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Japan PM Takaichi’s party poised for landslide victory, poll shows

Sanae Takaichi, the newly elected leader of Japan’s ruling party, the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), attends a press conference after the LDP presidential election in Tokyo on October 4, 2025. — YUICHI YAMAZAKI/POOL VIA REUTERS

TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s party is likely to score a landslide victory in next week’s lower house election, a survey by the Asahi newspaper showed, heightening the chance the country will continue to pursue big spending and tax cuts.

A strong showing in Sunday’s election would solidify Ms. Takaichi’s grip on her party and give her a mandate for her expansionary fiscal policy, which could heighten concerns about Japan’s finances and push bond yields higher.

Ms. Takaichi’s Liberal Democratic Party is likely to well exceed a majority of 233 seats out of 465 seats up for grabs in the lower house, according to Asahi’s poll released on Sunday. That would be an increase from 198 seats now.

Together with LDP’s coalition partner, the Japan Innovation Party or Ishin, the ruling alliance will likely reach 300 seats, the poll showed.

“A huge LDP win would further strengthen Takaichi’s grip on power. It won’t be surprising for markets to see a higher chance of Takaichi pursuing her flagship proactive fiscal policies including a consumption tax cut,” said Keisuke Tsuruta, senior bond strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

Japanese government bond yields rose on Monday as investors priced in the chance Ms. Takaichi will secure an electoral mandate to push through her “proactive” fiscal policy focused on bigger spending and tax cuts.

The largest opposition party, the Centrist Reform Alliance, is struggling and could lose half its 167 seats, the Asahi said.

Ms. Takaichi’s ruling coalition currently holds a slim majority in the powerful lower house but has a minority in the upper house.

The premier dissolved parliament last month and called a snap election on February 8 seeking a mandate for her push to reflate the economy with expansionary fiscal policy.

Japan suffered a broad market rout last month after Ms. Takaichi pledged to suspend an 8% levy on food sales for two years, reviving investor concerns about fiscal discipline in a country with public debt more than twice the size of its economy.

Most other parties have also called for a suspension or a cut to the consumption tax to cushion the blow to households from rising living costs. — Reuters

IMF chief says global inflation to fall, trade integration is needed

A participant stands near a logo of the International Monetary Fund at the annual meeting in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia, Oct. 12, 2018. — REUTERS/JOHANNES P. CHRISTO/FILE PHOTO

DUBAI — Global inflation is expected to fall to 3.8% this year and to 3.4% in 2027, helped by softer demand and lower energy prices, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) chief said on Monday.

Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said in a speech in the Annual Arab Fiscal Forum in Dubai that global growth has held up “remarkably well” amid profound shifts in geopolitics, trade policy, technology, and demographics.

Ms. Georgieva also called for more trade integration as unilateral trade agreements are seen on the increase.

“In the world of trade fragmentation, more trade integration is absolutely paramount.”

“What we have seen this year is that trade did not go down the way we feared it would. In fact trade is growing slightly slower than global growth,” she added. — Reuters

UK wants closer EU defense ties with potential bid to join new SAFE fund

REUTERS

BEIJING — British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said his government will consider applying to join a second possible multibillion-euro European Union (EU) fund for defense projects as his ministers prepare for talks with EU counterparts this week.

The European Commission is considering launching a second edition of its Security Action for Europe (SAFE) loans scheme as Europe seeks to bolster its defenses due to growing fears of Russia and doubts about US security commitments to Europe under President Donald J. Trump.

A British plan to join the original €150-billion ($177-billion, $1 = 0.8440 euros) SAFE fund broke down in November after Mr. Starmer’s government refused to pay a financial contribution to join, representing a setback for a post-Brexit reset of relations.

Asked if Britain would seek to join a new version of SAFE, Mr. Starmer said Europe needed to do more to rearm.

“That should require us to look at schemes like SAFE and others to see whether there is a way in which we can work more closely together,” he told reporters on his way to China last week. The comments were scheduled for release on Sunday.

