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Insure power lineworkers — Chiz

A lineman fixes a power transmission facility in Manila. — REUTERS

A SENATOR has filed a bill requiring mandatory insurance coverage and other benefits for lineworkers in the power utility sector.

“The continuous and reliable supply of electricity — crucial in sustaining our economic growth and maintaining our way of life — rests on the hands of lineworkers who construct, install, maintain, rehabilitate and repair our electrical transmission and distribution systems,” Senator Francis Joseph “Chiz” G. Escudero, who filed Senate Bill No. 2303, said in a statement on Thursday.

Under his proposed measure, lineworkers are entitled to life, accident, or disability insurance benefits with minimum insurance coverage pegged at P200,000; P400,000; and P600,000 depending on an electric cooperative’s size.

Mr. Escudero said this would “ensure that our lineworkers, as well as their families, are protected from the risks and perils of their chosen occupation.” — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Lady lawyer shot in Abra

JANNOON028 — FREEPIK

BAGUIO CITY — Gunmen riding in tandem on a motorcycle shot and wounded a lawyer who is the wife of a former Regional Trial Court (RTC) judge in front of their house in Bangued, Abra on Thursday afternoon.

Lawyer Maria Saniata Liwliwa Gonzales Alzate, was inside her white Mitsubishi Mirage G4 sedan (AVA 6533) while parked in front of their gate on Santiago Street, Zone 3, Bangued, when the assailants pulled over close to her vehicle and opened fire at her at least eight times.

Brig. Gen. David K. Peredo, Jr., Cordillera regional police director, ordered an immediate manhunt for the assailants who sped off from the scene in the direction of Barangay Consiliman, Zone 2, Bangued.

As of press time last night, there was no official word from the Seares Memorial Hospital in Bangued on the condition of Ms. Alzate.

The victim is the wife of Raphiel F. Alzate, former acting presiding judge of both the RTC Branch 24 in Cabugao, Ilocos Sur, and the RTC Branch 58 in Bucay, Abra. — Artemio A. Dumlao

P6.9-M ‘shabu’ seized in Marawi

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

COTABATO CITY — Nearly P7 million worth of “shabu” were seized by agents of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency-Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao from two men who fell in a buy-bust operation in Marawi City on Tuesday.

Christian O. Frivaldo, director of PDEA-BARMM, told reporters on Thursday that the two suspects are now detained, awaiting prosecution for violation of the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002.

Mr. Frivaldo said the two suspects, who sold more than a kilogram of “shabu” to covert agents who posed as buyers in Barangay Gadungan, Marawi City, were nabbed through the help of police. Two of their cohorts eluded arrest, but the two vehicles they used in the operation were impounded.

Mayor Majul Gandamra, who is chairman of the inter-agency Marawi City Peace and Order Council, expressed support for the crackdown on the proliferation of drugs in the city. — John Felix M. Unson

PCC, CIC budgets scrutinized

BW FILE PHOTO

A SENATE committee scrutinized and then approved the proposed budgets of the Philippine Competition Commission (PCC) and the Credit Information Commission (CIC), including the CIC’s request for P60 million in operating expenses and to boost its information communication technology (ICT) systems.

“We endorse without any objection the budget of the CIC to the mother Committee of Finance for plenary and further debate,” declared Senator Maria Imelda “Imee” R. Marcos at Thursday’s Senate Finance Committee hearing on both of the agencies’ budgets.

The committee also endorsed the PCC’s budget of P465 million, a portion of which will be used to develop a digital forensics lab that could trace bid rigging in public procurements, said PCC Chairman Michael G. Aguinaldo.

Meanwhile, Ms. Marcos asked Benjamin Joshua A. Baltazar, president and Chief Executive Officer of the CIC, to submit a more detailed explanation on why the agency was requesting P60 million in additional funds to its P267.250-million budget for next year. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Philex to mine for nickel in Zambales

BW FILE PHOTO

BAGUIO CITY — Philex Mining Corporation is going to mine nickel probably in Zambales, in addition to its gold and copper mine operation in Benguet, its president and chief executive officer (CEO)revealed recently.

Philex President and CEO Eulalio B. Austin Jr. said they were going to add nickel in their mineral extraction because of the rising demand for it in the world market.

Mr. Austin said the demand is driven by the widening preference and production of electric cars and solar energy dependent devices amid globally set goals for transformation to clean energy.

He expressed confidence that Philex can produce nickel due to many years of employing the subsidence method, where it uses bulldozers and backhoes, to mind for gold and copper. “(We) can do the same in search of nickel,” Mr. Austin said.

He revealed that they are in the stage of applying for an exploration permit in Zambales. “They are glad… that some of the officials in Candelaria and Sta. Cruz towns are supportive of mining,” he said. — Artemio A. Dumlao

RSF leads launch of ‘Circle 19’ for right to information in China

BAGUIO CITY — Press freedom watchdog Reporters without Borders (RSF) led the launch of “Circle 19” for the Right to Information in China early this week while holding its inaugural symposium in Paris.

Circle 19, refers to Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that enshrines the right to freedom of opinion and expression, as well as the 1919 “May Fourth movement” which advocated for progressive political and social reforms, including freedom of information.

Circle 19 for the Right to Information in China (Circle 19) is an independent group composed of Chinese people and China specialists.

On Monday, Circle 19 also launched the drafting process of a statement of principles aimed at demonstrating that the universal principle of the right to information is deeply rooted in China’s traditions, history and political system, contrary to certain narratives conveyed by the Chinese regime, explained RSF secretary general Christophe Deloire.

The group’s long-term objective is to empower the Chinese public with intellectual resources related to this right to information in the People’s Republic of China, he added.

Mr. Deloire said the RSF believes that “in its frantic race for social control, the Beijing regime deprives the Chinese public of its legitimate right to information by invoking a so-called ‘relativity’ of cultures which denies the universality of human rights.”

The Circle 19 initiative should demonstrate through unassailable arguments that the right to information is a central element of Chinese culture and that its implementation has been, and remains to this day, a constant demand of the Chinese people.

“A strategy of naming and shaming is not enough,” Mr. Deloire said, while quoting press freedom defender and nobel peace prize winner Liu Xiaobo, who said: “Change in China will come from inside.”

He said that Circle 19 was formed in 2019 and now includes around 30 participants, whose details are not public and remain anonymous for security reasons. — Artemio A. Dumlao

Earth’s life-support systems in jeopardy due to human activity

REUTERS

BERLIN — The Earth’s life-support systems are facing greater risks and uncertainties than ever before, with most major safety limits already crossed as a result of planet-wide human interventions, according to a scientific study released on Wednesday.

In a “health check” for the entire planet published in the Science Advances journal, an international team of 29 experts found that the Earth is now “well outside of the safe operating space for humanity” due to human activity.

The study, expanding on a 2015 report, said the world had now crossed six of nine “planetary boundaries” — the safe limits for human life in areas such as the integrity of the biosphere, climate change and the use and availability of fresh water.

In all, it said, eight of the nine boundaries are under more pressure than in the 2015 assessment, with only the sky’s ozone layer improving — raising the risk of dramatic changes in the Earth’s living conditions.

“We don’t know that we can thrive under major, dramatic alterations of our conditions,” lead author Katherine Richardson from the University of Copenhagen told a news conference.

The authors said crossing the boundaries did not represent a tipping point where human civilization would just crash but could bring irreversible shifts in the Earth’s support systems.

“We can think of Earth as a human body, and the planetary boundaries as blood pressure. Over 120/80 does not indicate a certain heart attack but it does raise the risk,” Ms. Richardson said.

The scientists sounded the alarm about increasing deforestation, the excessive consumption of plants for fuel, and the proliferation of manmade products like plastic, genetically modified organisms and synthetic chemicals.

“There are hundreds of thousands of human-made chemicals that are thrown into the environment now,” Richardson said. “We’re constantly surprised by the effects of these human impacts.”

Of the nine boundaries assessed, only ocean acidification, ozone depletion and airborne pollution — mainly soot-like particles — were judged to be still within safe limits. The ocean acidification boundary, however, was close to being breached.

The atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, has risen to around 417 parts per million, significantly higher than the safe level of 350 ppm.

The current rate of species extinction is also estimated to be at least tens of times faster than the average rate over the past 10 million years, meaning the planet has already crossed the safe boundary for genetic diversity.

Johan Rockström, the study’s co-author and director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, said he hoped the world would see the findings as a wake-up call.

“In my career I’ve never been sitting on so much evidence as today and can be so clear in our communication,” Mr. Rockström said, adding that he was disappointed with the outcome of last week’s United Nations Global Stocktake report, which will form the basis of the COP28 climate talks in Dubai later this year.

“It is a complete failure …and it’s a large risk… We’re still following a pathway that takes us unequivocally to disaster.” — Reuters

Mexican Congress holds hearing on UFOs featuring purported ‘alien’ bodies

REMAINS of an allegedly ‘non-human’ being is seen on display during a briefing on unidentified flying objects (UFOs), at the San Lazaro legislative palace, in Mexico City, Mexico, Sept. 12, 2023. — REUTERS

MEXICO CITY — Mexican lawmakers heard testimony that “we are not alone” in the universe and saw the alleged remains of non-human beings in an extraordinary hearing marking the Latin American country’s first congressional event on unidentified flying objects (UFOs).

In the hearing on Tuesday on FANI, the Spanish acronym for what are usually now termed Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP), politicians were shown two artifacts that Mexican journalist and long-time UFO enthusiast Jaime Maussan claimed were the corpses of extraterrestrials.

The specimens were not related to any life on Earth, Mr. Maussan said.

The two tiny “bodies,” displayed in cases, have three fingers on each hand and elongated heads. Mr. Maussan said they were recovered in Peru near the ancient Nazca Lines in 2017. He said that they were about 1,000 years old.

Similar such finds in the past have turned out to be the remains of mummified children.

“This is the first time extraterrestrial life is presented in such a form and I think there is a clear demonstration that we are dealing with non-human specimens that are not related to any other species in our world and that any scientific institution can investigate it,” Mr. Maussan said.

“We are not alone,” he added.

Jose de Jesus Zalce Benitez, Director of the Scientific Institute for Health of the Mexican navy, said X-rays, 3-D reconstruction and DNA analysis had been carried out on the remains.

“I can affirm that these bodies have no relation to human beings,” he said.

Lawmakers also heard from former US Navy pilot Ryan Graves, who has participated in US Congressional hearings about his personal experience with UAP and the stigma around reporting such sightings.

In recent years, the US government has done an about-face on public information on UAP after decades of stonewalling and deflecting. The Pentagon has been actively investigating reported sightings in recent years by military aviators, while an independent NASA panel studying UFOs is the first of its kind by the space agency. — Reuters

Russian journalist’s phone hacked with Israeli spyware — researchers

FREEPIK

NEW YORK — A leading Russian journalist has had her phone compromised using Israeli spyware, researchers said Wednesday, the latest sign that phone hacking tools are being used to spy on media workers and opposition figures worldwide.

A joint investigation by Canadian internet watchdog Citizen Lab and digital rights group Access Now found that the phone of Galina Timchenko had been infected using spyware built by the Israeli company NSO Group. The infection began on or around Feb. 10, 2023, the researchers said. They did not identify who would have deployed it.

Ms. Timchenko — the co-founder and publisher of independent Russian news outlet Meduza — was in Berlin at the time of the hack, the researchers said.

Media defense groups condemned the alleged surveillance, with the Committee to Protect Journalists saying “journalists and their sources are not free and safe if they are spied on.” Timchenko was quoted in a story published by Meduza on Wednesday as saying the hacking left her feeling “like I’d been stripped naked in the town square.”

In an email, NSO said it “always investigates credible allegations of misuse.” The company did not say whether an investigation had been opened in this case, or respond when asked for an example of any past investigation.

Researchers, lawmakers and journalists have repeatedly accused NSO of helping governments spy on political opponents and undermine independent reporting. In 2021, the company was blacklisted by the US government over human rights concerns.  

Timchenko is a particularly high-profile alleged victim. One of the pillars of Russia’s independent media scene, she set up Meduza in Latvia after being fired as the editor of one of Russia’s most popular news websites for falling foul of the authorities. The outlet has since become a prominent source of news amid Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. — Reuters

Taiwan blasts Elon Musk over latest China comments

TWITTER.COM/ELONMUSK

TAIPEI — Taiwan is “not for sale,” the island’s foreign minister said in a stern rebuke to Elon Musk who asserted Taiwan was an integral part of China, as the billionaire again waded into the thorny issue of relations between Beijing and Taipei.

Mr. Musk, the owner of the social media platform X formerly known as Twitter, as well as the Tesla electric car company and Starlink satellite network, made the comments to the All-In Summit in Los Angeles uploaded to YouTube this week.

“Their (Beijing’s) policy has been to reunite Taiwan with China. From their standpoint, maybe it is analogous to Hawaii or something like that, like an integral part of China that is arbitrarily not part of China mostly because … the US Pacific Fleet has stopped any sort of reunification effort by force,” he said.

Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu, in a post on X late Wednesday, responded that he hoped Mr. Musk could ask China to “open @X to its people.” China blocks X, along with other major Western social media like Facebook.

“Perhaps he thinks banning it is a good policy, like turning off @Starlink to thwart Ukraine’s counterstrike against Russia,” Mr. Wu added, referring to Mr. Musk’s refusing a Ukrainian request to activate his Starlink satellite network in Crimea’s port city of Sevastopol last year to aid an attack on Russia’s fleet there.

“Listen up, Taiwan is not part of the PRC & certainly not for sale!” Mr. Wu said, using the acronym for the People’s Republic of China.

Taiwan’s democratically elected government strongly rejects China’s sovereignty claims, and says only Taiwan’s people can decide their future.

This is not the first time Mr. Musk, whose Tesla had a large factory in Shanghai, has riled Taiwan. Last October, he suggested that tensions between China and Taiwan could be resolved by handing over some control of Taiwan to Beijing, drawing a similarly strong reprimand from Taiwan. — Reuters

Kim invites Putin to North Korea

RUSSIA’s President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un during a meeting at the Vostochny Cosmodrome in the far eastern Amur region, Russia, Sept. 13, 2023. — SPUTNIK/MIKHAIL METZEL/KREMLIN VIA REUTERS

SEOUL/MOSCOW — Kim Jong Un invited Kremlin chief Vladimir Putin to visit North Korea during a rare summit, stoking U.S. concerns that a revived Moscow-Pyongyang axis could bolster Russia’s military in Ukraine and provide Kim sensitive missile technology.

Putin accepted the invitation, according to North Korean state news agency KCNA, though there was no immediate confirmation from the Kremlin. Since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Putin has rarely travelled abroad.

Calling each other “comrades”, Putin and Kim toasted to their friendship on Wednesday with Russian wine after the 70-year-old Russian president showed Kim, 39, around Russia’s most modern space launch facility and they held talks alongside their defense ministers.

“At the end of the reception, Kim Jong Un courteously invited Putin to visit the DPRK at a convenient time,” KCNA said, referring to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, North Korea’s formal name.

“Putin accepted the invitation with pleasure and reaffirmed his will to invariably carry forward the history and tradition of the Russia-DPRK friendship,” KCNA said.

For the United States and allies, the burgeoning friendship between Kim and Putin is a concern: Washington has accused North Korea of providing arms to Russia, but it is unclear whether any deliveries have been made.

Both Russia and North Korea have denied those claims, but promised to deepen defence cooperation, and during a visit to North Korea in July, Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu was shown banned ballistic missiles by Kim.

Kim is due on Thursday to visit military and civilian aviation factories in the Russian city of Komsomolsk-on-Amur and to inspect Russia’s Pacific fleet in Vladivostok, Putin said.

‘FRIENDSHIP’
Over a sumptuous lunch of Russian “pelmeni” dumplings made with Kamchatka crab, white Amur fish soup and sturgeon, Kim on Wednesday toasted to Putin’s health, to the victory of “great Russia” and to Korean-Russian friendship, predicting victory for Moscow in its “sacred fight” with the West.

North Korea was founded in September 1948 with the backing of the Soviet Union, and Moscow supported it for decades during the Cold War, though support dropped off after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.

In recent years, China has been seen as the power with the most influence over Kim, but Pyongyang’s leaders have often tried to balance ties with both Moscow and Beijing.

After taking over from Boris Yeltsin in 1999, Putin visited Pyongyang in July 2000 for a meeting with Kim Jong Il, the father of Kim Jong Un.

At the summit on Wednesday, it was unclear just how far Putin was prepared to go in fulfilling North Korean wish lists for technology.

Amid the grinding artillery battles in Ukraine, Russia has ramped up its shell production, but a North Korean supply line could be useful.

North Korea is believed to have a large stockpile of artillery shells and rockets compatible with Soviet-era weapons, as well as a history of producing such ammunition.

Asked whether Russia could simply remove sanctions on North Korea, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia remained a responsible member of the UN Security Council.

But Peskov added that Moscow would develop its relations with North Korea in accordance with its own interests. Russian state television said the West’s rebukes over the summit were typical “hypocrisy” and pointed to U.S. military supplies to its allies in Asia.

The U.S. State Department said the Biden administration “won’t hesitate” to impose additional sanctions on Russia and North Korea if they conclude any new arms deals.

South Korea’s unification minister, Kim Young-ho, who is in charge of relations with the North, expressed “deep concerns” over military cooperation and possible arms transactions between Pyongyang and Moscow, saying the two countries were apparently continuing to pursue “some kind of” a military deal. — Reuters

‘Class B’ athletes have to pay for their own Asian Games campaign

KRISTINA KNOTT — PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

A FIFTH of the 395-strong Philippine team seeing action in the Hangzhou Asian Games scheduled Sept. 23 to Oct. 8 may have to pay for their own campaign in search for sporting glory.

In a document obtained by The STAR recently, 73 athletes categorized as “Class B” would have to pay for everything — uniform, bags, airplane ticket and hotel expenses — while the rest, who are all Category A athletes, would be funded by the Philippine Sports Commission.

In that same letter, the sports-funding agency announced the release of allowances as well as the tracksuit, luggage and other supplies of all Hangzhou-bound delegation members at the third floor of its administration building at the Rizal Memorial Sports Complex in Malate, Manila.

It also announced the sendoff at 9 a.m. on Monday at the PICC grounds in Pasay City.

But for Category B athletes, it was bad news.

“For Category B athletes and team officials (please ask guidance from the Philippine Olympic Committee regarding categories), please be informed that the PSC will be collecting payments for the following before departure: shoes, tracksuit, luggage, airfare (depending on actual cost if booked and ticketed via PSC), and accommodation of $50 a day (based on actual stay),” it said.

The “have money, will travel” scheme is being applied to those athletes who failed to snare either a gold or a silver in the last Southeast Asian Games in Phnom Penh, Cambodia last May.

Among the notable athletes who are in this category are former SEA Games gold winners Kristina Knott, William and Clinton Bautista. Fil-Spanish John Cabang Tolentino, who eclipsed the national 110m hurdles record last June, was also on the list.

“Category B (athletes) are those who did not win a gold or silver in the last SEA Games. PATAFA will have to pay for them to the PSC including the track suit, shoes, and luggage. Aside from airfare and accommodation, they won’t be given a travel allowance by the PSC also,” PATAFA Secretary-General Edward Kho told The STAR.

“They are John Tolentino and his coach Martin, KK, Willie Morrison,” he added.

Mr. Kho, however, isn’t certain if they will get reimbursements if they bring home the gold.

“I’m not sure,” he said.

A source also bared that the PSC is doing its best to find some money to cover some or the full expenses of some of these athletes, if not all.

“They are trying to get them all (Category B) funded,” said the same insider.

The STAR tried to get the side of PSC Chairman Richard Bachmann but he did not respond. — Joey Villar

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