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Terrorist attack hurts 3 cops 

UNSPLASH

COTABATO CITY — Combined Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) and Dawlah Islamiya gunmen attacked a roadside police detachment in Datu Salibo town, Maguindanao del Sur late Sunday, wounding three police officers and sending villagers into panic.

Community elders and officials of Barangay Pagatin, where the incident happened, confirmed to reporters on Tuesday the identity of at least four of the attackers and their association with the two terrorist groups. They said two of the terrorists, armed with M-16 and M14 rifles, were wounded when police returned fire.

In a Viber message to reporters Monday night, Brig. Gen. Allan C. Nobleza, director of the Police Regional Office-Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, said the wounded cops — Corporal Fernan D. Andres and Patrolmen Abdul Ali B. Lipuas and Alesona A. Makaandig, all of the 1402nd Regional Mobile Force Company — were being treated for bullet wounds in the body at an undisclosed hospital. 

Army Major Gen. Alex S. Rillera, commander of the Army’s 6th Infantry Division, said the attack was a ploy aimed at creating the impression that the Dawlah Islamiya and the BIFF have not been weakened, following the surrender in batches of 326 of their members since 2020.  — John Felix M. Unson

30,000 houses for distribution 

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

AROUND 30,000 housing units are expected to be distributed to the homeless this year, the National Housing Authority (NHA) told a House of Representatives committee on Tuesday.

“As of last year, we have around 30,000 unoccupied [housing units] but this year, we’re in the process of awarding these houses and turning these over to beneficiaries,” NHA general manager Joeben A. Tai told the House committee on appropriations.

Surigao del Sur Rep. Romeo S. Momo, Sr. called for expediency in awarding of housing units. “If they are not yet turned over to the beneficiaries, then the houses may incur damages and you [will] have to repair them again,” Mr. Momo said.

The Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) is proposing a P1.5-billion budget for the Pambansang Pabahay Para sa Pilipino Program (4PH), the government’s low-cost housing project.

DHSUD Secretary Jose Rizalino L. Acuzar said that houses will be built in-city with a monthly amortization graduated to a lower amount to be affordable and accessible to the poor’s needs. He added that the subsidy ranges between P3,500 to P4,000.

However, party-list Rep. France L. Castro criticized the government’s housing program, claiming it is far from being pro-poor. “If one house is 60,000 per square meter (sqm), times 24 sqm, its total contract is P1.4 million. Can a poor person afford this?” Ms. Castro asked the committee.

Given that the proposed subsidy stands at P1.5 billion and it would cover the first million houses targeted by the 4PH, Ms. Castro said beneficiaries will only get an estimated P1,500 each as interest subsidy.

Mr. Acuzar explained that under the 4PH, a beneficiary will only pay P400,000 out of the total P1.2-million cost of a housing unit. The loan will be payable over a period of 30 years to the Home Development Mutual Fund or PAGIBIG fund with a 6% annual interest.

A beneficiary will pay 1% of the interest while the government will shoulder the remaining 5%.

The housing sector has a proposed budget of P5.40 billion under the 2024 National Expenditure Program.

Out of the total budget, P2.61 billion will go the DHSUD, P2 billion to the NHA, P121.04 million to the Social Housing Finance Corp., and P672.72 million to the Human Settlements Adjudication Commission.

Lawmakers sought to increase next year’s housing budget for more people to afford to participate in the government’s housing program. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

Asia bears brunt of pollution health burden — new research

A MAN rides a motor tricycle, loaded with sacks of recyclables, amid dense smog in Lahore, Pakistan Nov. 24, 2021. — REUTERS

SINGAPORE — Despite improvements in China, air pollution across the globe continues to pose the greatest external risk to human health, with countries in Asia and Africa suffering most of the impact, new research showed on Tuesday.

Around three quarters of the adverse health effects of air pollution is concentrated in just six countries — Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, China, Nigeria and Indonesia, the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute (EPIC) said in its annual Air Quality Life Index (AQLI) report.

If hazardous airborne particles known as PM2.5 were brought down to levels recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), average life expectancy would rise by 2.3 years worldwide, saving a combined 17.8 billion life years, the report estimated.

While average world pollution levels have fallen slightly over the past decade, almost all of the improvement has been driven by China, where a 10-year “war on pollution” has seen PM2.5 fall by more than 40% since 2013.

“While China has had remarkable success in its war against air pollution, the trend in other parts of the world is going in the opposite direction,” said Christa Hasenkopf, AQLI’s director.

PM2.5 in South Asia has risen by nearly 10% since 2013, she said, cutting average life expectancy in the region by around five years. Growing energy consumption in central and western Africa was also turning particulate pollution into a growing health threat on par with HIV/AIDS and malaria.

Virtually all of Southeast Asia is also now considered to have “unsafe levels of pollution”, with average life expectancy cut by 2-3 years.

China’s average PM2.5 concentrations stood at 29 micrograms per cubic meter in 2022, but it still remains significantly higher than the WHO recommendation of 5 micrograms.

While improvements in China have helped raise average life expectancy by 2.2 years since 2013, it could rise by another 2.5 years if the country were to meet the WHO standard.

“We haven’t turned the corner on air pollution yet, though China’s example shows us that the issue is a tractable one,” Ms. Hasenkopf said. — Reuters

World now facing gloomy stew of debt, trade wars and poor productivity

Containers are seen at an industrial port in the Keihin Industrial Zone in Kawasaki, Japan Sept. 12, 2018. — REUTERS/KIM KYUNG-HOON

JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming — Record levels of government debt, geopolitical tensions that threaten to split the global trading system, and the likely persistence of weak productivity gains may saddle the world with a slow-growth future that stunts development in some countries even before it starts.

That sobering view of a post-pandemic global economy emerged from research organized by the Kansas City Federal Reserve and debated here this past weekend. It explored issues like the outlook for technological innovation, public debt, and the state of international trade at a time when the Russian invasion of Ukraine and conflict between the US and China have eroded a once-broad global agreement, at least in theory, to boost the free flow of goods and services.

“Countries are now in a more fragile environment. They’ve used a lot of their fiscal resources to deal with a pandemic…Then you have policy-driven forces, geoeconomic fragmentation, trade tensions, the decoupling between the West and China,” International Monetary Fund  (IMF) chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said in an interview on the sidelines of an annual Fed conference here.

“If we get to a point where part of the world is stuck without catching up and has large amounts of population, that creates tremendous demographic pressures and migration pressures.”

Mr. Gourinchas said it is possible that global growth settles into a trend of around 3% annually, a figure far below rates above 4% seen when rapid advances in China’s economy drove global output higher and which some economists consider borderline recessionary in a world where quick gains should still be achievable in large, less-developed countries.

But in the emerging pandemic economy, “the global growth environment has become very challenging,” said Maurice Obstfeld, a former IMF chief economist and now a fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.

China is now suffering what may be chronic economic problems along with a shrinking population. Emerging industrial policies in the US and elsewhere are reordering global production chains in ways that may be more durable or serve national security ends, but also be less efficient.

The symposium is among the first major attempts to take stock of longer-term economic developments after the pandemic and amid renewed geopolitical tensions after years in which officials were at first preoccupied with fighting COVID-19 itself, then had to focus on a global breakout of inflation.

Economists and policymakers here appeared in rough consensus that two trends from before the pandemic, both with global-growth implications, had been intensified by the health crisis and other recent events.

After rocketing higher during the Global Financial Crisis 15 years ago, the ratio of public debt to world economic output has grown to 60% from 40% thanks to pandemic spending and is likely now at a level where serious debt reduction is not politically feasible, Serkan Arslanalp, an economist at the International Monetary Fund, and Barry Eichengreen, an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley, wrote in a paper.

The implications of public debt that is “here to stay” varies by country, they said, with higher-debt but higher-income nations like the U.S. likely able to muddle through over time, while smaller nations perhaps face future debt crises or binding fiscal constraints.

Globally the fallout could be severe if public borrowing steers capital from countries that still have growing populations and less developed economies, said Cornell University economics professor Eswar Prasad.

“This puts us in a bleak setting, thinking about the parts of the world that are labor rich but capital poor,” he said. While the populations of major European nations, Japan, China and the US are all aging, some African nations like Nigeria continue to grow fast. 

‘A MORE NAIVE TIME’
The other pre-pandemic trend that has endured and intensified is a rising openness to policies that range from the outright protectionist tariffs imposed under former US President Donald Trump to Biden administration efforts to steer production of things like computer chips back to the US.

White House Council of Economic Advisers Chair Jared Bernstein said at the symposium Biden administration industrial policies weren’t necessarily tilted either for or against more international trade, since many of the intermediate goods needed to make silicon chips, for example, would be imported.

“In my view the strategies we are pursuing despite a lot of heated rhetoric implies neither more nor less trade,” Bernstein said during one discussion.

Others noted the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and the fast follow-on divorce of the European power grid from Russian energy, fractured one of the key precepts behind the spread of globalization: Trade would create durable partnerships, if not outright allies.

“I do remember a time, maybe a more naive time…when more trade would create friends,” said Ben Broadbent, deputy governor of the Bank of England.

But World Trade Organization Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said while the pandemic raised reasonable issues around global supply resilience, particularly for sensitive items like pharmaceuticals, the move to reorder global production patterns risked leaving growth opportunities on the table.

“From a political point of view you can understand how attractive it is to say we see the vulnerabilities so we are going to try to do business with those who have the same values as we do,” she said. But whatever the strategy — “nearshoring,” “friendshoring,” “reshoring” — she argued that “maybe you need to go a little bit further…If you are going to diversify anyway…spread it to those who have been at the margins of the global system.”

“Friends,” she noted, can change, a pointed statement at a time when Mr. Trump, who aimed tariffs at Europe, is running again and recently raised the idea of an across-the-board tax on imports.

If there was a potential bright spot, it was around the discussion of advances in artificial intelligence as a possible driver of higher productivity.

Yet even that was weighed against the possible damage the technologies may do, and against research findings showing innovation was getting exponentially harder.

Even beyond that, any benefits may be slow in coming.

“I think of ChatGPT like Peloton,” said Nela Richardson, chief economist for payroll processor ADP, comparing the AI innovator with the maker of upscale exercise bike systems. “You can put as many as you want in a home office. If doesn’t mean people are going to use it.” — Reuters

Toyota halts Japan assembly plants over glitch

Toyota Motor Corp’s logo is pictured on a car in Tokyo, Japan, Nov. 8, 2016. — REUTERS/KIM KYUNG-HOON/FILE PHOTO

TOKYO — Toyota Motor Corp. on Tuesday said it has suspended operations at all 14 of its assembly plants in Japan due to a production system malfunction, bringing domestic output to a standstill at the world’s biggest-selling automaker.

The glitch is preventing Toyota from ordering components and its cause is under investigation, though it is “likely not due to a cyberattack,” a spokesperson said.

Toyota suspended 12 plants in its home market from Tuesday morning and added the final two from the afternoon, the spokesperson said. It was unclear how much output would be lost.

The plants together account for about a third of the automaker’s global production, Reuters calculations showed.

Toyota’s domestic production had been on the rebound after a series of output cuts it blamed on semiconductor shortage. Output was up 29% in January-June, the first such increase in two years.

Its Japan output averaged about 13,500 vehicles daily in the first half of the year, Reuters calculations showed. That excludes vehicles from group automakers Daihatsu and Hino.

Operations were halted for a day last year when a supplier suffered a cyberattack, hampering Toyota’s ability to order parts. Toyota resumed operations using a back-up network.

Tuesday’s incident is having a knock-on effect. Group firm Toyota Industries  said it has partially suspended operations at two engine plants due to the automaker’s glitch.

Toyota is a pioneer of just-in-time inventory management, which keeps down costs but means supply chain snarls put production at risk.

While the cause of the latest malfunction was unclear, corporate Japan has been on alert in recent days as businesses and government offices reported harassing phone calls.

The government said the calls were likely from China and related to Japan’s release of treated radioactive water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant into the Pacific Ocean. — Reuters

‘Hundreds of thousands’ trafficked into SE Asia scam centers — UN

BI PHOTO

BANGKOK — Hundreds of thousands of people are being trafficked by criminal gangs and forced to work in scam centers and other illegal online operations that have sprung up across Southeast Asia in recent years, the United Nations said in a report on Tuesday.

The report cited “credible sources” estimating that at least 120,000 people across Myanmar and around 100,000 in Cambodia may be trapped in scam operations, with other criminal-owned enterprises in Laos, the Philippines and Thailand ranging from crypto-fraud to online gambling.

“People who are coerced into working in these scamming operations endure inhumane treatment while being forced to carry out crimes. They are victims. They are not criminals,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk.

Cambodian police spokesperson Chhay Kim Khoeun said he had not seen the UN report but queried the number.

“I don’t know how to respond, where did they get the (100,000) number from? Have they investigated? Where did they get the data? Foreigners are just saying things.”

The UN Human Rights Office report was one of the most detailed of the phenomenon that has emerged since the COVID pandemic, fueled by closure of casinos that prompted moves into less regulated areas in Southeast Asia.

The fast-growing scams centers are generating billions of US dollars in revenue each year, the report said.

“Faced with new operational realities, criminal actors increasingly targeted migrants in vulnerable situations … for recruitment into criminal operations, under the pretense of offering them real jobs,” the report said.

It said most of the trafficking victims were from other Southeast Asian countries as well as China, Taiwan and Hong Kong, but some were recruited from as far away as Africa and Latin America.

The UN rights office called on regional governments to strengthen rule of law and tackle corruption to “break the cycle of impunity” that allows criminal enterprises to thrive.

The governments of Myanmar and Cambodia did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the UN report. — Reuters

PHL ramps up efforts to curb rice inflation, ponders price controls 

PRESIDENT FERDINAND R. MARCOS, JR. — PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on Tuesday ordered authorities to double efforts to hunt down rice hoarders and take steps to curb soaring prices, while warning of a possibility that price control measures could be imposed. 

The Philippines is one of the world’s biggest importers of the grain and its retail rice prices climbed further this month, some varieties surging as much as 25% in some markets in and around the capital. 

Farmers groups blamed tight supply during the local lean harvest season and higher costs of imports, while the government said hoarding and crop losses from typhoons may also be reasons.

Mr. Marcos, who is also agriculture secretary, also sought support mechanisms for farmers and traders “should legal measures be invoked by the government in controlling the price of rice”, his office said in a statement.

The Philippines’ rice inflation hit 4.2% in July, the highest since 2019, putting pressure on authorities to boost stockpiles ahead of potential supply challenges from El Niсo dry weather in coming months.

Rice imports between January and July totaled 2.26 million metric tons, 16% lower compared with the year-ago volume, the customs bureau said. — Reuters

Jordan Clarkson ranks among leading World Cup gunners

THE GILAS PILIPINAS FIL-AM from the Utah Jazz, Mr. Clarkson (left) averaged 24.5 points in two outings to rank fifth in the gunners’ list filled up by fellow NBA stars. — PHILIPPINE STAR/JUN MENDOZA

CARRYING the offensive load for host Philippines, Jordan Clarkson has positioned himself among the premier scorers of the 2023 FIBA World Cup (WC) after the first four days of action.

The Gilas Pilipinas Fil-Am from the Utah Jazz averaged 24.5 points in two outings to rank fifth in the gunners’ list filled up by fellow NBA stars.

Slovenia and Dallas Mavericks megastar Luka Doncic showed the way with 35.5, highlighting his scoring rampage with a 37-point explosion in their 100-85 rout of Venezuela and a 34-piece in an 88-67 demolition of Georgia.

TNT import Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, suiting up as Jordan’s naturalized player, shot up to No. 2 spot with 31.5 after a tournament-high 39 markers in a Monday’s 87-95 overtime setback to New Zealand at the MOA Arena.

Two NBA talents strutting their stuff in the Philippine side of the WC — South Sudan’s Carlik Jones of the Chicago Bulls and Dominican Republic’s (DR) All-Star Karl-Anthony Towns of Minnesota — ran third and fourth, respectively.

Mr. Jones, who shot 35 in the Bright Stars’ 96-101 loss to Puerto Rico, averaged 28.0 while Mr. Towns, who banged in 26 in DR’s 87-81 win over Gilas in the record-breaking opener at the Philippine Arena, normed 25.

Messrs. Jones and Towns paced Mr. Clarkson, who fired 26 in the loss to the Dominican Republic and 21 in Gilas’ 70-80 defeat to Angola.

France’s Evan Fournier (New York) occupied sixth with 24.0 followed by Mr. Clarkson’s Jazz teammate and Finland top gun Lauri Markkanen and Australia’s Patty Mills (Atlanta) who averaged 23.0 each.

Germany’s Dennis Schroder, a Lakers mainstay, stood at ninth with 22.0 while Montenegro and Bulls big man Nikola Vucevic (21.5) rounded out the Top 10.

Mr. Clarkson also figured prominently in the assists leaderboard with his 7.0 good for a share of sixth.

Meanwhile, Japan’s naturalized player Joshua Hawkinson, who ranked 12th in scoring with 18.5 markers, emerged as the top rebounder with 14.5 caroms per outing ahead of Cape Verde’s Edy Tavares (13.0).

Gilas stalwart June Mar Fajardo ranked 18th in the battle of the boards with 7.0 while frontline partner AJ Edu tied for 37th with 5.5.

Puerto Rico’s Tremont Waters showed the way in assists with 10 per game followed by Mr. Jones (8.5). After Mr. Clarkson, Scottie Thompson and CJ Perez were the best assist-men for the Philippines with three per outing.

Brazil’s Raul Neto Togni led the steals department with 5.0 while Italy’s Nicolo Melli and Vucevic shared pole position in blocks with 2.5 per match each. — Olmin Leyba

Eala jumps to career-high No. 195 in WTA rankings

ALEX EALA — FACEBOOK/ALEX EALA

ALEX Eala’s rise in the women’s professional tennis circuit reached another height.

For the first time in her budding career, Ms. Eala barged inside the Top 200 of the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) rankings after a remarkable campaign in back-to-back tournaments in Great Britain.

Ms. Eala, only 18 years old, jumped 22 places from No. 217 to No. 195 for her new career-high ranking following a championship and a runner-up finish in two straight W25 tournaments.

Her previous career-best ranking was at No. 214 last year.

Ms. Eala reigned supreme in the W25 Roehampton in London earlier this month before falling just short with a runner-up finish in W25 Aldershot in Hampshire, England for a foiled back-to-back championship goal.

The lefty scholar from the Rafael Nadal Academy in Spain beat the No. 2 seed Arina Rodionova of Australia in the W25 Roehampton finals, 6-2, 6-3.

That’s the fourth title for Ms. Eala in a young international stint also highlighted by two juniors doubles grand slams and the historic singles grand slam title in the US Open last year.

Ms. Eala came on the verge of following it up right away but she fell to Destanee Aiava of Australia, 6-3, 4-6, 1-6, in the W25 Aldershot finals.

She also made it to the W25 Roehampton doubles quarterfinals with Aiava and semifinals of the W25 Aldershot with Polish partner Urszula Radwanska. — John Bryan Ulanday

Blu Girls rout Hong Kong, 7-0, in U18 Women Softball Asia Cup

BLU GIRLS — ASIA SOFTBALL

THE PHILIPPINES set in motion its bid to advance to the World Cup as it overpowered Hong Kong, 7-0, yesterday at the start of the Group A matches of the Under18 Women Softball Asia Cup in Fujian, China.

Represented by the young but battle-tested softbelles from Bacolod City High School, the Blu Girls didn’t leave anything to chance, unleashing a two-run lead in the first inning and a decisive five-run rampage in the fifth to seal the deal.

It was a victory that bolstered the chances of the Blu Girls, the national and Asia Pacific champions who finished fifth in the World Series for U14 and U16 in the United States early this month, to advance to the Under18 (U18) World Series next year.

“We’re happy to start the tournament with a win but we still have tough matches ahead of us,” said national team coach Sheirylou Valenzuela.

ASAPHIL President Jean Henri Lhuillier also lauded the team for its great start.

“This is the fruit of all the hard work and effort that the athletes and coaching staff have undergone over the last few months. I hope this will serve as the momentum we need to carry Team Philippines all the way to the finals and that we secure a ticket to the World Cup,” said Mr. Lhuillier.

The Blu Girls will battle the host Chinese today (Aug. 30) and the South Koreans tomorrow at the Pingtan Stadium.

Daniela Cabangon, Che-Restcel Dela Cruz, Jeryll Duller, Ciarina Daniela Eder, Shein Espinosa, Trisha Karyl Hicayen, Angelica Jean Latriz, Rhea Manalo, Magdalene Nangan, Eileen Polvorido and Laira Dianne Silverio comprise the team. — Joey Villar

Ruthless Novak Djokovic makes winning return to US Open

NOVAK DJOKOVIC — REUTERS

NEW YORK — Novak Djokovic made a winning return to the US Open by storming past Frenchman Alexandre Muller 6-0 6-2 6-3 on Monday to reclaim the world number one ranking and take the first step towards matching Margaret Court’s record haul of 24 Grand Slams.

Unable to play at last year’s event due to being unvaccinated against COVID-19, Mr. Djokovic had not been seen on the Flushing Meadows hard courts since his loss to Daniil Medvedev in the 2021 final.

And fans let the 36-year-old know they had missed him, showering the Serb with applause as he emerged from the tunnel onto Arthur Ashe Stadium court.

It was clear that the three-time champion had missed them as well as he embraced the cheers of a record crowd of over 30,000 that included former-US President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle.

“I was excited to go out on the court, it has been a couple of years so to come in front of you guys is always a pleasure,” Mr. Djokovic told the New York crowd. “Thanks for coming out and thanks to all the people who stayed to almost 1 a.m..

“Night sessions at Arthur Ashe are always something special.”

Arriving in New York on the back of an absorbing win over his young rival Carlos Alcaraz in the Cincinnati Open final, an in-form Mr. Djokovic showed the 84th ranked Mr. Muller no mercy in what was his US Open main draw debut.

Firing on all cylinders, Mr. Djokovic broke the overwhelmed Frenchman to open the match and never took his foot off the gas, closing out the first set in 23 minutes with a thundering ace.

Mr. Djokovic broke Mr. Muller for a fourth time to open the second set and went 2-0 up before his opponent held serve for the first time, raising both hands in triumph as the crowd roared.

But the cheers would be few and far between as Mr. Djokovic closed out the second with a wicked forehand.

Mr. Muller showed more ambition in the third, taking the set to 3-3 before Mr. Djokovic took control by breaking the Frenchman twice on the way to closing out the match.

“I couldn’t serve well in the second and third, I dropped the level of my serve and had to work for my points a bit more,” said Mr. Djokovic. “Nevertheless I think I played great from the beginning to the end.

“Some hiccups but I liked the level and hopefully I can maintain it in the next round as well.”

While the US Open has just got underway, Mr. Djokovic’s win guarantees he will nudge Mr. Alcaraz out of top spot when the world rankings are updated on Sept. 11.

Mr. Alcaraz, who beat Mr. Djokovic in an epic Wimbledon final in July, opens his account on Tuesday against Germany’s Dominik Koepfer.

The path to a 10th US Open final and a possible mouthwatering showdown with Mr. Alcaraz will get tougher but Mr. Djokovic had one obstacle removed from his side of the draw when Danish fourth seed Holger Rune was upset 6-3 4-6 6-3 6-2 by Spanish clay court specialist Roberto Carballes Baena.

Next up for number two seed Mr. Djokovic is Spain’s Bernabe Zapata Miralles, who was a straight sets winner over American Ethan Quinn. — Reuters

IESF World Esports Championship 2023 MLBB kicks off in Romania

SINGAPORE — The long awaited IESF World Esports Championship 2023 Mobile Legends: Bang Bang (MLBB) tournament finally kicks off. Catch 16 international teams vying for the lion’s share of the $100,000 prize pool, and the opportunity to bear the crown of the first-ever IESF MLBB championship!

Taking place in Iasi, Romania — the Group Stage features a single round robin format that will be held today till August 30. The participating teams will be split in groups of four, where they’ll have to battle it out in a best-of-three (BO3) series. The top two teams from each group will then proceed onto the Playoffs held from Aug. 31 to Sept. 3, in double elimination bracket. The final two teams will face off in a best-of-five series at Main Stage B.

“We’re proud to be part of the global esports family brought together by the IESF committee, and to celebrate competitive gaming,” stated Ray Ng, Head of Esports Ecosystem, MOONTON Games, “This event wouldn’t have been made possible without the tireless efforts of our partners and  athletes, and we look forward to the many surprises that the championship has in store.”

The participating countries for this year’s MLBB tournament are:

Romania, Indonesia, United States and Brazil. Colombia, Egypt, Senegal and Namibia.

Ukraine, Turkey, Georgia and the Philippines. Mongolia, UAE, Kazakhstan and Saudi Arabia.