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Triple Giga guns for two in a row with Vosotros returning in PBA 3×3 Season 3

TNT unleashes a returning Almond Vosotros as it guns for two in a row in the PBA 3×3 Season 3 Second Conference Leg 2 that begins today (Oct. 23)at the Ayala Mall Circuit in Makati.

Mr. Vosotros served as “reserve” when the Triple Giga ruled last week’s conference opener and is poised to hit the ground running in his comeback stint in collaboration with first-leg winners Ping Exciminiano and Matt Salem and conference debutant Chester Saldua.

The Triple Giga’s quest for the franchise’s 15th leg title overall starts in Pool A, where they battle No. 6 Purefoods and No. 7 Blackwater for spots to the KO rounds.

Cavitex and Meralco resume their bids for the top honors with the same cast that finished second and third, respectively, in Leg 1.

The No. 2 Braves field anew Tonino Gonzaga, Marion Magat, Jorey Napoles and Ken Ighalo, who face No. 5 Ginebra, No. 8 San Miguel Beer and No. 11 Pioneer Elastoseal in the initial skirmishes in Pool B.

The third-ranked Bolts parade Alfred Batino, Joseph Sedurifa, Jeff Manday and JJ Manlangit in the two-day stop, where they duel first with No. 4 MCFASolver, No. 9 NorthPort and No. 10 Terrafirma in Pool C.

The half-court specialists dispute two berths to the quarterfinals at stake in three-team Pool A and three tickets to the Last-8 on the line in Pools B and C. — Olmin Leyba

Blu Girls U15 win over Uganda via forfeiture, stay in super-round of Women’s Softball World Cup

THE PHILIPPINES got a much-needed victory over Uganda via forfeiture that soothed the pain of a crushing defeat to a mighty United States yesterday and stayed in super-round contention in the U15 Women’s Softball World Cup at the Komazawa Olympic Park in Tokyo.

Moments after being a recipient of a 20-0 drubbing at the hands of the Americans, the Cebuana Lhuillier-backed Blu Girls got a reprieve in the win over the Ugandans, who pulled out from the tournament.

“Uganda didn’t show up so yes, they forfeited all their games, automatic 7-0,” said Amateur Softball Association of the Philippines secretary-general and national team catcher Cheska Altomonte.

The result hiked the country’s record to 2-1 and it would need to win one or both of its last two matches with Puerto Rico today (Oct. 23) and Brazil tomorrow for it to claim one of the three slots in Group B to the super round.

There, assuming they advance, the Blu Girls and fellow Group B qualifiers will tackle the top three in Group A in a crossover format where the Nos. 1, 2 and 3 in the first bracket clash with the Nos. 3, 2 and 1, respectively, in the other.

After an epic 3-2 win over Czechia, a shorter name for the Czech Republic, the day before, the Blu Girls ran into the dreaded Americans, who just utterly destroyed the former in a duel that lasted only three innings due to the mercy rule.

It wasn’t the end of the world for the Nationals though as there is still light at the end of the tunnel in their medal hopes. — Joey Villar

Lakers roster depth

To argue that Taurean Prince did not have a smashing debut with the Lakers would be an understatement. In fact, his first preseason game two weeks ago was a bust; he fouled out and shot only one of five — including zero of three from beyond the arc — in 13 minutes on the floor as a substitute. To his credit, though, he subsequently showed flashes of the skill set that made him the ideal recipient of the $4.5 million biannual exception. With Jarred Vanderbilt sidelined since the opener due to a bruised heel, he did well enough to be named by head coach Darvin Ham as the fifth starter (alongside LeBron James, Anthony Davis, Austin Reaves, and D’Angelo Russell) when the regular season kicks off later this week.

For Prince, the role will be a veritable return to his early days with the Hawks and Nets; he had been burning rubber from the bench in the last three years. Whether he will remain in the First Five when Vanderbilt convalesces is anybody’s guess at this point. It likewise bears noting that Rui Hachimura did well in the same spot for the better part of the 2023 Playoffs. In other words, Ham will have the luxury of choice, and may well opt for a revolving door depending on the makeup of the opposition at any given time.