“Whether it’s SAFE or other initiatives, it makes good sense for Europe in the widest sense of the word — which is the EU plus other European countries — to work more closely together.”

EU Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic and other EU officials are due in London for talks this week.

Mr. Starmer has tried to work more closely with the EU and remove some post-Brexit trade barriers in contrast to the rancorous relations between previous Conservative governments and the EU as they negotiated Britain’s departure from the bloc, which was completed in 2020.

He has also taken a leading role in coordinating European support for Ukraine.

Under the SAFE scheme, the EU jointly borrowed money on financial markets to lend to countries in the bloc for defense projects.

Asked about recent criticism from Nigel Farage, whose Reform UK party is leading in the polls, who said the governing Labor government was moving too close to the EU, Mr. Starmer said the Brexit campaigner had repeatedly misled the public.

“I wouldn’t listen too much to what Nigel Farage has to say about this,” Mr. Starmer said. — Reuters

Russia does not want a global conflict, Medvedev says

UNSPLASH

MOSCOW — Dmitry Medvedev, a senior Kremlin security official, said in remarks released for publication on Monday that the world was getting very dangerous, but that Russia did not want a global conflict.

Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine triggered the biggest confrontation between the West and Moscow since the depths of the Cold War, though US President Donald J. Trump’s envoys are trying to negotiate an end to the war with Russia and Ukraine.

Mr. Medvedev, who serves as deputy chairman of Russia’s Security Council, a kind of modern-day politburo of Russia’s most powerful officials, praised Mr. Trump and said it was encouraging that contacts had resumed with Washington.

But Mr. Medvedev, who has repeatedly hurled invective at Kyiv and Western powers while warning of the risks of an escalation of the war towards a nuclear “apocalypse,” said the West had repeatedly ignored Russian interests.

“The situation is very dangerous,” Mr. Medvedev told Reuters, TASS and the WarGonzo Russian war blogger in an interview at his residence outside Moscow.

“The pain threshold seems to be decreasing.”

“We are not interested in a global conflict. We’re not crazy,” said Mr. Medvedev, who served as Russian president from 2008 to 2012. “A global conflict cannot be ruled out.”

President Vladimir Putin remains the final voice on Russian policy, though Mr. Medvedev, now an arch-hawk, gives a sense of hardliners’ thinking within the Russian elite, according to foreign diplomats.

A cartoon hanging in the room where the interview took place showed Mr. Medvedev, a former lawyer who hails from Mr. Putin’s hometown of St. Petersburg, pointing a submachine gun at European leaders.

WORLD WAS SIMPLY ‘TOO MUCH’ IN JANUARY
Mr. Putin and Mr. Trump have both mentioned the risks of escalation over Ukraine, though European diplomats say that Moscow has skillfully played the escalation card to scare Ukraine’s allies from getting too heavily involved in the war.

“They say ‘No way — these Russians are making it all up’ — they are sowing horror stories and they will never do anything,” Mr. Medvedev said, adding that what the Kremlin calls the “Special Military Operation” in Ukraine showed Russia would stand up for its interests.

Ukraine and its European allies cast the war, the deadliest in Europe since World War II, as an imperial-style land grab, and say that if Russia wins in Ukraine then it will one day attack NATO. Russia dismisses such claims as nonsense.

Conflict first erupted in eastern Ukraine in 2014 after a pro-Russian president was toppled in Ukraine’s Maidan Revolution. Russia annexed Crimea and Moscow-backed separatists battled Kyiv’s armed forces in eastern Ukraine.

When asked about the flurry of global events of January in Venezuela, over Greenland and elsewhere, Mr. Medvedev said that it had all been simply “too much.”

On Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, a Russian ally, Mr. Medvedev said that if Mr. Trump had been “stolen” by a foreign power, then the United States would have clearly seen it as an act of war.

