University (2-2) shoot for the same missions after losses against University of Santo Tomas and Ateneo de Manila University, respectively.

“That (loss versus UE) makes us human. We’re not supernatural human beings. There are times that we’re gonna be on our lows and that just happened,” said coach Topex Robinson as La Salle stumbled after an impressive start by wiping out three assignments last week.

“We cannot cry over spilled milk anymore. So, it’s done and over with. What’s important for us is the opportunity in front of us and that’s FEU.”

In a super rare occasion, the usually potent La Salle had a sluggish start as it stared to a massive 11-28 deficit against the fiery UE squad before falling short to complete a comeback.

The shocking defeat relegated La Salle to second spot behind unbeaten and last year’s finalist UP (4-0) but if anything, Mr. Robinson expects his charges to only get better from here on.

La Salle last year also had a shaky first-round campaign before sweeping the second round on its way to the title highlighted by a 2-1 comeback series win against UP.

“We will keep learning. And there’s a lot of learnings in our game against UE. It’s just gonna make us better. The earlier we’ll get over this, the better it is for us. Life goes on for us so we have to focus on FEU,” he vowed.

FEU, on the other hand, is as hungry as ever to finally give head coach Sean Chambers his first win after four tries and there’s no better chance to do it against the defending UAAP king. — John Bryan Ulanday

Young players Ruelle Canino, Daniel Quizon expected to be mainstays on national chess team

RUELLE CANINO — FIDE

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Former national chess team mainstay Girme Fontanilla has never really taken her eyes away from chess despite being retired from the sport for decades now.

But when she saw this young girl turning heads in the 45th FIDE Chess Olympiad that concluded Sunday at the BOK Sports Hall in the Hungarian capital, she was just blown away.

“She’s a great talent,” said the 74-year-old Ms. Fontanilla during a recent conversation with veteran sports scribe Ignacio Dee referring to the 16-year-old wonder Ruelle Canino.

Of course, Ms. Fontanilla, a member of that iconic team that owns the best finish by the national women’s squad in Olympiad history, 22nd in 1988 in Thessaloniki, Greece, would know greatness when she sees one.

Truly, Ms. Canino was nothing short of electric on her debut as she scored six points out of a possible eight with five wins, including two against formidable Woman Grandmasters Claudia Amura of Argentina and Carmen Voicu-Jagodzinsky of Romania, and five draws against a single loss.

Thanks to her mind-blowing performance, Ms. Canino has gained 102 whopping points to jump from a pedestrian 2004 to a WIM level 2260, which included ratings she earned from playing well in Europe the month before.

If she had played one more time, she would have earned a Woman International Master norm.

Also accounting himself well on his debut was Daniel Quizon, who scored 5.5 points out of nine while claiming the Grandmaster title along the way.

“Given more experience and international exposure, those two should go places. We’re also seeing two promising young players who could be fixtures of our national teams for a very long time,” said national women’s coach and NCFP chief executive officer GM Jayson Gonzales.

The team was sponsored by the Philippine Sports Commission and backed by NCFP chief Butch Pichay, delegation head Atty. Ruel Canobas, women’s team manager Atty. Nikki de Vega and Far Eastern U chair Gigi Montinola. — Joey Villar

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT