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Nxled Chameleons gun for record start against winless Galeries Tower

NXLED CHAMELEONS — FACEBOOK.COM/NXLEDCHAMELEONS

Games on Tuesday
(Filoil EcoOil Arena)
4 p.m. – Nxled vs Galeries Tower
6:30 p.m. – Akari vs Capital1

ARE the Nxled Chameleons for real?

The fledgling franchise will try to prove it is as it shoots to sustain its record start against Galeries Tower on Tuesday in the Premier Volleyball League on Tour at the Filoil EcoOil Arena.

The Chameleons, who haven’t finished better than eighth place in their first four conferences in the pros, have been turning heads as of late after slaying league titans Petro Gazz and Choco Mucho in Batangas City late last month.

Another win over the Highrisers (0-2) in their 4 p.m. duel would catapult the Chameleons straight to the top of Pool A alongside the PLDT High Speed Hitters (3-0).

A big part of Nxled’s sensational rise was super rookie Lyann de Guzman, who had averaged 22.5 points in her first two outings in the league.

Nxled coach Ettore Guidetti has also been drawing strong performances from Chiara Permentilla, Jovelyn Fernandez, EJ Clariño and Krich Macaslang.

In a Pool B showdown, Akari (1-3) clashes with Capital1 (0-4) at 6:30 p.m. — Joey Villar

Gravelton PH gears up for its 4th season this October

GET ready to shift gears and embrace the grit as Gravelton PH returns with Gravelton Clark 2025, hitting the trails harder and tougher than ever.

Now on its fourth adrenaline-charged year, the country’s premier gravel race is back to push cyclists and adventure seekers to their limits on the rugged routes of Central Luzon.

The action kicks off and concludes at Filinvest Mimosa Plus Leisure City in Clark, Pampanga, this Oct. 18–19.

This year’s two-day Gravelton PH weekend is set to be bigger and bolder, offering participants not just a festive atmosphere but the most action-packed and grittiest race of a lifetime.

Day 1 (Oct. 18) revs up with an expanded Gravelton Clark 2025 Expo Day featuring more partner brands, booths and activations powering the pre-race vibe.

The adrenaline truly kicks in on Day 2 (Oct. 19) for the Gravelton Clark 2025 Race Day.

Riders will hit the trail and take on Gravelton’s roughest course for the most pulse-pounding and breathtaking gravel race ever.

Registration for Gravelton Clark 2025 opens on July 15, and official registration links will be available on Gravelton PH’s social media pages. Interested participants are encouraged to lock in their slots early.

Kudermetova and Mertens win women’s doubles crown

LONDON — Eighth seeds Veronika Kudermetova and Elise Mertens fought back from a set down to win their first Grand Slam as a pair, beating Hsieh Su-Wei and Jelena Ostapenko 3-6, 6-2, 6-4 in the Wimbledon women’s doubles final on Sunday.

It was the first major title for Russia’s Kudermetova, who was on the losing side in the 2021 final against Mertens and Hsieh. The second Wimbledon crown for Belgian Mertens took her to five Grand Slam doubles titles.

“It’s been incredible,” a tearful Mertens said as she summed up a memorable Wimbledon campaign, having also reached the fourth round in the singles.

In the first set, Kudermetova held to go 3-1 up but the fourth seeds then won five straight games. The 28-year-old Russian led the charge in the second set, holding twice as the pair got three breaks in a row to force a third set.

Hsieh, who has won seven majors in women’s doubles including four Wimbledon titles, won a prolonged exchange with Kudermetova from the baseline to get the first break of the third set, before Ostapenko held without losing a point to take 4-2 lead.

But erroneous returns from Hsieh hit the net as the eighth seeds broke back, and Kudermetova held to go 5-4 up before Ostapenko went long to lose a 26-shot rally and bring up match point.

Kudermetova’s backhand from close range cut across the court to secure the match, finally fulfilling her dream of lifting the trophy at the All England Club.

“A few years ago I was playing in the final here against Elise… I lost that final and it was so painful. Today I said to myself, I really want this,” Kudermetova said.Reuters

Palmer leads Chelsea over PSG to win Club World Cup

EAST RUTHERFORD, New Jersey — Chelsea were clear underdogs before the FIFA Club World Cup final. Cole Palmer didn’t seem to mind, and the pressure of a global stage didn’t slow him down.

Palmer rang up two goals and one assist in a sensational first half and Chelsea toppled Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) 3-0 to win the Club World Cup on Sunday.

The 23-year-old winger scored in the 22nd and 30th minutes and Joao Pedro tacked on the third goal right before halftime, capitalizing on Palmer’s fine touch into the box. Robert Sanchez, meanwhile, saved six shots in his best showing of the tournament.

Chelsea, who won the 2021 Club World Cup that featured only eight teams, battled past Portugal’s Benfica and Brazilian sides Palmeiras and Fluminense in the knockouts to face Paris Saint-Germain — six weeks removed from their first UEFA Champions League trophy.

The European champions had allowed just one goal in their first six matches of the Cup. But on Sunday, PSG’s Gianluigi Donnarumma saved just two of five shots on goal.

The frustrated Parisians went down to 10 men in the 85th minute when Joao Neves pulled Chelsea defender Marc Cucurella by the hair, was caught on video review and shown red.

Altercations spilled past the final whistle, and PSG coach Luis Enrique appeared to grab at Pedro’s neck while he and Donnarumma confronted Chelsea players.

The final capped the end of a month-long tournament with 32 teams representing six continents, a test run for the United States before it co-hosts next year’s World Cup with Canada and Mexico.

President Donald J. Trump attended the final as a guest of FIFA president Gianni Infantino. Mr. Trump presented Chelsea the trophy and stayed on stage to celebrate with the club.

In his first year as manager, Enzo Maresca guided the Blues to a 2025-26 Champions League berth and won two trophies, the Club World Cup following their victory in the UEFA Conference League.

Cucurella made a crucial stop to keep the game scoreless in the 16th minute. Fabian Ruiz made a great pass across the box to Desire Doue, who could have shot it but instead tried a centering pass to a teammate that Cucurella intercepted.

Six minutes later, Palmer — whose first attempt barely missed wide left in the eighth — got the scoring started.

Malo Gusto picked up a wayward header from PSG’s Nuno Mendes and ran into the box. After a fancy dribble to create space, his shot was blocked right back to his feet, so he fed Palmer for a left-footer to the bottom left corner.

Levi Colwill earned the assist on the second goal for his long ball downfield to Palmer. From there, Palmer calmly dribbled toward the center of the 18-yard line and fired the same low, left-footer for an identical goal.

In the 43rd, Palmer tapped a pass between two defenders for Pedro, who popped his shot over a sprawling Donnarumma’s right shoulder.

Sanchez dove to meet Neves’ stoppage-time header just before the goal line. His heroics continued in the second half, as he swatted away a shot by Ousmane Dembele from close range.

Palmer was named Player of the Tournament. His three goals and two assists, tied for the most goal contributions of any player, all came during the knockout stage.

Speaking to broadcaster DAZN postgame, Palmer praised Maresca’s game plan for giving him opportunities and said he had to “repay” the manager by scoring some goals.

“He’s building something special, something important,” Palmer said. “We’re a young team… I feel like we’re going in the right direction.” — Reuters

Special Olympics Pilipinas, Milo Philippines and DepEd promote sports inclusivity through unified learning

BIÑAN CITY, Laguna — Milo Philippines has given its full support to the Special Olympics Pilipinas and the Department of Education (DepEd), in championing a more inclusive future through unified learning in sports at the inaugural Unified Brigada Eskwela Palaro, a one-day event that celebrated inclusive education by bringing together students of all abilities to learn and play side by side.

As part of its commitment to making sports accessible for all Filipino children, Milo supported this initiative to underscore that the values instilled through sports such as grit, discipline, and teamwork, should be available to every child, including those with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

“Milo believes that sports can be a powerful tool in effecting positive change in individuals and the whole society,” said Carlo Sampan, Head of Sports, Milo  Philippines.

Unified learning, a term pioneered by Special Olympics, refers to an inclusive educational environment where students with and without disabilities, learn, play, and participate equally together in shared environments. The Unified Brigada Eskwela Palaro gave children and parents a preview of what unified learning is all about, serving as a powerful platform for kids to learn understanding, empathy and growth.

Held at the Alonte Sports Arena in Biñan City, the event gathered over 200 students from 23 DepEd schools recognized as “Unified Champion Schools” or schools that adopt inclusive practices such as unified sports, inclusive youth leadership and whole-school engagement.

The event featured various activities on sports and leadership, including the Milo Best Center Basketball Clinic, where children participated in engaging basketball drills designed to teach the fundamentals of the sport.

According to a study by the University of Massachusetts and Special Olympics, children who participate in unified sports activities show significant enhancements in social and emotional development, along with a stronger sense of belonging in school. Parents observed noticeable improvements in their children’s confidence, behavior, and ability to connect with others.

The partnership between Milo and Special Olympics Pilipinas plays a crucial role in scaling awareness and implementation of inclusivity in both education and sports. By supporting and promoting inclusivity through events like the Unified Brigada Eskwela Palaro, they are building pathways where every child can thrive, be recognized, and reach their full potential through active play.

Dodgers’ two-out rally puts away rival Giants in extras

THE Los Angeles Dodgers strung together two-out bloop singles by Freddie Freeman and Andy Pages around an infield hit by Teoscar Hernandez, each producing a run, in a relatively quiet 11-inning uprising that resulted in a 5-2 road victory over the San Francisco Giants on Sunday afternoon.

Baseball’s traditional first half was extended by two innings when Giants pinch hitter Luis Matos smacked a one-out, two-run home run off Dodgers closer Tanner Scott in the last of the ninth, drawing the hosts even at 2-2.

The blown save was the major-league-leading seventh of the season for Scott, who had set the table for Matos when he served up a single to Matt Chapman one batter earlier.

After neither team scored in the 10th, the Giants’ sixth pitcher, Spencer Bivens (2-3), was one out away from stranding two baserunners in the 11th.

Freeman, though, popped a single between four San Francisco defenders in short right-center field, scoring extra-inning automatic runner James Outman. — Reuters

China’s exporters rush to beat Trump’s next big tariff deadline

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

BEIJING — China’s exports regained momentum in June as firms rushed out orders to capitalize on a fragile tariff truce between Beijing and Washington ahead of a looming deadline next month, with shipments to Southeast Asian transit hubs particularly strong.

Businesses on both sides of the Pacific are waiting to see whether the world’s two largest economies can agree on a more durable deal or if global supply chains will again be upended by the reimposition of duties exceeding 100%.

Chinese producers, facing weak demand at home and harsher conditions in the United States, where they sell more than $400 billion worth of goods annually, are also hedging their bets and racing to grab market share in economies closer to home.

Customs data on Monday showed outbound shipments from China rose 5.8% year-on-year in June, beating a forecast 5.0% increase in a Reuters poll and May’s 4.8% growth.

“There are some signs that frontloading demand is beginning to wane gradually,” said Chim Lee, senior analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit. “While frontloading ahead of the August tariff pause deadline is likely to continue, freight rates for China-bound shipments to the US have started to decline.”

“Trade diversion and rerouting appear to be continuing, which will attract the attention of policymakers in the US and other markets,” he added.

Imports rebounded 1.1%, following a 3.4% decline in May. Economists had predicted a 1.3% rise.

The upbeat set of data helped lift market sentiment with the blue-chip CSI300 up 0.2% at the midday trading break, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.4%, nearing its highest level since October.

Analysts and exporters are watching to see whether a deal agreed in June between US and Chinese negotiators will hold, after an earlier agreement reached in May was strained by a series of export controls that disrupted global supply chains for key industries.

Exports to the US grew 32.4% month-on-month, with June the first full month of Chinese goods benefitting from reduced US tariffs, although year-on-year growth remained negative.

Meanwhile, outbound shipments to the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations jumped 16.8%.

China’s June trade surplus came in at $114.7 billion, up from $103.22 billion in May.

China’s rare earths exports rose 32% in June from the month before, the customs data showed, in a sign that agreements struck last month to free up the flow of the metals were possibly bearing fruit.

But Chinese negotiators will struggle to talk the US into bringing tariffs down to levels that enable producers to turn a profit, analysts say, warning additional duties that exceed 35% will wipe out margins.

“Tariffs are likely to remain high and Chinese manufacturers face growing constraints on their ability to rapidly expand global market share by slashing prices,” said Zichun Huang, China economist at Capital Economics.

“We therefore expect export growth to slow over the coming quarters, weighing on economic growth,” she added.

GLOBAL TRADE WAR
Beijing faces an Aug. 12 deadline to reach a durable deal with the White House.

In the meantime, Mr. Trump continues to broaden his global trade offensive with new tariffs on other partners.

Analysts warn those measures could indirectly hurt Beijing by pressuring third countries used heavily for transshipments of Chinese goods.

Mr. Trump recently unveiled a 40% tariff on US-bound transshipments through Vietnam, a move that could undermine Chinese manufacturers looking to reroute shipments and avoid higher duties.

The US president has also threatened a 10% charge on imports from BRICS countries, in which China is a founding member, raising further risks for Beijing.

Backing its fellow BRICS member, China’s soybean imports in June hit a same-month record high, buoyed by a surge in purchases from top supplier Brazil to 9.73 million tons, which Mr. Trump has slapped with 50% tariffs. Imports of US soybeans, meanwhile, were just 724,000 tons.

China’s crude oil imports rebounded last month and reached the highest daily rate since August 2023, after refineries from Saudi Arabia and Iran increased operations. Iron ore imports climbed 8% from May. — Reuters

EU ready to hit US with €21-billion tariff list, Italy foreign minister says

Fifty-euro notes are seen in this file photo. — REUTERS

MILAN — The European Union (EU) has already prepared a list of tariffs worth €21 billion ($24.52 billion) on US goods if the two sides fail to reach a trade deal, Italy’s Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said in a newspaper interview on Monday.

President Donald J. Trump on Saturday threatened to impose a 30% tariff on imports from Mexico and the EU starting on Aug. 1, after weeks of negotiations with major US trading partners failed to reach a comprehensive deal.

Mr. Tajani also told daily Il Messaggero that to help the euro zone economy the European Central Bank should consider a new “quantitative easing” bond-buying-program, and more interest rate cuts.

The EU said on Sunday it would extend its suspension of countermeasures to US tariffs until early August and continue to press for a negotiated settlement.

Mr. Tajani said the €21-billion package of tariffs the EU has already prepared could be followed by a second set if a deal with the US proves impossible. He added, however, that he was confident that progress could be made in negotiations.

“Tariffs hurt everyone, starting with the United States,” he said. “If stock markets fall that puts at risk the pensions and the savings of the Americans.”

He said the goal should be “zero tariffs” and an open market among Canada, the United States, Mexico and Europe.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Sunday he would work intensively with French President Emmanuel Macron and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to resolve the escalating trade war with the United States.

European Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic said on Monday that Washington and Brussels were approaching a positive outcome for both sides, and warned that a 30% tariff would practically eliminate trade. — Reuters

Singapore economy grows 4.3% in 2nd quarter, avoids technical recession

VISITORS take in the view of the city skyline from a rooftop in the central business district in Singapore, July 26, 2022. — REUTERS/EDGAR SU

SINGAPORE — Singapore’s economy grew a faster-than-expected 4.3% in the second quarter year-on-year, preliminary government data showed on Monday, despite a dimming outlook due to global economic uncertainty.

The trade ministry’s advance estimate for gross domestic product in the April to June period compared to an expected expansion of 3.5% according to economists polled by Reuters.

On a quarter-on-quarter seasonally adjusted basis, gross domestic product (GDP) grew 1.4% in the April to June period, the advance estimates showed, avoiding a technical recession after the first quarter’s revised 0.5% contraction.

“The economy is holding up despite tariffs and geopolitical shocks. The de-escalation in the US-China tariff war and front-loading of exports during the 90-day reprieve has cushioned the tariff shocks,” said Maybank economist Chua Hak Bin.

On Thursday, Trade Minister Gan Kim Yong said the economy likely held up well in the first half of 2025 as businesses took advantage of the pause in tariffs to front-load exports to the US, but warned that growth could slow in the next six to 12 months.

The trade ministry in April downgraded the city-state’s GDP forecast for 2025 to a range of 0% to 2% from 1% to 3%.

Maybank’s Chua said his team’s forecast for Singapore’s GDP for 2025 is 2.4%. He expects the central bank to maintain its monetary policy settings at the upcoming review this month given the strength of the economy.

US President Donald J. Trump notified more than 20 countries last week of tariffs of 20% to 50% that will kick in from Aug. 1, warning that any reprisals would draw a like-for-like response.

Singapore has not yet received a letter from the Trump administration this round and its exports are still subject to the 10% baseline tariff announced in April.

The tariff was levied on Singapore despite a free trade agreement in place with the island nation since 2004.

Mr. Gan has said he will travel to the US for trade talks at the end of July with the aim of securing pharmaceutical concessions.

Mr. Trump said he would impose a 50% tariff on copper and soon introduce long-threatened levies on semiconductors and pharmaceuticals, broadening a trade war that has rattled markets worldwide. — Reuters

South Korea preparing to order airlines to check fuel switches on Boeing jets

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Stefan Fluck from Unsplash

SEOUL — South Korea’s transport ministry is preparing to order all airlines in the country that operate Boeing jets to examine fuel switches in accordance with a 2018 advisory from the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the ministry’s foreign media spokesperson said on Monday.

The spokesperson did not give a timeline for the checks. Boeing did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Fuel switch locks have come under scrutiny after a preliminary report into the crash of an Air India’s Boeing 787-8 jet that killed 260 people last month mentioned a 2018 advisory from the FAA.

The FAA advisory recommended, but did not mandate, operators of several Boeing models, including the 787, to inspect the locking feature of the fuel cutoff switches to ensure they could not be moved accidentally.

Reuters reported on Sunday, citing a document and sources, that the planemaker and the FAA have privately issued notifications to airlines and regulators that the fuel switch locks on Boeing planes are safe and checks are not required.

The Air India preliminary report said the airline had not carried out the FAA’s suggested inspections as the FAA’s 2018 advisory was not a mandate. But it also said maintenance records showed that the throttle control module, which includes the fuel switches, was replaced in 2019 and 2023 on the plane involved in the crash. — Reuters

Italy’s abortion taboos challenged by new law in Sicily

MACROVECTOR-FREEPIK

CATANIA, Italy — Monia, a Sicilian woman in her early forties, was overjoyed when she discovered in October 2022 she was expecting her first child. Her doctor, however, recommended a genetic test due to her age, and the result was one no parent wants to receive.

The fetus had a genetic syndrome. Monia, who declined to give her surname, asked her gynecologist what she could do.

“Nothing. You don’t want to terminate, do you?” the doctor asked her, she said.

He was a conscientious objector, Monia said, one of hundreds on the southern Italian island. More than 80% of gynecologists in Sicily refuse to perform abortions for moral or religious reasons, according to the latest health ministry data, which dates to 2022, even though the procedure has been a legal right for women in Italy since 1978.

To address that situation, in late May Sicily’s regional council — run by a center-right coalition — passed a law in a secret ballot requiring all public hospitals to create dedicated abortion wards and to hire staff willing to provide the service.

Under the national rules, abortion is permitted within the first 90 days of a pregnancy, or later if there are risks to the mother’s health or fetal abnormalities. The latter circumstance applied to Monia, who went to the Sant’Antonio Abate hospital in the city of Trapani, in western Sicily, to terminate her pregnancy.

“All the gynecologists were objectors,” she said. “An obstetrician gave me a bed with only a mattress cover and said they would administer a pill every three hours until I went into labor.” She was told she would receive no further assistance.

Her story is far from unique in southern Italy, where cultural traditions are more conservative than in the Catholic country’s richer north and center.

At first, Monia’s pills were ineffective, but after five days and a change of treatment she finally miscarried, attended to by a doctor and a midwife.

Hospital staff referred to her as “Article 6,” she said, after the provision in the law that allows abortions beyond 90 days.

In response to a request for comment, the Sant’Antonio Abate hospital said it was sorry for Monia’s “difficult experience.” However, the hospital said it was unable to verify the facts because both the hospital manager and the head of the gynecology department at that time had left.

The hospital said it now has three non-objecting doctors and was able to provide abortion services.

Abortions are only available in around half of Sicily’s hospitals, health ministry data shows, a figure much lower than in central and northern Italy, where rates are around 70%.

Like most of his colleagues, Fabio Guardala, a 60-year-old doctor, refuses to perform abortions. He operates at the Cannizzaro hospital in the Sicilian city of Catania, on the east coast of the island.

“A doctor’s job is to heal,” said Mr. Guardala, who is also deputy head of a healthcare unit at his local Catholic church. “Abortion is not treatment but killing. Nobody can force a doctor to kill.”

Silvia Vaccari, president of the Italian federation of midwives, FNOPO, said health outcomes can be grim in areas where legal abortions are hard to access.

“The absence of facilities sometimes leads people to turn to non-professionals, putting them at risk of death, or to continue with pregnancies and give birth to babies who are abandoned in places where they may never be found alive,” she said.

CATHOLIC INFLUENCE
Most other European Union countries allow health workers to refuse to perform abortions on ethical grounds, according to a 2022 study published in the Acta Biomedica journal. But the right is generally exercised far less commonly than in southern Italy.

One exception is deeply Catholic Poland, where abortion is only legal in cases of rape or incest or when a woman’s health or life is at risk. The Acta study said many Polish women have been forced to travel abroad to terminate their pregnancies.

Abortion has always been contentious in Italy, a Catholic country that hosts the Vatican. Right-wing Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni passed legislation last year to try to deter women from terminating pregnancies.

Pro-life groups have been allowed into abortion advice clinics, in a move Ms. Meloni’s party said was aimed at giving women an opportunity for reflection before making a final decision.

Nationally, the number of abortions dropped to 65,000 in 2022, according to the latest health ministry data, against 110,000 in 2011. More than 60% of gynecologists are conscientious objectors.

On the island of Sardinia, the region’s ruling, left-leaning 5-Star Movement last month presented a law proposal similar to the one adopted in Sicily, suggesting that other southern regions may soon follow its example.

Dario Safina, a center-left Democratic Party lawmaker in Sicily and the promoter of the new law, said many Sicilian women seeking an abortion feel forced to resort to the private sector.

“Access to abortion is not a problem for those who can afford it, because they can go to a private clinic. But healthcare based on wealth is the end of democracy,” he said.

Some doctors argue Sicily’s high objection rates are not only due to ethics but also to staff shortages and poor working conditions that make it harder for gynecologists to provide abortions on top of their regular duties.

Data from the GIMBE Foundation, a health sector think-tank, shows Sicily had nine healthcare workers per 1,000 residents in 2022, compared with a national average of 11.6 and far below the northern and central Emilia Romagna and Tuscany regions with 15.

“Hospitals always try to exploit doctors’ work without paying them properly, so sometimes professionals are reluctant to perform abortions,” said Salvatore Incandela, head of the Sicilian arm of AOGOI, Italy’s gynecologists’ association.

Italian anti-abortion group Pro-Life Together rejects this, saying non-objectors in Sicily were only required to perform 1.5 abortions a week on average in 2022 — still above a national average of 0.9.

LEGAL CHALLENGES?
Six Sicilian hospital managers and health professionals contacted by Reuters said the new legislation could strengthen the service, but it was still important to ensure doctors could opt out as allowed under 1978 national law that sanctioned the right to abortion.

Under the law, health workers are exempted from abortion procedures if they declare an ethical or religious objection, so long as the woman’s life is not in immediate danger.

Gaetano Sirna, the director general of Catania’s Policlinico-San Marco hospital, one of the city’s largest, said even with just six non-objecting gynecologists out of a total of 39, he could still ensure abortions for those who needed them.

“We have no problems guaranteeing the availability (of doctors)… gynecologists are free to declare themselves as objectors; we do not discriminate,” he told Reuters.

Abortion is not the only case in which conscientious objection is permitted in Italy. It used to be grounds for avoiding compulsory military service, which was abolished in the early 2000s, and an opt-out for scientists from conducting animal experiments was introduced in the early 1990s.

Giorgia Landolfo, a pro-abortion activist in Catania, called the new law in Sicily a “landmark,” but said she feared it would be hard to enforce.

Some anti-abortion groups say it will be challenged in court on the ground that job postings reserved for non-objectors discriminate against the others.

“Many measures in the past aimed at hiring non-objectors have been challenged and ultimately came to nothing,” said Vito Trojano, the head of SIGO, the Italian Obstetrics and Gynecology Society.

Some Sicilian politicians who strongly oppose the new rules believe the region should instead bolster its healthcare and support facilities for pregnant women, who often feel abandoned and see no alternative to abortion.

“Life is life from the moment of conception,” said Margherita La Rocca, a Sicilian lawmaker from the center-right Forza Italia party. “The fetus cannot just be considered a clump of cells when it’s convenient.” — Reuters

Government subsidy seen to bring down power costs, spur new industries

“The government should consider subsidizing a portion of power costs to lessen consumer burden. Lower electricity bills could also stimulate the growth of new industries, says Alfredo “Al” S. Panlilio, president of the Management Association of the Philippines (MAP).

Interview by Edg Adrian Eva
Video editing by Arjale Queral