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DoH: No mandated masking yet

PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

THE DEPARTMENT of Health (DoH) said on Wednesday that there is no need to revert to mandatory wearing of face masks in public despite a 50% uptick in coronavirus cases this month.

“We expected this higher number (in COVID-19 cases)… but of course, we were asked several times if we’re going to bring back the mask mandate, not right now,” Health Undersecretary Eric A. Tayag said in an interview on Cignal TV’s One News PH.

The Philippines recorded 2,275 COVID-19 cases from Dec. 12 to Dec. 18, which brings to 389 the daily average of newly reported infections for a 50% increase in cases from a week earlier.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. lifted the mandatory mask requirement for public places in October last year when the numbers tapered down.

At least 78.4 million people in the country have been fully vaccinated against the virus, with about 23.8 million of them having received their booster shots.

Mr. Tayag also said the DoH is expecting a slowdown in influenza-like illnesses but called on senior-citizens to get vaccinated against these sicknesses.

“We have reminded the public to check measures on how to prevent transmitting any infection not only for COVID but other respiratory illnesses as well… and this is to wear a mask,” he said. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Retired cop admits De Lima lie

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

A RETIRED police general who testified against former senator Leila M. de Lima in her drug trafficking cases has expressed his intention to recant his sworn statements before a Muntinlupa City trial court.

In a one-page letter to Judge Gener M. Gito dated Dec. 18 and released to media on Thursday, retired police brigadier general Jerry C. Valeroso said he has decided to recant his testimony “to set free all accused who were wrongfully charged.”

Mr. Valeroso added that the criminal complaints filed against the accused, which includes Ms. De Lima “are pure hearsay and full of lies.”

“Because I was disturbed by my conscience, I planned to recant in early 2019. However, due to fearing for my life and the safety of my family and loved one, I lost the guts to do so,” read part of his letter.

According to Ms. De Lima’s lawyer and spokesman, Filibon F. Tacardon, Mr. Valeroso testified that he took part in an undercover investigation on the illegal drug trade inside the New Bilibid Prisons (NBP), with former police sergeant Nonilo Arile acting as his informant.

Mr. Tacardon told reporters in a Viber message that the retired police official claimed to have met during his probe an alleged influential Chinese prisoner, Sam Li Chua, who purportedly showed him P65 million, intended for Ms. De Lima. He also claimed to have seen the ex-senator watching the concert organized by high-profile inmate Herbert Collango inside NBP.

Mr. Valeroso becomes the 13th witness to retract statements implicating the former senator in the illegal drugs trade. — Jomel R. Paguian

President names new MIAA chief

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has appointed airport operations expert Eric Jose Castro Ines as acting general manager and board member of the Manila International Airport Authority (MIAA), the Palace announced on Thursday.

In a statement, the Presidential Communications Office cited Mr. Ines’ appointment letter addressed to Transportation Secretary Jamie J. Bautista signed by Executive Secretary Lucas P. Bersamin.

MIAA is an attached agency of the Department of Transportation.

He will replace former MIAA chief Cesar M. Chiong, who had been suspended after the Ombudsman ordered his dismissal in August for alleged abuse of authority over reassigning over 285 MIAA employees within a month of assuming his post.

Mr. Ines served as airport station manager of the Etihad Airways and Gulf Air in Manila from March 1, 2006, to Dec. 31, 2017, and from July 1, 1997, to February 2006.

The airport officer was also a senior security officer of Gulf Air in Manila and Southeast Asia from Jan. 1, 1988, to June 3, 1997. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Bontoc aims for zero injuries

BAGUIO CITY — Authorities in Bontoc, the capital town of Mountain Province, are working together to ensure zero injuries during the Christmas and New Year’s Eve celebrations, steering clear of rowdy festivities involving firecrackers and the firing of guns.

During the Municipal Peace and Order Council Meeting, Bontoc’s elected officials, local police, Municipal Fire Station, and Health Office collectively appealed for cooperation from villagers to ensure a safe and injury-free holiday season.

