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Kidlat Tahimik focuses on the Filipino’s ‘indio-genius’

SOME of the art installations in the exhibit ‘INDIO-GENIUS: 500 Taon ng Labanang Kultural (1521-2021)’ by Kidlat Tahimik — PHOTO BY MICHELLE ANNE P. SOLIMAN

A GIANT driftwood ship fills a hall of the National Museum of Anthropology, ceramic mosaic “waves” crashing along its sides. It is a version of the Victoria, the only ship to make it back to Spain from Magellan’s expedition of exploration, and is part of a major exhibition by National Artist for Film and Broadcast Arts Eric Oteyza de Guia — better known as Kidlat Tahimik — in which he explores colonialism in Philippine history and what he calls the Filipinos’ “indio-genius.”

This is actually a homecoming for the exhibit, which was originally shown in Madrid’s Palacio de Cristal del Retiro from October 2021 to March 2022. It will now be on view at the National Museum of Anthropology in Manila for the next six months. In Spain it was called “Magellan, Marilyn, Mickey and Fray Damaso: 500 Years of Rock Star Conquerors”. Its new title in Manila is “INDIO-GENIUS: 500 Taon ng Labanang Kultural (1521-2021)”.

“This is one of the most important things we have ever staged,” said National Museum Director-General Jeremy R. Barns during a media preview of the exhibition on Oct. 18. “This is one of those things that goes to try to answer, ‘What do Filipinos know about being Filipino?’, and ‘What’s our identity?’”

Unlike the display in Madrid’s Palacio de Cristal del Retiro where the large-scale artworks were all found in one space, the large-scale installations and sculptures are scattered in three main spaces at the National Museum of Anthropology.

INDIO-GENIUS
The term “indi-genius” was coined by Mr. Tahimik’s Ifugao mentor, Lopes Na-Uyac, referring to the innate brilliance of the Filipino people, especially the indigenous communities.

The 80-year-old National Artist said that his mentor would always mispronounce the word “indigenous” — a mispronunciation which the former found fascinating.

“He combined the word ‘genius’ and ‘indigenous’ into one word, which says it all — there’s still a lot of genius sa kaalaman ng katutubo (in the knowledge of the natives) especially when it comes to harmony with nature,” Mr. Tahimik said during a guided tour of the show. He later changed the term slightly into “indio-genius.”

Indio was a term used by colonizers (often in ridicule) to refer to locals. “But in spite of being indio-nized, the genius of our indigenous culture still survives,” he said, “That’s why I’m doing a show like this.”

The artist used organic materials, such as wood from trees that had fallen due to typhoons, found objects, rocks and stones, shells, and dried palm leaves to create his installations.

“I am a National Artist for Film… But it is something that I’m trying to break out of the box from… I think I’m much more all around,” he said.

The large-scale installation begins with the Mad Expo 1887 display at the ground floor staircase in front of the Museum’s entrance. The installation is a reference to the Madrid Expo of 1887 by the Spanish Ministry of Overseas Colonies where imported flora and fauna — and Igorots — were exhibited. This incident made the future National Hero Jose Rizal protest in a letter to Ferdinand Blumentritt: “How dare they treat Ygorrotes like a human zoo?” In this section, Mr. Tahimik added a wooden sculpture of a two-faced Rizal — portraying him as a writer, and as a filmmaker.

At the balcony of the Marble Hall is the large installation Ang Ma-bagyong Sabungan ng 2 Bathala ng Hangin, A Stormy Clash Between 2 Goddesses of the Winds (WW III the Protracted Kultur War). It features a Trojan Horse with a Hollywood film camera for its head, surrounded by pop culture figures such as Spider-man, Marilyn Monroe, and Mickey Mouse, both clashing and being guarded by the bulul or rice deities of the Ifugao people.

Inside the Marble Hall the Victoria, the only ship to complete the Spanish expedition in 1522. Standing on the ship is a wooden sculpture of the Portuguese captain and navigator Ferdinand Magellan and his Malay servant Enrique de Malacca. The latter successfully completed the circumnavigation of the world — he brought along from the expedition’s start in Spain, and was one of only a few of the original men who returned to Spain alive. He is known to have been able to converse with people in Limasawa (in what is now Southern Leyte in the Philippines) when the expedition anchored off the island.

“I look at Mactan as a cultural battle besides. [Battle] is usually about body count or how many missiles were launched. Very few people look at the cultural clashes involved in a battle,” the artist said of the place where Magellan met his end at the hands of the men of local chieftain Lapu Lapu.

The final stretch of the exhibition is located at the Museum’s Gallery 1. It includes sculptures by the artist’s wife Katrin, and their sons. His namesake and late son, Kidlat, created a photograph tapestry titled Saan galing ang Indio-Genuis ni Jose Rizal? Also on view are works by his other sons, Kawayan and Kabunyan. Kawayan’s work is a mixed media painting titled Homage to Juan Luna’s Spoliarium, and Kabunyan’s is a framed Philippine map made of ceramic tiles, laminated flooring, iron balusters, and carved wood.

“At that time, all our young expats were fighting for reclamation in Madrid. They were fighting arrogance and racism of the colonialists. In a way they were proving themselves,” Mr. Tahimik said of Rizal and the other Illustrados in Spain.

“Rizal being a genius is not because he is westernized,” he said; the idea would rather be: “’Kung kayang kaya niyang pasukan yung mga [If Rizal can get into] western accomplishments like that… [it’s because of his Indio-Genius talents from his local culture.”

“INDIO-GENIUS: 500 Taon ng Labanang Kultural (1521-2021)” is on view at the National Museum of Anthropology, Luneta Park, Manila. Walk-in visitors are accepted while advance booking through https://reservation.nationalmuseum.gov.ph/ is required for groups of 20 to 30 persons. The museum is open on Tuesdays to Sundays, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/nationalmuseumofthephilippines/.  Michelle Anne P. Soliman

Madrid exhibition shines a light on the scars of breast cancer

A SCREENSHOT of the replica of Peter Paul Rubens’ Venus and Cupid showing a mastectomized breast, as a part of Breast Cancer Awareness Day in Madrid. — YOUTUBE.COM/THESTARONLINE

MADRID — An art exhibition in Madrid seeks to shine a spotlight on breast cancer and the physical and psychological scars left by mastectomies.

The exhibition at the Thyssen-Bornemisza National Museum of Art, titled “From the skin to the canvas: another take on breast cancer,” features digital copies of works by Francisco de Goya, Peter Paul Reubens and Hans Baldung Grien which have been altered to make it look like the nude subjects have undergone mastectomies.

“With this intervention we’re calling attention to the process of the illness,” said Juan Alberto Garcia de Cubas, president of the Fundacion Cultura en Vena (Culture in Your Veins Foundation), which organized the exhibition. As part of the show, Cultura en Vena filmed a video of Goya’s The Naked Maja being taken to a hospital in an ambulance, where the painting undergoes “surgery” as a team of artists paints a scar over her left breast. The work of art is then moved by ambulance to the museum and hung on the wall. Gema Salas, a 44-year-old architect who underwent a mastectomy to treat breast cancer, said the exhibition had a profound effect on her.

Women who undergo mastectomies often have to learn how to love themselves and their bodies again, Ms. Salas said.

“For me the painting represents how after treatment, when you feel a bit lost, it’s like being reborn as a woman,” she said. “Having a scar does not mean that you are any less of a woman.” — Reuters

SC stops Iligan from taking National Steel plant assets

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE Supreme Court (SC) has ordered the Iligan City government to stop its control and ownership over National Steel Corp.’s plant assets and land.

In an 18-page decision on July 20 and made public on Oct. 21, the SC Third Division said Iligan City went against a Makati regional trial court (RTC) ruling when it took over the firm’s plant assets.

“Considering all the circumstances, the court holds the levy and the tax delinquency sale of the subject plant assets as invalid having been conducted in defiance of the RTC Makati decision which ordered the respondents to clear the petitioner (National Steel) of its real property tax liabilities,” according to the ruling penned by Associate Justice Henri Jean Paul B. Inting.

Plant assets are long-term fixed assets that are used to generate sales for a corporation.

The Makati trial court in 2011 ruled that the sale of the firm’s assets was void since the local government unit did not clear the firm’s tax liabilities after it complied with the tax amnesty agreement.

The Court of Appeals had ruled that the Makati court did not have jurisdiction over the case. The appellate court then modified its ruling and upheld the finality of the trial court’s decision to void the sale of the plant assets.

In 2016, the city government still included National Steel in the list of delinquent real property taxpayers and proceeded to levy its plant assets.

The assets were forfeited in favor of the city government since there were no other bidders for them, which led to National Steel filing its complaints to the Makati court.

National Steel went bankrupt in 2000, prompting the Securities and Exchange Commission to order the firm’s liquidation.

In 2004, the city government provided tax relief to delinquent real property taxpayers, which included National Steel.

National Steel also entered into a tax amnesty agreement with Iligan City on Oct. 13, 2004, where the firm agreed to pay its real property tax liabilities amounting to P177.53 million in eight annual installments of P22.19 million from 2004 until 2012, with 2005 being a grace period.

The firm then sold its plant assets to Global Steelworks International, Inc. through an asset purchase agreement. The deal involved National Steel agreeing to pay and settle its tax liabilities over the plant assets up to Oct.14, 2004. Global Steel agreed to assume the taxes over the plant assets on Oct. 15, 2004.

The city government issued receipts acknowledging payments made by the firm on Dec. 18, 2008, and acknowledged its full compliance with the schedule of payments on Feb. 23, 2009.

The High Court noted that it will not award the plant assets to National Steel since the firm has an existing agreement with Global Steel.

“In as much as the right of the city government of Iligan to possess and own the plant assets proceeded from a void tax delinquency sale, it is commanded to desist from further possessing and exercising acts of ownership over the plant assets,” it said. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Treat obesity as chronic disease, not lack of will — paper

PIXABAY

By Patricia B. Mirasol, Reporter 

OBESITY should be recognized and treated as a chronic disease, according to a consensus paper for the management and care of obesity in South and Southeast Asia. 

“By fundamentally recognizing obesity as a chronic disease, we aim to shift a variety of erroneous beliefs that, for example, obesity results from solely a lack of willpower leading to poor lifestyle choices, or that it should be regarded merely as a risk factor for other conditions, to acknowledging the science of obesity,” said Dr. Tham Kwang Wei, lead author of the consensus and secretary of the Asia-Oceania Association for the Study of Obesity (AOASO), in an Oct. 20 statement.  

“When we approach obesity as a chronic disease with a propensity for relapse and progression,” Dr. Wei added, “we not only enable the provision of a whole-systems approach for effective prevention and treatment for the long-term, but also shift the focus on PwO [people living with obesity] and combat the stigma and discrimination associated with weight, which impedes PwO in seeking appropriate care.”   

Titled “Obesity in South and Southeast Asia — A new consensus on care and management,” the paper released Oct. 19 lists 42 preliminary recommendations developed by medical experts from the Philippines, Bangladesh, Brunei, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Vietnam. 

“We have not really solved the problem of chronic energy deficiency [a condition characterized by low body weight and possibly limited physical capacity due to food deprivation], and yet we added on overweight and obesity to our problems,” said Dr. Mia C. Fojas, one of two Filipinos on the panel and an endocrinologist and senior lecturer at the University of the Philippines-College of Medicine. 

Chronic energy deficiency and obesity and overweight were at almost equal prevalence three decades ago, she said at a recent press briefing. 

The Philippines, she added, is drawing up its clinical practice guidelines for obesity. 

“Our culture in one that revolves around food, we are proud of our food. Our diet is also high in carbohydrates with high rice consumption, for example,” Dr. Fojas said in an e-mail to BusinessWorld. “Also important to note is the general notion that being overweight is ‘healthy,’ specially in children, these probably coming for the times when malnutrition was prevalent.” 

Enough cultural and social demographic similarities exist to justify a shared effort in treating obesity, according to Brian Oldfield, co-chair of the consensus and president of AOASO, which led the development of the consensus through a grant from the Southeast Asia office of pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk. 

“It is our hope that with clear definitions and recommendations, we are one step closer to optimum care for people living with obesity in South and Southeast Asia,” Mr. Oldfield said in a statement.  

Obesity is a complex, progressive, and relapsing chronic disease that affects adults and children. It is caused by factors such as metabolism, dietary habits, and psychosocial conditions such as stress and depression. It is not caused by inadequate willpower, according to the consensus.  

Challenges specific to South and Southeast Asia are the double burden of over- and undernutrition, the varied quality of obesity care, cultural nuances, and stigma.  

The World Obesity Federation predicted that the prevalence of obesity worldwide would double between 2010 and 2030. This is likely an underestimation in South and Southeast Asia, the consensus pointed out, as adults and children of Asian descent experience obesity at lower levels of body mass index (BMI) compared to the cut-off points for global estimations.  

In the Philippines, the BMI cut-off points used to identify overweight and obesity are 23.0 kg/m2 and 25.0 kg/m2, respectively. The global standards are 25.0-29.9 kg/m2 for overweight, and 30.0 kg/m2 and above for obesity.   

Obesity prevalence among Filipino adults aged 20-59 years old was at 9.3% between 2018 to 2019. The prevalence for overweight and obesity for Filipino children aged 10-19 years was 11.6% by 2019.  

The consensus was presented at the International Congress of Obesity in Melbourne on Oct. 19. It was submitted in Obesity Reviews in July and is still awaiting publication. 

Comic actor Leslie Jordan, 67, killed in Hollywood car accident

COMIC actor Leslie Jordan — SHAWN MILLER/EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG

LOS ANGELES — Comic actor Leslie Jordan, a prime-time Emmy winner for his role on the hit sitcom Will & Grace and a social media sensation during the COVID-19 pandemic, died on Monday in a car crash while driving to work in Hollywood, a spokesperson said. He was 67.

Mr. Jordan apparently suffered an unspecified “medical issue” at the wheel of his car, and the vehicle struck the side of a building on his way to the Warner Bros. studio set of the Fox television series Call Me Kat, according to his agent, Don LeClair. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

The diminutive actor — he stood just 4 feet, 11 inches (1.5 meters) tall — co-starred on the show as a newly single gay man working as the head baker at the Louisville, Kentucky, cafe of the lead character, Kat, played by Mayim Bialik.

The show, in production for its third season, is largely based on the British sitcom Miranda.

Mr. Jordan, a Tennessee native, was best known to US television audiences for his recurring role on the NBC comedy Will & Grace as Beverly Leslie, the comically conniving foil of the Karen character played by Megan Mullally. The role earned him an Emmy for best guest actor in a comedy series in 2006.

He became famous to a younger generation of fans with a series of humorous video Instagram posts about daily life in quarantine that went viral during the pandemic.

Widely recognized for his short stature and Southern accent, his television credits also included guest appearances on Murphy Brown, Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, Star Trek: Voyager, Boston Public, and American Horror Story.

“The world is definitely a much darker place today without the love and light of Leslie Jordan,” his agent said in a statement. “Not only was he a mega talent and joy to work with, but he provided an emotional sanctuary to the nation at one of its most difficult times. What he lacked in height he made up for in generosity and greatness as a son, brother, artist, comedian, partner and human being.” — Reuters

ACEN board clears power supply deal with Dinginin plant

ACEN Corp. said on Tuesday that its board approved the execution of an agreement with GNPower Dinginin Ltd. Co. for the supply of 43 megawatts (MW) of capacity.

In a regulatory filing, ACEN said that the power purchase and supply agreement will start on Oct. 26, 2022.

GNPower Dinginin owns a 1,336-MW coal-fired power plant in Mariveles, Bataan. It is a joint venture among Aboitiz Power Corp., Power Partners Ltd. Co., and AC Energy and Infrastructure Corp. (ACEIC).

ACEIC owns 62.43% of ACEN and has a 20% economic interest in GNPower Dinginin.

In a separate filing, ACEN said it executed option agreements with institutional investors for the early retirement of its subsidiary’s 246-MW coal-fired power plant.

The Ayala-led listed energy company said the option agreements are with investors ETM Philippines Holdings, Inc. (EPHI) and The Insular Life Assurance Co. Ltd. (InLife).

The agreements between ACEN and the investors entitle them to exercise call and put options, respectively, “based on certain pre-agreed conditions, in order to enable the early retirement of the coal plant by 2040, and its transition to a cleaner technology.”

On Monday, ACEN said its subsidiary South Luzon Thermal Energy Corp. (SLTEC), the owner and operator of the 246-MW power plant in Calaca, Batangas, redeemed 32 million preferred shares from ACEN for P3.2 billion.

ACEN said that as part of its overall energy transition mechanism (ETM) to enable more renewables, it executed separate option agreements with InLife and EPHI involving the coal plant “following the issuance of SLTEC shares to these investors.”

A holder of a call option has a right to buy a stock while a holder of a put option has a right to sell.

In October last year, ACEN’s board authorized its management to work on the early retirement of the SLTEC coal plant by 2040 through ETM.

ACEN described ETM as a mechanism developed by the Asian Development Bank that aims to “leverage low-cost and long-term funding geared towards early coal retirement and reinvestment of proceeds to enable renewable energy.”

The company said proceeds from the decommissioning of coal plants through ETM will allow it to reinvest funds into renewable energy projects.

In 2021, ACEN said it aims to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 by retiring its remaining coal plants by 2040. It is also targeting to add more renewables to its portfolio by 2025.

On Tuesday, shares in the company closed 0.99% higher to finish at P6.15 apiece. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Global healthcare spending to fall in 2023 in real terms — report

ONLINE MARKETING-UNSPLASH

GLOBAL healthcare spending, public and private combined, will rise by just 4.9% in 2023 — not enough for an actual increase in real terms, given high inflation and slow economic growth, according to a forecast by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU). 

“With the cost of staff and treatments rising, healthcare spending will fall in real terms, making it harder for providers to tackle the backlog of non-COVID care,” said EIU healthcare analyst Aakash Babu in a statement. “Drugmakers will also see higher costs for staff, as well as active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) and other supplies.” 

In its Healthcare in 2023 report, the research and analysis division of The Economist Group said that governments will face new challenges as the pandemic slows and the focus tilts away from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). 

Aside from increased yet still insufficient healthcare spending and higher drugmakers’ costs, key trends to watch out for in 2023 include continued digitalization of healthcare, patent cliffs for drugs, and measures to control pharmaceutical pricing. 

These patterns are an estimated continuation of 2022, with 2023 being the second successive year of real-terms funding declines. 

Governments will be pushing down on pharma prices, while some companies face patent expiries, potentially spurring mergers and acquisitions in the sector, added Mr. Babu. 

RISK MITIGATION
In the Philippines, supply chain challenges have been felt from geopolitical issues involving Russia and Ukraine, the zero-COVID policy of China, and high inflation. 

The Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Association of the Philippines (PHAP) has implemented risk mitigation strategies, including close monitoring of companies providing direct materials, contract manufacturing, and logistics to constant reviews of safety stock levels for medicines, vaccines, and diagnostics. 

“Instituting risk mitigation strategies could help ensure medicine availability in the country and minimize the impact of any price movements,” PHAP said in an e-mail interview with BusinessWorld

“We have exerted efforts to mitigate the impact of supply chain disruptions, absorbing additional expenses without passing these on to patients as much as possible.” 

PHAP added that the government must ease the impact of supply chain disruptions by expanding pooled procurement, price negotiations, and multi-year contracts and partnerships with the private sector. 

Meanwhile, the digitalization of healthcare is expected to continue, with more investment going into the health startup space, said Mr. Babu of EIU.  

He told BusinessWorld via e-mail: “This could be prominent in markets like Asia and the Asia Pacific, who have been early adopters of the trend. However, the use of health data will come under stricter regulation in the US, Europe, and China.” — Brontë H. Lacsamana

Arts & Culture (10/26/22)

FISH KITE by Bong Anore

A PPO family concert at the CCP

THE CULTURAL Center of the Philippines (CCP) brings back its Halloween event, Tricks and Musical Treats: A PPO Family Concert, on Oct. 30, 4 p.m., at the Tanghalang Nicanor Abelardo (Main Theater). Dubbed as “A Tuneful Fiesta at Filharmonia,” this year’s family concert features 10-year-old pianist Ella Gabrielle Gaw and seven-year-old marimba player Gioia Francesco M. De la Cruz, who will perform with the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra (PPO), under the baton of Herminigildo Ranera. The show will be hosted by theater actress-director Liesl Batucan-del Rosario. After two online editions in 2020 and 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the PPO Family Concert continues its tradition to introduce orchestral instruments and develop appreciation for classical music among children in a fun, and creative way. The pre-concert event (at 2 p.m.) includes an instrument “petting zoo,” where children can touch and play selected music instruments. Guests are encouraged to wear their best Filipino-inspired costumes for the Halloween concert. Kids in their best costumes will win prizes. For more information, visit the CCP website (www.culturalcenter.gov.ph) or follow the CCP official social media accounts on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.


Ambeth Ocampo lectures at the Ayala Museum

THE LECTURE series “History Comes Alive” with historian Ambeth Ocampo returns to the Ayala Museum in Makati. The first lecture is “What You Missed in Araling Panlipunan” on Nov. 12, 3-4 p.m. One can attend onsite (register at https://bit.ly/HCA1112ONSITE,) or online via Zoom (register at https://bit.ly/HCA1112VIRTUAL). On Nov. 19, 3 p.m., Mr. Ocampo will give the lecture “Talking History: How a Historian Works” onsite (register at https://bit.ly/HCA1119ONSITE) and online via Zoom (register at https://bit.ly/HCA1119VIRTUAL). Onsite Lecture Passes come with complimentary museum admission and a discount at the Museum Shop for Mr. Ocampo’s Looking Back series of books. Guests may also join the meet and greet session scheduled after the lecture.


Salcedo Auctions presents Ronald Ventura exhibit

SALCEDO Auctions’ Private View presents Ronald Ventura’s solo show titled “Beast Master,” which opens to the public on Oct. 25. For the show, the artist explored the meaning of, and ideas associated with, beasts of every kind. “Beastmaster” is until Nov. 9, Tuesday to Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the main gallery of Salcedo Auctions (NEX Tower, 6786 Ayala Ave., Makati City). The online catalogue is available at salcedoauctons.com. For inquiries, e-mail info@salcedoauctions.com or contact 8823-0956 or 0917-591-2191.


Silverlens opening 2 exhibits

SILVERLENS will be opening two exhibits featuring works by Pow Martinez and Luis Lorenzana on Nov. 3. They will run until Dec. 3. Martinez’Clunker” is a collection of recent paintings featuring his now familiar solid-eyed, rubber band-lipped, and ‘80s era mullet-rocking characters. Mr. Martinez describes his current process as “what a nature painter might do in a digital landscape.” Mr. Lorenzana’s exhibit, “Head,” presents abstract works synthesizing his continuing probe into identifying the essence of artistic expression, an endeavor that he had strived for years preceding his artistic career. Silverlens is located at 2263 Don Chino Roces Ave. Extension, Makati. It is open Tuesdays to Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.


An exhibit on hats

THE METROPOLITAN Museum of Manila presents the exhibit “The Hat of the Matter” on Oct. 26, an examination of hats and headwear as wearable and conceptual art as seen through a Philippine prism. A signifier of status and barometer of style, the hat is never just a hat. Whether worn as protective headgear or elegant accessory, a hat carries on its brim multiple meanings that interweave art and craft, form and function, heritage and fashion, society and sustainability. Presented in partnership with Bench, the exhibit is the Filipino counterpart to the Korean Cultural Center’s “A Land of Hats”. The Metropolitan Museum of Manila is at the G/F MK Tan Centre, 30th St., Bonifacio Global City Taguig City.


Cultural mapping to be discussed in free Zoom seminar

PAMANALIKSIK: Pagmamapa ng mga Piling Likhang-Sining at Pamanang-Bayan, a three-day webinar series on cultural mapping, will be held from Oct. 26 to 28. The online discussion aims to guide participants on the important role of art to preserve Philippine history and tradition. It will present diverse art forms, including devotional practices of the Tagalogs, ancestral houses and heritage sites in San Juan City, and historically significant sculptures and monuments in Quezon City. It will explore how each discipline can be a source of knowledge on Filipino culture. The webinar will be facilitated by Alan Abina Navida from the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde (DLS-CSB) Design Foundation Department and University of the Philippines Diliman Extension Program. The event will be moderated by researcher and Design Foundation professor Iris De Ocampo. The webinar is free and open to the public and will be conducted via Zoom from Oct. 26 to 28, from 1-2:30 p.m. Interested participants may register through https://bit.ly/Pamanaliksik. For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/benildearts.


ARTablado presents Rizal artists

FILIPINO folklore and tradition are such a rich resource of stories and imagery that local artists have turned to it repeatedly for inspiration. In Obra Kadabra, the ongoing exhibit in Robinsons Antipolo’s ARTablado, 22 artists of Sining Rizal resent recent works that blur the realm of reality and imagination. The participating artists, all from the province of Rizal, are Bong Anore, Oiet Aramil, Jhune Bernardo, Marlon Constantino, Rey Punelas, Jovito Andres, Charlie Val, Berny Supsupin, Totong Francisco, Reggie Lim, Ronald Limayo, Jonalyn Montero, Gerry Marasigan, Ding Jovellano, Wiliam Alcantara, Jun Tiongco, Roger Fulgado, Roland delos Santos, Mhar Baes, Bello Pasa Jr., Addie Cukingnan and Naomi Banal. In celebration of Halloween, Sining Rizal artists will likewise be selling hand-painted masks during the exhibition period. The exhibition runs until Oct. 31 at Robinsons Antipolo.


