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SC: Child, wife abusers not just men

WIKIMEDIA/PATRICKROQUE01

THE PHILIPPINE Supreme Court (SC) has upheld rulings that any person, regardless of gender, can be charged with violence against women and children (VAWC) for committing such abuses against a woman or child.

“The law uses a gender-neutral term when referring to offenders,” wrote Senior Associate Justice Marvic M.V.F Leonen in the SC resolution released on Wednesday and discussed in a forum in Baguio City by Spokesperson Camille Sue Mae L. Ting.

Ms. Ting said the petitioner in the case filed to quash the complaint against her, claiming that as a woman, she cannot be charged with violations under the VAWC on the contention that the law was made against men’s abusive acts on women and children.

A regional trial court denied her petition and, subsequently, the Court of Appeals did so, too.

In the same forum, Justice Maria Filomena D. Singh underscored the need for Philippine laws to be updated to be gender-inclusive and gender sensitive.

“We are far from equality with our laws. We still have many laws discriminating against other genders,” she said in Filipino. At present, the Committee on Gender Responsiveness is focusing on raising consciousness and awareness, she said. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

Customs seizes P218-M ‘shabu’

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE BUREAU of Customs (BoC) said it intercepted a parcel of methamphetamine or “shabu” worth an estimated P218 million.

In a statement on Thursday, the agency said that it seized a parcel containing about 32 kilograms of “shabu” in a warehouse in Pasay City.

“The shipment was declared as ‘machinery muffler’ from Zimbabwe and underwent rigorous profiling…which led to the discovery of shabu concealed inside the mufflers,” it added.

The agency said that the consignee was arrested, and charges will be filed accordingly. — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson

Zubiri seeks more trade with Japan

SENATE President Juan Miguel F. Zubiri met with Japanese Ambassador to Manila Kazuya Endo on Wednesday, asking the newly assigned envoy for constant engagement with Japanese businesses to boost trade and investments in the Philippines.

“He (Mr. Zubiri) also encouraged the Ambassador to engage private and business sectors from Japan in a healthy discussion once the CREATE MORE Act is being deliberated upon in the Philippine Senate, to further boost Philippines’ and Japan’s cooperation in terms of trade and investment,” the Senate Public Relations and Information Bureau said in a statement.

The House of Representatives on March 18 passed on final reading amendments to the law designed to revive the post-pandemic economy through tax incentives contained in the CREATE MORE Act. 

The CREATE MORE (CREATE to Maximize Opportunities for Reinvigorating the Economy) measure cuts corporate income tax to 20% from 25%. It also provides duty exemptions and value-added tax (VAT) exemptions on imports. The Senate has yet to deliberate on the measure.

Earlier, Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian filed a resolution seeking to probe the large volume of denied VAT refunds, citing complaints from Japanese companies which threatened to leave Manila after finding it hard to apply for these.

In November, Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Philippines President Shigeru Shimoda told a Senate hearing that Congress should push for more tax incentives for Japanese companies to expand their operations in the Philippines.

On another front, Mr. Zubiri said Thursday he was hopeful negotiations on the Reciprocal Access Agreement between Japan and the Philippines move forward to allow the deployment of troops on each other’s soil. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Hepatitis B vaccinations pushed

MUFID MAJNUN-UNSPLASH

CHILDREN must be vaccinated against Hepatitis B to prevent a liver cancer outbreak in 2024, a congressman and former health secretary said on Thursday.

“Come 2042 to 2045, many could have liver cancer or Hepatocellular Carcinoma in the Philippines due to unvaccinated children,” Iloilo Rep. Janette L. Garin said in a statement in Filipino.

The World Health Organization (WHO) raised the alarm against the disease earlier this month as figures showed that around 3,500 people die from viral hepatitis daily.

Hepatitis B is transmitted through blood and other bodily fluids entering the body through wounds, during birth and delivery, and sexual intercourse.

With Hepatitis B accounting for 1.3 million deaths annually, WHO said it is not surprising that it is blamed for 83% of deaths due to the liver disease.

“If someone not vaccinated contracts Hepatitis B, there is a 30% chance that it can progress to Hepatocellular Carcinoma, a deadly type of liver cancer,” Ms. Garin said. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

DoJ says Teves’ son tried to bribe Timor-Leste police

THE DEPARTMENT of Justice (DoJ) revealed on Thursday that a son of dismissed congressman Arnolfo A. Teves, Jr. has been exposed for allegedly attempting to bribe Timor Leste police for preferential treatment while detained at a Dili prison.

The DoJ cited a report from Timorese media outlet Hatutan that Mr. Teves’ son allegedly offered a $2,000 (P114,000) to a member of the Polícia Científica De Investigação Criminal (PCIC) in exchange for ensuring his father’s safety in and outside of the Becora Prison.

Hatutan’s report detailed the exchange, where a PCIC member sent Mr. Teves’ son a WhatsApp message, suggesting that with payment, they could ensure “100% security” for his father.

The member claimed that the Prison Guard Chief at Becora had already instructed staff to provide maximum security for Mr. Teves during his detention, the report said.

PCIC Director Vicente Fernandes e Brito declined to comment on the allegations.

The bribery allegations have spurred calls within Timorese law enforcement for the Filipino ex-congressman’s extradition to the Philippines, where he faces multiple murder charges.

Philippine Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin C. Remulla, who had long called on Mr. Teves to come home and face his accusers, said: “Let us stop playing hide and seek with the law, one cannot evade accountability for eternity.”

Mr. Teves’ legal counsel, Ferdinand S. Topacio, did not immediately to BusinessWorld’s requests for comment.

On Wednesday, Mr. Topacio accused the DoJ of witness tampering, a claim denied by DoJ Assistant Secretary and Spokesperson Jose Dominic F. Clavano IV, citing the strength of their evidence in the case. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

Cignal TV partners with POC on coverage of Paris Olympics

(Filoil EcoOil Arena)
7:30 a.m.-JRU vs Letran (men)
10 a.m.-JRU vs Letran (women)
2 p.m.-AU vs San Beda (women)
5 p.m.-AU vs San Beda (men)

CIGNAL TV has officially come in as partner of the Philippine Olympic Committee (POC) in the country’s centennial participation in the coming Paris Olympiad.

Cignal TV, according to MediaQuest and Cignal TV President and Chief Executive Officer Jane Basas, is preparing the most comprehensive coverage of the July 26 to Aug. 11 Games.

This includes campaigns leading to the June 21 grand sendoff and the Filipino Olympians’ one-month training camp in the northeast French city of Metz prior to competition proper.

“We will bring every memorable moment to the Filipino fans, from the time our athletes leave to their (pre-Games) training all the way until they come back hopefully bringing medals for the country,” Ms. Basas said in yesterday’s press launch with POC President Bambol Tolentino, POC Secretary General Wharton Chan, and Cignal TV first vice president and head for channels and content management Sienna Olaso.

“To do this, we commit all available resources across the MediaQuest group from our pay-TV platforms to our free-to-air platforms to our digital platforms and we are working closely as well with PLDT and Smart to make sure that we scale the distribution and reach and content across the country,” Ms. Basas added.

Mr. Tolentino expressed gratitude to Cignal TV for joining this Olympic journey.

“We are very excited with his partnership between the POC and Cignal,” said Mr. Tolentino.

Ms. Olaso said Cignal will promote the Philippines’ Olympic drive in all platforms for the next 99 days before the opening and produce a 13-part miniseries with reporters embedded to chronicle their journey.

The network, meanwhile, is finalizing a deal for broadcast rights of the Olympiad.

“We’re in the tailend of our discussion with the official rights holder for the Olympic Games. We don’t have a final agreement yet but we’re trying our best with the support of our chairman Manny V. Pangilinan and the POC to secure the rights,” said Ms. Basas.

“Our objective is put as many games, particularly the games where Filipinos are competing in all available platforms — free-to-air, we have our dedicated sports channel RPTV, One Sports sa digital free to air and of course Cignal. We are looking as many as 18 channels bringing the most comprehensive coverage of the Games. But our priority is the Filipino athletes.” — Olmin Leyba

Fil-Am Jung-Ruivivar Olympic hopes alive in uneven bars

FIL-AM Levi Jung-Ruivivar kept her Olympic hopes alive by making the women’s uneven bars even as Paris-bound Carlos Yulo failed to make the men’s floor exercise finals of the FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup Series in Doha, Qatar on Thursday.

Ms. Jung-Ruivivar, 17, claimed the eighth and last finals seat by scoring 13.2 points that kept her in the hunt of joining fellow gymnasts Yulo and Aleah Finnegan, pole-vaulter EJ Obiena, boxers Eumir Marcial, Nesthy Petecio, Aira Villegas and weightlifters Vanessa Sarno, John Febuar Ceniza and Elreen Ando in this July’s Paris Games.

But she must finish at least second among the finalists who have yet to earn their Olympics slots.

Of the eight, Algerian Kaylia Nemour, Portuguese Filipa Martins and Ukrainian Anna Lashchevska, who finished first, fifth and seventh with 15.400, 13.366 and 13.233 in the qualification round, respectively, have already booked their Paris berths by virtue of their strong performances in the World Championships in Antwerp, Belgium last year.

So regardless of the final scores and positions of Mmess. Nemour, Martins and Lashchevska, the two Paris slots will be basically fought by Ms. Jung-Ruivivar, Belarus’ Alena Tsitavets (second, 13.666), New Zealand’s Georgia-Rose Brown (third, 13.400), Sweden’s Nathalie Westlund (fourth, 13.400), and Belgium’s Maellyse Brassart (sixth, 13.255).

Meanwhile, many-time world titlist Mr. Yulo was a shadow of his old self again as he wound up just 21st in his favorite event — the floor exercise — with a score of 12.666 in the qualification phase and failed to make the cut.

Mr. Yulo, however, will have his other chances in two more apparatuses as he wades into battle in his other events where he excelled before — the vault and parallel bars today.

Another Philippine bet, Emma Malabuyo, will shoot for an Olympic spot as she sees action in the women’s floor exercise today. — Joey Villar

SMB eyes early quarters slot against freefalling Converge

SAN MIGUEL BEER — PBA.PH

Games Friday
(PhilSports Arena)
4:30 p.m. — Converge vs San Miguel Beer
7:30 p.m. — Ginebra vs TNT

SAN Miguel Beer (SMB) attempts to get on the next rung of what coach Jorge Gallent dubbed as their step-by-step mission in the PBA Philippine Cup.

With a spotless 5-0 mark, the league-leading Beermen are well in position to notch win No. 6 and get into the quarterfinals ahead of everyone in this tight race.

And Mr. Gallent’s rampaging squad can achieve this by taking care of business Friday at 4:30 p.m. against freefalling Converge (0-7) in a top-versus-bottom tiff at the PhilSports Arena.

“We’re taking it one game at a time. Right now, we think of Converge. That’s the ladder,” said Mr. Gallent after claiming their latest prey, Terrafirma, 113-110, last Wednesday and closing in on an early Last-8 qualification.

“So we have 11 steps (in the elimination round). We’re going to our sixth step. That’s the only thing we’re thinking of.”

Though practically out of it all, the FiberXers can use a morale-boosting upset now. Aldin Ayo’s youth-laden charges played their best game of the All-Filipino a week ago in a close 107-113 loss to Phoenix.

Like defending champion SMB, Ginebra (5-3) seeks a quarters-clinching sixth victory in the 7:30 p.m. showdown with TNT (4-3).

The Gin Kings, however, will have a big void to fill in the wing position following the calf injury that forced Jamie Malonzo out of action for some four weeks.

“We’re going to miss Jamie, no doubt. He does a lot for us on both sides. That position, with Miah (Gray) and Aljon (Mariano), along with Jamie, used to be our position of strength and depth. But with all of them injured, we’ll have to be creative and force some guys to play up in size or perhaps for Japeth (Aguilar), to play down in size,” coach Tim Cone told The STAR.

“Collectively, we’ve just got to move on and figure out ways to win games and get ourselves to the playoffs.”

The Gin Kings and the Tropang Giga are similarly on a two-game streak that neither would like to end as the quarters chase heats up. — Olmin Leyba

76ers hold off Heat, advance to face Knicks in first round

JOEL EMBIID collected 23 points and 15 rebounds and Nicolas Batum drained six 3-pointers to lift the host Philadelphia 76ers to a 105-104 victory over the Miami Heat in an NBA play-in game on Wednesday.

Mr. Batum finished with 20 points on 7-of-12 shooting from the floor, and Tyrese Maxey added 19 points. Kelly Oubre, Jr. recorded 11 points and eight rebounds, and Tobias Harris added nine points and 10 boards.

The seventh-seeded 76ers outscored Miami 66-53 in the second half to set up an Eastern Conference first-round playoff series against the second-seeded New York Knicks. Game 1 of the best-of-seven series is Saturday in New York.

Miami’s Tyler Herro contributed 25 points and nine assists, and Jimmy Butler had 19 points, five assists and five steals.

Rookie Jaime Jaquez, Jr. scored 15 points off the bench for the Heat, who will look to capture the eighth seed on Friday when they host the Bulls. Chicago won the late Wednesday game 131-116 over the Atlanta Hawks. — Reuters

Splash Brother

Klay Thompson stopped and did a slow 360-degree turn before resuming his trek to the dugout. He began the night full of verve, only to end it utterly deflated. In between, he spent 32 minutes on the court and managed to contribute as much off it: with zero points to his name. The so-called Splash Brother’s veritable no-show contributed heavily to the Warriors’ poor performance in their do-or-die encounter with the Kings, and his rumination no doubt focused as much on what happened as on what is to come.

It goes without saying that the Warriors get to travel only as far as two-time Most Valuable Player awardee Stephen Curry will take them. That said, their roller-coaster ride in the last half-decade more closely reflects the ups and downs of Thompson’s career. Finalists in 2019, they then failed to make the playoffs the next two seasons as he convalesced from a torn anterior cruciate ligament and ruptured Achilles tendon. En route to their trek to a fourth championship in the pace-and-space era, he put up sterling numbers and played the most number of minutes for the blue and yellow.

To be sure, there was no indication that Thompson would be laying a big fat egg just when the Warriors needed him most. He had been playing outstanding basketball after the All-Star break, making fans forget about a prolonged slump that hitherto relegated him to the bench. For some reason, though, he could not find his range against the Kings the other day. Of the 10 shots he took, six from beyond the arc, only one actually had a chance of going in. Little wonder, then, that he — whose confidence typically borders on cockiness — appeared absolutely crushed in the aftermath.

Thompson’s no fool, so he understands the prospects he faces as a would-be free agent. The Warriors cannot possibly continue paying insane amounts in luxury taxes while failing to move past the regular season, and would thus need to exercise fiscal prudence moving forward. Meanwhile, he wants to feel appreciated, and will likely push for a new deal that he believes approximates his worth. The dichotomy has expectedly led to an impasse in contract negotiations, never mind the platitudes uttered by those he shared the bunker with all these years. From head coach Steve Kerr to Curry to fellow Big Three member Draymond Green, the message is clear: He is wanted back.

Thompson was appreciative of the vote of confidence in his exit interview yesterday. “It means a lot,” he said. “I mean, we’ve been through the highest of highs and [lowest of] lows… It makes me grateful to have the times I’ve had with them. Like, that was pretty historic stuff.” And he’s right. He also happens to be realistic, which is why he’ll spend the run-up to free agency on July 1 steeling himself for any eventuality. “At the end of the day, whatever happens, it’s all gravy,” he noted. Indeed.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

First law protecting consumers’ brainwaves signed by governor

FREEPIK

COLORADO GOVERNOR Jared Polis on Wednesday signed into law the first measure passed in the US that aims to protect the data found in a person’s brainwaves.

Sponsors of the bill said it was necessary as quick advances in neurotechnology make scanning, analyzing and selling mental data increasingly more possible — and profitable.

State representative Cathy Kipp, a sponsor of the legislation, said in a statement that while advancements in the neurotechnology field hold great promise for improving the lives of many people, “we must provide a clear framework to protect Coloradans’ personal data from being used without their consent while still allowing these new technologies to develop.”

State senator Kevin Priola, another of the bill’s sponsors, said that neurotechnology “is no longer confined to medical or research settings” and that when it comes to consumer products, the industry “can currently operate without regulation, data protection standards, or equivalent ethical constraints.”

The Neurorights Foundation, a nonprofit promoting the ethical development of neurotechnology, said Colorado’s bill, which it supported, was the first of its kind in the US

The foundation on Wednesday released a report assessing the neurotechnology industry’s data privacy protections, which it said were often weak or nonexistent.

The Colorado law notes that neuratechnologies used in a clinical setting are already covered by medical privacy laws, so the new measure is aimed at consumer products available outside of a hospital.

Big tech firms — including Facebook and Instagram’s parent company Meta Platforms, along with Elon Musk’s Neuralink — are developing technology that can detect brain activity then potentially put it to commercial use. Mined brain data has endless potential, be it to better target ads, exploit human moods, sell more stuff or regenerate lost brain function.

The US Food and Drug Administration last year approved human studies for Neuralink’s brain implants, which had previously been tested on animals.

Earlier this month, the CEO of Synchron, a rival to Neuralink, told Reuters the company is preparing to recruit patients for a large-scale clinical trial required to seek commercial approval for its device.

Elsewhere around the world, other governments have been working to increase consumer protections when it comes to neurotechnological products. — Reuters

Deadly heatwave in West Africa warns of climate change-driven scorchers to come

MIKEERSKINE HZ0-UNSPLASH

NIAMEY — On a hospital bed in Niger, a 96-year-old woman lay motionless attached to a drip — one of thousands of possible victims of West Africa’s worst heatwave in living memory, which a report said on Thursday was linked to fossil fuel-driven climate change.

In late March and early April, days and nights of extreme heat above 40° Celsius (104°F) gripped many West African countries. Temperatures soared so high in Mali and Burkina Faso they equated to a once in 200-year event, according to the report on the Sahel region by World Weather Attribution (WWA).

The severity of the heatwave led WWA’s team of climate scientists to conduct a rapid analysis, which concluded the temperatures would not have been reached if industry had not warmed the planet by burning fossil fuels and other activities.

“In a pre-industrial climate, we wouldn’t expect to see heat waves at this intensity at all,” WWA statistician Clair Barnes told Reuters.

“It was the hottest that anyone in living memory has had to deal with (there),” she said.

Despite a lack of data, WWA estimates there were hundreds or possibly thousands of heat-related deaths, and it warned such extreme heat will become much more common without greater global efforts to reduce planet-warming emissions.

On the current trajectory, if fossil fuel emissions do not fall “we would expect to see heatwaves like this maybe ten times more frequently, so potentially up to ten times a year,” Mr. Barnes said.

“It’s something that people are going to have to adapt to and learn to live with.”

Given the growing threat, the group recommends that countries formulate heat action plans that would warn citizens when extreme temperatures are imminent and offer guidance on how to prevent overheating.

ELDERLY AT RISK
The plight of the nonagenarian in Niger illustrates the threat such extreme temperatures pose, particularly to older people in countries where access to air conditioning or even electric fans can be limited.

Standing at the hospital bedside on Monday, daughter Zeynabou Toure described how her mother quickly sickened in the heat at the start of April, prompting them to rush to hospital.

They were among an unusually high number of patients seeking care at the facility in Niger’s sun-baked capital Niamey, said doctor Andia Abdoul-Kader.

“We have seen more and more cases of dehydration,” he told Reuters in his office. “It really affects the elderly… four to five liters of water need to be replenished for the patient to return to normal.”

While Abdoul-Kader has not recorded excess deaths, Gabriel Toure Hospital in the capital of neighboring Mali reported 102 deaths, likely heat-related, in the first four days of April. This compares to 130 deaths it recorded in total for the whole of April last year.

“This indicates an exceptional situation this year,” said one of the hospital’s department heads, doctor Djibo Mahamane Django, in an online video post on April 5. — Reuters