Home Blog Page 3752

Women abound in volleyball league as players, coaches and executives

TINA SALAK — PREMIER VOLLEYBALL LEAGUE

SLOWLY but surely, the Premier Volleyball League is progressing to a league that gives women a chance to prove their worth not just as players but as coaches and executives.

Just yesterday (Jan. 24), living legend Tina Salak was acquired as an Akari assistant coach while former University of the Philippines standout Justine Dorog retired and accepted the same position at Farm Fresh.

Ms. Salak, a Southeast Asian Games bronze medalist, last coached for the Far Eastern University Lady Tamaraws and her experience should be vital in providing added wisdom to interim mentor Raffy Mosuela steer a talented franchise at a chance for glory.

“We have seen how she has elevated her teams in the past, which is why we are thrilled to see how she will contribute to the growth of our players this season. We are delighted to have you on our squad, Coach Tina,” the team said via social media.

For the 25-year-old Ms. Dorog, she would help mentor Jerry Yee.

Also recently, Capitol1 Solar Energy, the league’s 12th team, will have sisters Milka and Mandy Romero, daughters of avid sports patron and Party list Representative Mikee Romero, as team owners.

Already, the league had a female head coach in Lerma Giron at Galeries Tower and Regine Diego at F2 Logistics before the Cargo Movers disbanded. Joey Villar

JRU’s Laurenciana-Miguel tandem stuns beach volleyball NCAA S99 titleist Ramirez-Marapoc duo

JOSE RIZAL University’s (JRU)Windel Laurenciana and Matthew Miguel sent shockwaves down the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Season 99 beach volleyball sands after stunning reigning titlists Louie Ramirez and Jefferson Marapoc, 22-20, 18-21, 15-11 on Wednesday in Subic Bay.

It was a mammoth win for the Heavy Bombers pair after coming in as complete underdogs against the Ramirez-Marapoc pair, who captured last season’s title — the Altas third overall.

Also posting opening day wins were Arellano University’s (AU) Adrian Villados and Arman Clarence Guinto over College of Saint Benilde’s (CSB) Leonard Van Jaboli and Arnel Christian Aguilar, 24-26, 21-17, 15-8; Mapua University’s Kenneth Eslapor and Saint Marlowe Jamisola against Emilio Aguinaldo College’s (EAC) Bhim Lawrence Diones and Ervin Patrick Osabel, 21-19, 9-21, 15-10; San Beda University’s Aidjien Josh Rus and Mohammad Shaif Ali Tahiluddin over Lyceum of the Philippines University’s (LPU) Janse Palad and Josue Velasco III, 21-18, 21-14; and CSB’s Arnel Christian Aguilar and James Harold Marasigan against Kyle Angelo Villamor and Jezreel Franz Marcos, 12-21, 21-19, 15-13.

In women’s action, University of Perpetual Help’s Mary Rhose Dapol and Krisha Cordero outlasted JRU’s Karyla Rafaela Jasareno and Czarina Nina Ramos, 21-12, 19-21, 15-13, yesterday to seize the early share of the lead with three others.

Other victors were SBU’s Angel Habacon and Reyanna Caneta over LPU’s Christina Cañares and Baby Mar Nichole Collado, 21-13, 21-8, EAC’s Catherine Almazan and Christine Joy Cordial against Mapua’s Raina Airyl Verginio and Nadine Angeli Berces, 14-21, 21-16, 15-8; and AU’s Alona Nichole Caguicla and Harem Ceballos over St. Benilde’s Angelika Mondejar and Doreen Baguio, 21-15, 21-17.

The Lady Blazers bounced back from the defeat after they downed San Sebastian College-Recoletos’ Kat Santos and Juna May Gonzales, 21-12, 21-12, to claim their first win and stay in the medal hunt. — Joey Villar

€1-million bonus for Equatorial Guinea players

ABIDJAN — Equatorial Guinea’s team at the Africa Cup of Nations have been promised a €1-million ($1.08 million) bonus after their upset 4-0 win over hosts Ivory Coast on Monday that ensured them top place in Group A, the country’s president said on Tuesday.

A public holiday was also declared after unfancied Equatorial Guinea humiliated the Ivorians in Abidjan to finish ahead of heavyweight contenders Nigeria and the host nation.

A government statement said Equatorial Guinea’s President Teodoro Obiang Nguema, the world’s longest-standing ruler, had watched excitedly as the team won.