Mayor Jerome Tudlong, Jr., emphasized the significance of public cooperation, stating, “Let us unite as a community to ensure a safe and enjoyable yuletide season. Your cooperation will contribute to a harm-free festive atmosphere.”

Police Major Pedro Tactay sought the support of barangay officials, urging Barangay tanods to enhance regular patrols while emphasizing the prohibition of gun firing for a tranquil celebration.

Municipal Health Officer Diga Kay Gomez underscored the importance of observing the firecracker law and Municipal Ordinance no. 115, S. of 2007, which restricts firecracker use among minors and regulates their overall use to maintain a record of zero firecracker-related injuries.

Bontoc Fire Station officials advised the public to use Christmas lights with Import. — Artemio A. Dumlao

P47.6-M ‘shabu’ seized in Zamboanga

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COTABATO CITY — Anti-narcotics agents, working undercover, seized P47.6 million worth of “shabu” and arrested the man allegedly selling the illegal substance to them at a motel in Zamboanga City on Wednesday night.

Col. Alexander A. Lorenzo, Zamboanga City police director, told reporters on Thursday that the suspect, Alkhominie Ismael Usil, was arrested after yielding seven kilos of shabu during a police entrapment operation inside one of the rooms of Serenity Inn in Barangay Putik.

Mr. Lorenzo said Mr. Lorenzo said Mr. Usil hails from Barangay Lamion in Bongao, the capital town of Tawi-Tawi province in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

Zamboanga City Mayor John M. Dalipe went to the motel to personally congratulate police involved in the buy-bust operation, including the Police Regional Office 9 and intelligence agents from the military’s Western Mindanao Command based in Calarian, Zamboanga City. — John Felix M. Unson

Hollis-Jefferson siblings led TNT over Taipei in EASL win

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RONDAE Hollis-Jefferson and brother Rahlir realized a lifelong dream as they teamed up to power TNT to a breakthrough 80-69 win over Taipei in the East Asia Super League (EASL) Wednesday night in Sta. Rosa, Laguna.

The Hollis-Jeffersons combined for 57 points in their maiden gig together to key the Tropang Giga’s first victory in Group A after a 0-4 fumbling start.

Rondae dropped 35 markers, 11 rebounds and five assists before exiting the home game on a bad fall late in the final minutes. He was taken to the hospital immediately after.

Rahlir, who came on board after Rondae’s original partner Quincy Miller left to join a Japanese club, produced 22-9-4 in his TNT debut.

The siblings were filled with emotion on being teammates at last after failing to do so in college and over nine years as pros.

“If you know me, you know how much this meant to me/us,” Rondae, who is four years younger, posted on Instagram.

“This was a win for both of us, our family and our city. The hope and inspiration is beautiful and I’m finally glad we were able to do this at this level.”

Rahlir, for his part, said Rondae inspired and challenged him with his performances for TNT.

“I felt like I had to match his energy because he’s been playing well over here for the past couple of seasons. So I had to come over here and match what he was doing. And I think it’s big that we got the first win in EASL. So we want to continue working towards the next one as well,” he said.

TNT got back at the Braves, who dealt them a 97-106 loss the first time around in Taipei and sent the Taiwanese down to 1-3. — Olmin Leyba

The Scores

TNT 80 — Ro. Hollis-Jefferson 35, Ra. Hollis-Jefferson 22, Oftana 15, Khobuntin 6, Tolomia 2, Heruela 0, Ganuelas-Rosser 0, Aurin 0, Galinato 0, Ponferrada 0, Cruz 0.

Taipei 69 — Johnson 19, Barefield 15, Zaytsev 10, Fan 9, Chou 5, Guinchard 3, Hung 3, Smart 3, Jian 2, Wu 0, Tseng 0.

Quarterscores: 17-21; 48-42; 62-58; 80-69

High jumper Grospe sets new national mark

LEONARD GROSPE

APART from producing future champions, one of the main goals of the Philippine National Games is to break national records.

Mission accomplished.

And it was delivered by the fast-rising Leonard Grospe, who shattered the 17-year-old Philippine high jump record by his coach Sean Guevarra before dusk fell Wednesday at the PhilSports track oval in Pasig City.

The tall and scrawny 22-year-old Mr. Grospe leapt to 2.20 meters and eclipsed the 2.14m set by the one person instrumental to his meteoric emergence — Mr. Guevarra — in an effort considered the worthiest effort yet in this six-day meet organized and funded by the Philippine Sports Commission.

It was one of the many marks he set this year including rearranging the national indoor records twice with a 2.14m and 2.15m in the Asian Indoor Championships in Nur Sultan, Kazakhstan last February.

Mr. Grospe had 2.18m in the Pinoy Athletics Summer Series meet in Lingayen, Pangasinan last June but it wasn’t recognized by World Athletics and didn’t count.

It made up for his frustrations in last May’s Phnom Penh Southeast Asian Games where he missed out on a medal after managing just a fifth-place finish with a 2.13m finish.

But he went from zero to hero in just a span of six months with his recent feat.

At the nearby pool yesterday, Puerto Princesa’s Quendy Fernandez claimed her sixth gold medal by towing her team of Maglia Jaye Dignadice, Pearl June Daganio and Cindy Fernandez to the 200m freestyle relay victory in a minute and 54.43 seconds. — Joey Villar

NLEX, Blackwater fighting for PBA survival

Games Friday
(Smart Araneta Coliseum)
4 p.m. — NLEX vs Blackwater
8 p.m. — Meralco vs Barangay Ginebra

FOR NLEX and Blackwater, the order of the day is fighting for survival. For heavyweights Meralco and Barangay Ginebra, it’s staying in play for coveted positions in the PBA Commissioner’s Cup playoffs.

With such a backdrop, the Road Warriors (2-6) and the Bossing (1-7) go all out for a pivotal win in their 4 p.m. encounter today at the Smart Araneta Coliseum to continue in the race for the quarterfinals.

This as the Bolts, running third at 6-1, and the Gin Kings, sitting at fifth at 4-3, engage in a rivalry tiff at 8 p.m. with identical intentions of boosting their drive for a Top 4 and twice-to-beat incentives in the Last-8.

The magic number for a hassle-free passage to the quarters is six wins and both NLEX and Blackwater better climb out of their skids running four and seven games, respectively, and pick up wins or else run out of road.

The Road Warriors hope trade acquisition Robert Bolick has already gotten his footing after spending more practice and bonding time with the likes of Stokley Chaffey Jr., Sean Anthony, Matt Nieto, Rob Herndon and Brandon Rosser ahead of the crucial tussle. Bolick debuted with nine markers in their 97-113 loss to TNT last Dec. 20, just two days after arriving at NLEX from NorthPort via trade.

Blackwater’s situation is actually worse.

If the Bossing absorb their eighth defeat, it’s virtually game over for the charges of Jeff Cariaso, who have never tasted victory again after starting the tournament victorious against Converge, 103-84, last Nov. 8. — Olmin Leyba

Nueva Ecija routs Novaliches, 96-74, leads President’s Cup

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UNDEFEATED Nueva Ecija walloped Novaliches QC Warriors, 96-74, and zoomed to the solo lead in the Pilipinas Super League President’s Cup late Wednesday night at the Filoil EcoOil Centre in San Juan.

The Capitals banked on a 27-16 start and never looked back, leading by as many as 32 points for their seventh straight win in as many games.

Bobby Balucanag fired 15 points, six rebounds and two assists as all other 11 players scored in the coast-to-coast win of Nueva Ecija, which created a little separation from Quezon and Biñan with similar 6-0 slates.

Emman Calo chipped in 12 points while Axel Doromal had 10 for the Bong Cuevas-owned ball club, also known as Rice Vanguards in the MPBL.