Indeed, the Lakers now have the luxury of roster depth — and not the type akin to a mere collection of talents. Credit to general manager Rob Pelinka for actually constructing a lineup that makes sense, balanced and made up of complementary pieces. If there is any question, it’s that chemistry can be hard to develop on the fly. And, yes, the fact that their two best players are injury-prone does give even the most optimistic watchers some pause. Then again, it’s precisely the reason Prince and such notables as Gabe Vincent, Jaxson Hayes, Christian Wood, and Cam Reddish were brought in — to hold the fort during the times the top guns are absent.

All told, the Lakers have ample cause to believe another deep postseason run is in the cards. The Western Conference is admittedly stacked; the Nuggets, Suns, Warriors, Grizzlies, and Clippers are projected to crowd the top. All the same, success in the National Basketball Association is attributable to a confluence of factors that could very grace their quest for the hardware. If there’s anything their run to the championship in the turn of the decades underscored, it’s that fortune favors the brave. And if Prince has his way, he’ll be injecting his fair share of pluck along the way.

 

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.

US moves more forces to Mideast as Israel pounds Gaza and beyond

REUTERS

GAZA/JERUSALEM — Fears that the Israel-Palestinian conflict might spread through the Middle East ratcheted higher on Sunday, with the US sending more military assets to the region as Israel pummelled targets in Gaza and elsewhere.

More than 50 Palestinians were killed in Israeli airstrikes on the narrow coastal enclave overnight, Gaza medical sources said on Sunday.

An Israeli missile attack targeted Damascus and Aleppo international airports in neighboring Syria early on Sunday, killing a civilian worker and putting the airports out of service, Syrian state media reported.

Israel said its aircraft struck Hezbollah targets in Lebanon on Saturday and that one of its soldiers was hit by an anti-tank missile in cross-border fighting that the Iran-backed group said killed six of its fighters.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken cautioned Lebanon’s caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Saturday that the Lebanese people would be affected if his country were drawn in, the State Department said.

Israel started its “total siege” of Gaza after an Oct. 7 cross-border attack on southern Israel by militants of the Islamist movement Hamas killed 1,400 people, mainly civilians, in a shock rampage that has traumatized Israel.

Gaza’s Health Ministry said on Saturday that Israel’s air and missile strikes in retaliation had killed at least 4,385 Palestinians, including hundreds of children, with more than a million of the tiny territory’s 2.3 million people displaced.

INCREASING ATTACKS
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Washington would send more military assets to the Middle East to support Israel and strengthen the US defense posture in the region following “recent escalations by Iran and its proxy forces.”

A Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system and additional Patriot air defense missile system battalions will be sent to the region, and more troops will be put on standby, Mr. Austin said.

Washington has already sent a significant amount of naval power to the Middle East in recent weeks, including two aircraft carriers, their support ships and about 2,000 Marines.

Drones and rockets targeted two military bases housing US forces in Iraq last week, the latest in a series of attacks after Iraqi militants warned Washington against intervening to support Israel against Iran-backed Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

A deadly blast at the Al-Ahli hospital in Gaza on Tuesday was likely caused by an errant rocket fired from Gaza, not an Israeli strike, Canada’s National Department of Defense said, reaching similar conclusions to the US and France.

Israeli aircraft struck a compound beneath a mosque in the Jenin refugee camp in the occupied West Bank early on Sunday that the military said was being used by militants to organize attacks.

Israeli forces killed a fifth Palestinian in the West Bank overnight, bringing the number of deaths there to 90 since the war began, the Palestinian health ministry said on Sunday.

Palestinian media reported at least 11 Palestinians were killed in an Israeli strike in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis, and that Israel was striking the southern city of Rafah.

The strikes came hours after Israeli military spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari called on Gazans to move south out of harm’s way.

“For your own safety move southward. We will continue to attack in the area of Gaza City and increase attacks,” Mr. Hagari told Israeli reporters on Saturday.

AID ARRIVES, INVASION LOOMS
The first humanitarian aid convoy allowed into the enclave since war broke out arrived through the Rafah border crossing on Saturday. The United Nations (UN) said the 20-truck convoy brought life-saving supplies that would be received by the Palestinian Red Crescent.

But the U.N. humanitarian office said the volume of goods that entered on Saturday was just 4% of the daily average of imports into Gaza before the hostilities and a fraction of what was needed after 13 days of siege of the crowded enclave.

President Biden, long a firm supporter of Israel, cheered the arrival of the aid after days of intense negotiations. He said the United States was committed to ensuring more aid gets to Palestinians running out of food, water, medicines and fuel.

“We will continue to work with all parties,” Mr. Biden said in a statement.

Israel has amassed tanks and troops near the fenced border around Gaza for a planned ground invasion aiming to annihilate Hamas, after several inconclusive wars dating to its seizure of power there in 2007.

“We are going to go into the Gaza Strip… to destroy Hamas operatives and Hamas infrastructure,” Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Herzi Halevi told troops in a video distributed by the Israeli military on Saturday. “We will have in our mind the memories of the images and those who fell on Saturday two weeks ago.” — Reuters

Argentina heads to the polls in grip of fierce economic crisis

REUTERS

BUENOS AIRES  — Argentines headed to polls on Sunday to vote in a general election under the shadow of the South American country’s worst economic crisis in two decades, which has driven the rise of an outsider far-right libertarian who is in pole position to win.

The vote is likely to roil Argentina’s already shaky markets, impact its ties with trade partners like China and Brazil, and set the political path for the country, a major grains exporter with huge reserves of lithium and shale gas.

Polling stations opened at 8:00 am (1100 GMT) with three frontrunner candidates likely to split the vote: libertarian economist Javier Milei, centrist Peronist Economy Minister Sergio Massa and conservative Patricia Bullrich.

Mr. Milei, pledging to “chainsaw” the economic and political status quo, is the candidate to beat, with angry voters flocking to his tear-it-all-down message, fed up with inflation at 138% and poverty affecting over two-fifths of the population.

“People want things to change,” said Federico Aurelio, president of consulting firm Aresco. “How? They have no idea, but they want change.”

Mr. Milei, a brash former TV pundit likened to Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro, posted a shock win in August open primaries, though Mr. Massa and Ms. Bullrich were not far behind and it may well prove a close race. Pollsters expect no outright winner.

A candidate needs over 45% of the vote or 40% and a 10-point lead to avoid a second-round run-off, which would be held on Nov. 19. Voting on Sunday will end around 6:00 p.m. (2100 GMT) and the first results are expected at 9:00 p.m. (00:00 GMT).

Whoever wins will have to deal with an economy on life support: central bank reserves are empty, recession is around the corner after a major drought, and a $44-billion program with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is wobbling.

Amid this crisis Mr. Milei has risen abruptly, pledging shock therapy to fix the economy including dollarizing, shutting the central bank, slashing the size of government drastically and privatizing state entities.

“He is the only one who understands the situation in the country and understands how to save it,” said Buenos Aires student Nicolas Mercado, 22.

Mr. Massa, current economy chief, remains in the running despite overseeing inflation hitting triple digits for the first time since 1991. He is pledging to cut the fiscal deficit, stick with the peso and defend the Peronist social welfare safety net.

“Massa represents certain traditional guarantees with which I was raised: public health, state education, which is what I want to defend with my vote,” said astrologer Flavia Vázquez.

Ms. Bullrich, a former security minister who is popular in business circles, has seen her support diluted by the unexpected emergence of Mr. Milei. Pollsters see her as the most likely of the top three runners to miss out on a second round — Reuters

S&P upgrades Greece to investment grade for first time since 2010 crisis

A man walks by a National Bank branch in Athens, Greece, October 31, 2015. — REUTERS

S&P Global is the first among the “big three” rating agencies to upgrade Greece to investment grade since the country’s debt crisis in 2010.

It raised late on Friday the country’s local and foreign currency long-term issuer ratings to “BBB-/A-3,” with a stable outlook, citing stronger budgetary position.

The other two agencies, Fitch and Moody’s, rate the country one notch below investment grade. DBRS Morningstar upgraded Greece’s rating to investment grade BBB (low) last month.

S&P said it expects budget surplus target to help in paring the country’s government debt, and added that it is cautious about political pressures hindering Greece’s ability to sustain large primary budget surpluses.

Greece lost its investment-grade credit rating, which implies a low risk of default, in 2010 when its decade-long debt crisis erupted, forcing it to sign up for international bailouts worth about 260 billion euros ($275.34 billion) to stay afloat. It emerged from the debt crisis in 2018 and was the only country in the eurozone with a “junk” rating.

S&P expects “additional structural economic and budgetary reforms, coupled with large European Union funds, will support robust economic growth in 2023-2026.”

Greece expects economic output to rise 3% in 2024 following a 2.3% expansion this year more than twice the eurozone average. It also projects a 2.1% of GDP primary budget surplus next year on higher investment and strong tourism revenue.

The conservative government hopes now that the upgrade will trigger more capital inflows and reduced borrowing cost for the country’s businesses.

“In the short and medium term, we expect inflows from index-tracking funds, upgrade of banks assets and more favorable borrowing cost for companies,” a senior finance ministry official told Reuters.

Greece’s 10-year government bond yield was at 4.38% on Friday, about 58 basis points below Italy’s equivalent.

“I think all the ratings specific news is priced in. It is trading as investment grade, anyway,” Rabobank senior rates strategist Lyn Graham-Taylor told Reuters. — Reuters

‘I am a Zionist’:  How Joe Biden’s lifelong bond with Israel shapes US war policy

U.S. President Joe Biden meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the Israeli war cabinet in Tel Aviv, Israel, Oct. 18, 2023. — REUTERS

WASHINGTON — When Joseph R.  Biden met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his war cabinet during his visit to Israel, the US president assured them: “I don’t believe you have to be a Jew to be a Zionist, and I am a Zionist.”

The politicians and generals gathered in the ballroom of the Tel Aviv hotel nodded in approval, according to a US official knowledgeable of the closed-door remarks, even as Israel bombarded Gaza in retaliation for a devastating attack by Palestinian Hamas militants and with a ground invasion looming.

Mr. Biden, who is of Irish Catholic descent, has used similar words in the past to profess his affinity for Israel. But the moment, which has not been previously reported, illustrates how Mr. Biden’s decades as one of the leading “Friends of Israel” in American politics seem to be guiding him during a defining crisis of his presidency.

It also underscores the challenges he faces balancing unwavering support for Israel with persuading Mr. Netanyahu — with whom he has a long history — to avoid worsening the civilian death toll and humanitarian meltdown in Gaza as well as complicating further releases of American hostages.

“Biden’s connection to Israel is deeply engrained in his political DNA,” said Aaron David Miller, a former Middle East negotiator who served six secretaries of state in both Democratic and Republican administrations. “Whether he likes it or not, he’s in the midst of a crisis he’ll have to manage.”

Reuters interviewed a dozen current and former aides, lawmakers and analysts, some of whom said Mr. Biden’s current wartime embrace of Mr. Netanyahu could afford the US leverage to try to moderate Israel’s response in Gaza.

In their private session with aides on Wednesday, the two leaders displayed none of the tensions that have sometimes characterized their meetings, according to a second US official familiar with the talks.

But Mr. Biden did pose hard questions to Mr. Netanyahu about the coming offensive, including “have you thought through what comes the day after and the day after that?” the official said. US and regional sources have expressed doubt that Israel, which vows to destroy Hamas, has yet crafted an endgame.

Mr. Biden’s alignment with the right-wing leader risks alienating some progressives in his Democratic Party as he seeks re-election in 2024, with a growing international outcry against Israel’s tactics also casting some blame on the US.

It also has prompted many Palestinians and others in the Arab world to regard Mr. Biden as too biased in favor of Israel to act as an even-handed peace broker.

FORGED OVER DECADES
Mr. Biden has partly credited his pro-Israel world view to his father, who insisted following World War II and the Nazi Holocaust there was no doubt of the justness of establishing Israel as a Jewish homeland in 1948.

Mr. Biden’s awareness of the persecution of Jews over the centuries and a record high in the number of antisemitic incidents in the US last year could also help explain why Hamas atrocities committed in the Oct. 7 attack on Israel were so disturbing for the 80-year-old president, according to a former US official.

Entering national politics in 1973, Mr. Biden spent the next five decades forging his policy positions — iron-clad support for Israel’s security coupled with backing for steps toward Palestinian statehood — as he served as US senator, Barack Obama’s vice president and finally president.

His career was marked by deep engagement with the Israeli-Arab conflict, including an oft-retold encounter with Prime Minister Golda Meir who told the young lawmaker in 1973 on the cusp of the Yom Kippur War that Israel’s secret weapon was “we have no place else to go.”

During his 36 years in the Senate, Mr. Biden was the chamber’s biggest recipient in history of donations from pro-Israeli groups, taking in $4.2 million, according to the Open Secrets database.

As vice president, Mr. Biden often mediated the testy relationship between Mr. Obama and Mr. Netanyahu.

Dennis Ross, a Middle East adviser during Mr. Obama’s first term, recalled Mr. Biden intervening to prevent retribution against Mr. Netanyahu for a diplomatic snub during a 2010 visit. Mr. Obama, Ross said, had wanted to come down hard over Israel’s announcement of a major expansion of housing for Jews in East Jerusalem, the mostly Arab half of the city captured in the 1967 war.

“Whenever things were getting out of hand with Israel, Mr. Biden was the bridge,” said Ross, now at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “His commitment to Israel was that strong … And it’s the instinct we’re seeing now.”

While Mr. Biden and Mr. Netanyahu profess to be longtime friends, their relationship was frayed in recent months with the White House echoing Israeli opponents of Mr. Netanyahu’s plan to curb the powers of the Supreme Court of Israel.

PROGRESSIVE DISSENT
The two now find themselves in an uneasy alliance that could be tested by an Israeli ground offensive.

Republican US Senator Lindsey Graham, in an interview with Reuters, expressed confidence that the “arc of time” in Mr. Biden and Mr. Netanyahu’s relationship would enable them to work together.

But in a veiled swipe, Mr. Graham, who spent years as Mr. Biden’s Senate colleague, said it was “imperative” he set “red lines” to keep Iran, Hamas’ benefactor, out of the conflict.

Mr. Biden has warned Iran not to get involved but has not spelled out consequences.

Hamas gunmen killed 1,400 people and took around 200 hostages, including Americans, when they rampaged through Israeli towns. Israel has since put Gaza under siege. At least 4,385 Palestinians have been killed, Gaza officials said.

While Republicans have shown near-unanimity in endorsing whatever action Israel takes, Mr. Biden faces dissent from a faction of progressives pushing for Israeli restraint and a ceasefire.

“President Biden, not all America is with you on this one, and you need to wake up and understand,” Representative Rashida Tlaib, the only Palestinian American in Congress, told supporters. “We are literally watching people commit genocide.”

But experts say Mr. Biden could gain ground among independent voters who share his affinity for Israel.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Monday showed stronger US public sympathy for Israel than in the past, with support for Israel highest among Republicans at 54%, compared to 37% of Democrats. Younger Americans showed less support for Israel than older Americans.

Mr. Biden, facing low approval ratings, and some fellow Democrats are also expected to be wary of running afoul of the main U.S. pro-Israel lobby, AIPAC, a powerful force in US elections.

But the crisis has also stirred criticism of Mr. Biden for not devoting enough attention to the plight of Palestinians, whose hopes for statehood have grown ever dimmer under Israeli occupation.

US officials had said the time was not right to resume long-suspended Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, largely because of intransigence on both sides.

“The administration’s neglect of the issue is a key factor in where we are today,” Khaled Elgindy, a former Palestinian negotiations adviser, said.

Mr. Biden’s “blank check” for Israel’s assault on Gaza has “shattered, perhaps irreversibly, what little credibility the US had left,” said Khaled Elgindy, now at the Middle East Institute in Washington. — Reuters

Scientists infect volunteers with Zika in hunt for vaccines, treatments

PUBLIC HEALTH IMAGE LIBRARY/US CENTERS DISEASE FOR CONTROL AND PREVENTION

RESEARCHERS in the United States have shown for the first time they can safely and effectively infect human volunteers with Zika virus, a step towards learning more about the disease and developing vaccines and treatments.

The study — known as a “controlled human infection model” — has previously been controversial for Zika because of the risks to participants and lack of treatments.

But US regulators and the World Health Organization (WHO) ruled the new model, developed by a team at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, was safe and scientifically important.

Zika is a viral infection spread by mosquitoes, which is usually mild or asymptomatic.

But a major outbreak in the Americas in 2015 and 2016 showed it can be dangerous for pregnant women and fetuses, causing devastating birth defects such as microcephaly, a disorder in which a child is born with an abnormally small head and brain.

There are no vaccines or treatments, and the outbreak in the Americas ended before new ones could be fully tested. Infections have dwindled worldwide since, with about 40,000 reported last year from that region.

But the WHO has warned that surveillance can be patchy, and transmission patterns for Zika are not well understood. Climate change is also likely to boost the spread, which is already established in 91 countries.

Anna Durbin, the Johns Hopkins professor who led the study, said developing countermeasures was essential because infections could re-surge.

Also significant, she added, was the mental health burden on pregnant women in endemic regions, who worry about the virus and their babies but have limited protection options.

Ms. Durbin and her colleagues used two strains of Zika to infect 20 female volunteers who were not pregnant or lactating. All developed laboratory confirmed infections, with mild illness. Eight others got a placebo.

To minimize the risks, the patients were admitted to an inpatient unit and monitored until they were free of the virus. They agreed to use birth control methods for two months.

The next step is evaluating the strains in male volunteers, in part to assess how long the virus, which can be sexually transmitted, stays infectious in semen.

Ms. Durbin said several vaccine manufacturers have already asked to use the strains to test experimental products.

The data was presented as an abstract at the annual meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene in Chicago. — Reuters

Elevate your social media feed with vivo V29 5G

In the Philippines, the art of content creation has taken the digital world by storm. With a vibrant and tech-savvy population, Filipinos have embraced the world of blogging, vlogging, and social media sharing.

As the demand for quality content continues to soar, there is a growing need for the perfect tool to capture life’s moments and share them with the world.

Enter the vivo V29 5G, a smartphone that’s set to revolutionize the way Filipinos create and share content.

Content creation craze in Philippines

Filipinos are known for their creativity and resourcefulness, and it’s no surprise that content creation has become a massive trend.

From picturesque travel vlogs to scrumptious food blogs, from heartwarming family moments to showcasing the latest fashion trends, Filipino content creators have left an indelible mark on the digital landscape.

This pursuit of artistic expression and storytelling has led to a constant quest for better tools and gadgets to enhance the quality of their work.

Perfect tool: vivo V29 5G

If you’re a content creator or aspire to be one, the vivo V29 5G is the perfect choice for you. With its camera-centric design, this recently released smartphone has all the features you need to capture stunning moments and elevate your content.

@vivo_philippines This newest vivo V29 5G can definitely be your vlogging cam! #vivogoals #vivoSmartphones #vivoV29Series5G #fyp #foryoupage ♬ original sound – vivo_philippines

The vivo V29 5G boasts a 50MP front camera that delivers crystal-clear selfies and wide-angle shots. Whether you’re showcasing your makeup skills, sharing your OOTD, or vlogging about your daily life, this camera ensures you always look your best.

The rear camera is just as impressive. With 50MP resolution and Optical Image Stabilization (OIS), your outdoor adventures, landscape shots, or food photography will be nothing short of breathtaking. No more blurry pictures, even in low light conditions.

Aside from the cameras, one of the most impressive features is the Aura Light 2.0, which can give you professional-quality lighting at your fingertips.

In addition to the exceptional hardware and lighting features, the vivo V29 5G also offers a range of specialized camera modes that are tailor-made for content creators such as Portrait Mode, Food Mode, and Night Mode.

@vivo_philippines Studio level photography ba? No need to go to studio! Just use our vivo V29 😉 #vivogoals #vivoSmartphones #vivoV29Series5G #vivoLoveAndPassionSpotlighted #fyp #foryoupage ♬ original sound – vivo_philippines

Whether you’re a seasoned vlogger, an up-and-coming influencer, or a hobbyist looking to express your creativity, the vivo V29 5G empowers you to capture moments with brilliance and share your stories with impact.

Get ready to take your content creation journey to new heights with the vivo V29 5G – a smartphone that truly understands the art of content creation.

The vivo V29 5G is available in Magic Maroon and Starry Purple at 12GB + 256GB for only P24,999 and 12GB + 512GB for just P26,999. Its more affordable version, the vivo V29e 5G in Crystal Blue and Forest Black with 12GB RAM + 256GB ROM will also be available on Nov. 4 for only P18,999.

Buy now at the official vivo Philippines website, Shopee, Lazada and TikTok, as well as at physical stores across the country.

The vivo V29 5G is also available through Home Credit with a 0% interest rate, starting at just P1,002 per month for the 256GB ROM variant and P1,082 per month for the 512GB ROM variant.

Stay updated with the latest news and announcements from vivo Philippines on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, X, and TikTok.

 


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Experts say more local tech opportunities needed to boost Filipinos’ skills, expertise

Buildings are seen along EDSA in Quezon City, July 3. PHOTO BY MIGUEL DE GUZMAN, The Philippine Star

THE Philippines should focus on developing advanced technology skills instead of mainly being an outsourcing hub, industry experts said on Friday.

“Once we get to that higher level function, you will have a lot of Filipinos that are taking advantage of global opportunities right at home,” said Winston L. Damarillo, president of DevConnect Philippines, Inc., during the DEVCON Pro Summit 2023 press conference.

“We do have the talent,” he said on developing the tech industry of the country. “What we lack is exposure.”

Mr. Damarillo emphasized the creation of more local software and hardware products as a means to elevate tech skills in the Philippines, which would subsequently attract more venture capital.

“I think the formula that gets us there the fastest is just super encouraging freelancing,” he said on the future of Filipino tech talents being utilized in creating solutions over writing code assigned to them.

However, Mr. Damarillo said this will surely create some disruption, given that the Philippine information technology and business process management (IT-BPM) sector is on a steady rise.

The IT-BPM industry is on track to hit its $35.4-billion (P2-trillion) revenue target by yearend, also expecting to add 257,000 full-time workers and $5.9 billion in revenues in the two years until the end of this year, according to the IT and Business Process Association of the Philippines.

If the goal is hit, the industry will post an 8.8% annual growth and surpass the global industry growth rate of 7.7%.

“A healthy ecosystem benefits everyone,” Arvin Yason, managing director at IT company Accenture Philippines, said in response to possibly creating its own industry competitors.

“We see the value of uplifting [talents] from just being a developer to actually becoming the product owner and moreover,” he said. “There is global talent [in the Philippines], and it benefits everyone.”

In 2021, Accenture Philippines granted academic institutions P8 million to create and fund startups focusing on local tech areas that needed a boost, such as artificial intelligence, the Internet of Things, and applications in the healthcare area, Mr. Yason said.

“Over the past few years, there is a realization that we’ve been a breeding ground for technology talent, not just for our competitors but even for some employees who want to do other things also,” he said.

“There is nothing like success to bring more success,” said Tom Fisher, chief technology officer at American telco company TuVasWifi.

He noted that learning from the successes of the Silicon Valley and using government institutions for proper tax regulations can be used to attract a sustainable tech ecosystem in the Philippines.—Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

Rio Tinto, Aboriginal group sign first solar deal for WA iron ore region

PORT DAMPIER, Australia – Rio Tinto has signed an initial agreement with the Yindjibarndi people and the Philippines’ ACEN to look at options to develop green energy supplies for its operations in the world’s biggest iron ore region.

The project in Western Australia’s Pilbara district comes as part of Rio’s $3 billion plan to decarbonize its iron ore business. It is the first for Yindjibarndi Energy, a partnership between the Yindjibarndi Aboriginal Corporation and ACEN Corp., the listed energy platform of the Ayala Group.

The deal comes as Australia’s Indigenous groups are taking equity stakes in the growing renewable energy industry, and as ACEN grows its footstep outside its home base in Southeast Asia.

As a first step, the group is looking to build a 75–100-megawatt solar array, for which an investment decision will be due by the end of next year. Construction is expected to take 12-18 months.

“This arrangement would see renewable power on Yindjibarndi connecting to our private network,” Simon Trott, Rio Tinto’s iron ore division chief, told media in Port Dampier.

In its second phase, the group will look at battery power and wind projects, which Yindjibarndi Energy plans to supply the region. Rio has already identified some potential locations for wind to supplement its renewable energy network during the night.

Rio Tinto, which accounts for 1% of global emissions mostly due to the steel-making emissions of its customers, is looking to build 600-700 megawatts of solar power to displace gas as part of the decarbonization of its iron ore business.

It is targeting a 50% reduction in scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2030 from a 2018 baseline of 32.6 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent. Rio has walked back an initial target of a 15% reduction in emissions by 2025 and its targets are behind peer Fortescue, which plans to reach net zero scope 3 emissions by 2040.

The green energy developments allow YAC to take into account cultural heritage sites, river systems, water ways and other important places when they are choosing renewable sites, said YAC CEO Michael Woodley.

Western Australia’s Yindjibarndi Aboriginal Corporation struck a deal with ACEN in July to develop up to 3 gigawatts of renewable energy, giving YAC a 25%-50% stake in projects developed on their native title land and preference to community businesses for contracts.

Aboriginal groups have so far had limited say in mega-projects rolled out across Indigenous lands. Some have at times eroded or destroyed traditional landscapes, including the demolition by Rio Tinto of sacred rock shelters at Juukan Gorge three years ago.

“It’s about taking respectful use of Yindjibarndi country and providing green electrons to the community, to Rio Tinto, to other business, primarily to help with Pilbara decarbonization then electrification,” said Yindjibarndi Energy CEO Craig Ricato.—Reuters

Election watchdog, CSC warn gov’t workers vs electioneering

CANDIDATES filing their certificates of candidacy for village and youth elections on Oct. 30 set up camp outside a mall in Manila midnight of Saturday to be first in line when the Commission on Elections opens. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

AN election watchdog on Friday said some government workers and officials have started engaging in campaign-related activities for the 2023 Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan elections.

“The more common [cases] would be the use of barangay vehicles and candidate materials being posted near barangay premises,” Eric Jude O. Alvia, secretary general of the National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel), said in a phone call interview with BusinessWorld.

Electioneering and partisan political activity refer to acts that promote the election or defeat of a candidate or party to public office, the Civil Service Commission (CSC) said in an e-mailed press release on Friday.

The prohibition of electioneering and partisan activities is mentioned in the 1987 Constitution and the CSC-Commission on Elections (Comelec) Circular No. 1, series of 2016, which can lead to suspension and/or dismissal, depending on the offense.

Prior to the campaign period, which started on Oct. 19 and will end on Oct. 28, Mr. Alvia said that Namfrel instructed its volunteer chapters to observe and report any instance of local governments supporting potential candidates, especially through projects in the guise of delivering social services such as the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program or 4Ps.

“This is also part of the responsibilities of the Comelec’s Anti-Epal [Task Force],” he said on the dedicated arm of the Comelec in charge of issuing corresponding show cause orders for those who violate the imposed election and campaign regulations.

The CSC reminded government officials to refrain from participating in electioneering and partisan activities.

“The Commission acknowledges civil servants’ shared desire to contribute to improved public service delivery through electoral participation,” said Karlo Alexei B. Nograles, CSC chairperson.

“However, we must remain mindful not to engage in electioneering or partisan activities during this period,” he said. “This precautionary measure underscores our commitment to maintaining the integrity and neutrality of the public service.”

The prohibition of such activities covers all civil service members, career officers holding political offices in an acting or officer-in-charge capacity, and active members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the Philippine National Police, alongside employees on leave of absence, according to the CSC.

“Civil servants, nonetheless, are allowed to cast their votes, express their views on current political problems or issues, mention the names of candidates or parties they support, and publicly express their opinions or engage in discussions of probable issues in a forthcoming election, or on attributes of or criticisms against probable candidates to be nominated on a forthcoming political party convention,” the CSC said.

Social media interaction is allowed as long as government workers do not explicitly solicit support for or against a candidate or party during the campaign period, the CSC noted.

Government employees found in direct or indirect engagement involving said activities will be given a penalty of one month and one day to six months suspension for the first offense, and dismissed from service for the second offense, according to the 2017 Rules on Administrative Cases in the Civil Service.—Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

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