NCCA holds Filipino Values Festival

THE NATIONAL Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA), in partnership with the Negros Cultural Foundation, Inc., present Bálay Pinoy, the NCCA Filipino values month celebration. The opening day is scheduled on Nov. 6 at the Open-Air Auditorium, Rizal Park and will feature various booths and activities including face painting, live sketching, arts and crafts, T-shirt printing, and film screening of Sine Halaga Film Festival year 1 among others.

Globe plans 235 cell sites in BARMM; Converge expands fiber footprint

GLOBE TELECOM, Inc. on Tuesday said it targets to install 235 new cell sites in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) by the end of 2022.

“So far, [Globe] has fired up 130 new cell sites and is currently upgrading the capacity of 175 4G (fourth-generation) towers,” the company said in an e-mailed statement.

Globe noted that it has also laid down 19,000 fiber-to-the-home lines out of the 25,376 year-end target.

The company aims to address “common government pain points for greater transparency and efficiency,” it said.

Such concerns, according to Globe, include the absence of an organized voice network, a centralized internet connection, a formal email system, and a standard service level and monitoring.

William Brian Arnaiz, Globe Business Operations Transformation manager for Visayas and Mindanao, said: “To rapidly innovate and deliver new value propositions, and keep pace with constant technologically-fueled change, organizations that are not digitally native need to embark on a journey of digital transformation.”

CONVERGE ICT
Meanwhile, Converge ICT Solutions, Inc. said it has expanded its fiber footprint to nearly 600,000 kilometers by end-September.

“This consists of its subsea, aerial, and terrestrial fiber optic cable network that covers the northernmost tip in Luzon to islands in Visayas and Mindanao,” the company said in an e-mailed statement.

According to Converge Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder Dennis Anthony H. Uy, the company continues its aggressive investments to expand its fiber footprint in more areas in the country.

The goal is “to ensure internet access to more Filipinos,” he noted. “Fulfilling our commitment to reach the unserved and underserved, we are continuously expanding and strengthening our fiber network to serve the strong demand for reliable and accessible internet.”

The company reported recently that it had laid out more than 600,000 fiber ports in Visayas and Mindanao as of end-July, which was twice of its previous 300,000 ports rolled out by the end of 2021. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Lower prostate cancer screening rates linked with more advanced cancers

PIXABAY

A DECLINE in prostate cancer screening has been linked to subsequent increases in advanced cancers, according to data from the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), findings that may spur revisiting current US testing guidelines.  

A new study, involving more than 5 million men over age 40 at 128 VA facilities across the country between 2005 and 2019, found that when screening was encouraged, later diagnoses of incurable advanced malignancies were less likely.  

“Screening rates were significant predictors of metastatic cancer rates,” study leader Dr. Brent Rose of the University of California, San Diego said at a news conference on Monday at the annual meeting of the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) in San Antonio, Texas. Metastatic cancers are those that have advanced and spread to other parts of the body.  

The benefits of screening for prostate cancer have been controversial. In 2012, the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) advised against it, maintaining that because the disease usually progresses very slowly, the risks of screening outweigh the potential benefit. There was concern that suspicion of prostate cancer based on a common blood test could lead to painful, potentially risky biopsies that may not have been necessary.  

In 2018, based on new evidence, the panel modified its recommendation to limit prostate cancer screening to men ages 55 to 69, and then only if they “express a preference for screening after being informed of and understanding the benefits and risks.”  

Overall at the VA facilities, rates of screening with blood tests for prostate-specific antigen levels dropped from 47.2% in 2005 to 37.0% in 2019, the researchers reported.  

During that period, metastatic prostate cancer rates rose from 5.2 per 100,000 men to 7.9 per 100,000, with the rise driven by increases in the 55–69 and over-70 age groups, the researchers said.  

At individual facilities, higher rates of screening were linked with lower rates of subsequent diagnoses of advanced cancers. But for every 10% decrease in screening, there was a corresponding 10% increase in metastatic prostate cancer incidence five years later, the researchers said.  

Observational studies like this one cannot prove cause and effect, and earlier randomized trials comparing screening to no screening have yielded conflicting results, further complicating the issue. A large European trial found a significant benefit, but a North American trial did not.  

In the North American trial, however, many of the men assigned to the no-screening group “surreptitiously” were screened privately by their personal physicians, which likely biased the outcomes, ASTRO president-elect Dr. Jeff Michalski of Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis said at the news conference.  

Dr. Rose noted that while the USPSTF advice to limit prostate cancer screening has resulted in lower rates of prostate cancer diagnoses, rates of metastatic prostate cancer have increased “more dramatically.”  

“We hope this data will give the USPSTF a chance to re-evaluate their recommendations,” Dr. Michalski said.  

A spokesperson for the USPSTF said an update to its prostate cancer screening recommendation is not currently underway. — Reuters 

Creaking chains a reminder of slavery in New York art exhibit

TIMOTHY SCHENCK/GOVISLAND.COM

NEW YORK — A new art installation that visitors can walk through on New York’s Governors Island features giant chain links grinding overhead, pointing to the legacy of slavery in the United States.

Artist Charles Gaines says he wanted to create a piece — which faces the Statue of Liberty and is roughly 100 feet (30.5 meters) long that reflected the sounds and history of the Mississippi River.

“The Mississippi River — which is the place that you talk about the history of American commerce, but also we can talk about the history of slavery,” said Mr. Gaines. — Reuters

Gov’t partially awards reissued 25-year bonds

BW FILE PHOTO
THE GOVERNMENT made a partial award of the reissued bonds it offered on Tuesday as investors continued to ask for higher yields. — BW FILE PHOTO

THE GOVERNMENT partially awarded the reissued 25-year Treasury bonds (T-bonds) it offered on Tuesday as investors wanted higher rates amid expectations of further tightening by the central bank before the year ends.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) raised just P26.139 billion from its offer of 25-year papers on Tuesday, less than the programmed P35 billion, even as total bids reached P46.988 billion.

This brought the total outstanding volume for the bond series to P88.3 billion, the BTr said.

The bonds, which have a remaining life of 12 years and 11 months, were awarded at rates ranging from 7.625% to 8%, bringing the average to 7.887%, which was 3.8 basis points (bps) lower than the 7.925% quoted for the bond when it was first offered on Sept. 28, 2010 and also 11.3 bps below the 8% coupon for the issue. 

However, this was 69.38 bps above the 7.1932% quoted for the same bond series at the secondary market and 47.23 bps higher than the 7.4147% yield seen for the 10-year tenor at the secondary market prior to the auction, based on PHP Bloomberg Valuation Service Reference Rates data provided by the BTr.

National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon said in a Viber message to reporters that the auction saw “decent demand” and that higher bids were driven by hawkish statements from the chiefs of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) and the Finance department.

A trader said the range of awarded rates came in within expectations as the market is gearing up for further rate hikes at home and abroad.

“Although, note that the high rate reached 8%, which can be viewed as an aggressive award on the part of BTr,” the trader added in a text message.

Likewise, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in a text message that investors wanted higher yields in anticipation of further tightening.

“The Treasury bond average auction yield went up to 7.887% amid recent signals on local policy rate hikes for the rest of 2022, about +0.50 or +0.75 on the next rate-setting meeting on Nov. 17, 2022 to help stabilize both the peso exchange rate and overall inflation amid another large rate hike by the Fed,” Mr. Ricafort added.

BSP Governor Felipe M. Medalla on Monday said the central bank may need to raise rates by more than 100 bps at its last two meetings this year, depending on the Fed’s aggressiveness.

Finance Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno, a member of the BSP’s policy-setting Monetary Board, also said on Monday that benchmark rates should be raised by 100 bps before the year ends to help support the peso, noting this could be done via two 50-bp hikes or a 75-bp increase at the Nov. 17 meeting and a 25-bp hike at the Dec. 15 review.

The BSP has so far raised key rates by 225 bps this year to tame inflation and support a weakening currency that has added to price pressures.

Meanwhile, the Fed is likely to raise rates by 75 bps for a fourth straight time at its policy-setting meeting on Nov. 1-2, adding to 300 bps worth of hikes since March.

The BTr wants to raise P200 billion from the domestic market this month, or P60 billion through Treasury bills and P140 billion from T-bonds.

The government borrows from local and external sources to help plug a budget deficit capped at 7.6% of gross domestic product this year. — Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson