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Swarm of Chinese militia ships seen off Sabina Shoal, says US think tank

AFP WESTERN COMMAND PHOTO

AS MANY as 14 Chinese militia ships entered Sabina Shoal at the weekend after months of waning presence, a US think tank said on Sunday, citing satellite images.

The ships were “working illegally” at the shoal, the Gordian Knot Center for National Security Innovation said on its website, based on sattelite images from Nov. 18.

“As recently as Nov. 12, there were only three ships visible there, but imagery from Planet Labs now clearly shows 12 ships, with suggestions that at least two more may be present but were partially covered by a cloud,” Gordon Knot said.

The Chinese Embassy in Manila did not immediately reply to a Viber message seeking comment.

The number of Chinese vessels at Sabina Shoal has increased but not at the level from early this year, when Philippine Coast Guard patrols saw as many as 26 ships there, it said.

The security think tank said the number of Chinese ships at Iroquois Reef had “dropped dramatically from Nov. 11 to 12, and “it isn’t clear whether any of the vessels now at Sabina were previously at Iroquois.”

The presence of Chinese vessels within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone in the South China Sea comes just days after Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. and Chinese President Xi Jinping sought ways to cool tensions in the South China Sea.

Mr. Marcos earlier told reporters they “tried to come up with a mechanism to lower tensions in the South China Sea” during a meeting on the sidelines of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit in San Francisco.

At their meeting, the Philippine leader also expressed concern over incidents between Chinese and Philippine vessels, including a recent collision.

He also raised the plight of Filipino fishermen, asking the Chinese leader to “go back to the situation where both Chinese and Filipino fishermen were fishing together in these waters.”

Gordon Knot said a segment of the People’s Armed Forces Maritime Militia called the Spratly Backbone Fishing Fleet is known to operate regularly at both Sabina Shoal and Iroquois Reef. 

The Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative said in a 2021 report these ships “are a subset of domestic fishing vessels that meet certain minimum requirements of length, tonnage and power that operate in the Spratly Islands to fulfill political goals on behalf of the Chinese government.”

It said each ship is required to operate in the contested areas for at least 280 days yearly to receive subsidies from the Chinese government worth $1 million yearly.

Tensions between the Philippines and China have worsened after the Chinese Coast Guard fired water cannons to block Manila’s attempt to deliver food and other supplies to a grounded ship at Second Thomas Shoal on Aug. 5.
The Philippines last month filed a diplomatic protest against China and summoned its envoy in Manila after Chinese ships collided with Philippine vessels on a resupply mission to Second Thomas Shoal, where it deliberately grounded a World War II-era ship in 1999 to assert its sovereignty.

China claims more than 80% of the South China Sea, which is believed to contain massive oil and gas deposits and through which billions of dollars in trade passes each year.

It has ignored the 2016 ruling by the United Nations-backed arbitration court that voided its claim based on a 1940s map.

The Philippines has been unable to enforce the ruling and has since filed hundreds of protests over what it calls encroachment and harassment by China’s coast guard and its vast fishing fleet. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Duterte told not to sow discord between House, AFP

RODRIGO DUTERTE — PRESIDENTIAL PHOTO/ ROBINSON NIÑAL

A CONGRESSMAN on Sunday urged ex-President Rodrigo R. Duterte to stop creating tension between the military and the House of Representatives.

“I respectfully appeal to former President Rodrigo Duterte to recognize the paramount importance of keeping our Armed Forces and national police free from partisan politics,” House Majority Leader and Zamboanga City Rep. Manuel Jose M. Dalipe said in a statement.

“These institutions serve as the bedrock of our nation’s security, and their effectiveness relies on unity and impartiality.”

The ex-President on Nov. 15 told SMNI channel TV in Filipino: “Watch the military as well as the police closely. You who are conniving in Congress, I am not scaring you, but watch the military and the police.”

“That’s why I’m not worried that they will prevail… because the military is there,” Mr. Duterte said.

Mr. Dalipe called Mr. Duterte’s remarks “baseless statements.”

“The Armed Forces of the Philippines and Philippine National Police have more important things to do than watch Congress, as claimed by the former President,” he added.

The congressman said the military and police must be insulated from partisan activities and should maintain the highest degree of professionalism.

The House on Nov. 6 passed a resolution upholding its “integrity and honor” after Mr. Duterte issued scathing remarks against the institution.

Mr. Duterte described the House as the country’s “most rotten institution” after congressmen on Oct. 10 stripped several agencies including the Office of the Vice President and the Education department of their confidential funds.

Lawmakers transferred P1.23 billion worth of these budgets to security agencies amid worsening tensions with China.

Mr. Duterte is the father of Vice-President Sara Duterte-Carpio, who is also Education secretary.

Ms. Duterte-Carpio in May resigned from Lakas-CMD after congressmen demoted her ally, former President and Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, from the senior deputy speaker post. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

Labor, youth groups back transport strike

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

By Ashley Erika O. Jose, Reporter and Jomel R. Paguian

THE LAND Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) said on Sunday it expects the three-day nationwide transport strike beginning Monday to have a minimal impact, even as the group spearheading it has gained support from labor and youth groups.

The Pinagkaisang Samahan ng mga Tsuper at Operators Nationwide (PISTON) is waging a three-day strike to call for the suspension of the government’s Public Utility Vehicle Modernization Program (PUVMP), which effectively phases out traditional jeepneys in favor of new generation transport vehicles by the end of the year.

But LTFRB Chairman Teofilo E. Guadiz III reiterated that several transport groups have committed to operate and ply their routes, while the LTFRB will deploy about 250 vehicles to convey any stranded passengers in Metro Manila.

“In the event of a transport strike, rest assured that we are fully prepared to offer free rides to the public,” Celine B. Pialago, LTFRB spokesperson, said in a Viber message on Sunday.

The LTFRB has already coordinated with local government units to preposition vehicles at strategic areas to offer free rides to passengers who may be affected by the transport strike.

Also, the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) announced on Sunday the suspension of the expanded number coding scheme covering private vehicles on Monday.

In a statement in Filipino, PISTON President Mody Floranda said: “It’s (PUVMP) really not about improving public transport but making it easy for big businesses and corporations to take over the routes and livelihoods of small operators.”

London-based International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) expressed support for PISTON’s cause.

“Public transport is a major national asset and must be run in the interests of workers and passengers,” Alana Dave, ITF director of urban transport, said in a statement.

“Any modernization and investment in public transport must contribute to overcoming existing inequalities and achieving economic and social justice for the working class,” she added.

Youth activists’ group, Anakbayan, said it also stands in solidarity with PISTON, bewailing how the government program would replace jeepneys with foreign-made modern PUVs that cost P2.5 million to 2.8 million per unit. “In turn, the higher price of the modern jeepney means higher passenger fares,” it said in a statement.

Meanwhile, labor group Federation of Free Workers (FFW) called for the immediate suspension and review of the current modernization initiatives.

“FFW urges the government to halt and re-evaluate its modernization programs, which have been without comprehensive consultation with all affected stakeholders,” said the federation president Jose “Sonny” G. Matula in a statement.

“Despite challenges, the LTFRB remains optimistic for a constructive dialogue with PISTON’s participation in the PUV Modernization Program, as 60% of the transport groups have expressed their support for this initiative,” said Ms. Pialago.

Fisheries report quake damage

PHILIPPINE STAR /EDD GUMBAN

A TOTAL of 54 fishing boats were damaged as a result of Friday’s 7.2-magnitude earthquake in General Santos City and Sarangani province, the Department of Agriculture (DA) said on Sunday.

So far, only the fisheries sector has reported damage as a result of the tremor, which included pavement cracks at fish landing sites in Malapatan, Sarangani.

In addition, a DA building at the Prime Regional Government Center in Koronadal City was also damaged.

Since Agriculture Secretary Francisco T. Laurel, Jr. directed agencies of the department in Mindanao to assess the earthquake’s damage to farm infrastructure last Saturday, the DA has not yet received such reports that could hinder the food supply system.

The DA said it was still in the process of assessing, evaluating, and coordinating with various agencies for a complete its impact assessment and determine what assistance farmers and fishermen adversely affected by the quake would need.

“We are ready to extend assistance so that our stakeholders could quickly recover from this disaster,” Mr. Laurel said last Saturday. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

GSIS pensioners to get cash gift

GSIS FACEBOOK PAGE

THE GOVERNMENT Service Insurance System (GSIS) will be releasing P3.47 billion in Christmas cash gifts to its more than 300,000 elderly and disability pensioners starting Dec. 6.

The GSIS said the cash gift, which will be credited to pensioners’ GSIS e-card, is equivalent to their one-month pension up to a maximum of P10,000.

“We are announcing this news early because we know that our pensioners are eagerly awaiting it, so they can plan when to withdraw and decide what to purchase with their benefits,” GSIS President and General Manager Jose Arnulfo “Wick” Veloso said in a statement in Filipino.

Mr. Veloso said that GSIS old-age and disability pensioners who are receiving their regular monthly pensions and are living as of Nov. 30 are qualified for the holiday gift.

He added that those who have their pensions suspended as of Dec. 31 because of failure to comply with Annual Pensioners Information Revalidation (APIR) will receive their cash gift after they finish the revalidation process. — Jomel R. Paguian

Phasing out plastics requires change in behavior — analyst

PHASING OUT certain plastics, as a bill in Congress proposes, must take consumer behavior into account and more time than just four years to be fully implemented, an analyst said.

“If phasing out is really the track, it can be managed by a staggered implementation as plastic use is behavioral. You cannot just abruptly remove plastic until the population is able to adjust,” John Paolo R. Rivera, president and chief economist at Oikonomia Advisory & Research, Inc., said in a Viber message on Sunday.

Last Nov. 13, the House Committee on Ecology approved the proposed Single-Use Plastic Packaging Regulation Act, which seeks to phase out in four years plastic plates and saucers, oxo-degradable plastics and film wraps less than 50 microns thick.

The bill also seeks to discontinue in one year the use of flexible drinking straws, stirrers, sticks for candy, balloons or cotton buds, buntings, confetti, and packaging less than 10 microns thick.

“It can be done but four years may be too short to change behavior unless stringent laws will be applied,” said Mr. Rivera.

Mr. Rivera said that the government should also focus on minimizing the use of plastics. “Plastics should be used when appropriate and plastic substitutes [should] be used…in products like [that use] dry goods packaging.”

He added that recycling, upscaling and a proper system on plastic disposal should be implemented.

Riedo A. Panaligan, project coordinator of Plastic Free Pilipinas, said the measure could be implemented as the single-use plastics targeted for phase out “have clear alternatives already available in the market such as plastic straw with metal straws, plastic bags with ecobags, etcetera.”

“The world is now facing a plastic crisis, it is about time to eliminate problematic single-use plastics and plastic with known hazardous chemicals,” Mr. Panaligan said in an e-mail.

He added that the measure should include incentives that could help lessen the demand for plastics such as the establishments of alternative delivery systems and refills.

Congressmen last year approved a separate measure that seeks to impose an excise tax of P100 per kilo on single-use plastic bags. The bill is still pending before the Senate Ways and Means Committee.

Mr. Panaligan also said that Ecological Solid Waste Management Act, which lists non-environmentally acceptable packaging and products has yet to be implemented.

The Philippines is projected to generate 92 million tons of waste from 2022 to 2025, data from the Environmental Management Bureau said. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz 

Budget for literacy poll tripled

THE SENATE Finance Committee has more than tripled the budget to conduct a survey aimed at gathering information on the literacy and educational skills of Filipinos. Under the proposed budget for next year, P208.97 million has been earmarked for the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) to implement the Functional Literacy, Education, and Mass Media Survey (FLEMMS). The amount is 254% bigger than the P58.9 million allocated for the purpose by the House of Representatives.

“This will help the Second Congressional Commission on Education (EDCOM II) to identify areas where we have high illiteracy rates, so we can launch programs that will improve education outcomes in those places,” Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian said in a statement.

The EDCOM II, which is composed of members from the House and Senate, is tasked to assess and set targets to improve the country’s education sector.

Mr. Gatchalian also proposed to conduct the survey more regularly, which was last done in 2019.

The World Literacy Foundation reported that illiteracy costs a country’s economy P258 billion every year.

At least nine of out 10 Filipino children aged 10 struggle with reading and writing simple text, according to 2021 data from the World Bank.

The Education department has a proposed P718.08-billion budget under the Senate’s version of the 2024 General Appropriations bill.

The Senate is expected to approve its version of the budget this week. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

North Luzon tourism events kick off

BAGUIO CITY — The Department of Tourism (DoT) launched the 2nd North Luzon Travel Expo (NLTE) here over the weekend in a bid to ensure the further recovery of the tourism industry in Regions 1, 2, 3 and the Cordilleras.

The NLTE’s kick-off event was held last Saturday at the Grand Sierra Pines Hotel, North Outlook Drive, here, as the DoT-Cordillera is hosting this year’s event with main feature activities lined up for November 25-27 Tourism and Travel Fair at the CAP Convention Center of Camp John Hay.

There will be a musical show featuring local artists of the four regions; an Art in the Park event at Reflection Pool of Wright Park, Baguio City; and a Business to Business Networking activity at La Fayette Hotel, Baguio City.

There will also be product presentations at the CAP Convention Center; a Familiarization Tour (North Luzon Interregional Circuit) that will be a post tour of key destinations in Baguio City and Benguet in the Cordillera; and Naguillan, San Fernando City, Bauang, San Juan and Luna in La Union in Region 1.

On Nov. 26, the “Hibla ng Lahing Pilipino Fashion Parade” will be staged at the Manor Garden, Camp John Hay featuring regal fabrics from North Luzon. This is in recognition of the weavers of indigenous Filipino textiles.

DoT-Cordillera Regional Director Jovita A. Ganongan said the intention of the NLTE “is to create a synergy to develop a robust tourism value chain by converging existing and new domestic tourism products, destinations, and services of the North Luzon regions to the local and international markets. She also said this is also to further strengthen the relationship of the North Luzon regions with their tourism stakeholders.”

Enrique Esguerra of the Alliance of Travel and Tours Management in the Cordilleras (ATTIC) stressed that the activity especially the showcasing of attractions of each regions is never a competition but more of a collaborative effort to promote tourism. — Artemio A. Dumlao

Tentative Gaza deal reached to  pause fighting, free hostages

Children’s mock bodybags are pictured during a candlelight vigil in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, outside the G.P.O., in Dublin, Ireland, Nov. 3, 2023. — REUTERS

KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza/JERUSALEM -— Israel, the United States and Hamas have reached a tentative agreement to free dozens of women and children held hostage in Gaza in exchange for a five-day pause in fighting, the Washington Post reported, citing people familiar with the deal.

However, both Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US officials said no deal had been reached yet.

The hostage release could begin within the next several days, barring last-minute hitches, according to people familiar with the detailed, six-page agreement, the paper said on Saturday.

The report comes as Israel appears to be preparing to expand its offensive against Hamas militants to southern Gaza after air strikes killed dozens of Palestinians, including civilians reported to be sheltering at two schools.

Under the agreement, all parties would freeze combat operations for at least five days while 50 or more hostages are released in groups every 24 hours, the Post reported. Hamas took about 240 hostages during its Oct. 7 rampage inside Israel that killed 1,200 people.