He also said Western claims of a Russian or Chinese threat to Greenland were false “horror stories” made up by Western leaders to justify their own behavior. — Reuters

UK Treasury offers up to £100,000 exit packages to cut hundreds of jobs, Financial Times reports

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Pierre Blaché from Pixabay

THE UK TREASURY is offering its officials up to £100,000 ($136,790, $1 = 0.7310 pounds) to leave voluntarily as part of plans to cut hundreds of jobs in the finance ministry, the Financial Times (FT) reported on Monday citing people familiar with the plan.

British Finance Minister Rachel Reeves wants to trim about 300 of her department’s roughly 2,100 staff by 2030, the report said, citing several people familiar with the plan, adding that the cuts form part of a wider drive to cut 16% of administrative costs across Whitehall.

Reuters could not immediately verify the report. The UK Treasury did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

According to the FT report, the Treasury could still require some officials to be made redundant if voluntary departures fall short across its offices in London, Darlington, Norwich and Edinburgh.

“The Treasury is the largest it has been on record, so during this period of stability it’s now right we reduce our size back to more normal levels through a voluntary exit scheme, in line with the whole of government,” the Treasury told the FT.Reuters

Pakistani security forces hunt militants behind weekend attacks

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Uzairmaqbool from Pixabay

QUETTA — Pakistani soldiers were hunting down separatist militants on Monday who stormed schools, banks, and security installations, killing nearly 50 people, in a series of coordinated attacks across southwestern Balochistan province, the military said.

The attacks at the weekend brought Pakistan’s largest province to a near standstill as the separatist Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) struck nearly a dozen targets in one of their largest ever operations, killing 17 security officials and 31 civilians.

Pakistan’s military has killed 177 BLA fighters in three days of fighting, the interior ministry said on Monday.

Pakistan’s government and military have said the group has received support from India, threatening to escalate hostilities between the nuclear-powered neighbors who engaged in their worst armed conflict in decades in May.

Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said 22 more militants had been killed overnight in different areas of Balochistan, taking the total to 177.

“Security forces, police and intelligence agencies thwarted the nefarious intentions of terrorists by taking timely and effective action,” Mr. Naqvi said in a statement.

“The Indian agents and their facilitators will be completely eliminated.”

India’s foreign office had rejected the allegations on Sunday, saying Islamabad should instead address the “long-standing demands of its people in the region”.

OPERATION BLACK STORM
Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest and poorest province, has faced a decades-long insurgency led by ethnic Baloch separatists seeking greater autonomy and a larger share of its natural resources.

The group claimed it had killed 84 members of Pakistan’s security forces and captured 18 others. Reuters could not independently verify the claim. The military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Attackers dressed as ordinary civilians entered hospitals, schools, banks and markets on Saturday before opening fire, Pakistan’s junior interior minister Talal Chaudhry said.

“In each case, the attackers came in dressed as civilians and indiscriminately targeted ordinary people working in shops,” he said, adding militants had used civilians as human shields.

The banned BLA said the attacks were part of a coordinated operation dubbed Herof, or “black storm”, targeting security forces across the province. — Reuters

Qatar wealth fund plans to invest in five new VC funds 

FREEPIK/ATLASCOMPANY

DOHA — The Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) plans to invest in five new venture capital funds as part of an expanded $3 billion venture capital program, the sovereign wealth fund said on Monday.

The new funds, called Greycroft, Ion Pacific, Liberty City Ventures, Shorooq and Speedinvest, are set to open offices in Doha in an effort to develop Qatar as a venture capital hub, it said in a statement.

The “Fund of Funds” initiative was unveiled in 2024 to attract venture capital firms to Qatar, build a robust environment for entrepreneurs and help diversify its economy away from fossil fuel revenues, as the country follows the path of other wealthy Gulf peers.

Qatar’s prime minister on Sunday announced an expansion of the fund to reach up to $3 billion.

“This year, we move from momentum to scale,” Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said as he opened the Qatar edition of the Web Summit technology conference.

The expansion would potentially target investments besides series A and B funding rounds.

“We are now expanding the scope to do later rounds, so that may open up conversations with a different set of managers,” said Mohsin Pirzada, the head of funds at QIA, in an interview with Reuters.

“We will continue to be quite flexible and support earlier stages as well, but there are sufficient pools of capital within the country to go after those types of opportunities,” he said, citing credit lending facilities.

The QIA has assets under management worth $580 billion, according to Global SWF, a sovereign wealth fund tracker, and late last year it launched its own AI-focused company Qai as it bets on the booming sector to drive economic diversification.

As part of its efforts, the country has launched a pilot computing credit program that provides free computing for startups that are based in Doha, which could be applicable to managers that are part of the Fund of Funds scheme.

The pilot program is going to be “a big differentiator in terms of what our program is offering vis-a-vis our peers in the region,” Mr. Pirzada said. — Reuters

Gaza border reopening long awaited by stranded Palestinians

REUTERS

CAIRO/GAZA — Cut off from family or urgently requiring hospital care, Palestinians stranded on each side of Gaza’s Rafah crossing waited with growing desperation for Monday’s reopening of the border as a delayed part of October’s ceasefire deal.

How fully crossings to and from Egypt will resume, and under what conditions, remains unclear with Israel retaining complete control of Gaza’s frontier, but for those waiting to travel even a partial reopening feels long overdue.

While Rafah was partially open early in the Gaza war between Israel and Palestinian Hamas militants, it has been shut entirely since summer 2024 and only very small numbers have been able to travel to or from Gaza via Israel since then.

The people hoping to return to Gaza know it lies in ruins, their homes and neighborhoods destroyed in Israel’s two-year military campaign sparked by the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack. Those seeking to leave know that new restrictions could maroon them abroad.

Yet, a mother cut off from family and grieving the death of her newborn son, a trader yearning to reunite with his fiancйe for a long-delayed wedding, and two people needing medical treatment abroad were all hopeful for the reopening.

EAGER TO GO HOME
Faten Hamed Abu Watfa, 43, has not seen her three children since she left Gaza nearly 10 months ago. Sitting in Egypt, she scrolls through photographs on her mobile phone, pictures of her two sons, aged 21 and 18, and her 15‑year‑old daughter, trying to bridge the distance that has kept her separated from them.

Abu Watfa left Gaza City’s al‑Karama neighborhood on April 5, 2024, hoping to stay away for no more than six to eight weeks while her mother‑in‑law received medical treatment. Instead, she became stranded in Egypt after the Rafah crossing closed.

“It’s an indescribable feeling, that one will go back to be reunited with his children and family, to the country, to the place where he lived and grew up.”

Her return, however, will not be to the home she left behind. Abu Watfa said her house was torched by Israeli forces, leaving only the concrete pillars standing.

“When it rains, they put something like tar on the roof to keep the water from dripping on them, because the situation would be really difficult,” she said.

“I am ready to enter Gaza, be searched and get tired, not for a day, but for a whole week… to be dragged around during the journey back, until I reach Gaza and see my children and my father safe and sound.”

Many families who arrived in Cairo early in the war never expected to remain for so long. Some depleted their savings, while others found themselves divided, with relatives trapped on opposite sides of the Rafah border.

“I love Gaza, and I don’t see any other place that feels like home,” said Mohammad Talal al‑Burai, 28, a currency trader whose house in Jabalia in north Gaza was destroyed.

Despite fears of a relapse into fighting and concerns that poor internet and communications could disrupt his work, Mr. Burai registered with the Palestinian embassy in Cairo as soon as the Rafah crossing reopened.

“Going back to live in a tent? I don’t care,” he said. “I can’t wait to take my father into my arms and place a kiss on his forehead,” Mr. Burai told Reuters.

