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Germany’s Scholz asks Poland to clarify cash-for-visas affair

A GERMAN national flag flies atop the illuminated Reichstag building in Berlin, Germany Dec. 9, 2022. — REUTERS

BERLIN — German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Saturday called on the Polish government to clarify allegations about a cash-for-visas deal for migrants that has roiled Polish politics, as a debate about immigration heats up in Germany.

The demand from Mr. Scholz marks stepped up rhetoric from Poland’s powerful western neighbor, coming just days after sources said Germany summoned the Polish ambassador and Interior Minister Nancy Faeser spoke to her Polish counterpart on the topic.

Since earlier this month, the Polish government has been facing accusations by opposition parties that it was complicit in a system in which migrants received Polish visas at an accelerated pace without proper checks after paying intermediaries.

Arrivals to Poland could easily cross into other European Union countries given that borders are open.

Poland’s government has written to the European Union’s (EU) security commissioner to say that the scandal was an exaggerated “media fact” timed to discredit the ruling nationalists in a tough battle for reelection next month.

“The visa scandal that is taking place in Poland needs to be clarified,” Mr. Scholz said on Saturday at an event. “I don’t want people from Poland to simply be waved through,” he added.

Mr. Scholz hinted that Germany could take steps to control the border with Poland.

In recent years, Germany has already coped with floods of migrants and asylum seekers from Syria and Ukraine.

In a letter to Polish Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau, EU Commissioner for Home Affairs Ylva Johansson demanded full clarification of the scandal of up to 350,000 purchased work visas for the EU-Schengen area, BILD reported this week.

In the letter made available to BILD, the commissioner points out that the behavior of the Polish authorities could mean “a violation of EU law and in particular of the EU Visa Code.” — Reuters

Even China’s 1.4 billion population can’t fill all of its vacant homes

A person rides a scooter past a construction site of residential buildings by Chinese developer Country Garden, in Tianjin, China Aug. 18, 2023. — REUTERS

BEIJING — Even China’s population of 1.4 billion would not be enough to fill all the empty apartments littered across the country, a former official said on Saturday, in a rare public critique of the country’s crisis-hit property market.

China’s property sector, once the pillar of the economy, has slumped since 2021 when real estate giant China Evergrande Group defaulted on its debt obligations following a clampdown on new borrowing.

Big-name developers such as Country Garden Holdings continue to teeter close to default even to this day, keeping home-buyer sentiment depressed.

As of the end of August, the combined floor area of unsold homes stood at 648 million square metres (7 billion square feet), the latest data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) show.

That would be equal to 7.2 million homes, according to Reuters calculations, based on the average home size of 90 square meters.

That does not count the numerous residential projects that have already been sold but not yet completed due to cash-flow problems, or the multiple homes purchased by speculators in the last market upturn in 2016 that remain vacant, which together make up the bulk of unused space, experts estimate.

“How many vacant homes are there now? Each expert gives a very different number, with the most extreme believing the current number of vacant homes are enough for three billion people,” said He Keng, 81, a former deputy head of the statistics bureau.

“That estimate might be a bit much, but 1.4 billion people probably can’t fill them,” He said at a forum in the southern Chinese city Dongguan, according to a video released by the official media China News Service.

His negative view of the economically significant sector at a public forum stands in sharp contrast to the official narrative that the Chinese economy is “resilient.”

“All sorts of comments predicting the collapse of China’s economy keep surfacing every now and then, but what has collapsed is such rhetoric, not China’s economy,” a spokesperson at the foreign ministry said at a recent news conference. — Reuters

Countries should not ‘play games’ with Ukraine on arms aid — Pope

ANNETT KLINGNER-PIXABAY

ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE — Pope Francis suggested on Saturday that some countries were “playing games” with Ukraine by first providing weapons and then considering backing out of their commitments.

The pope made his comments aboard the plane returning from a trip to the French port city of Marseilles. He was responding to a reporter’s question about whether he was frustrated that his efforts to bring about peace had not succeeded. He has sent an envoy, Italian Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, to Kyiv, Moscow, Washington and Beijing to meet with leaders there.

He said he did feel “some frustration” and then began talking randomly about the arms industry and the war.

“It seems to me that the interests in this war are not just those related to the Ukrainian-Russian problem but to the sale of weapons, the commerce of weapons,” he said.

“We should not play games with the martyrdom of this people. We have to help them resolve things… I see now that some countries are moving backwards, not wanting to give (Ukraine) arms. A process is starting in which the martyr certainly will be the Ukrainian people and that is an ugly thing,” he said.

Asked for a clarification, Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said the pope was not taking a stand on whether countries should continue to send weapons to Ukraine or stop sending them.

“It was a reflection on the consequences of the arms industry: the pope, with a paradox, was saying that those who traffic in weapons never pay the consequences of their choices but leave them to be paid by people, like the Ukrainians, who have been martyred,” Mr. Bruni said.

A number of countries, including the United States, face internal political pressure to stop or curtail spending on weapons sent to Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky appealed to US lawmakers on Thursday for continued support amid doubts by some Republicans over whether Congress should approve more aid.

The pope has condemned the international arms trade in general but said last year that it is morally legitimate for nations to supply weapons to Ukraine to help the country defend itself against Russian aggression. — Reuters

Host China claims first gold of Asian Games in rowing

CHINA’S Jiaqi Zou and Xiuping Qiu celebrate after winning gold after the Lightweight Women’s Double Sculls. — REUTERS

HANGZHOU, China — Asian Games hosts China claimed the first gold of the continental sporting showpiece on Sunday when Zou Jiaqi and Qiu Xiuping won the lightweight women’s doubles sculls title in the rowing.

On an overcast morning at the Fuyang Water Sports Centre, the Chinese duo dominated, clocking a time of seven minutes and 6.78 seconds to finish nearly 10 seconds clear of Uzbek runners-up Luizakhon Islomova and Malika Tagmatova.

Indonesia took the bronze.

About 12,400 athletes from 45 nations are competing for 481 gold medals across a huge program of 40 sports at the Hangzhou Games in eastern China, which were delayed by a year due to COVID-19.

China topped the medals table in the last 10 Asian Games and are almost certain to do so again on home soil.

XI OPENS HANGZHOU ASIAN GAMES, CEREMONY DAZZLES
China’s President Xi Jinping opened the COVID-delayed 19th Asian Games in the Eastern city of Hangzhou during a spectacular and at times raucous ceremony on Saturday, which organizers hope will lift the mood in a nation struggling with an economic slump.

Spectators in the city’s 80,000 capacity stadium let out a huge roar as Mr. Xi was introduced and walked in to sit with visiting dignitaries including International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach and Syria President Bashar al-Assad.

The Games, delayed by a year due to China’s measures to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, will be the country’s biggest sporting event in over a decade in several metrics, with around 12,000 athletes from 45 nations competing in 40 sports.

After the Chinese flag was brought out, the first team out was Afghanistan, whose female athletes, based abroad due to sport for women being banned by the Taliban, walked together with their male counterparts.

Their flagbearers carried the tri-color flag for Afghanistan which is used by international resistance movements and shunned by the Taliban.

Several teams including Chinese Taipei were vocally welcomed by the spectators, but none more than the home team, whose athletes are expected to dominate the medals table once again.

The Games also mark a stark contrast to the cheerless Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics that took place under China’s strict zero COVID conditions, which lasted for nearly three years from January 2020 until late 2022.

In an often spellbinding ceremony intended to burnish Hangzhou’s status as one of China’s centers of technology and creativity, dozens of balletic dancers hovered above a digitally-projected lake in the wake of a flotilla of sail-boards.

In a modern take on the traditional lighting of the cauldron, a huge, digitally animated torchbearer “ran” the length of the stadium before settling to loom above the actual torch-bearer, China’s Olympic champion swimmer Wang Shun.

In synch, the pair lit a huge, multi-pronged cauldron, prompting another bout of cheering and, soon after, a digital firework display.

TRAFFIC CONTROL
A sizeable “traffic control area” around the city’s Olympic stadium was blocked off, at least one metro station was shut and deliveries were disrupted on Saturday.

Some felt the security measures, always tight wherever Mr. Xi goes for a visit, were overdone.

One local social media user was told that due to safety rules surrounding the Games a pencil sharpener they had ordered could not be delivered.”How dangerous is the sharpener?,” the user wrote. “Will I be able to use it to kill foreign country leaders?”

Organizers have not disclosed spending on the Games, though the Hangzhou government has said it spent more than 200 billion yuan ($30 billion) in the five years through 2020 on transport infrastructure, stadiums, accommodation and other facilities.

Organizers hoped a high-tech opening ceremony on Saturday would help drum up excitement for the Games. Interest at home has been muted as the economy sputters and some question the cost of hosting the mega-event.

GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS
The official slogan of the event, “Heart to Heart, @Future,” represents the goal of uniting the people and countries of Asia through these games, officials have said, but geopolitical tensions and rivalries threatened to overshadow that effort this week.

On Friday, India protested over a visa issue that affected three of its athletes at the games, leading India’s sports minister Anurag Thakur to cancel his trip.

Japan’s top government spokesperson said on Tuesday that Tokyo would do its utmost to ensure the safety of Japanese nationals in China as the release of treated radioactive water from the Fukushima nuclear power plant into the sea has chilled ties.

“We should promote peace through sports, adhere to the principle of goodwill towards neighbors and mutual benefit and … resist the cold war mentality and confrontation between camps,” Mr. Xi told dignitaries including Bach and Assad at a banquet before the ceremony on Saturday, state news agency Xinhua reported.

Some analysts said Mr. Xi also wishes to send a message to Asian leaders that China is open for business.

“Xi Jinping wants to use these Games to showcase that China is still an economic leader, the economic locomotive of Asia … as a response to Western criticism,” said Marcus Chu of Hong Kong’s Liangnan University who researches Chinese sports-politics. — Reuters

Gilas boys suffer 92-36 setback to mighty Australia

KIEFFER LOUIE ALAS — FIBA.BASKETBALL

THE GILAS Pilipinas boys’ amazing run came to an abrupt end, suffering a 92-36 blowout loss against the mighty Australia in the FIBA U16 Asian Championship semifinals yesterday at the Al-Gharafa Sports Club Multi-Purpose Hall in Doha, Qatar.

On a four-game win streak, Gilas was clamped down to just 10 points in the first half, including a meager three-point outing in the second period, that took the fight out of the squad en route to a hapless 56-point defeat.

No player finished in double figures for the usually balanced Gilas unit with ace Kieffer Louie Alas bleeding for only two points on one-of-seven shooting after firing 18.6 points in the first four games.

Irus Chua and CJ Amos led the way with six points apiece for the Nationals, who were left off the dust with a 10-45 deficit at the turn and never recovered since then by trailing as many as 60 points.

Gilas shot only 28.9-percent from the field, including three-of-33 from the trey, compared to Australia’s efficient 57-percent clip.

Ranged against the back-to-back champion Aussies whose smallest player stands at 6-foot-3, Gilas was also out-rebounded big time, 73-31, leading to a 27-9 and 62-16 gap in second chance and points in the paint, respectively.

Still, the loss could not dampen the Filipino teens’ stellar campaign marked by a sure ticket to the 2024 FIBA U17 World Cup in Turkey with a commendable semifinal finish.

Gilas’ World Cup qualification off a 64-59 quarterfinal win against Japan realized the country’s return to the world youth stage after five years since 2018 under the golden era of Kai Sotto, Carl Tamayo and AJ Edu.

And Gilas sports a chance to even put an icing on the cake with a rematch against China, which absorbed an 86-69 loss to New Zealand in the other semis pairing, for the bronze medal.

Prior to a shellacking loss to Australia, Gilas’ lone loss came at the expense of the Chinese, 84-67, in the opener before stringing four straight wins against Kazakhstan, 66-42, Malaysia, 75-52, South Korea, 95-71, and Japan.

Meanwhile, all players barged into the scoring board for Australia led by Dash Daniels with 12 points, 11 rebounds and two blocks in only 20 minutes of play. — John Bryan Ulanday

Man City make it perfect six, Man Utd and Everton get morale-boosting wins

MANCHESTER City maintained their perfect start to the season with a sixth successive Premier League win but it was not as serene as it might have been in a 2-0 victory over Nottingham Forest as they played the second half with 10 men.

Goals by Phil Foden and Erling Haaland put the champions in cruise control within 15 minutes but Rodri’s red card one minute into the second period after he grappled with Morgan Gibbs-White meant City had to work hard to seal the victory.

Manchester United also got a much-needed 1-0 win at Burnley to snap a run of three straight defeats in all competitions.

Everton registered their first league victory of the season, producing an impressive display to triumph 3-1 at Brentford whose home struggles continued.

Luton Town got off the mark as they drew 1-1 against 10-man visitors Wolverhampton Wanderers while Crystal Palace and Fulham played out a 0-0 draw at Selhurst Park.

With half of the weekend’s fixtures being played on Sunday, City took the chance to move onto a maximum 18 points, five ahead of Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal, who meet on Sunday, and Liverpool, who host West Ham United.

A City win never looked in doubt once Kyle Walker set up Mr. Foden to thump in the opener after a 46-pass move and Mr. Haaland headed powerfully into the net from a cross by Matheus Nunes.

But Rodri’s needless altercation with Mr. Gibbs-White, who made a meal of the City midfielder putting his hands on his throat in the 46th minute, meant the hosts were unable to coast through the rest of the match.

“We played, I would say, 51, 52 minutes 10 against 11, so it was not easy, but we were fantastic,” City manager Pep Guardiola said. “I thought the way we played in the first half was amazing against a difficult side for the physicality, the pace they have up front.”

Asked about Rodri’s sending off which means he will likely miss three games, Mr. Guardiola said: “Rodri has to control his emotions. I can get a yellow card but Rodri cannot get a red.

“He has done it. He has apologized. The players in the pitch have to control their emotions.”

DANGEROUS ASSIGNMENT
A trip to Turf Moor to face a Burnley side who are better than their league position suggests looked like a dangerous assignment for United but thanks to Bruno Fernandes’s sublime volley they got back on track to climb to eighth on nine points.

Mr. Fernandes met a superb Jonny Evans pass on the stroke of halftime and his classy finish proved enough for the win.

“Team spirit was big. The battle, the fight. It’s about winning. The last week a lot was against us,” United manager Ten Hag said. “It’s up to us, we knew that.”

Everton’s James Tarkowski scored versus his former club in a well-deserved 3-1 win at Brentford’s Community Stadium.

Abdoulaye Doucoure put Everton ahead in the sixth minute with a strike into the top right corner but Mathias Jensen leveled in the 28th with a shot that went in off the far post.

Tarkowski headed in Dwight McNeil’s corner after 67 minutes before substitute Dominic Calvert-Lewin wrapped up the points in the 71st with an effort off the leg of goalkeeper Mark Flekken.

Victory lifted Everton out of the relegation zone and up to 15th with four points, while Brentford, without a home win this season, are 12th on six.

Wolves were reduced to 10 men at a raucous Kenilworth Road when Jean-Ricner Bellegarde was sent off late in the first half for kicking out at Luton skipper Tom Lockyer.

Undeterred the visitors went ahead when Pedro Neto cut in after racing down the right wing and smashed a shot into the roof of the net.

However, Luton were handed a lifeline when Joao Gomes handled in the box and, after a VAR review, Carlton Morris stepped up to send Jose Sa the wrong way.

It secured Luton’s first point in the top flight since April 1992 and they might have been celebrating a win.

“But it’s coming. We were better again today. I’m not saying we should have got something from the game, I’m saying we should have won,” Luton manager Rob Edwards said.

The Hatters moved off the bottom, above Burnley on goal difference, with one point from five games.

Palace and Fulham are ninth and 10th respectively with eight points after their stalemate.Reuters

Without Lionel Messi, Inter Miami seeks points at Orlando City

INTER Miami will be trying to pick up another crucial result in their pursuit of the playoffs without Lionel Messi when they travel a few hours north to visit Orlando City on Sunday evening.

Mr. Messi has played only 41 of Miami’s last 270 minutes in league play, first missing out due to international duty with Argentina and then because of fitness concerns.

The official explanation is not a new injury but the aggravation of a previous ailment due to fatigue. But it had the appearance of a player leaving the field injured when Messi exited with a slight limp in the first half of Miami’s 4-0 home win against Toronto FC on Wednesday.

“It’s bothersome,” said manager Tata Martino, via an interpretation from Goal.com. “I don’t know if it hurts. I can’t really explain as it’s more a medical topic. It’s probable it bothers (Messi) to the point, including mentally, that he isn’t able to play freely.”

The Herons (9-15-4, 31 points) entered the game five points beneath the playoff line and have recently fared OK without their star. They beat Sporting Kansas City at home and lost at Atlanta United in games Mr. Messi did not dress.

But a trip to second-place Orlando (14-7-8, 50 points) is a tougher assignment given how well the Lions have played of late.

A 2-0 loss at New York City FC in midweek halted an impressive six-match unbeaten run (5-0-1). The Lions clinched a playoff spot anyway thanks to results elsewhere later in the evening. They had needed until the final day to secure their postseason place a season ago.

Club scoring leader Facundo Torres has scored 10 of his 12 goals since the start of June and is just three off the pace of the league lead. He’s led an attack that has scored two or more in six consecutive home matches. — Reuters

Leaving the Sixers

If latest reports from the pro hoops grapevine are to be believed, James Harden is apparently still keen on leaving the Sixers. The extent of his desire is hardly earth-shaking in and of itself. After all, he felt aggrieved when he did not get the contract extension he expected in the offseason — a year after he agreed to lower terms in order to provide the red, white, and blue with the financial flexibility to shore up a top-heavy roster. With training camp about to open, however, his projected holdout is seen to put a severe crimp on title hopes in the City of Brotherly Love.

Not that compelling Harden to report to the Sixers’ practice facility in New Jersey this week will make things easier.  Since publicly branding general manager Daryl Morey “a liar” and pledging to “never be a part of an organization that he’s a part of,” the 10-time All-Star has cut off all communication with franchise officials. Which, in a nutshell, means they cannot expect him to play his best even if he is forced to suit up for them. It doesn’t even matter that the National Basketball Association fined him $100,000 for his public comments; if anything, it served to strengthen his resolve.

At this point, it’s fair to argue that Morey will want nothing more than to make Harden someone else’s headache. That said, he’s bent on getting a dollar-for-dollar value in any trade scenario. If nothing else, he needs to ensure that the Sixers stay competitive, lest reigning Most Valuable Player awardee Joel Embiid suddenly develop wanderlust. The problem is the lack of demand for the recalcitrant asset; around the league, the latter’s reputation has taken a significant hit following nasty separations with the Rockets and Nets. Who would want to take a chance in the face of uncertainty?

Logic dictates that the only way for Harden to get his wish is if he first proves his value to potential suitors. This means lacing up his sneakers for the Sixers and being at his best. He’s no spring chicken at 33, and the last thing he wants is to be viewed as requiring high maintenance while providing diminishing returns. As to whether he can let go of his anger enough to finally think straight, only time will tell.

 

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.

2022’s top-paid professionals: pilots, developers, mathematicians — PSA

PHILIPPINE Statistics Authority

AIRCRAFT pilots, software developers, and mathematicians were among the top-paying jobs in 2022, data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed.

In the 2022 Occupational Wages Survey by the PSA, aircraft pilots and related professionals had the highest average monthly wage at P135,363, which was twice as much as the top-paying jobs in 2020, held by mathematicians, actuaries, and statisticians at P63,368.

The OWS focuses on establishments with a workforce of at least 20 employees to track wage rates of benchmark occupations (including accounting and bookkeeping clerks and unskilled workers) and up to 11 different monitored occupations from each of the preselected 55 out of the 71 industries.

The rest of the top five high-paying occupations were software developers (P70,595), mathematicians and actuaries (P69,654), production supervisors and general foremen (P63,017), and application programmers (P58,643).

In the industry level, four occupations that made it into the top 10 were engaged in the industry of insurances, reinsurance, and pensions (except compulsory social security). This included mathematicians and actuaries, applications programmers, statisticians, and accountants.

The healthcare industry was also recognized in the 2022 survey as healthcare workers, specifically specialist medical practitioners and medical doctors/generalist medical practitioners, which were not on the last OWS high-paying job list, are now positioned at ranks six and eight, respectively.

The following are the top six to 10 highest-paying occupations: specialist medical practitioners (P57,476), statisticians (P51,607), medical doctor/generalist medical practitioners (P51,251), geologists (P49,059), and accountants (P48,982).

As for benchmark occupations (jobs that are common and are often near or at the bottom of the wage scale) across the regions, the highest recorded average monthly wage rate was in the National Capital Region at P24,530. This was followed by Region III at P20,029 and Central Visayas at P18,989.

Across the 193 monitored occupations, the overall average monthly wage rate saw an increase of 11.7% to P18,423 in 2022 from P16,486 in 2020. This marked a turnaround from the contraction of almost 10% in 2020.

Similarly, the median monthly basic pay across all industries inched up by 6.9% to P13,588 in 2022 from P12,753 in 2020.

The highest median monthly basic pay was recorded in the electricity, gas, steam, and air conditioning supply industry, reaching up to P29,928 in 2022 from P27,253 in 2020, recording a growth of 6.9%.

The leading percent growth in median monthly basic pay was seen in workers in mining and quarrying, with a 21.5% growth, reaching P16,132 in 2022 from P13,272 in 2020. — Andrea C. Abestano

Crypto play-to-earn game craze highlights urgent need for awareness — expert

A NON-FUNGIBLE TOKEN (NFT) is displayed on the website of NFT marketplace OpenSea in this illustration picture taken on Feb. 28, 2022. — REUTERS

By Miguel Hanz L. AntivolaReporter

MANY FILIPINOS have fallen victim to the fanfare of play-to-earn games enabled by cryptocurrency due to a lack of awareness, according to an expert.

Consumers must be informed and empowered to handle any financial asset responsibly, Jeanifer C. Bilango, the country manager of the local crypto brand Coins.ph, said in an interview with BusinessWorld.

“It has shown how Filipino consumers are ready from an educational and tech standpoint,” Ms. Bilango said regarding crypto adoption in the country.

“Filipinos are quite sophisticated enough to be onboarded into Web3 because in order for you to play Axie, you need to have a Web3 wallet,” she added.

Ms. Bilango noted that most failed to understand the speculative nature—the promise of profit—surrounding such an opportunity.

“It’s just economics—you have a limited supply, and if demand is not properly addressed or funneled properly, it will lead to prices going up,” she said. “That’s the biggest learning.”

Axie Infinity, a Vietnam-based online video game powered by non-fungible tokens (NFTs), took the Philippines by storm during the pandemic and saw 35% of its traffic in the country, according to its creator Vietnamese studio Sky Mavis.

Players can collect, trade, and play with virtual creatures called Axies, which are traded in the form of NFTs and used to sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The online video game had been losing about 50,000 players a month since January 2022, based on data from activeplayer.io, due to a supply-and-demand imbalance and volatile crypto assets, which Sky Mavis developers were trying to fix, BusinessWorld reported in March that year.

According to crypto insights company CoinGecko, the price of a single SLP token peaked at P19.97 on July 13, 2021. As of Friday, it is priced at P0.077954—barely a single Philippine peso.

“Most people ascribe crypto to scams because of the illegitimate players who affect the perspective of the space,” Ms. Bilango said regarding entities that are not bound to certain audits and regulations.

“There are ways in which we have to work on teaching people how to use crypto responsibly,” she added.

“We’re still early, but it takes time for legitimate projects to build on top of the blockchain, but we are very optimistic because we see adoption albeit small.”

Ms. Bilango said that the government has been open-minded about crypto adoption in the country.

“What they want at the end of the day is consumer protection, and what we want is to innovate. So where can we meet in the middle?” she said.

There are 20 virtual asset service provider (VASP)-licensed firms listed by the Philippine central bank, following the recent approval of UnionBank on Tuesday.

Ms. Bilango noted that the local crypto market is seeing opportunities in remittances and stablecoin, which aims to stabilize its market value as a cryptocurrency to another currency or commodity.

First Atkins Group completes land purchase for its 8th cold storage

In photo, standing from left to right: Atty. Marlon Morada, First Atkins Vice Legal Counsel; Myk Gamora, First Atkins Group CFO; and Aldwin Dumago, Lima Land Industrial Business Operations Head. Seated: Gabriel J. Ang, First Atkins Group President & CEO; and Clifford Academia, Lima Land VP of Operations

The First Atkins Group continues its commitment to promoting food sufficiency as it unveils plans for its 8th cold storage facility. First Atkins Holdings Corp. (FAHC), through its subsidiary First Inland Kingdom Realty Corp. (FIKRC), has successfully acquired a 34,558-square-meter (3.46 hectares) industrial estate from Aboitiz Equity Ventures (AEV) subsidiary, Lima Land, Inc.

This new facility, to be situated within the industrial estate, is poised to become the largest of its kind in the country, boasting more than 20,020 pallet positions (PP) for frozen meat and a capacity of 5 million kilos for onions. It will incorporate state-of-the-art Japanese technology, particularly its Automated Storage and Retrieval Systems (ASRS), a robotics-aided system designed for efficient item retrieval and storage. This project represents one of FAHC’s multibillion-peso initiatives aimed at bolstering food security.

Cold storage facilities offer a range of valuable advantages, including the reduction of food wastage through extended shelf life, preservation of product quality, and optimization of supply chain management. These facilities also play a crucial role in disaster recovery by safeguarding food supplies during emergencies, ultimately enhancing economic stability in the agricultural sector.

President and CEO Gabriel J. Ang expressed, “We selected this Aboitiz property due to its strategic location near the Batangas Port and the reliable partnership offered by a well-developed industrial subdivision.” He also expressed hope about the potential positive outcomes that could be realized by both FAHC and the onion producers in Mindoro through their collaboration. Mindoro is known to be one of the three largest onion producers in the country.

FAHC reiterates its resolute commitment to collaborating with the government in achieving food sufficiency objectives. This commitment involves the construction and efficient operation of cold storage facilities, with the aim of reducing intermediary costs and ensuring direct access for consumers to affordable, high-quality food.

FAHC is the parent company of meat importation and distributor Atkins Import and Export Resources, Inc. and Prime Numbers Commodities, Inc., cold storage operator First Meycauayan Cold Storage and Leasing, Inc., real estate arm First Inland Kingdom Resources, Inc., logistics firm Trident Supply Chain Solutions, Inc., and ready-to-cook and packaged food manufacturer First Gablen Trading Corp.

 


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Philippines approves GSK anti-shingles vaccine

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a vaccine for the prevention of shingles, a viral infection caused by the same virus that causes chickenpox, biopharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) announced on Thursday.

The GSK shingles vaccine is administered intramuscularly in two doses and is intended for the prevention of shingles in adults aged 50 and above, as well as those aged 18 and above with immunocompromised conditions, according to the company.

“Shingles is a disease that can cause excruciating pain and is caused by the reactivation of the varicella-zoster virus,” Giovell P. Barangan, GSK Philippines medical director, said in an e-mailed statement.

“As people age, the cells in the immune system lose the ability to mount a strong and effective response to infection, increasing the risk of developing shingles,” GSK Philippines said, citing a study from the British Journal of General Practice.

A paper from the BMC Public Health journal noted that shingles typically presents as an unbearably painful, isolated rash and can also lead to long-lasting nerve pain called post-herpetic neuralgia.

A study on the long-term protection provided by the vaccine, published in the Infectious Diseases journal, showed that the vaccine maintains an 89% efficacy rate at 9.6 years post-vaccination, one month after the second dose.

The vaccine was initially approved in the United States and Canada in 2017 for shingles prevention among those aged 50 and older, and it has since been adopted by over 40 other countries.

In December 2022, the FDA issued a public health warning against the unauthorized sale of the Shingrix shingles vaccine from GSK Philippines, which was under evaluation at the time.

The Quezon City government allocated P20 million to fund its free shingles vaccine program for senior citizens in 2018, using Zostavax, according to the Philippine News Agency.

However, the sale and use of Zostavax in the United States were discontinued as of November 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices has noted that GSK’s Shingrix recombinant zoster vaccine is the preferred shingles vaccine. — Miguel Hanz L. Antivola

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