His son Vice President Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue promised a further €50,000 to the squad for every goal scored against the Ivorians, adding €200,000 to their windfall. — Reuters

Consolidated security platform urged due to AI-driven attacks — Trend Micro

PIXABAY

By Miguel Hanz L. Antivola, Reporter

Companies need to invest in a robust and consolidated platform for cybersecurity due to an expected surge in threats this year driven by artificial intelligence (AI), according to experts.

Predictions from the report of cybersecurity software company Trend Micro showed more cloud-native worm, supply chain, and private blockchain attacks to happen this year, affecting both public and private sectors in the Philippines.

These will double down on the use of generative AI tools for hyper-realistic and socially engineered audiovisual content, given its increasing availability and quality.

“Gone are the days of the silo solutions and isolated resources,” Ian Felipe, country manager at Trend Micro Philippines, told reporters during a briefing on Tuesday.

“The key to succeed in fighting these cybercriminals is having a consolidated approach,” he added. “Endpoint [security] will not suffice.”

“If the private companies are migrating to the latest technology, same goes with the cybercriminals,” said Monte de Jesus, senior threat researcher at Trend Micro Philippines.

“They are just following the money trails,” he added.

Trend Micro noted 52% of global organization with supply chains were hit by ransomware.

“Businesses must transition beyond conventional phishing training and prioritize the adoption of modern security controls,” Eric Skinner, vice president of market strategy at Trend Micro, said in a press statement.

“These advanced defenses not only exceed human capabilities in detection but also ensure resilience against these tactics,” he added.

Mr. Felipe has observed a general awareness and initiative among Philippine organizations to step up their cyber defenses by increasing their budget, he told BusinessWorld.

However, he noted the importance of having an integrated system and approach when dealing with threats.

“A lot of organizations right now use different security tools, but if it’s not consolidated or in a platform, it hampers the ability of the organization to respond to threats,” he said.

“It gives organizations the ability to respond promptly and correctly,” he added.

Red Sea turmoil sends economic shockwaves

A still from a video showing Houthi fighters hijacking the ship Galaxy Leader on the Red Sea off the coast of Al Hudaydah, Yemen, on Nov. 20. — GETTY IMAGES VIA BLOOMBERG

TWO MONTHS of missile, drone and hijacking attacks against civilian ships in the Red Sea have caused the biggest diversion of international trade in decades, pushing up costs for shippers as far away as Asia and North America. The disruption is spreading, fueling fears of broader economic fallout.

Repeated rounds of retaliatory strikes by the US and its allies, as well as a multinational naval operation to patrol the waters, haven’t stopped the assaults by the Houthi militants that followed the start of the Israel-Hamas war. With sailors demanding double pay and insurance rates skyrocketing, shipping lines are steering clear of a waterway that normally carries 12% of the world’s seaborne trade.

More than 500 container ships that would have sailed through the Red Sea to and from the Suez Canal, carrying everything from clothing and toys to auto parts, are now adding two weeks to their routes to travel around the Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa, according to Flexport. That’s about a quarter of all the container-shipping capacity in the world, according to the digital logistics platform.

“We haven’t seen costs increase this quickly since the last crunch in the pandemic,” said Vincent Iacopella, a logistics expert at Alba Wheels Up. Many of the underlying bottlenecks in supply chains remain, even though prices dropped last year as the COVID-19 disruptions faded, he said. The cost of shipping containers from China to the Mediterranean Sea has more than quadrupled since late November, according to Freightos, a cargo-booking company.

Shipping lines, as well as those that carry oil, say they’re planning for the upheaval to last months or more, with vessels for the longer route booked as far out as the summer. That means every company sending goods has more inventory tied up in transit and needs yet more in case containers get scarce. Already, the factories that make those ubiquitous metal cargo boxes are working flat out, according to Container xChange, an online industry platform. Ports as far away as Halifax, Nova Scotia report delays in getting ships, and higher costs.

Customers are scrambling to adapt. Volvo Car AB and Tesla, Inc. have announced production suspensions at plants in Europe, citing the inability to get components from suppliers in Asia. British retailers Tesco Plc and, Marks & Spencer Group Plc have flagged the risk of higher costs. Maersk, the No. 2 container carrier, warned last week that disruptions will last for a few months at least. Though many companies say they still haven’t felt the effects, the longer the upheaval goes on, the wider the economic impact.

UNDERESTIMATED RISKS
“So far, many executives and investors have consistently undershot the potential for this risk to emerge,” said Alexis Crow, who specializes in geopolitics and long-term investing at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. “This is perhaps predicated on a misguided assumption that the Israel-Hamas conflict remains contained.”