“Same intensity from our first to third group that’s why we got the lead and sustained it all throughout the game,” said head coach Jerson Cabiltes as Nueva Ecija is looking good in its redemption tour so far after losing its throne in the MPBL.

But the Capitals are far from satisfied, warned Cabiltes, with a lot of squads also sporting perfect records entering a long break for the Holidays.

Seasoned anchors Michael Mabulac and Will McAloney as well as ace guard Michael Juico did not play for Nueva Ecija in the match but it hardly mattered as the Capitals dominated the Warriors, highlighted by an 81-49 lead early in the fourth.

Deo Timajo (22), Jhonnel Bauzon (12) and Rojay Santos (11) paced the Warriors, who slid to 3-4 at 11th place. — John Bryan Ulanday

Clippers’ Harden

Skepticism was prevalent when the Clippers traded for James Harden in the first week of the 2023-24 season. To be sure, there was ample reason for the second-guessing. Conventional wisdom pegged their new acquisition as fool’s gold, having seen the destruction he wreaked in his wake. In successive years, he forced his way out of the Rockets, Nets, and Sixers — ostensibly because he felt their objectives ran counter to his own. In short, he was looking out for Number One. As he himself argued in a presser immediately after his latest change of address, “I’m not a system player. I am a system.”

For a while there, it looked as if the Clippers would find cause to regret their move. Harden posted pedestrian numbers in his first five games for the blue and red. Not coincidentally, all led to losses; blowouts to the Knicks and Mavericks were interspersed with inexcusable setbacks to the otherwise-inconsistent Nets and incomplete Grizzlies and Nuggets. The general consensus was that too many cooks invariably spoiled the broth. In the midst of the swoon, P.J. Tucker — who was included in the deal with the Sixers — could not help but note that “There’s not enough basketballs on the planet for this team, really.”

All the same, Clippers head coach Tyronn Lue saw enough improvements since Harden’s arrival to believe that a turnaround was in short order. He also kept tinkering with the lineup in search of a winning rotation, which not coincidentally, had Russell Westbrook coming off the bench and Tucker riding the pine. And since he made the changes, the results cannot be denied: nine straight victories to catapult them to fifth in the highly competitive Western Conference. So confident have they become that they didn’t even need Paul George yesterday against the Mavericks to keep their win streak intact.

Admittedly, Harden’s stats this season are the lowest of his career outside his sixth-man days with the Thunder. That said, there can be no discounting his contributions to the Clippers’ cause. His mere presence places pressure on the defense and has enabled Kawhi Leonard to puncture the hoop with consistency. He has even coaxed former Thunder teammate Westbrook into accepting a significantly reduced role. The former Most Valuable Player awardee is sporting his worst line since being drafted fourth overall in 2008, and yet professes to be happy. “I’ve been in the league so long, I understand the definition of true sacrifice and understanding what that looks like … This is a team game, and I know the most important goal. That’s to win a championship.”

Which, in the final analysis, is how the Clippers’ decision to go all in with Harden will be judged.

 

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.

North Korea warns of nuclear attack if provoked with nukes

SEOUL — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said Pyongyang would not hesitate to launch a nuclear attack if an enemy provokes it with nuclear weapons, state media reported on Thursday.

Mr. Kim made the remark as he met with soldiers working for the military’s missile bureau and congratulated them over Pyongyang’s recent launching drill of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), KCNA news agency said.

He said the test demonstrated the loyalty and strong stand of the armed forces and was” a clear explanation of the offensive counteraction mode and the evolution of the nuclear strategy and doctrine of the DPRK not to hesitate even a nuclear attack when the enemy provoke it with nukes,” KCNA reported.

DPRK is the abbreviation for the North’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

North Korea said this week it had tested its newest ICBM on Monday to gauge the war readiness of its nuclear forces against mounting US hostility.

The top diplomats of the United States, South Korea and Japan on Wednesday issued a joint statement condemning North Korea’s recent ballistic missile launches and urged Pyongyang to engage in “substantive dialogue without preconditions”.

