Home Blog Page 458

DA, NFA urged to monitor rice prices

PHILIPPINE STAR/RYAN BALDEMOR

THE government should closely monitor rice retail to prevent price gouging and stop traders from exploiting farmers who sell rice at low farmgate prices, a congressman said on Tuesday.

In a statement, Quezon Rep. Wilfrido Mark M. Enverga urged the Department of Agriculture (DA) and National Food Authority (NFA) to step up its price monitoring activities and intervene to stabilize rice prices.

“We need to ensure that our farmers earn a fair income while keeping prices affordable for consumers,” Mr. Enverga, who heads the House of Representatives agriculture panel, said in Filipino.

Palay farmgate prices in February averaged at P20.70, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority. DA data showed that a kilo of regular milled rice averaged at P47.20 last month.

Mr. Enverga recommended that DA and NFA create a “real-time digital price monitoring system” to inform consumers and producers about the range of rice prices, aiming to reduce artificially inflated prices.

“There should be clear pricing to avoid deceiving farmers. If there is price tracking in the market, we can immediately see who is cheating,” he said. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

BI still studying Guo’s escape

ALICE L. GUO — SENATOR RISA HONTIVEROS FACEBOOK PAGE

THE Bureau of Immigration (BI) said that it has yet to determine how dismissed Bamban Mayor Alice L. Guo and her cohorts had escaped the Philippines last year, the agency confirmed during a Senate committee hearing on Tuesday.

Under Senator Ana Theresia Hontiveros-Baraquel’s scrutiny, BI Intelligence Chief Fortunato Manahan, Jr. admitted the agency has no knowledge of how they went past Philippine borders undetected. 

Mr. Manahan said that the BI had sent written letters to their Asian counterpart bureaus, however, no written replies have been received, as of March 4.

“No official written replies have been received by the (BI) as of today, but, from informal channels there they have stated that there have been no results or information with regard to the arrival and departure of the Guos,” he added.

National Intelligence Coordinating Agency (NICA) Director Ferlu J. Silvio said that it was possible she and her companions had fled the country via Tawi-Tawi province.

“The Tawi-Tawi area is much nearer…the average sailing of boats is at 400 to 500,” Mr. Silvio added.

Ms. Hontiveros also asked for updates on BI’s internal investigation into officials and personnel who may have helped Ms. Guo escape the country. 

“We will check if there’s any from the Office of the Commissioner… As far as I’m concerned, ma’am, (I have no information), because another office is in charge of that,” Mr. Manahan said.

Separately, BI Commissioner Joel Anthony M. Viado said that there is no evidence from the agency’s initial internal investigation, that proves any personnel were involved.

“There is no evidence that personnel of the agency are involved in Guo’s illegal exit,” Mr. Viado said in a statement.

Ms. Guo and her cohorts fled the country in July. She had reportedly traveled to Malaysia and Singapore, then to Indonesia a month later using her Philippine passport, according to the Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission (PAOCC).

She has been accused of coddling illegal Philippine offshore gaming operators in Bamban town in Tarlac, where she ran and won for the first time as mayor in 2022.  Raided by authorities in March, an illegal hub on land she partially owned had been linked to scamming operations. — Adrian H. Halili

5 dead in South Cotabato collision

COTABATO CITY — Five individuals, including two women, died in an accident involving two motorcycles in a barangay in Tupi, South Cotabato at dusk Monday.

Officials of the Tupi Municipal Police Station (MPS) and the director of the Region 12 police, Brig. Gen. Arnold P. Ardiente, separately said on Tuesday that the fatalities were riding the two motorcycles that figured in the highway mishap.

Senior Master Sgt. Rea Mae B. Gatinao, spokesperson of the Tupi police force, said three of the victims, two of them women, died instantly from injuries caused by the accident.

The male driver of the other motorcycle and his companion also both died in a hospital where they were brought for treatment.

Ms. Gatinao, citing accounts of witnesses and police probers who responded to the incident, said the speeding motorcycle veered towards the other lane of the highway in Sitio Tulacabong in Barangay Crossing Rubber and hit head-on the other motorcycle, ridden by the two women and their male companion who all died immediately at the scene.

The two motorcycle drivers who perished in the accident do not have driving licenses, according to police investigators and barangay officials. Their badly damaged motorcycles are now in the custody of the Tupi MPS.

Ms. Gatinao and Mr. Ardiente both refuted claims that the two motorcycles were racing at an unlit stretch of the highway in Barangay Crossing Rubber.

Mr. Ardiente said the accident was a head-on collision of two motorcycles from the opposite directions of the highway. — John Felix M. Unson

P680K worth of meth seized in Pangasinan city sting

LOREN BISER-UNSPLASH

BAGUIO CITY — Philippine authorities arrested an alleged “high-value target drug personality,” in an early Tuesday sting that also led to the confiscation of crystal meth (shabu) worth P680,000.

The raid was led by the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) in Pangasinan, Urdaneta City police, and Philippine National Police Drug Enforcement Group -Special Operations Unit 1.

According to PDEA-Region 1 director Joel B. Plaza, 51-year-old Jimmy Andres Pablo from San Manuel, sold a knot-tied transparent plastic containing suspected shabu, weighing more or less 100 grams to an undercover agent.

Authorities also seized from Mr. Pablo an improvised shotgun pistol, four pieces of live ammunition for a 12 gauge shotgun, a mobile phone, a motorcycle, assorted keys, two identification cards, a brown paper bag, a black body bag and several drug paraphernalia, and also the buy-bust money to be presented as evidence of the drug deal during Pablo’s trial for illegal drug sale.

Aside from the drug charges, Mr. Pablo will also be facing illegal firearms possession and violation of the gun ban now in effect because of the upcoming May 2025 elections. — Artemio A. Dumlao

3 hurt in Zamboanga del Norte grenade attack

COTABATO CITY — Three individuals were hurt in an explosion that ripped through a residential area in a barangay in Kalawit, Zamboanga del Norte on Monday afternoon.

Officials of the Kalawit Municipal Police Station and Brig. Gen. Roel Cuevas Rodolfo, director of the Police Regional Office-9, said on Tuesday that the grenade explosion injured Arnold Yu Lubaton, 69, Renel Elmenzo Labina, 38, and Honeylette Pagador Labina, 33.

Mr. Lubaton is a known staunch endorser of the reelectionist mayor of Kalawit, Salvador Antojado, Jr.

The Kalawit Municipal Police Station, in a report to PRO-9, stated that Mr. Lubaton was in his house, along with the Labinas, when someone threw a grenade from outside and hurriedly ran away as the explosive went off.

Police investigators said the grenade exploded right in the front door of Mr. Lubaton’s house.

He and his two guests sustained shrapnel wounds in different parts of their bodies and were immediately taken by emergency responders to a hospital for treatment.

Local executives and officials of the Kalawit police force are still unsure whether the bombing of Lubaton’s house is related to his support for the incumbent mayor. — John Felix M. Unson

Trade wars erupt as Trump tariffs take effect

FLAGS wave in the wind in Windsor, Ontario, a Canadian town that borders Detroit, Michigan in the US on Feb. 4, 2025. — REUTERS

WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump’s new 25% tariffs on imports from Mexico and Canada took effect on Tuesday, along with a doubling of duties on Chinese goods to 20%, launching new trade conflicts with the top three US trading partners.

The tariff actions, which could upend nearly $2.2 trillion in two-way annual US trade went live at 12:01 a.m. EST (0501 GMT), hours after Mr. Trump declared that all three countries had failed to do enough to stem the flow of the deadly fentanyl opioid and its precursor chemicals into the US.

China responded immediately after the deadline, announcing additional tariffs of 10%-15% on certain US imports from March 10 and a series of new export restrictions for designated US entities.

Canada and Mexico, which have enjoyed a virtually tariff-free trading relationship with the US for three decades, were poised to immediately retaliate against their longtime ally.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Ottawa would respond with immediate 25% tariffs on C$30 billion ($20.7 billion) worth of US imports, and another C$125 billion ($86.2 billion) if Mr. Trump’s tariffs were still in place in 21 days. He said previously that Canada would target American beer, wine, bourbon, home appliances and Florida orange juice.

Tariffs will disrupt an incredibly successful trading relationship,” Mr. Trudeau said, adding that they would violate the US-Mexico-Canada free trade agreement signed by Mr. Trump during his first term.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford told NBC that he was ready to cut off shipments of nickel and transmission of electricity from his province to the US in retaliation.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum was expected to announce her response during a morning news conference in Mexico City on Tuesday, the country’s Economy ministry said.

STACKING CHINA TARIFFS
The extra 10% duty on Chinese goods adds to a 10% tariff imposed by Mr. Trump on Feb. 4 to punish Beijing over the US fentanyl overdose crisis. The cumulative 20% duty also comes on top of tariffs of up to 25% imposed by Mr. Trump during his first term on some $370 billion worth of US imports.

Some of these products saw US tariffs increase sharply under former president Joseph Biden last year, including a doubling of duties on Chinese semiconductors to 50% and a quadrupling of tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles to over 100%.

The 20% tariff will apply to several major US consumer electronics imports from China previously untouched by prior duties, including smartphones, laptops, videogame consoles, smartwatches and speakers and Bluetooth devices.

China’s new tariffs announced on Tuesday targeted a wide range of US agricultural products including certain meats, grains, cotton, fruit, vegetables and dairy products.

It also added 15 US entities to its export control list and 10 US entities to its unreliable entity list.

The Commerce ministry earlier in the day said Washington mistakenly “shifted the blame” for its fentanyl crisis to Beijing.

The state-backed Global Times newspaper said on Monday Beijing’s retaliation would most likely target US agricultural and food products.

US farmers were hard hit by Mr. Trump’s first-term trade wars, which cost them about $27 billion in lost export sales and conceded share of the Chinese market to Brazil.

RECESSION FEARS
The tariffs on Mexican and Canadian products could have much deeper repercussions for a highly integrated North American economy that depends on cross-border shipments to build cars and machinery, refine energy and process agricultural goods.

“Today’s reckless decision by the US administration is forcing Canada and the US toward recessions, job losses and economic disaster,” Canadian Chamber of Commerce Chief Executive Officer Candace Laing said in a statement.

She said the US tariffs will fail to usher in a “golden age” coveted by Mr. Trump but instead raise costs for consumers and producers and disrupt supply chains. “Tariffs are a tax on the American people.”

Matt Blunt, president of the American Automotive Policy Council representing Detroit automakers, called for vehicles that meet the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement’s regional content requirements to be exempted from the tariffs.

Even before Mr. Trump’s tariffs announcement, US data on Monday showed factory gate prices jumped to a nearly three-year high, suggesting that a new wave of tariffs could soon undercut production.

Mr. Trump’s confirmation that the tariffs would proceed sent financial markets reeling with global stocks tumbling and safe-haven bonds rallying. Both the Canadian dollar and Mexican peso fell against the greenback.

PILING ON
Mr. Trump has maintained a blistering pace of tariff actions since taking office in January, including fully restored 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum imports that take effect March 12, rescinding prior exemptions.

Mr. Trump’s “America First” agenda, aimed at redrawing trade relationships in favor of the US, is expected to be a centerpiece of his Tuesday night address to a joint session of Congress.

Mr. Trump on Saturday opened a national security investigation into imports of lumber and wood products that could result in steep tariffs. Canada, already facing 14.5% US tariffs on softwood lumber, would be hit particularly hard.

A week earlier, Mr. Trump revived a probe into countries that levy digital services taxes, proposed fees of up to $1.5 million on every Chinese-built ship entering a US port and launched a tariff investigation into copper imports.

These add to his plans for higher “reciprocal tariffs” to match the levies of other countries and offset their other trade barriers, a move that could hit the European Union hard. — Reuters

Europe prepares charm offensive in Vietnam

REUTERS

HANOI — European leaders are planning visits to Vietnam in coming months to strengthen ties with the Southeast Asian nation, officials said, amid tensions with Washington that could impact their exports to the United States.

Former US President Joseph Biden pushed hard to boost US influence in the former foe, considering the country a key partner in his strategy to contain China, but bilateral relations may weaken if his successor Donald Trump imposes duties on Hanoi, which is a potential target of his threatened reciprocal tariffs due to its large trade surplus.

Amid this growing uncertainty, European countries are intensifying their contacts with Vietnam, with the head of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen and France’s President Emmanuel Macron both planning visits in the next months, European officials and diplomats said, noting the trips have long been planned and are not yet finalized.

“The tide of tariffs and export controls is rising…We want to create new opportunities to trade and invest with trusted partners,” Ms. Von der Leyen told top officials from Southeast Asian bloc ASEAN in a video message when they were gathered last week in Vietnam’s capital Hanoi.

Mr. Macron could travel to Vietnam in late May, with the aim of further boosting ties with the former colony after Paris formally elevated diplomatic relations last year, while Ms. Von der Leyen could visit earlier with the goal of formally upgrading ties, a senior EU official said, adding EU trade commissioner Maros Sefcovic may precede them in April.

Mr. Macron’s office declined to comment. A spokesman for the European Commission could not confirm any official visit at this stage. Vietnam’s Foreign ministry did not reply to requests for comment.

FROM RAILWAYS TO AID
The European Union (EU) imported $52 billion worth of goods from Vietnam last year, less than half of US imports but still Vietnam’s third export market thanks also to an existing free trade deal.

US manufacturers in Vietnam, whose business relies on exports to the US more than their European rivals, expect cuts in their workforce if Mr. Trump imposes tariffs, a survey found.

That scenario, despite being the result of what the EU official described as a “catastrophic” shift in global trade, could however lead to more Vietnamese exports to the EU and may in turn facilitate investments in Vietnam by European companies, as they might access redundant talent more easily, he said.

That comes as Vietnam wants to diversify military supplies and boost public spending on infrastructure, including a major railway project, with European companies racing to win contracts.

On development policy, Europe is already working to take on the US mantle after Mr. Trump froze foreign aid.

Belgium is setting up a fund that would contribute to restart the temporarily suspended recovery of areas contaminated with agent orange sprayed by US forces during the Vietnam War, the country’s ambassador to Vietnam Karl Van den Bossche said, noting the plan was to turn the reclaimed land into profitable industrial zones. — Reuters

Obesity rates soaring globally in ‘monumental social failure’ — study

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Michal Jarmoluk from Pixabay

LONDON — Rates of obesity and overweight are spiraling due to a “monumental societal failure” to tackle the problem, with more than half of adults and almost a third of children and young people set to be affected by 2050, according to a new study.

That represents more than 3.8 billion adults and 746 million children and adolescents, research published in The Lancet said.

Obesity is associated with an increased risk of serious health problems like diabetes, some cancers, and heart disease.

“The unprecedented global epidemic of overweight and obesity is a profound tragedy and a monumental social failure,” said lead author Professor Emmanuela Gakidou from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington in the US.

The team, part of the Global Burden of Disease Study BMI Collaborators, used data from 204 countries and territories to come up with their estimates and project what could happen in future without action.

Rates of overweight and obesity have already more than doubled over the past three decades, with more than 2.1 billion adults and 493 million young people aged 5-24 years affected as of 2021, they said.

While the reasons for obesity were complex, governments should use the estimates to focus on how to help populations most at risk, researchers said, particularly around improving access to healthy diets.

The study, funded by the Gates Foundation, had limitations, including data gaps and the use of body mass index as a marker. It also did not consider the potential impact of obesity drugs, which have seen huge demand in richer countries where they are available, the researchers said.

The picture varies globally, but the researchers said an accelerated rise in obesity among young people and the rise in low- and middle-income countries where health systems cannot cope with the coming disease burden were particularly worrying.

That includes a projected 250% increase in rates of overweight and obesity in sub-Saharan Africa. The rise, to 522 million adults and 200 million children and young people, is driven partly by population growth.

A separate study published on Monday, the World Obesity Atlas from the World Obesity Federation, also raised this issue.

“The most affected regions are developing countries,” said Simon Barquera, president of the Federation.

The Obesity Atlas suggested that 79% of adults and 88% of children with obesity and overweight will be living in low- and middle-income countries by 2035, and only 7% of all countries have adequate health systems in place to deal with this.

“It’s really one of the main public health challenges around the world,” Mr. Barquera added. — Reuters

‘Impossible’ for US to give up Indo-Pacific, Taiwan defense minister says

DVIDS/ LANCE CPL. ISAIAH CAMPBELL

TAIPEI — The United States cannot abandon the Indo-Pacific because the region is part of its “core national interests,” Taiwan’s Defense Minister Wellington Koo said amid concerns about US security commitments to Taiwan.

The White House clash between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and US President Donald Trump, which plunged ties between Kyiv and its top military backer to a new low, has renewed concerns in Taiwan about Washington’s security commitment at a time when China is ramping up its military pressure to assert its sovereignty claims over the democratic island.

“We indeed noticed the fast-changing and tricky international situation and deeply understand that we can’t just talk about values but not national interests,” Mr. Koo told reporters at a briefing on Monday when asked whether the US is still a reliable security partner for Taiwan.

“So we must ask: keeping the peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region including the status quo in the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea, is that a core US national interest?” Mr. Koo asked.

“I think it is impossible for the United States to retreat from the Indo-Pacific because it is its core national interest.”

Mr. Koo said “using deterrence and strength to achieve peace” has been the long-standing consensus between Taipei and Washington, and that stability in the region is important for the United States, both economically and geopolitically.

The United States is Taiwan’s most important international backer and arms supplier despite the lack of formal diplomatic ties between Washington and Taipei.

Taiwan, which strongly rejects China’s sovereignty claim, enjoyed support from the first Trump administration. But Mr. Trump unnerved Taiwan on the campaign trail by calling for it to pay more for US security guarantees. — Reuters

Cone, Gin Kings seek clincher versus embattled Batang Pier

BARANGAY GINEBRA GIN KINGS — FACEBOOK.COM/PBAOFFICIAL

Games on Wednesday
(Smart Araneta Coliseum)
5 p.m. – NorthPort vs Ginebra*
7:30 p.m. – Rain or Shine vs TNT**
* Ginebra leads series, 3-0
** TNT leads series, 2-1

THERE’S a mouthwatering incentive to be had if Barangay Ginebra would take care of business and bring out the broom against embattled NorthPort.

Finish off the Batang Pier in Game 4 of the PBA semifinal series on Wednesday and the Gin Kings would get a refreshing nine-day turnaround time before hitting the court again for the finals’ tip-off on March 14.

That extra period of breather would be most welcome for Ginebra stalwarts Justin Brownlee, Scottie Thompson and Japeth Aguilar and coach Tim Cone himself considering the physically and mentally draining work they’ve had since Gilas Pilipinas’ overseas sorties last month.

Mr. Cone and Company seek the clincher at 5 p.m. at the Smart Araneta Coliseum, mindful about staying on an even keel in spite of dominant victories in the first three games.

“We’ve been talking a lot about discipline, a lot about process and those are kind of our keywords right now in terms of getting ourselves ready for each game,” said Mr. Cone, whose charges have beaten the Batang Pier by an average of 20.66 points.

“This team has always been a good team about moving on. It can be hard to move on from wins because you kind of want to live in those wins but you’ve got to move on from them. It’s a cliche but you just got to take each game at a time and you do that through staying disciplined mentally and focusing on the process of what makes you successful and not looking to the end result.”

NorthPort, the top-seeded team in the eliminations, vowed to fight hard to stay alive.

“We all know Ginebra is a very experienced team. They have coach Tim Cone, they have five, six national team players, and they’ve been together for a long time,” said NorthPort gunner Arvin Tolentino.

“We beat them in the eliminations but they were able to adjust in the playoffs. Until now we’re still looking for an answer, a lot of things are not clicking. Good thing, we have one more chance on Wednesday.”

After missing out on a 3-0 lead last Sunday, reigning Governors’ Cup titlist TNT takes its second attempt to get on the hill against Rain or Shine (ROS) at 7:30 p.m.

While grappling with the absence of injured veteran Jayson Castro, Rondae Hollis-Jefferson and the Tropang Giga fought full-strength ROS toe-to-toe but came short in the endgame.

The 103-98 breakthrough in Game 3, meanwhile, greatly boosted the confidence of the youth-laden Elasto Painters, who are ready to engage TNT in a marathon duel.

“The longer it takes, the better for us. We feel we have a better chance if it reaches a Game 7,” said ROS mentor Yeng Guiao. — Olmin Leyba

UST seeks to protect solo second spot over UP

UST GOLDEN TIGRESSES — UAAP/NICOLE HERNANDEZ

Games on Wednesday
(Mall of Asia Arena)
10 a.m. – UE vs FEU (men)
12 p.m. – UP vs UST (men)
2 p.m. – UE vs FEU (women)
4 p.m. – UP vs UST (women)

MAINTAINING a striking distance from unbeaten champion National University (NU) is the coveted goal as red-hot University of Santo Tomas (UST) eyes to protect the solo second spot against the slumping University of the Philippines (UP) side in the UAAP Season 87 women’s volleyball on Wednesday at the Mall of Asia Arena.

Santo Tomas (3-1) is on a three-game winning streak while UP (2-2) deals with two straight losses, making it a duel between polar opposites in the main game at 4 p.m.

Far Eastern University (2-2), then eyes to break away from a logjam with UP, Adamson University and De La Salle University at third spot when it clashes against the winless University of the East (0-4) at 2 p.m. of the quadruple bill also featuring UE-FEU and UST-UP for men’s side at 10 a.m. and 12 p.m., respectively.

The momentum — and the favor — is on the UST Golden Tigresses, who bowed to FEU in the opener before slaying contenders Ateneo de Manila University, La Salle and Adamson to climb to solo second, just behind NU with a perfect 4-0 record.

That, however, doesn’t mean a smooth ride, especially against the erstwhile cellar-dweller UP Fighting Maroons, who have improved by leaps and bounds with key offseason recruits and under Deputy coach Yani Fernandez as Santo Tomas looks to bank on rising star Angge Poyos once again.

Ms. Poyos, the super sophomore who bagged the Rookie of the Year and Second Best Outside Spiker honors last season, fired 21 points last time out to foil the 28-point eruption of dazzling rookie Shaina Nitura of Adamson.

Ms. Poyos has been the driving force for the crippled yet still sailing ship of Santo Tomas sans injured spikers Xyza Gula (back) and Jonna Perdido (ACL) in a bid to settle some unfinished business following a runner-up finish to NU in Season 86.

UP, on the other hand, bowed to Ateneo and La Salle after a sizzling start against UE and FEU, in a new era under Bocboc, a long-time assistant in La Salle. — John Bryan Ulanday

Philippine city says donations from alleged Chinese spies were accepted in good faith

ALEJANDRO LUENGO-UNSPLASH

MANILA — A Philippine city that accepted donations of money and policing equipment from groups connected to Chinese nationals subsequently accused of espionage had received them in good faith and without strings attached, its mayor said on Tuesday.

Reuters reported last week that four Chinese nationals arrested by Philippine authorities in January had led civic groups overseen by the Chinese Communist Party’s foreign influence network.

“These contributions were accepted in good faith by the recipients thereof with the sincere intention of enhancing public service and no conditions or obligations were attached to them,” Tarlac City Mayor Cristy Angeles said in a statement.

She said donations from the groups included 15 motorcycles, five each for the city police, the province’s police force, and the city government’s public order and safety office.

The city government had also received a donation of P100,000 ($1,730), which the Department of Education spent on dental kits for school children, and another for P200,000 pesos in 2023 that has so far not been used, she said.

A July 2022 article published on the social media account of a CCP-led body engaged in “united front work” showed one of the accused Chinese spies handing a cheque worth P500,000 to Angeles.

She said the government did not receive that amount from the group.

“These donations, given their insignificant amount, in no way influenced our decision-making process in governance nor led to any substantial collaboration thereafter,” Angeles said in the statement.

A senior Philippine government official said on Monday authorities will look into the cash and other gifts to determine whether or not they were given with ulterior motives.

The four are among at least eight suspected Chinese spies the Philippines has arrested in recent weeks. Relations between the two nations have soured in recent years over maritime disputes in the South China Sea where they have overlapping claims. — Reuters