Though there’s no sign the higher costs are boosting inflation yet, central bankers are already warning of the risks. Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank, cited “the coming back of supply bottlenecks” as one of the four key risk factors she’s watching. Low water levels are already slowing flows through the Panama Canal.

A spike in oil prices would be another risk for inflation if the conflict disrupted supply.

“So far I think we have been lucky in that we haven’t seen an oil tanker get hit.” said Saad Rahim, chief economist at Trafigura Group, one of the world’s biggest commodity traders. “That could be really something that then focuses the mind.”

Bloomberg Economics says the upside risks from shipping costs could offer central banks another reason to delay interest-rate cuts. Economists at JPMorgan Chase & Co forecast a 0.7 percentage-point increase to global goods inflation during the first half of this year if the shipping crunch persists.

HIGHER COSTS
“So far, we’ve mainly felt the higher costs,” said Rainer Grill, spokesman for Ziehl-Abegg SE, a manufacturer of ventilation technology based in Kuenzelsau, Germany. “The delays are particularly painful for individual shipments — such as components for new production plants that are on their way to Asia.”

Niels Rasmussen, chief shipping analyst at trade group Bimco, said the impact from the Red Sea crisis is already more severe than that from the Ever Given, the huge ship which ran aground and blocked the Suez Canal for about a week in 2021. If it continues, he said, the effect could rival the 1956 Suez Crisis, which left the canal closed for five months. 

This time, Bloomberg Intelligence estimates the rerouting adds about 40% in voyage distance. For importers that means delays, higher costs, key components stuck on the high seas and air freight offering a limited alternative. The volume of shipments by plane from Vietnam to Europe — a major route for clothing — jumped 62% in the week ended Jan. 14, according to Oslo-based Xeneta. Other carriers are going overland via Kazakhstan, bypassing Russia to get goods to Europe.

US CASUALTIES
On the turquoise waters off Yemen, there are signs the tensions may be getting worse.

On Tuesday, the Pentagon said the US and its allies had destroyed 25 Houthi missile facilities, days after President Joseph R. Biden warned that strikes would continue for the foreseeable future.

“Deterrence is not a light switch,” US Deputy National Security Adviser Jon Finer told ABC on Sunday. “We are taking out these stockpiles so they will not be able to conduct so many attacks over time. That will take time to play out.”

The group’s assaults began a few weeks after Hamas’ deadly Oct. 7 attack on Israel. So far, the Houthis haven’t done much damage, but shipping companies are spooked nonetheless.

Most of the Houthi attacks have come in and around the Bab el-Mandeb — which translates roughly from Arabic as “Gate of Tears” — a narrow strait that vessels pass through to enter the Red Sea coming from the Indian Ocean.

The global attention is something the Houthis, a militant group from the remote mountains of Yemen, have been craving for years. The car-transport ship they hijacked in their first attack is now docked off the country’s coast, an attraction for local residents.

If it weren’t for the actions of the US and its allies, “we would not have become a regional and international force,” Mohammed al-Bukhaiti, a member of the Houthi Political Council, said in a phone interview from Sanaa. He vowed that the attacks will continue as long as Israel’s assault on Gaza and blockade of the enclave do. “We are confident that we will win regardless of how much they mobilize forces,” he said. 

IRAN ROLE
Iran counts the group along with Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon in its “axis of resistance.” The Houthis’ arsenal includes ballistic and cruise missiles, some inherited from the Soviet-era stocks they captured in the civil war, upgraded with Iranian technology, according to military analysts.

Supplies of oil and gas so far haven’t been affected dramatically.

The Red Sea route has become a key corridor for Russian oil cargoes in the wake of Europe’s decision to stop buying from Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine. The Houthis have said they won’t target those ships, though two have been struck, apparently by accident. Some other producers are also using the route, hoping to avoid the Houthis’ wrath. Most Middle East crude bound for the US Gulf Coast already goes around the Cape of Good Hope because it’s carried in tankers too big to fit through the Suez Canal when fully loaded.

China has so far steered clear of the Red Sea conflict. The world’s biggest trading nation imports about half of its crude oil from the Middle East, and it exports more to the European Union than the US. The Houthis have said they won’t target Chinese ships.

By exposing the vulnerabilities in the global supply chain that remain since the pandemic, the Red Sea stress has highlighted risks for other potential hot spots, as well, cautioned Josh Lipsky, senior director of the GeoEconomics Center at the Atlantic Council in Washington.

“If anyone expected two years later we’d be able to look at a shut down in the Red Sea and say, ‘that’s fine because we’ve built up these resiliencies closer to home’ — that’s just not realistic,” he said. — Bloomberg

‘Dior bag scandal’ lands S. Korea’s Yoon, ruling party in disarray ahead of election

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol. — REUTERS

SEOUL — Hidden camera footage appearing to show South Korea’s First Lady accepting a Dior bag as a gift has plunged President Yoon Suk Yeol and his party into a controversy that may threaten their bid to reclaim a parliamentary majority in April’s election.

Some members of Mr. Yoon’s conservative People Power Party (PPP) have urged the president and his wife, Kim Keon Hee, to apologize for the incident dubbed by local media “Dior bag scandal” and admit receiving the purse was, at least, inappropriate, in the hope of putting the matter to rest.

Mr. Yoon’s office said it had no information to share.

By opting to remain silent and, at the weekend, pushing for the party leader to resign due to a disagreement over some members’ stance, Mr. Yoon risks creating a flash point that could end up costing PPP the April 10 election, analysts say.

“It is a political bombshell,” said Rhee Jong-hoon, a political analyst. “The Kim Keon Hee risks are only going to get bigger.” Mr. Yoon won a close election in 2022 but his PPP is a minority in the parliament, which is controlled by the rival Democratic Party (DP).

Analysts said when Ms. Kim, as the spouse of a government official, accepted the purse, which had a price tag of 3 million won ($2,250), she may have violated an anti-bribery law.

The president’s supporters say Ms. Kim is the victim of an illegal plot to set her up and a smear campaign.

The case surfaced in November when a YouTube channel aired a video clip secretly recorded by a Korean American pastor with a hidden camera as he visited Ms. Kim and handed her the handbag.  The pastor, Rev. Abraham Choi, who has been involved in religious exchanges with North Korea and is an advocate of engagement with Pyongyang, said he initially sought a meeting with Ms. Kim out of concern for Mr. Yoon’s hardline North Korea policy.

Mr. Choi said while Ms. Kim was a family acquaintance, her response to discussions over possible luxury gifts — including Chanel cosmetics he claims he gave her in their first meeting — led him to believe such gifts were the only way to secure an audience.

“You might say they were like an entry pass, a ticket for a meeting (with Kim),” Mr. Choi told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday.

Mr. Yoon’s office said it had no information to provide when asked about Me. Choi’s claims.

An unnamed presidential official told Yonhap news agency last week that Mr. Choi had deliberately approached Kim with the intention of illegally filming using his family connections, and that gifts to the couple are handled and stored as property of the government.

After a first meeting, Mr. Choi said he became concerned about Ms. Kim’s role in the administration and worked with a reporter at the YouTube channel, which airs left-wing news and commentary, to film her accepting the pricey bag during a second visit.

“A normal person would then say, ‘Reverend, I can’t see you if you do this,’” he said. “But the First Lady gave me the place and time.”

Ms. Kim also remains mired in allegations of stock price manipulation from about 12 years ago, a case for which opposition-controlled parliament voted last month to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate.

PPP opposed the bill as a plot by the DP to hamper an investigation into its leader, Lee Jae-myung, and his corruption charges, which he denies. Mr. Yoon vetoed the bill as politically motivated.

In 2021, Ms. Kim made a public apology after months of allegations of falsified professional record and plagiarism in her Ph.D. thesis overshadowed Mr. Yoon’s campaign for president.

‘MARIE ANTOINETTE’
A number of PPP members have argued public sentiment is focused on Ms. Kim and not the hidden camera sting, reflecting growing concern the issue is leaving a bad impression with voters.

Tension between Mr. Yoon’s office and his party boiled over last week when a member of its leadership, Kim Kyung-yul, likened the situation to the notoriety of Marie Antoinette, the French Queen known for her profligacy.

Local news reports said Mr. Yoon was livid and wanted to remove the party’s leader, Han Dong-hoon, marking at least a brief split between the president and an official widely seen as a protégé and close associate.

In a poll released by YTN cable news conducted this week, 69% of respondents said Yoon needs to explain his position regarding the controversy around the first lady.

Another poll by the financial publication News Tomato in December showed 53% of respondents believe Ms. Kim acted inappropriately, while 27% said she was caught in a trap set up to embarrass her.

“The general public thinks, ‘Okay, it may be a trap, but why did she take it (the bag) anyway?’” said Shin Yul, political science professor at Myongji University. — Reuters

Metro Pacific delivers telemedicine services to Tawi-Tawi

COURTESY OF METRO PACIFIC INVESTMENTS CORP.