Mr. Kim said Monday’s launch showed the military’s high mobility and rapid attack capability, and called for efforts to further strengthen its combat efficiency, KCNA reported.

In a separate statement, Mr. Kim’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, condemned the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) for holding a meeting over the ICBM launch, saying it was an exercise of the country’s right to self-defense.

“The UNSC should place heavy responsibility on the irresponsible behavior and act of the US and the ROK, which have aggravated the tension on the Korean peninsula through all sorts of military provocations all year round,” she said.

ROK stands for South Korea’s official name, the Republic of Korea.

The United States, South Korea and Japan staged a joint air drill involving a US strategic bomber near the Korean peninsula on Wednesday, the latest US strategic asset to be deployed as part of Washington’s pledge with Seoul to boost defense readiness. — Reuters

Gaza children dizzy from hunger as war impedes food deliveries

Palestinian children carry pots as they queue to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen, amid shortages in food supplies, as the conflict between Israel and Hamas continues, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip Dec. 14, 2023. — REUTERS

RAFAH, Gaza Strip — The children displaced to south Gaza were craving chicken, but all their mother had left to feed the family for the day was a tin of peas donated by a man who took pity on her when he saw her crying.

Left homeless by Israel’s military offensive against Hamas, like most of Gaza’s 2.3 million population, Tahany Nasr was in a tent camp in Rafah focused on one thing only: how to find enough food and water to get everyone through another day.

She said her children had lost weight and were getting dizzy spells because they were not eating enough.

“I’ve been begging to feed my children and don’t find anything. I go to Social Affairs, they say go to the mosque. I go to the mosque, they say go to the Affairs,” she said, referring to Gaza’s welfare ministry which normally organizes distributions of basic goods like flour to people in hardship.

Hunger has become the most pressing of the myriad problems facing hundreds of thousands of displaced Gaza Palestinians, with aid trucks able to bring in only a small fraction of what is needed, and distribution uneven due to the chaos of war.

Some trucks have been stopped and looted by people desperate for food, while swathes of the devastated territory are beyond their reach because access roads are active battlegrounds.

Even in Rafah, which has a crossing to Egypt through which aid trucks enter and is an area where the Israeli army has told civilians to seek refuge, the dearth of food and clean water is so severe it is causing people to lose weight and get ill.

“We have started to see people coming in emaciated,” said Samia Abu Salah, a primary care doctor in Rafah.

She said weight loss and anemia were common and people were so weak and dehydrated they were more susceptible to chest infections and skin conditions. Babies and children were particularly at risk, and their growth would be affected.

A MEAL OF ONIONS
“My children just told me today that they were craving chicken. Where would I find them chicken? Where? Do I know? May Allah save us,” said Ms. Nasr, breaking down in tears as she spoke.

“We haven’t received any food in two days. How do I fool my children? With some pasta? Some lentil stew? If I could find it!” she said, adding that sometimes she had resorted to making meals out of only onions.

Ms. Nasr went into her tent to fetch the tin of peas she said a kindly man had given her, even though he had bought it for himself. “This is it. This can is all we have for a whole day,” she said, holding it up, her voice rising in anger.

Far from being an extreme case, the account given by Ms. Nasr echoed stories told by many interviewees who spoke to Reuters in Rafah and elsewhere. People spoke of eating only once a day, of inadequate meals with insufficient nutrition, of rationing water, of children getting diarrhea from drinking dirty water.

The war was triggered by Hamas fighters who stormed into southern Israel from Gaza on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people including babies and children and capturing 240 hostages of all ages in the deadliest day of Israel’s 75-year history.

Israel has responded with a military assault on the densely populated, Hamas-run Gaza Strip, which has killed nearly 20,000 people, mostly women and children, according to health officials there, and wrought a humanitarian catastrophe.

Maha Al-Alami, a displaced woman sheltering in a school in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis with eight children and grandchildren, said everyone was traumatized by the experience of hunger.

“I’m telling you, once the war is over, God willing, the Palestinian people should sit before psychiatrists,” she said. — Reuters