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Philippine elections fell short, human rights group says

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

A GLOBAL human rights coalition on Tuesday said the May national and local elections in the Philippines did not meet the standards of free, honest, and fair voting due to numerous reports of human rights violations and incidents pointing to fraud.

In a statement, the International Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP) said its International Observer Mission (IOM) concluded that the elections did not provide voters access to reliable information, freedom from intimidation, and a credible vote-counting system.

“The observers reported that the May elections showed a higher level of failure of the electronic voting system than ever before, along with a higher level of blatant vote-buying, a disturbing level of red-tagging of candidates and parties, as well as a number of incidents of deadly violence,” said former Australian senator and IOM Commissioner Lee Rhiannon.

“A large number of voters did not get to cast their vote and many had to trust that election officials would later put their marked ballot paper through a Vote Counting Machine, thus undermining the secrecy of the vote,” she added.

The IOM was a collaboration between the international coalition and local election watchdog Kontra Daya that had participation from academics around the world.

ICHRP stressed the need for the Commission on Elections (Comelec) and lawmakers to review the automated election system and introduce reforms that would discourage political dynasties from being elected.

Acting Comelec Spokesperson John Rex C. Laudiangco earlier called into question the group’s initial report, citing a lower number of election-related violent incidents. He also asserted that the Comelec did everything “according to the law and in fact above and beyond the call of the law.” — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Kyrie Irving exercises option to stay with Nets in 2022-23

IN AN apparent change of heart, Kyrie Irving exercised his option with the Brooklyn Nets for the 2022-2023 season, The Athletic and ESPN reported on Monday evening.

The star point guard’s decision came hours after reports said that he was expected to decline the $36.5-million option — and that the Nets gave him permission to seek a partner for a sign-and-trade.

Instead, Irving will return for his fourth season in Brooklyn.

“Normal people keep the world going, but those who dare to be different lead us into tomorrow. I’ve made my decision to opt in. See you in the fall. A11even,” Irving said in a statement to The Athletic.

The Athletic also reported that Irving passed on “multiple opt-in and trade scenarios” to see out the rest of his original four-year contract with the Nets.

Irving faced a Wednesday deadline to exercise the option. His decision means that he is eligible to sign a long-term extension with the Nets until Thursday.

The Nets made Irving a “real offer” on a long-term contract in the past week, per ESPN, but are hesitant to offer a new four-year deal.

ESPN reported on Monday that the Los Angeles Lakers were the only team with known interest in a sign-and-trade deal. The Lakers had only the $6-million midlevel exception to offer Irving and likely would have needed a third team to help facilitate any trade with the Nets.

Irving, 30, has missed 123 of 226 possible games with the Nets since joining the team in 2019.

Irving averaged 27.8 points and 5.8 assists per game in 2021-2022, though the sample size was limited due to his stance on the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccine. Irving wasn’t allowed to play home games until the final month of the regular season.

Irving reportedly provided the Nets a list of teams to whom he would approve a sign-and-trade deal, which caught Kevin Durant’s attention, reports said. Durant is not expected to seek alternatives now that Irving is remaining with the Nets. — Reuters

Serena returns to Wimbledon hoping to banish ghosts of 2021

SERENA Williams ahead of the 2022 Wimbledon Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon. — REUTERS

NEARLY a year to the day since Serena Williams last played a singles match on the Tour, the tennis great returns to Wimbledon’s Centre Court where her awe-inspiring career almost came to a tearful end.

Chasing a record-equaling 24th Grand Slam singles crown, sixth seed Williams limped out of her first round match last year with an injury and the sport suddenly had a void to fill as she took a year off to “heal physically and mentally.”

Now, three months shy of her 41st birthday, Williams is ranked 1,204 in the world and the American needed a wild card to play at Wimbledon where she has won the title seven times.

She has only two doubles matches at Eastbourne under her belt going into the year’s third major where she takes on France’s Harmony Tan.

However, Williams was glad Wimbledon broke with tradition and allowed players to practice on the iconic Centre Court to avoid a repeat of them slipping on the lush green grass.

While Williams chases an elusive 24th major, world number one Iga Świątek is busy chasing records herself and will put a 35-match winning streak — the best in the 21st century — on the line on the same court when she takes on Jana Fett.

Poland’s Świątek has not lost since February, but the 21-year-old comes into Wimbledon without playing a match on grass after she skipped the tune-up tournament in Berlin due to a shoulder issue. Reuters

Alcaraz survives five-set whirlwind to reach Wimbledon second round

LONDON — It might not have been the workout Carlos Alcaraz was hoping for as he nursed a sore elbow but the Spaniard showed why he is considered the next big thing as he toppled Jan-Lennard Struff 4-6, 7-5, 4-6, 7-6(3), 6-4 in the Wimbledon first round.

The 19-year-old has enjoyed an incredible season on clay and hardcourts — winning titles in Rio, Miami, Barcelona and Madrid — and on Monday he proved he has the skills and mental belief to succeed on the sport’s slickest surface.

Despite still being a grasscourt novice, fifth seed Alcaraz did not let German Struff’s 218-kph hurtling serves or the disappointment of losing two of the opening three sets faze him.

Facing an opponent he described as “big serve, big shots,” Alcaraz kept his nerve to fire down 30 aces and produced an assortment of breathtaking passing shots to secure only his second ever win on grass.

In their only previous meeting, Struff beat Alcaraz in straight sets in the third round at last year’s Roland-Garros.

But since that showdown, their careers have headed in opposite directions. — Reuters

Reliability

It’s easy to categorize Kyrie Irving’s decision to opt in to the last year of his contract with the Nets as a no-brainer. After all, the option is worth a whopping $36.5 million, a not inconsiderable sum under any circumstance and carrying even more value in light of the small fortune he lost over the last year. Because he managed to suit up in only 29 regular-season games owing to his firm commitment to stay unvaccinated against the COVID-19 virus, he was docked around $17 million in salary. Meanwhile, he stands to give up even more moolah in the face of his imminent divorce with Nike.

To argue that Irving is easy to figure out would, however, necessitate engaging in revisionist history. In fact, there’s nothing easy about him — and not simply because of his partiality to conspiracy theories and scientifically debunked positions. And, make no mistake, he wanted to leave the Nets following the latter’s refusal to provide him with a maximum contract extension. He even went so far as to identify potential sign-and-trade destinations. Given his mercurial nature, he would not have raised eyebrows had he opted out and, say, latched on to the Lakers for the $6-million midlevel exception.

That Irving managed to rein in his Hyde side is, perhaps, the surprise. Needless to say, he stuck around because of the money, and because he still has the chance to explore any and all opportunities next year. And he may well have done so because of good friend Kevin Durant and the prospect of them continuing to make beautiful music together on the court. His constant flirtation with the uncertain notwithstanding, he cannot but see the value in consorting with the devil he’s familiar with than with the devil he does not know.

Irving isn’t stupid. Considering the lack of interest in his services, he understands that he can also use his 2022-23 campaign as a means to rehabilitate his reputation. The problem isn’t his skill set; at his best, he’s a Top 15 player with an uncanny capacity to puncture the hoop. It’s his reliability — or, rather, lack thereof. He’s a high-risk-high-reward proposition, and going all in on him hasn’t seemed to be worth the aggravation. It’s why the Nets have played hardball with him, and why they may yet see him at his finest before he bids goodbye.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Gov’t keeps Alert Level 1 for NCR and most areas

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

MOST areas in the Philippines will remain under the lowest coronavirus alert up to the first half of July, according to the presidential palace, as authorities modified the matrices used to determine quarantine classifications.

Metro Manila is among the areas that will be placed under the first level of a five-scale alert system from July 1 to 15, Palace spokesman Jose Ruperto Martin M. Andanar said in a statement on Tuesday.

The national capital region (NCR), an economic powerhouse that is home to more than 13 million people, is currently under the same virus alert.

On the other hand, 37 areas from across the Philippines “shall be placed” under the alert system’s level 2, Mr. Andanar said.

Starting July 1, alert level classifications will be based “on the revised cross tabulation of total beds utilization rate and average daily attack rate,” the Palace official said.

He said the new matrix will remove the two-week growth rate in determining case-risk classification, which will now be based on average daily attack rates and current thresholds.

“Total beds utilization rate and its current thresholds are retained as the main metric for health system capacity.”

The positivity rate in Metro Manila had reached 5.9% on June 25 from 3.9% on June 18, monitoring group OCTA Research said on Monday.

TESTING
Mr. Andanar, in a separate statement, said unvaccinated on-site workers in both public and private sectors in areas under alert level 2 and higher must either undergo RT-PCR tests once every two weeks or take weekly antigen tests.

“In areas where there are sufficient supplies of COVID-19 vaccines, all establishments and employers in the public and private sector shall require their eligible employees who are tasked to do on-site work to be vaccinated against COVID-19,” he said.

The new testing rules are waived in alert level 1 areas “subject to the implementation of clinical-based management, including symptomatic testing.”

The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) said mandatory testing and vaccination “will create unemployment and underemployment opportunities in the light of our economy striving to recover from the pandemic adversity.”

The policy, which critics view as anti-poor, would derail business recovery, reduce production, and make workers lose their competitiveness, TUCP said in a statement.

It said that testing should be made free and accessible because if not, “workers and their families will sacrifice some more because a bigger part of their salaries will, again, go to payment for the cost of periodic testing alone.” — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Solo parents to get more benefits with new law 

PHILIPPINE STAR/ WALTER BOLLOZOS

A CONGRESS-approved bill that grants additional benefits to solo parents became a law without President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s signature. 

The measure, which lapsed into law on June 4, provides solo parents with additional work leave, scholarship and cash subsidy, and priority status in government low-cost housing projects.  

The new law has shortened the period before someone can be declared a single parent to six months from the previous one year. 

It expands the legally-recognized meaning of a single parent, considering any legal guardian, adoptive or foster parent who solely provides parental care and support to a child or children. 

Under the law, solo parents are entitled to a forfeitable and noncumulative parental leave of not more than seven days every year.  

The law also directs education institutions to provide scholarships or grants to qualified children of solo parents.

It entitles solo parents who earn minimum wage and below to an additional financial support of as much as 1,000 every month. 

I am elated that the Expanded Solo Parents Welfare Act has been passed into law,Senator Ana Theresia RisaN. Hontiveros, one of the measures proponents, said in a statement.  

I share this victory with the millions of solo parents in our country,she said. This is a victory for solo parents like me.” 

The new law also grants single-parents who are earning less than P250,000 a year a 10% discount and exemption from the value-added tax on various goods for children up to six years old. Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza 

Palace supports filing of charges vs those linked to agri smuggling 

BUREAU OF CUSTOMS

THE PRESIDENTIAL Palace on Tuesday said charges should be filed against the 22 officials and personalities allegedly involved in the smuggling of agriculture products into the country. 

A report by the Senate Committee of the Whole indicated that around P667.5 million worth of agri-fishery products were technically smuggledinto the country from 2019 to 2022.  

We are one with the Senate in fighting corruption in the bureaucracy,Palace Spokesman Jose Ruperto Martin M. Andanar said in a statement.    

File the necessary charges before the Office of the Ombudsman so officials and persons mentioned in the Senate report could be afforded due process, face their accusers, and have their day in court,he added.  

The 63-page committee report, filed on June 1, revealed a list of agriculture smugglers and protectors,” naming officials from the Agriculture department, Customs bureau, and local governments as well as private individuals.   

Senator Aquilino KokoL. Pimentel III, one of the 17 senators who signed the report, said in a statement on Tuesday: By signing, I am not confirming that I have personal knowledge. Its just us acknowledging that intelligence has reached the senate president,”  

The list of names provided is not yet comprehensive,he added, so it would be a good idea to continue the probe in the next Congress.  

Senator-elect Robinhood Ferdinand RobinC. Padilla said it would not be enough to just remove the accused officials from their position.  

If those in government positions lack accountability, they cant stop at apologies,he told reporters in Filipino in a press conference.  

Some of the officials cited in the report have denied the accusations and expressed readiness to face allegations in court.  

Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III, who led the investigation, has said that a copy of the list has been personally given to President-elect Ferdinand BongbongR. Marcos, Jr., who will concurrently serve as Agriculture secretary.  

Smuggling is really one of our biggest problems today,Mr. Pimentel said.  

The report cited weaknesses in the prosecution of smuggling cases, failure to digitalize inspection processes, and lack of first border inspection. Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

Over 600,000 tricycle drivers to receive fuel subsidy  

ZAMBOANGA CIO

THE DEPARTMENT of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) on Tuesday announced that 617,806 tricycle drivers nationwide will be receiving fuel cash subsidy under the agency’s program to address rising fuel prices. 

In a statement, DILG Secretary Eduardo M. Año said the cash assistance will be distributed by the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) through e-wallet platforms, state-owned Land Bank of the Philippines (LANDBANK), and other off-site payout sites of local government units.  

“We hope this fuel subsidy will help those tricycle drivers who are suffering because of the constant rise in oil prices,” he said in Filipino. “We hope this would give relief to these drivers.”  

In March, the LTFRB started releasing fuel subsidy for other public transport operators and drivers, and said it was waiting for the beneficiary list of tricycle and delivery drivers from the DILG.  

Mr. Año noted the subsidy will be distributed in three batches.  

The first batch will be for the 539,395 tricycle drivers who will receive the cash aid through their e-wallet accounts; the second batch will be for the 73,233 who will avail of LANDBANK’S over-the-counter services; and the third will cover 5,178 drivers who will use on-site payout sites of local governments.   

“All those included in the master list of qualified tricycle drivers will receive a fuel subsidy,” he said. “Let us just wait for additional details from the LTFRB.”  

The DILG said about 766,590 tricycle drivers submitted their names for the master list, but 148,784 were disqualified due to lack of requirements and failing to meet the deadline.  

Mr. Año also urged city and municipal mayors to establish help desks for the beneficiaries.  

Oil companies imposed another round of price hike on Tuesday. From the start of the year to June 14, pump prices of diesel, gasoline, and kerosene have gone up by P41.15, P28.70, and P37.95, respectively. John Victor D. Ordoñez 

Samar coastal road partially opened 

DPWH

THE ₱1.126-billion Samar Pacific Coastal Road project in central Philippines is now partially open, the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) announced on Tuesday.  

An initial eight-kilometer stretch of the 11.6-km coastal road in Northern Samar province and its Simora Bridge component, part of the government’s Build Build Build infrastructure program, were inaugurated Monday.    

DPWH Undersecretary Emil K. Sadain said the past four years of construction proved to be challengingwith about 29 typhoons and pandemic restrictions affecting the project. 

The partial opening of the Samar Pacific Coastal Road is a huge step toprovide comfortable and improved interconnectivity that will support sustainable agricultural development, and contribute to food self-sufficiency program and in sustaining peace and development efforts in Northern Samar,he said.

Northern Samar Governor Edwin C. Ongchuan noted that without the coastal road, travel to and from several remote towns required multiple boat rides.

The project, with funding assistance from the Republic of Korea through the Export-Import Bank of Korea (KEXIM), forms part of the Samar Island circumferential road, according to Mr. Sadain. 

Construction of the remaining three-kilometer, two-lane road with two more bridges are ongoing with the bridges at an average completion rate of about 50%, DPWH said.  

The road traverses the coastal municipalities of Palapag, Laoang and Catubig where residents are mainly engaged in coconut and rice farming. MSJ

Coconut processing plant in Zamboanga City gutted by fire 

MAYOR BENG CLIMACO FACEBOOK PAGE

FIREFIGHTERS in Zamboanga City on Tuesday morning were still working to put out a fire that broke out late Monday at a coconut processing plant located along the citys coastal area.  

As of Monday noon, the Bureau of Fire Protection had yet to declare the fire under control, according to the Zamboanga City government.  

There were no reported casualties or injuries, it said.   

Outgoing Mayor Maria Isabelle Climaco-Salazar said the origin of the fire that started at around 11 p.m. at the Philippine International Development, Inc. (PHIDCO) compound was still undetermined.  

Fire fighting activities continue up to this time, as traffic rerouting is in effect,she said in a Facebook post on Tuesday morning.   

PHIDCO, established in 1959, is a coconut processing and export firm according to the company website.   

Its export products include crude coconut oil, refined bleached deodorized (rbd) coconut oil, cochin coconut oil, and copra expeller cake. It also produces the Washington brand of cooking oil, Datu laundry bars, and Viva detergent bars for the local market. 

Aside from its manufacturing activities, it leases out commercial as well as warehouse spaces,it said. MSJ 

Ukraine digs for survivors in rubble of Russian missile hit

KREMENCHUK, Ukraine — Firefighters and soldiers searched for survivors in the rubble of a shopping mall in central Ukraine on Tuesday after a Russian missile strike killed at least 16 people in an attack condemned by the United Nations and the West.

Family members of the missing lined up at a hotel across the street where rescue workers had set up a base after Monday’s strike on the busy mall in Kremenchuk, southeast of Kyiv.

More than 1,000 people were inside when two Russian missiles slammed into the mall, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said. At least 16 people were killed and 59 injured, Ukraine’s emergency services said.

“This is not an accidental hit, this is a calculated Russian strike exactly onto this shopping center,” Mr. Zelensky said in an evening video address. He said the death count could rise.

More than 40 people had been reported missing, Ukraine’s prosecutor general’s office said.

A survivor receiving treatment at Kremenchuk’s public hospital, Ludmyla Mykhailets, 43, said she was shopping with her husband when the blast threw her into the air.

“I flew head first and splinters hit my body. The whole place was collapsing,” she said.

“It was hell,” added her husband, Mykola, 45, blood seeping through a bandage wrapped around his head.

Russia has not commented on the strike but its deputy ambassador to the United Nations, Dmitry Polyanskiy, accused Ukraine of using the incident to gain sympathy ahead of a June 28-30 summit of the NATO military alliance.

“One should wait for what our Ministry of Defense will say, but there are too many striking discrepancies already,” Mr. Polyanskiy wrote on Twitter.

The United Nations Security Council will meet Tuesday at Ukraine’s request following the attack. UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said the missile strike was “deplorable.”

Leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) major democracies, at a summit in Germany, said the attack was “abominable.”

“Russian President Putin and those responsible will be held to account,” they wrote in a joint statement tweeted by the German government spokesperson.

BATTLE FOR LYSYCHANSK
Elsewhere on the battlefield, Ukraine endured another difficult day following the loss of the now-ruined city of Sievierodonetsk after weeks of bombardment and street fighting.

Russian artillery pounded Lysychansk, Sievierodonetsk’s twin city across the Siverskyi Donets River.

Lysychansk is the last big city still held by Ukraine in eastern Luhansk province, a main target for the Kremlin after Russian troops failed to take the capital Kyiv early in the war.

A Russian missile strike killed eight and wounded 21 others in Lysychansk on Monday, the area’s regional governor Serhiy Gaidai said. There was no immediate Russian comment.

Ukraine’s military said Russia’s forces were trying to cut off Lysychansk from the south.

Rodion Miroshnik, ambassador to Moscow of the Luhansk People’s Republic, said Russian troops and their Luhansk Republic allies were advancing westward into Lysychansk and street battles had erupted around the city’s stadium.

Fighting was on in several villages around the city, and Russian and allied troops had entered the Lysychansk oil refinery where Ukrainian troops were concentrated, Miroshnik said on his Telegram channel.

Reuters could not confirm Russian reports that Moscow’s troops had already entered the city.

Russia also shelled the city of Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine on Monday, hitting apartment buildings and a primary school, the regional governor said.

The shelling killed five people and wounded 22. There were children among those wounded, the governor said.

‘AS LONG AS IT TAKES’
Moscow denies targeting civilians in what it calls a “special military operation” in Ukraine, but Kyiv and the West have accused Russian forces of war crimes.

The war has killed thousands, sent millions fleeing, and triggered spikes in global food and energy prices.

During their summit in Germany, G7 leaders, including US President Joseph R. Biden, said they would keep sanctions on Russia for as long as necessary and intensify pressure on President Vladimir Putin’s government and its ally Belarus.

The United States also said it was finalizing another weapon package for Ukraine that would include long-range air-defense systems.

Mr. Zelensky asked for more arms in a video address to the G7 leaders, US and European officials said. He requested help to export grain from Ukraine and for more sanctions on Russia.

The G7 nations promised to squeeze Russia’s finances further — including a cap on the price of Russian oil that a US official said was “close” — and pledged up to $29.5 billion more for Ukraine.

The White House said Russia had defaulted on its external debt for the first time in more than a century as sanctions have effectively cut the country off from global finance.

Russia rejected the claims, telling investors to go to Western financial agents for the cash which was sent but bondholders did not receive. — Reuters