By Miguel Hanz L. Antivola, Reporter

Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC) has expanded its telemedicine services to Turtle Islands, Tawi-Tawi, aiming to reach more geographically isolated areas in the Philippines.

mWell, MPIC’s health and wellness app, through its OnTheGo program, has partnered with the government’s Broadband ng Masa initiative to improve access and connectivity in underserved areas.

The portable digital clinic platform is expected to benefit the Turtle Islands’ nearly 6,000 residents through online consultations, prescriptions, and lab referrals.

“Our goal is for mWell to demolish the barriers that prevent our countrymen in remote areas from receiving quality healthcare,” Manuel V. Pangilinan, mWell chairman and MPIC chairman, said in an e-mailed press statement.

Chaye Cabal-Revilla, mWell chief executive officer and MPIC chief finance, risk, and sustainability officer, said the platform aims to foster healthcare accessibility, availability, and affordability for all Filipinos.

mWell also reached the residents of Sacol Island, Zamboanga through the Smart Village initiative of the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT).

The outreach has enabled healthcare access to the island’s 12,000 residents, according to Maria Teresa M. Camba, DICT assistant secretary.

MPIC is one of three key Philippine units of First Pacific, the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT Inc.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.

Taiwan president-elect signals desire to join US-led trade framework

XANDREASWORK-UNSPLASH

TAIPEI — Taiwan’s president-elect, Lai Ching-te, signaled on Wednesday his desire for Taipei to join the US-led Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, considering the island’s key role in the global economy.

The United States excluded chip powerhouse Taiwan from the framework, part of the Biden administration’s effort to counter what it says is Beijing’s increasing economic and military coercion in the region, when it was set up in 2022.

But the United States then set up the US-Taiwan Initiative on 21st Century Trade, which joins the US-Taiwan Economic Prosperity Partnership Dialogue and Technology Trade and Investment Collaboration Framework the two sides have.

Taiwan plays a key role in the global economy and the three existing structures “echo the issues valued by the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework”, Lai told the US-Taiwan Business Council at a meeting in Taipei.

“I very much hope that this can become an important basis for Taiwan to join the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework in the future,” a statement from the presidential office cited Lai as saying.

Lai, who takes over as Taiwan’s new president on May 20, is now its vice president.

Taiwan is a major producer of chips used in everything from microwaves to iPhones and fighter jets, and is home to TSMC, the world’s largest contract chipmaker.

In a separate statement, the Foreign Ministry said two US lawmakers, Mario Diaz-Balart and Ami Bera of the Congressional Taiwan Caucus, would visit Taiwan from Wednesday to Friday, meeting both Lai and President Tsai Ing-wen.

Taiwan has previously sought to join the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework.

In November, US negotiators pressed hard to complete trade talks on the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework initiative, but failed to reach a deal in time for a summit of the Asia Pacific Economic Co-operation, at which Biden had hoped to showcase it as an alternative to deeper trade ties with China.

China, which claims Taiwan as its own territory despite the objections of the government in Taipei, has condemned the US Indo-Pacific push, saying Washington is creating “exclusive clubs”.

Any Taiwan participation in the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework would probably further strain Sino-US ties, with Beijing angered by any show of support from Washington for the island. — Reuters

Philippines inflation remains an ‘urgent’ concern – finance minister

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

MANILA — Philippine Finance Secretary Ralph G. Recto said on Wednesday inflation remains a “most urgent concern” and must be kept under control.

Mr. Recto, who took on the financial portfolio on Jan. 15, is the government’s representative to the seven-member policymaking monetary board of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, which will meet for the first time this year on Feb. 15 to review the direction of policy rates.

Headline inflation in December returned to target at 3.9%, but average inflation for 2023 was 6%, well above the central bank’s 2% to 4% target.

“It is imperative that we find ways and means to reduce inflation,” Mr. Recto told a news conference. “I support what the monetary board is doing. Like I said, it’s data driven.”

The central bank kept its benchmark rate steady at 6.5% in the final two meetings of last year, after hiking rates by a total of 450 basis points since May 2022 to rein in inflation.

Mr. Recto said the possibility of oil prices and transport costs going up is there given escalating geopolitical tensions.

“The central bank will look at all these data and make the appropriate decisions going forward. We recognize that there are external threats,” he said.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Eli M. Remolona Jr. said on Monday monetary policy would have to remain sufficiently tight given the inflation numbers, making a rate cut at its meeting next month unlikely. — Reuters

Thai economy in ‘crisis’ PM says, pledges more stimulus

REUTERS

BANGKOK — Thai Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin said on Wednesday he believes the country’s economy is in crisis, adding the government would roll out stimulus measures in addition to handouts to boost growth.

“I confirm that the economy is not doing well and is in crisis,” he told reporters, adding it was fine if the central bank disagreed with him.

Mr. Srettha’s comments come after the central bank governor told Reuters on Tuesday that government stimulus measures would not fix structural issues plaguing Southeast Asia’s second-biggest economy.

The government this week slashed 2024’s growth projections to 2.8% from an earlier forecast of 3.2% on weaker exports and foreign tourist arrivals.

Thailand’s growth has been slower than expected but the economy is not in crisis as portrayed by the government, said Bank of Thailand (BOT) Governor Sethaput Suthiwartnarueput, who has come under fire from the premier for not cutting interest rates despite low inflation.

Mr. Srettha, who is also finance minister, has told the governor that high rates were hurting businesses and has urged the BOT to lower rates, which are at a decade-high of 2.5%.

His government has promised a slew of stimulus measures to revive the economy, including a $14.3-billion handout programme targeting 50 million Thais.

“Reducing interest rates is a central bank matter … but there will be more policies in addition to the digital wallet.” — Reuters

China adds 12.44 million urban jobs in 2023, says more effort needed this year

A WOMAN walks across the street during morning rush hour in Chaoyang District, Beijing, China Nov. 21, 2022. — REUTERS

BEIJING — China created 12.44 million new urban jobs last year, meeting its target, but more efforts are needed to prop up employment amid uncertain economic conditions in 2024, the country’s human resources ministry told a press conference on Wednesday.

China set a goal to create around 12 million urban jobs in 2023. The job creation goal for this year is expected to be unveiled at the opening of the annual parliamentary meeting in March.

“China’s economic operation has become more uncertain with weak social expectations in 2024,” said Yun Donglai, deputy director of the ministry’s employment promotion department.

“The pressure on total employment will not decrease in 2024, and more efforts will be needed to stabilize employment,” said Yun.

Yun said more prominence would be given to priority targets, such as strengthening support for youth employment, including college graduates, and expanding job opportunities for them.

The world’s second-biggest economy grew 5.2% last year, meeting the government’s target, but it is burdened by a protracted property market downturn, weak consumer and business confidence, and mounting local government debt.

As businesses remained wary of adding workers in the face of uncertainties, a nationwide survey-based jobless rate increased to 5.1% in December from November’s 5.0%, official data showed last week.

For the full year of 2023, the average nationwide survey-based jobless rate dropped to 5.2% from 5.6% in 2022.

In a competitive job market, some Chinese college graduates are trading down to find a source of income as the youth jobless figure rose to a record high of 21.3% in June last year. — Reuters

Philippines says armed forces to ensure ‘unimpeded and peaceful’ exploration in South China Sea

REUTERS

MANILA — The Philippine armed forces will guarantee the “unimpeded and peaceful” exploration and exploitation of natural resources within the country’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) as it shifts its focus to external defense, Manila’s defense secretary said.

“We are evolving into a defense concept which projects our power into areas where we must, by constitutional fiat and duty, protect and preserve our resources,” Defense Secretary Gilberto C. Teodoro told the Manila Overseas Press Club on Tuesday night.

Mr. Teodoro also said the Philippines will “increase the tempo” of activities with allies and major partners in the West Philippine Sea and other parts of the country and “exercise these partnerships to the full”.

Manila calls the portion of the South China Sea that is within its EEZ as the West Philippine Sea, where it has had a series of confrontations with China with both trading accusations of provoking conflict.

In addition to the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei claim parts of the South China Sea disputed by China, which claims almost all of the sea, a conduit for more than $3 trillion of annual ship-borne commerce.

The Permanent Court of Arbitration in 2016 said China’s claims had no legal basis, a ruling Beijing rejects.

Plans by a Philippine firm to drill for oil and natural gas on the Reed Bank in the South China Sea have been hampered for years by the territorial dispute.

“We are not the ones encroaching on the EEZ of another country sea. The encroacher has a vast area of sea,” Mr. Teodoro said. “We do not want a fight, we want peace but it should be based on international law and sustainability.”

“We will not bend over backward,” Mr. Teodoro said.

China and the Philippines agreed last week to improve maritime communication and to properly manage conflicts and differences in the South China Sea through friendly talks. — Reuters

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT