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Soldier killed in Basilan clash 

COTABATO CITY — A soldier was killed while eight others, among them a policeman, were wounded in an ambush by unidentified gunmen in Ungkaya Pukan town in Basilan province in southern Philippines on Saturday. 

The victims were on their way to a secluded area in the village of Ulitan to inform community leaders about their civil-military project in the area, when gunmen opened fire, sparking a gunfight. 

Brigadier General Allan C. Nobleza, director of the Police Regional Office-Bangsamoro Autonomous Region here said a member of the 64thInfantry Battalion under the Army’s 101stInfantry Brigade died. 

Seven other members of the battalion were hurt in the gunfight. 

In a report, Captain Jakaria J. Muin, Ungkaya Pukan police chief, said officials of the 64thInfantry Battalion coordinated with the senior commander of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front in the municipality, Huram D. Malangka, about Saturday’s event with village leaders. 

Investigators had yet to identify the gunmen.John Felix M. Unson

Grenade explodes in Cotabato 

COTABATO CITY — A grenade explosion ripped through a house in Kabacan town in Cotabato at past1:00 a.m. on Sunday, hurting a couple and their six-year-old child. 

Colonel Harold S. Ramos, Cotabato provincial police director, said the family members sustained shrapnel wounds in different parts of their bodies. 

Personnel of the Kabacan Municipal Police Station were still validating reports by neighbors that a man had hurled a grenade inside the victims’ house in the village of Kayaga through an open window and ran away. 

Lt. Col. Maxim S. Peralta, Kabacan police chief, said village officials were helping police investigate the grenade attack that also caused panic among villagers. — John Felix M. Unson

House to help water agency 

PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

THE HOUSE of Representatives has committed to help the Local Water Utilities Administration (LWUA) reduce its water system loss, Speaker Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez said in a statement on Sunday. 

“The ongoing deliberations of the House committee on appropriations on the proposed P5.768-trillion budget for 2024 is the perfect opportunity to explore solutions, including the rehabilitation of water supply systems and modernization of the LWUA,” he said. 

LWUA Chairman Ronnie L. Ong last week sought the House’s help in cutting the almost 30% annual water system loss of water districts under its jurisdiction. 

The water districts yielded an average nonrevenue water rate of 29.34%, he said, which results in a 488-million cubic meter water loss annually or more than half the 850-million cubic meter capacity of Angat Dam, Mr. Ong said. 

A reduced nonrevenue water supply will actually mean more affordable water because it would lower production costs and water supply interruptions, Mr. Ong told Mr. Romualdez in a meeting last week. 

“Patching up water system losses means more water for all at a time when El Niño remains a very serious threat to our daily convenience and food production,” the Speaker said in the statement. 

The LWUA is a specialized lending institution that promotes, finances and oversees the development of water supply systems in cities and municipalities outside Metro Manila. It has 532 water districts nationwide.Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

8 hurt in Kidapawan mall accident 

COTABATO CITY — Eight people, among them children, were hurt when fragments of glass hit them after a protective siding of an escalator in a mall in Kidapawan City shattered in a peculiar incident on Friday. 

Three of the eight victims were badly injured, according to the Catholic Notre Dame Broadcasting Corp., citing reports. 

Local officials and the management of the Kidapawan Gaisano Mall, located along a stretch of a highway straddling through the center of the city, were investigating the incident. 

A one-year-old baby who sustained cuts in the head and upper torso after being hit by shards of broken glass was confined in a hospital.John Felix M. Unson

Maui wildfires deadliest in a century after death toll hits 89

THE SHELLS of burned houses and buildings are left after wildfires driven by high winds burned across most of the town in Lahaina, Maui, Hawaii, US Aug. 11. — HAWAI’I DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

KAHULUI, Hawaii — The death toll from the Maui wildfires is now at 89, officials said on Saturday, making it the deadliest US wildfire in more than a century.

The scale of the damage came into sharper focus on Saturday, as search teams with cadaver dogs sifted through the ruins of Lahaina, four days after a fast-moving blaze leveled the historic resort town, obliterating buildings and melting cars.

The cost to rebuild Lahaina was estimated at $5.5 billion, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), with more than 2,200 structures damaged or destroyed and more than 2,100 acres (850 hectares) burned.

Governor Josh Green warned at a news conference on Saturday afternoon that the death toll would continue to rise as more bodies were discovered.

Officials vowed to examine the state’s emergency notification systems after some residents questioned whether more could have been done to warn people before the fire overtook their homes. Some were forced to wade into the Pacific Ocean to escape.

Sirens stationed around the island — intended to warn of impending natural disasters — never sounded, and widespread power and cellular outages hampered other forms of alerts.

The state’s attorney general, Anne Lopez, said she was launching a review of the decision-making both before and during the fire, while Mr. Green told CNN he had authorized a review of the emergency response.

Local officials have described a nightmarish confluence of factors, including communications network failures, powerful wind gusts from an offshore hurricane and a separate wildfire dozens of miles away, that made it nearly impossible to coordinate in real time with the emergency management agencies that would typically issue warnings and evacuation orders.

The death toll made the inferno, which erupted on Tuesday, Hawaii’s worst natural disaster in history, surpassing a tsunami that killed 61 people in 1960, a year after Hawaii became a US state.

The latest death toll exceeded the 85 people who perished in a 2018 fire in the town of Paradise, California, and was the highest toll from a wildfire since 1918, when the Cloquet fire in Minnesota and Wisconsin claimed 453 lives.

Touring Lahaina earlier on Saturday, Mr. Green said state and federal agencies were working to aid those who had survived.

“Our focus now is to reunite people where we can, and to get them housing and get them health care, and then turn to rebuilding,” he said.

RAPID ADVANCE
Authorities began allowing residents back into west Maui on Friday, although the fire zone in Lahaina remained barricaded. Officials warned there could be toxic fumes from smoldering areas and said search operations were continuing.

“It’s going to be sad to get down there,” said Za Dacruz, 33, as he waited on Friday in a traffic jam to try to return to Lahaina. “We’re just looking for everyone to be alive, to be safe – that’s all we’re trying to do. And the rest? We’ll go from there.”

Hundreds of people were still missing, though a precise count was not clear.

At a family assistance center in Kahului, June Lacuesta said he was trying to locate nine relatives who had not been heard from since Tuesday.

“When I see Lahaina town itself, I cannot describe the feelings I get,” said Mr. Lacuesta, who was headed to a church shelter next to continue his search.

The disaster began just after midnight on Tuesday when a brush fire was reported in the town of Kula, roughly 35 miles (56 km) from Lahaina.

About five hours later, power was knocked out in Lahaina. In updates posted on Facebook that morning, Maui County said a three-acre (1.2-hectare) brush fire cropped up in Lahaina around 6:30 a.m. but had been contained by 10 a.m.

Subsequent updates were focused on the Kula fire, which had burned hundreds of acres and forced some local evacuations. But at around 3:30 p.m., according to the county’s updates, the Lahaina fire flared up.

Some residents began evacuating while people, including hotel guests, on the town’s west side were instructed to shelter in place. In the ensuing hours, the county posted a series of evacuation orders on Facebook, though it was not clear whether residents were receiving them as people frantically fled the fast-advancing flames.

Some witnesses said they had little warning, describing their terror as the blaze destroyed the town around them in what seemed to be a matter of minutes. — Reuters

US, Japan to develop hypersonic missile interceptor — Yomiuri

COMMONS.WIKIMEDIA.ORG

TOKYO — Japan and the US will agree this week to jointly develop an interceptor missile to counter hypersonic warheads being developed by China, Russia and North Korea, Japan’s Yomiuri newspaper said on Sunday.

The agreement on interceptors to target weapons designed to evade existing ballistic missile defenses is expected when President Joseph R. Biden meets Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in the US on Friday, the report said, without giving any source for the information.

Officials at Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs could not be reached for comment outside business hours.

Unlike typical ballistic warheads, which fly on predictable trajectories as they fall from space to their targets, hypersonic projectiles can change course, making them more difficult to target.

Mr. Biden and Mr. Kishida are to meet the sidelines of a trilateral summit with South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeol at the presidential retreat at Camp David, Maryland, the Yomiuri said.

The US and Japan agreed in January to consider developing the interceptor at a meeting of Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin with their Japanese counterparts, Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi and Defense Minister Yasukazu Hamada.

An agreement would be the second such collaboration in missile defense technology.

Washington and Tokyo developed a longer-range missile designed to hit warheads in space, which Japan is deploying on warships in the sea between Japan and the Korean peninsula to guard against North Korean missiles strikes. — Reuters

Inner Mongolia reports 2 cases of bubonic plague

CARLOS DE SOUZA-UNSPLASH

BEIJING — China’s northern region of Inner Mongolia reported two cases of bubonic plague on Saturday, following a previous infection that was detected on Aug. 7, the local government said.

The two people infected are the husband and daughter of the previous case, the government said in a statement on its website.

All close contacts have been quarantined and have shown no abnormal symptoms, according to the statement.

Cases of bubonic plague infection, a highly infectious disease that is spread mostly by rodents, are low in China, with most found in Inner Mongolia and northwestern Ningxia region in recent years.

Bubonic plague is the most common form of plague, which can be fatal if not treated in time, according to the World Health Organization. — Reuters

Iran official says unblocked S.Korea funds to be used for ‘non-sanctioned goods’

STOCK PHOTO - Pixabay.com

IRAN’s central bank chief said on Saturday that all of Iran’s frozen funds in South Korea had been unblocked and would be used for “non-sanctioned goods.”

Mohammad Reza Farzin’s post on social media appeared to confirm comments a day earlier by Washington, which said there would be restrictions on what Iran could do with any funds unfrozen under an emerging deal that has led to the release of five Americans from prison to house arrest in Tehran.

White House spokesperson John Kirby said Iran could only access the funds “to buy food, medicine, medical equipment that would not have a dual military use.” An estimated $6 billion in Iranian assets have been held in South Korea.

The five Americans will be allowed to leave Iran once the funds are unfrozen, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Mr. Reza Farzin wrote in a post on messaging platform X, formerly known as Twitter, that the funds would be transferred to six Iranian banks in Qatar.

“Congratulations to the foreign exchange diplomacy team for successfully releasing seized foreign currency resources,” he said in the post.

He added that the costs of converting the funds from South Korea’s won currency to euros would be accepted by the “third country” where the money would be deposited to buy “non-sanctioned goods.” — Reuters

Miss Universe cuts ties with Indonesia organizer who is accused of sexual harassment

JAKARTA — The Miss Universe Organization said it was cutting ties with its Indonesian franchisee and cancelling this year’s Malaysia pageant after contestants accused local organizers of sexual harassment.

The US-based organization said in an emailed statement late on Saturday it had decided to sever its contract with PT Capella Swastika Karya and its national director Poppy Capella, who also holds the license for Miss Universe Malaysia.

Six Miss Universe Indonesia contestants filed complaints with police accusing organizers of sexual harassment, saying they were subjected to topless “body checks,” their lawyer said on Tuesday.

“It has become clear that this franchise has not lived up to our brand standards, ethics, or expectations as outlined in our franchise handbook and code of conduct,” the Miss Universe Organization said, adding that providing a safe place for women was its utmost priority.

Jakarta police did not respond to a request for comment on Sunday. Spokesperson Trunoyudo Wisnu Andiko said on Tuesday the report would be investigated.

Ms. Capella said in a statement on Instagram she does not condone any form of sexual harassment.

“I emphasize that I, as the national director and license owner for Miss Universe Indonesia, was not involved at all and have never known, ordered, requested or allowed anyone who plays a role and participated in the process of organizing Miss Universe Indonesia 2023 to commit sexual harassment through body checking as reported,” she said.

The Jakarta contest was held to select Indonesia’s entry for the annual Miss Universe competition, to be held in El Salvador late this year.

The Miss Universe Organization said it was evaluating its policies and procedures to avoid similar occurrence in the future, adding that there are no measurements or body dimensions requirement to join their pageant worldwide. — Reuters

China condemns brief US visit of Taiwan VP

BEIJING — China’s foreign ministry on Sunday condemned a brief US visit by Taiwan Vice President William Lai, saying he was a separatist and “troublemaker through and through” and Beijing would take strong steps to protect its sovereignty.

Mr. Lai, front-runner to be Taiwan’s next president at elections in January, arrived in New York late on Saturday for what is officially a transit on his way to Paraguay for the inauguration of its president.

China, which claims democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, has repeatedly denounced Mr. Lai’s trip, which includes another stopover in San Francisco on Wednesday on his way back to Taipei.

In a statement issued shortly after Mr. Lai landed in New York on a scheduled flight from Taipei, China’s foreign ministry said it opposed any form of visit by “Taiwan independence separatists” to the United States.

“Lai stubbornly adheres to the separatist position of Taiwan independence and is a troublemaker through and through,” the ministry said.

Taiwan is the “core of China’s core interests” and facts have shown again and again that the reason for the rise in tensions in the Taiwan Strait is Taiwan trying to “rely on the United States to seek independence,” it said.

“China is closely following developments and will take resolute and vigorous measures to defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

China has an especial dislike of Mr. Lai, who has previously described himself as a “practical worker for Taiwan independence,” though he has repeatedly said on the campaign trail he is not seeking to change the status quo, but that only Taiwan’s people can decide their future.

‘LOW KEY’ VISIT
A person familiar with the trip’s planning said Mr. Lai will join receptions with overseas Taiwanese during the stopover in New York, during which he will make a speech.

He will not meet US lawmakers, the person said, adding Mr. Lai will keep the visit “low key,” in line with Taipei and Washington’s shared position to “jointly manage risks when facing an authoritarian region at this sensitive time.”

Mr. Lai, greeted by supporters waving flags as he arrived at his New York hotel, wrote on social media platform X he was “looking forward to seeing friends and attending transit programs in New York.”

Laura Rosenberger, chair of the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT), a US government-run non-profit that carries out unofficial relations with Taiwan, said on X that she would meet Mr. Lai in San Francisco, where he is due on Wednesday on his way home.

China is likely to launch military drills this week near Taiwan, using Mr. Lai’s US stopovers as a pretext to intimidate voters ahead of a next year’s election and make them “fear war,” Taiwanese officials say.

On Sunday, the Eastern Theatre Command of China’s People’s Liberation Army, which is responsible for the area around Taiwan, posted on its WeChat account a short video of fighter jets practicing dog fights at an undisclosed location, saying its forces had recently been engaged in “high-intensity flight training.”

“We pay attention to daily training, constructing an actual combat environment and treating every lift-off into the skies as actual combat,” it quoted an unnamed commander as saying.

Mr. Lai’s transits come as Beijing and Washington are trying to improve relations.

That includes the prospect of a visit to the US by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, which could pave the way for a meeting between US President Joseph R. Biden and China’s leader Xi Jinping this year.

China has stepped up its military activities around Taiwan over the past three years, seeking to force the island into accepting Beijing’s sovereignty.

In April, China staged war games around Taiwan in an angry response to Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen meeting US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy in California on a stopover on the way back to Taipei following her visit to Central America. — Reuters

Rising rice prices in PHL fuel food inflation concerns

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

Retail prices for both imported and locally-produced rice in the Philippines rose further by between 4%-14% this month, government data showed on Friday, as global and domestic farmgate prices soared, adding pressure on food inflation.

The steady rise in prices of the country’s staple food pushed local rice inflation to 4.2% in July, the fastest pace since 2019, indicating growing pressure on the major importer of the grain to rapidly increase its stockpile.

Adding to supply risks, the Philippines is bracing for the impact on harvests of dry weather brought by the El Niño phenomenon, which the government hopes will not be severe.

The Department of Agriculture (DA) said it hopes to get “better terms” for an additional 300,000 to 500,000 metric tons of rice imports this year by private traders, as it seeks to lower prices.

Vietnamese rice exporters are now offering lower prices to Philippine traders, and the DA will work with the government of India to allow Manila to import rice on humanitarian grounds, said Agriculture Undersecretary Domingo Panganiban.

Local farmgate prices are rising because of the usual lean domestic harvest between July and September, while traders at the same time are competing for supplies, said Jayson Cainglet, executive director at farmers’ group SINAG.

He also blamed surging import prices.

The United Nations food agency’s rice price index rose 2.8% in July from the month before to their highest in nearly 12 years as prices in key exporting countries jumped on strong demand and India’s move to curb exports.

Both imported and locally-produced “special” rice variety was being sold in Philippine wet markets at as high as P65 ($1.16) per kilogram as of Thursday, up as much as 12% from last month, Department of Agriculture data showed.

The imported “premium” variety was offered at 4% higher at P52/kg, while the same variety produced locally jumped 14% to P56/kg.

The low-cost well-milled and regular-milled varieties rose 6% and 11%, respectively.

While the Philippine central bank is painting an upbeat outlook on inflation after it slowed for six straight months from February, economists say rising prices of rice, which accounts for 9% of the consumer basket, is a challenge.

“The steep increase is a big upside risk given how heavily weighted rice is in the CPI basket,” HSBC economist Aris Dacanay said. — Reuters

BSP chief cautions against quick policy pivot

BSP GOVERNOR ELI M. REMOLONA

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Eli M. Remolona warned against “sudden reversals” of monetary policy when asked about the possibility of a rate cut in an interview with Nomura Holdings Inc. earlier this month.

“If there’s a chance that we might have to raise rates again after we start cutting, we don’t want to take the risk from these quick reversals,” Mr. Remolona said in a transcript of conversation with Nomura’s chief Asean economist Euben Paracuelles that the central bank sent on Friday.

It is “prudent” for BSP to still pause on the policy rate if there are no large inflation shocks and if there are mixed signals from the data, particularly on the economy, according to the transcript.

The nation is not “out of the woods yet” on inflation, and the BSP is watching new supply shocks and El Niño to see if further monetary tightening is needed.

“If we don’t tighten when those shocks materialize, then expectations could get out of hand, inflation will feed on itself, and it gets much harder for us,” the BSP chief said, adding that the central bank wants “to be comfortable that inflation is staying within” its 2%-to-4% target.

Mr. Remolona’s comments were made before the government reported Thursday that second-quarter economic growth decelerated to 4.3% from a year ago on above-target inflation, borrowings costs at a 16-year high and government underspending. — Bloomberg