The pause also is intended to allow a significant amount of humanitarian aid in, the newspaper said, adding the outline for the deal was put together during weeks of talks in Qatar.

But Mr. Netanyahu told a press conference on Saturday evening: “Concerning the hostages, there are many unsubstantiated rumors, many incorrect reports. I would like to make it clear: As of now, there has been no deal. But I want to promise: When there is something to say – we will report to you about it.”

A White House spokesperson also said Israel and Hamas have not yet reached a deal on a temporary ceasefire, adding the US is continuing to work to get a deal. A second US official also said no deal had been reached.

HOSPITAL ‘A DEATH ZONE’
Israel vowed to destroy Hamas after the Oct. 7 attack. As the conflict entered its seventh week, authorities in Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip raised their death toll to 12,300, including 5,000 children.

After dropping leaflets earlier in the week, Israel on Saturday again warned civilians in parts of southern Gaza to relocate as it girds for an onslaught after subduing the north.

Raising international alarm, Israel made Al Shifa Hospital in Gaza City a primary focus of its ground advance in northern Gaza.

A team led by the World Health Organization (WHO) which visited Al Shifa on Saturday described it as a “death zone” with signs of gunfire and shelling. WHO said it was developing plans for immediate evacuation of the remaining patients and staff.

Elsewhere in the north, Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini of UNRWA, the U.N. aid organization for Palestinian refugees, said on social media platform X that Israel bombarded two agency schools. More than 4,000 civilians were sheltered at one of them, he said.

“Dozens reported killed including children,” he said. “Second time in less than 24 hours schools are not spared. ENOUGH, these horrors must stop.”

A spokesperson for Gaza’s Hamas authorities said 200 people had been killed or injured at the school. Israel’s military did not comment.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, whose government controls parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, on Saturday said “hundreds of forcibly displaced people were killed” at the two schools in Gaza.

Abbas on Saturday appealed to US President Joseph R. Biden to intervene to stop the Israeli operation in Gaza.

The Israeli army killed two Palestinians in incursions in the West Bank early on Sunday, the Palestinian news agency WAFA said.

Israeli forces shot dead Issam Al-Fayed, a disabled 46-year-old, at the entrance of the Jenin refugee camp, the agency said. Another man, Omar Laham, 20, was killed by a gunshot to the head in clashes with soldiers in the Dheisheh refugee camp south of Bethlehem, it said.

The agency said 15 Palestinians were killed early on Sunday in Israeli air bombardments of the central and southern Gaza strip.

Thirteen people were killed in an attack on a home in Nuseirat camp in central Gaza while a woman and her child were killed in the southern city of Khan Younis, WAFA said.

Reuters could not independently verify the reports. 

AIR STRIKES
Mr. Biden, who opposes a ceasefire, was looking to the end of the conflict, saying in a Washington Post opinion article that the Palestinian Authority should ultimately govern both Gaza and the West Bank.

Asked about Biden’s proposal, Mr. Netanyahu told reporters in Tel Aviv the Palestinian Authority in its current form was not capable of being responsible for Gaza. Israel has not disclosed a strategy for Gaza after the war.

An Israeli offensive in the south could compel hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who fled Gaza City in the north to uproot again, along with residents of Khan Younis, a city of more than 400,000, compounding a dire humanitarian crisis.

The conflict has already displaced around two-thirds of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million.

An advance into southern Gaza may prove more complicated and deadlier than in the north, however, with Hamas militants dug into the Khan Younis region, a senior Israeli source and two top ex-officials said.

Early Saturday, an air strike in a busy residential district of Khan Younis killed 26 Palestinians and wounded 23, health officials said.

Eyad Al-Zaeem told Reuters he lost his aunt, her children and her grandchildren in the attack. They all had evacuated from northern Gaza on Israeli army orders only to die where the army told them they could be safe, he said.

“All of them were martyred. They had nothing to do with the (Hamas) resistance,” said Zaeem, standing outside the morgue at Nasser Hospital, where the 26 bodies were laid out before they were to be carried by loved ones to burials. — Reuters

Ukraine’s Zelensky slaps sanctions on 108 people and 37 Russian groups

UKRAINE’s President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks during a joint news conference with US President Joseph R. Biden (not pictured) in the East Room of the White House in Washington D.C., Dec. 21, 2022. — REUTERS

LVIV, Ukraine — President Volodymyr Zelensky has sanctioned 37 Russian groups and 108 people including a former prime minister and a former education minister and said he aimed to fight wartime abductions of children from Ukraine and other “Russian terror.”

“We are increasing the pressure of our state onto them and each of them must be held responsible for what they have done,” he said in his nightly video address on Saturday, after his office issued corresponding decrees with his signature.

Mr. Zelensky did not associate specific individuals or groups with particular wrongdoings. The decrees showed a range of 10-year penalties against individuals and five-year penalties against non-profit groups including one named in English as the “Russian Children’s Foundation.”

Mr. Zelensky said in his address that the list included “those involved in the abduction and deportation of Ukrainian children from the occupied territory” and individuals who “in various ways help Russian terror against Ukraine.”

Some of the newly-sanctioned people, which included many with Russian citizenship, had previously been punished with separate or similar penalties.

Those included Dmytro Tabachnyk, a former minister of education and science who had his Ukrainian citizenship stripped from him in February, and ex-Prime Minister Mykola Azarov.

With former President Viktor Yanukovich, Mr. Azarov previously had assets and property frozen among other penalties. The two men fled Ukraine for Russia in 2014 after a crackdown on street protests that killed more than 100 demonstrators in Kyiv.

Other individuals penalized on Saturday included Sergei Aksyonov, the Russian-installed head of Crimea, and Leonid Pasechnik, whom Vladimir Putin appointed head of Luhansk, the eastern Ukrainian region Russia annexed in 2022.

The sanctioned Russian groups included several whose names or websites indicate they work with children.

One sanctioned group was named Kvartal Lui, which matches an organization with a website which says its founder is Children’s Rights Commissioner Maria Lvova-Belova, herself sanctioned by Kyiv in October 2022.

The International Criminal Court in The Hague this month issued an arrest warrant against Lvova-Belova, along with President Vladimir Putin, accusing them of the war crime of deporting children from Ukraine.

Mr. Zelensky’s new list also sanctioned the executive director of Kvartal Lui, Sofia Lvova-Belova. Her older sister, Maria Lvova-Belova, has said children were taken to shelter them from violence and denied committing any war crime.

Kyiv says about 20,000 children have been removed to Russia or Russian-held territory without the consent of family or guardians, which it says amounts to a war crime that meets the UN treaty definition of genocide.

Yale University published research on Thursday saying more than 2,400 children aged between six and 17 had also been taken to 13 facilities across Russian-allied Belarus.

The report, from a group that receives US State Department funding, said that the transports across Russian territory to its western neighbor were “ultimately coordinated” between Putin and Belarus leader Alexander Lukashenko.

Mr. Zelensky’s decrees upheld a decision by the National Security and Defense Council to issue sanctions with an array of penalties including blocking assets, trade, transit, leasing, removal of capital, land purchases and other financial and economic activities. — Reuters

Japanese troops drill on island seen as vulnerable to China

CHRIS BARBALIS-UNSPLASH

TOKUNOSHIMA, Japan — Japanese marines in amphibious assault vehicles stormed an island beach at the edge of the East China Sea on Sunday in a simulated attack to dislodge invaders from territory that Tokyo worries is vulnerable to attack from China.

As tensions run high with neighbors China, Russia and North Korea, the drill on the southwest island of Tokunoshima capped an 11-day series of exercises nationwide dubbed 05JX, meant to show the readiness of ground, sea and air forces to defend Japan’s territory and infrastructure, including nuclear power plants.

“The goal of JX is to show that if there is an emergency situation resulting from an attack, that we are able respond in a joint way,” General Yoshihide Yoshida, chief of staff of the Self-Defence Forces’ Joint Staff, said after observing the drill on Tokunoshima.

Ground Self-Defense Force amphibious assault vehicles launched from two Maritime Self-Defense Force landing ships anchored offshore. Other troops arrived in semi-inflatable rubber boats, with heavy equipment carried to shore on military hovercraft.

Unlike many of the beaches along Japan’s southwest island chain stretching toward Taiwan, the one on Tokunoshima does not have a coral reef that would make military operations more difficult.

The scope and pace of military exercises in Japan are likely to increase over the next few years, including with US forces, after Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in December unveiled the country’s biggest military buildup since World War II, with a pledge to double defense spending over five years.

Mr. Kishida has warned that East Asia could be the next Ukraine, if China, emboldened by Russia’s assault on its neighbor, attacks Taiwan.

The 43.5 trillion yen ($290 billion) in planned spending will go to new weapons such as longer-range missiles as well as to increase stocks of spare parts and munitions to fight a sustained conflict.

But the yen’s sharp decline this year has forced Japan to cut back on some planned purchases, including new models of the U.S.-made Chinook helicopters that Japan’s military used in the Tokunoshima drill. — Reuters

Elon Musk, under fire, threatens to file lawsuit against media watchdog

ELON MUSK — REUTERS

ELON MUSK threatened on Saturday to sue media watchdog Media Matters and those who attacked his social media platform X, following moves by several large US companies to halt advertising on the site after being promoted alongside antisemitic content.

Mr. Musk and X have been under a microscope all week for antisemitic and racist content that has proliferated on the site since he purchased it in 2022.

Liberal watchdog group Media Matters for America said earlier this week that it found ads from IBM, Apple and others were placed alongside content promoting Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party.

Mr. Musk on Wednesday endorsed an antisemitic post on X that falsely claimed members of the Jewish community were stoking hatred against white people, drawing sharp condemnation, including from the White House.

“The split second court opens on Monday, X Corp will be filing a thermonuclear lawsuit against Media Matters and all those who colluded in this fraudulent attack on our company,” Mr. Musk wrote in a post on X, without naming any other parties.

Numerous companies suspended ads in the last two days, including IBM, Disney, Warner Bros Discovery and Comcast, Lions Gate Entertainment and Paramount Global. Axios reported that Apple, the world’s largest company by market value, would do the same.

“This week Media Matters for America posted a story that completely misrepresented the real experience on X, in another attempt to undermine freedom of speech and mislead advertisers,” a statement posted by Mr. Musk said. He accused Media Matters of creating an alternative account designed to “misinform advertisers” about their posts.

Media Matters on Saturday said Mr. Musk was a “bully” who threatens “meritless lawsuits.”

“Musk admitted the ads at issue ran alongside the pro-Nazi content we identified,” Media Matters President Angelo Carusone said in a statement.

“If he does sue us, we will win.”

Mr. Musk has threatened legal action against other parties in the past, most specifically the Anti-Defamation League, a nonprofit organization that fights antisemitism, blaming it for X’s loss of ad revenue. He has not yet sued the ADL, however.

Advertisers have fled the site since Mr. Musk bought it in October 2022 and reduced content moderation, resulting in a sharp rise in hate speech, according to civil rights groups.

The White House on Friday condemned Mr. Musk’s endorsement of what it called a “hideous” antisemitic conspiracy theory, and accused Mr. Musk of an “abhorrent promotion of antisemitic and racist hate” that “runs against our core values as Americans.”

Mr. Musk is also CEO of electric carmaker Tesla, which has been hit by several lawsuits that allege rampant racial or sexual harassment of workers.

Antisemitism has been on the rise in recent years in the United States and worldwide. Following the outbreak of war between Israel and Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, which attacked Israel on Oct. 7, antisemitic incidents in the United States rose by nearly 400% from the year-earlier period, the ADL said. — Reuters