Mr. Burai postponed his wedding after the war erupted in October 2023. His mother remains in the United Arab Emirates, receiving medical treatment.

“I will go ahead with my marriage, but I may not hold a party since my mother might not be able to join us,” he said.

DESPERATE TO LEAVE
For others, the chance to cross is a matter of life and death.

Tamer Al-Burai, 50, who is a cousin of Mohammad Al-Burai’s father, suffers from obstructive sleep apnea and relies on Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) machine, to help him breathe normally during sleep by keeping the airway open.

“My health has become much worse because there is no power and no fuel,” he said. His family left for Egypt two years ago, but he was unable to follow because the crossing remained shut.

“I have appealed to humanitarian groups, to the WHO, to the Palestinian Authority – to anyone – so that I can leave, save my life, and reunite with my family,” Mr. Al-Burai said.

Thousands of Gaza Palestinians have registered with the World Health Organization to travel for treatment. Gaza’s health ministry said at least 20,000 patients, including children and cancer patients, are awaiting evacuation.

Among them is Noor Daher, 31, a graphic designer from Gaza City with a chronic heart defect. “My heart beats even harder now,” he said. “I am hopeful my problem will finally end.”

For many, the reopening came too late.

Dalia Abu Kashef, 28, died last week while waiting for her name to appear on the Rafah crossing list for a liver transplant.

“We found a volunteer – her brother – who was ready to donate part of his liver,” said her husband Muatasem El-Rass.

“We were waiting for the crossing to open so we could travel and do the surgery, hoping for a happy ending. But she deteriorated badly and died.” — Reuters

China hands life sentence to former justice minister over bribery

People stand on the Tiananmen Square before the opening session of the National People's Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, March 5, 2022.— REUTERS

BEIJING — China’s former justice minister Tang Yijun was sentenced by a Chinese court to life in prison on Monday for taking bribes, state broadcaster CCTV reported.

The Xiamen Intermediate People’s Court in the southeastern coastal Fujian province said Mr. Tang had illegally accepted property worth more than 137 million yuan ($19.71 million) between 2006 and 2022, and abused his position to seek benefits for entities and individuals in areas such as company listings, land buybacks, bank loans and case handling, according to CCTV.

“Tang’s actions constituted the crime of bribery,” the court said in its ruling, adding that the sums involved were “particularly huge” and caused “particularly serious losses” to the interests of the state and the people.

Mr. Tang was also deprived of political rights for life and had all of his personal property confiscated, CCTV said.

The sentence comes as President Xi Jinping presses ahead with a sweeping anti-corruption campaign that has ensnared a string of high-ranking officials in recent weeks.

The country’s anti-graft watchdog said over the weekend it had opened a probe into Wang Xiangxi, minister of emergency management – a rare case of a sitting minister falling under investigation.

Last month, China said its top general Zhang Youxia was being investigated, in the highest-profile purge to date of senior military leadership.

Mr. Tang, 64, started his career in the eastern Zhejiang province, where he spent over three decades and rose to become the province’s deputy Communist Party chief. He later served as governor of Liaoning province before being appointed justice minister in 2020.

Mr. Tang came under investigation in April 2024 for suspected serious violations of discipline and law, a term commonly used to refer to corruption. He was expelled from the Communist Party later that year. — Reuters

Love scams get more sophisticated using AI warns CICC

Slide by CICC presenting some of the stats from Jan-Dec 2025. — CICC

With Valentine’s Day just days away, Filipinos are being cautioned against love scams that have recently become more believable and sophisticated through the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI), according to the Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center (CICC) on Monday.

“Use your brain, not just your heart, because today, your soulmate might actually be a ‘scam-mate’ hiding behind a sophisticated algorithm—the script of deception,” Renato “Aboy” A. Paraiso, CICC’s acting executive director, said during the press conference for the agency’s Anti-Love Scam campaign.

“They use AI [and] they follow a script more polished than a teleserye (tv series). They build a fake relationship for weeks to gain your trust,” Mr. Paraiso said.

The CICC noted that scammers are leveraging AI in various ways, such as creating accounts with AI-generated photos and identities.

Perpetrators can come from anywhere, even offshore, as AI is already being used to craft scripts and automate conversations in many languages.

The agency also reported more sophisticated incidents where scammers use AI in video calls to alter their appearance, making scams more believable.

Jocel de Guzman, co-founder of Scam Watch Pilipinas, CICC’s partner for this year’s campaign, said monitoring love scams is critical as they serve as entry points for investment fraud, such as cryptocurrency, fake gold, and foreign exchange schemes.

2025 LOVE SCAM REPORT
In CICC’s 2025 love scam report, the agency said that a total of 123 complaints were recorded, with scammers victimizing the most during the month of January, ahead of “love month,” as well as during the “wedding month” of June.

More females were victimized according to the report, with 63 incidents recorded compared to 56 among males, while four incidents remain undisclosed.

Most victims are aged between 18 and 29, indicating that love scams can also victimize younger and tech-savvy individuals, the CICC said. Other affected age groups include those between 30 and 39 years old (38 complaints) and 40 to 49 years old (18 complaints).

The National Capital Region (NCR) comprises the highest number of love scam cases at 50.7%, while Region IV-A makes up 23.9%, and overseas cases tally 25.4% of the overall total.

The CICC also reported the social media applications most used by scammers: Telegram tops the list (31.7%), followed by WhatsApp (25.7%), Instagram (15.8%), Facebook and Tinder (11.9% each), and Litmatch (3%).

Mr. Paraiso noted that if a person you have only been talking to for two days on social media insists on moving to a private messaging app, it should be considered a “red flag.”
Meanwhile, a total of more than P20 million in lost funds was reported recovered from love scams in the same year due to the efforts of the CICC.

“AI, AI-AI FEB-IBIG” CAMPAIGN
To fight against love scams, the CICC also launched its 2026 Anti-Love Scam campaign during the forum with the theme “AI, AI-AI FEB-IBIG,” a pun on a famous Filipino song.

“This campaign is our way of fighting back. We are using education, humor, and digital literacy to remind every Filipino: mag-i-ingat sa AI na pag-ibig (be careful of AI love),” Mr. Paraiso said.

The CICC has launched several videos for the campaign on its social media platforms, along with a dance challenge and a TikTok filter.

The agency continues to encourage victims, or even those who have simply experienced love scam attempts and other cybercrimes, to call the CICC’s hotline at 1326. — Edg Adrian A. Eva

Philippine Golf Championship kicks off Asian Tour season

ANGELO QUE — PHILIPPINE GOLF TOUR

THE STAGE is set as more than 130 players vie for the Philippine Golf Championship presented by the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) to start the Asian Tour season on Feb. 5 to 8 at the East Course of the Wack Wack Golf and Country Club in Mandaluyong City.

Among the top golfers expected to see action are former Order of Merit (OOM) winners in John Catlin and Sihwan Kim of the United States as well as Jazz Janewattananond of Thailand in the event offering a total prize purse of $500,000 from the Asian Tour and the National Golf Association of the Philippines (NGAP), the sport’s governing body in the country.

Backed by the PSC under Chairman Patrick Gregorio, the tournament marks the second straight year that the country will host the season-opening event of the Asian Tour, which positions the country as a regional golfing powerhouse.

“Hosting the season opener of the Asian Tour for the second straight year reflects the confidence the international sporting community has in the Philippines,” said Mr. Gregorio.

“The Philippine Golf Championship aligns perfectly with our vision of using major events to inspire excellence, elevate Filipino athletes and strengthen the country’s sports tourism and global sporting profile,” he added.

No less than the President Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. gave his stamp of approval to this tournament, similar to projects of the National Sports Tourism Inter-Agency Committee (NST-IAC), which Mr. Gregorio also chairs.

These include the FIVB Men’s World Cup, the Futsal World Cup, the World Junior Gymnastics Championships, a premier international surfing classic and the just concluded WTA 125 Philippine Women’s Open.

Just like the previous international sporting events, the Philippine Golf Championship provides high quality competition for Filipino golfers.

“The Filipino golfers can compete against the world’s best,” said Mr. Gregorio.

“We have proven that time and again. The Philippines as a golf destination is likewise comparable with the world’s best. Golf will be one of the pillars of our sports tourism efforts. The PSC and NST-IAC will closely work with NGAP to make sure we are successful,” Mr. Gregorio added.

As for the NGAP, the event will showcase the talent of Filipino players. Recently, Aidric Chan and Carl Jano Corpus both captured titles on the Asian Development Tour.

“Working closely with the Asian Tour, we’re proud to showcase our players, our courses, and our capability to stage world-class events,” said NGAP Chairman Al Panlilio.

“This tournament not only honors our rich golfing heritage but also inspires the next generation of Filipino golfers.”

The event will also feature former Asian Tour winners Suteepat Prateeptienchai, Poosit Supupramai, Ekpharit Wu, Rattanon Wannasrichan and Sadom Kaewkanjana of Thailand, Jbe’ Kruger of South Africa, Hongtaek Kim of Korea and Lee Chieh Po of Chinese Taipei.

From the Philippines, among the 25 professionals expected to participate are former Philippine Open champions Angelo Que, Clyde Mondilla and Gerald Rosales, as well as Antonio Lascuna, a five-time Philippine Golf Tour OOM winner.

They will be joined by 16 invited local players, and six national amateurs. The tournament is open to the general public and welcomes spectators.

Filipino-American Justin Delos Santos, a Japan Tour regular, and Fil-British Enrique Dimayuga, an NCAA standout and Putra Cup individual champion, will likewise see action.

Asian Tour Commissioner and Chief Executive Officer Cho Minn Thant said the tournament would once again provide the perfect platform to launch the season.

“As we close in on being able to announce our full schedule for this year, the Asian Tour is absolutely delighted to confirm that the Philippine Golf Championship will raise the curtain on our 2026 season,” said Mr. Cho.

“We started last year strongly in Manila as well, at the Philippine Open, and it is with great enthusiasm that we return there to begin another season filled with promise and opportunity.”

“We thank our friends at the NGAP for their continued commitment, and we are especially pleased to be back at Wack Wack, a special venue full of memories and where par is always to be respected,” added Mr. Cho.

Thai coach Tai Bundit to mentor Alas Pilipinas, says PNVF chief Liao

TAI BUNDIT — PVL.PH

ALAS PILIPINAS will have its women’s coach in Tai Bundit.

Philippine National Volleyball Federation (PNVF) President Tonyboy Liao on Monday confirmed the appointment of Mr. Bundit, a Thai bench strategist who has been coaching in the country for more than a decade now, after gaining the nod of Rebisco big boss Jonathan Ng.

Mr. Bundit, of course, is the current coach of the Spikers’ Turf’s Criss Cross squad where Mr. Ng is the head.

“Yes,” said Mr. Liao when asked if Mr. Ng had already given the green light.

Mr. Liao, however, said he would still need the final go signal from the PNVF board but everyone knows it’s just a formality.

“I will have it approved by the (PNVF) executive board in our meeting on Thursday,” he said.

Mr. Bundit first came into the nation 12 years ago and coached Ateneo de Manila University for five seasons in a stretch that snared the Ateneo Lady Eagles two UAAP championships and served as Creamline mentor from 2017 to 2021 when he also had multiple crowns in the Premier Volleyball League.

He then mentored Criss Cross and won a title in the Spikers’ Turf.

Mr. Bundit takes over from Brazilian Jorge Souza de Brito and hopes to accomplish what the former failed to do — end the country’s 21-year Southeast Asian Games medal drought. — Joey Villar

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