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TRB inspects CAVITEX C5 link flyover extension

CAVITEX.PH

THE TOLL Regulatory Board (TRB) has inspected the 1.6-kilometer Cavitex C5 Link Flyover extension as it nears completion, according to Cavitex Infrastructure Corp. (CIC)    

In a statement on Thursday, CIC said the government regulators had a site visit early this week, where traffic management plans were also discussed.  

This entails transferring of the Merville entry and exit ramp to in front of Shell C5 Southlink for better traffic flow. Traffic signalization and signages will be installed in coordination with the local authorities to help manage traffic for motorists bound to the expressway, and those that will use the service road,the company said.    

The flyover extension will link to the operational 2.2-km Cavitex C5 Link flyover, providing convenient access for motorists heading to South Luzon Expressway (SLEX)/C5 from Merville and vice-versa.   

The flyover extension dubbed, Segment 3A2: Merville to E. Rodriguez Avenue, is already 95% complete, according to the CIC.    

We are pleased to see the progress of the Cavitex C5 Link. We look forward to it serving an estimated 15,000 motorists, helping lessen their travel time from SLEX to Pasay, Taguig and Parañaque, thereby helping decongest some of our local roads,TRB Executive Director Alvin A. Carullo said.    

Meanwhile, CIC said the construction of Segment 2, called Cavitex R1 Expressway to Sucat Interchange, has reached over 30% completion.    

The travel time of motorists between the two areas will be cut by as much as thirty minutes, bypassing traffic from Sucat Road and Quirino Avenue, once the segment links Cavitex to its Sucat Interchange.    

CIC is controlled by Metro Pacific Tollways Corp., a unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPIC).   

MPIC is one of three Philippine units of Hong Kongs First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being Philex Mining Corp. and PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. Revin Mikhael D. Ochave 

Boston Celtics pull away from Warriors for 2-1 edge in Finals

BOSTON CELTICS forward Jayson Tatum (0) attempts a layup against Golden State Warriors forward Andrew Wiggins (22) in the first half during Game 3 of the 2022 NBA Finals at TD Garden. — REUTERS

JAYLEN Brown scored 17 of his 27 points in the first quarter and Jayson Tatum finished with 26 points to lift the host Celtics to a 116-100 victory over the Golden State Warriors on Wednesday in Game 3 of the National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals.

The Celtics grabbed a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven series with Game 4 set for Friday in Boston.

“My message to the team was, ‘We’ve done this after losses. It’s time to do it after wins,’” Celtics coach Ime Udoka said after his team improved to 7-0 after a loss in the playoffs.

Tatum had nine assists and Brown added five to go along with nine rebounds. Boston’s Marcus Smart finished with 24 points on Wednesday after mustering just two in the Celtics’ 107-88 loss in Game 2 on Sunday.

“That left a bad taste in our mouth, coming out of Game 2 hearing and knowing that we got beat up,” Smart said on the NBA TV. “For us, it’s like anybody else. If you’re in a fight with a bully, you gotta keep going and you gotta stand up.

“…We got the Golden State Warriors who have done this before multiple times who understand what it takes to be here. They want to see what you got. They punched us in our mouths in Game 2, and we responded.”

Al Horford collected 11 points, eight rebounds and six assists for Boston, which held a 47-31 advantage in total rebounds — including 15-6 on the offensive glass.

Golden State star Stephen Curry overcame early foul trouble to make six 3-pointers and finish with 31 points. Curry remained in the game with 4:07 to play in the fourth quarter despite appearing to injure his left leg while vying for a loose ball.

Warriors coach Steve Kerr said Curry was removed from the game given his team’s 14-point deficit with 2:19 to play.

“We weren’t going to catch up,” Kerr said. “We’ll know more (on his status) tomorrow.”

Klay Thompson had 25 points and Andrew Wiggins added 18 for the Warriors, who benefited from their third straight strong third quarter in the series to trim their deficit to four points entering the fourth.

Draymond Green, who was roundly jeered by the crowd, finished with just two points and four rebounds.

Green used an expletive to describe his own performance before adding, “I was soft. That’s what was most disappointing to me, for us.”

Tatum made two foul shots, a long jumper and two driving layups to start the fourth quarter and stake Boston to a 107-96 lead with 5:53 to play. Smart sank a corner 3-pointer and made a bank shot to give the Celtics a 114-100 lead with 2:19 remaining.

Golden State, which outscored Boston by a combined 73-38 margin in the third quarters of Games 1 and 2, hoped for similar domination on Wednesday after entering the period with a 12-point deficit. Curry drained back-to-back 3-pointers and made two more to give the Warriors an 83-82 lead before Smart answered from beyond the arc on the next possession.

Brown responded from a sluggish 5-for-17 shooting performance on Sunday with an aggressive start on Wednesday. He made six of nine shots — including three of four from 3-point range — in the first quarter. — Reuters

Broncos have ownership bid in place for record $4.65B

THE Denver Broncos appear set to be sold for a sports-franchise record $4.65 billion, according to multiple media reports.

As expected, the Walton-Penner family — led by Walmart heir Rob Walton — has made the winning bid. The Walton-Penner family and the Pat Bowlen Trust have entered into a purchase and sale agreement, it was jointly announced on Tuesday.

The specific amount of the record-setting transaction was reported on Tuesday by various media outlets.

This would be the highest price paid for an American sports franchise, topping the $3.2 billion paid for the NBA’s Brooklyn Nets in 2019. It would also be more than double the most recent sale price of an NFL team as the Carolina Panthers were sold for $2.275 billion in 2018.

Forbes valued the Broncos at $3.75 billion in 2021, estimating it at No. 10 on the list of National Football League (NFL) franchise valuation.

Earlier this month, Forbes identified other bidders as Josh Harris, who is part of the ownership group of the Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Devils; Jose E. Feliciano, one of the founders of Clearlake Capital; and mortgage lender Mat Ishbia.

Walton, 77, has a net worth of $65 billion and is the 19th-richest person in the world, per Forbes. The Walmart fortune is so vast that his siblings, Alice and Jim, also are among the world’s 20 richest people on Forbes’ list of billionaires.

If the Walton sale goes through, Rob Walton would become the second NFL owner from the extended Walton family. Ann Walton Kroenke, who is Walton’s cousin, is married to Stan Kroenke, owner of the Los Angeles Rams.

“We are thrilled to be selected to move forward with the purchase of the Denver Broncos!” Rob Walton said on behalf of the ownership group. “Carrie (Walton-Penner), Greg (Penner) and I are inspired by the opportunity to steward this great organization in a vibrant community full of opportunity and passionate fans.”Reuters

Red Bull Dance Your Style is now in the Philippines

FOR the first time ever, Red Bull Dance Your Style, the brand’s take on a global 1-on-1 street dance competition with a unique battle format featuring the latest hits and timeless classics that challenge a dancer’s freestyle and improvisation skills, is coming to the Philippines.

Unlike other major dance competitions with professional judges, the crowd will play a crucial role in determining the winner of each battle. The crowd participation means the dancers will really need to express their personality and passion through their dancing. They’ll need to win the crowd to move past their opponents.

The first major Red Bull Dance Your Style Philippines event will kick off at the BGC Amphitheatre with the National Finals on July 23, featuring the top 16 dancers who qualified and pre-selected by nationally-established dance consultant and a member of the Philippine All-Stars Vince Mendoza. “The selection process was not easy and hard as well. Can you imagine gathering talented people and sizing up their skill-set? It’s like a dream and also having that excitement during the selection process,” shares Mendoza when asked about the decision making that went into choosing the country’s representatives.

All the participants will be gathering together in one place for an intense yet fun dance battle to test the diversity of their move-set while proving that they are the best dancer in the world.

Each round of every battle will consist of two thrilling rounds with the DJ spinning mixes of different genres ranging from modern pop and rap music to old-school classics. The competitors will need to prove that they have rhythm, movement, creativity, and charisma since capturing the crowd’s attention and acquiring their approval is the only way to secure a spot in the next round of the competition.

The winner of the National Finals will then move on to the World Finals and represent the Philippines, competing against over 60 dancers from 30 countries. The World Finals is set to take place in Johannesburg, South Africa, in December 2022.

Interested viewers may secure their spot to watch Red Bull Dance Your Style live via this link: www.redbull.com/danceyourstyleph. Registration officially opens on June 2022.

Dutch ends Wales’ World Cup party with Cardiff win

CARDIFF — A second-string Netherlands beat Wales 2-1 away after a dramatic late finale in the Nations League on Wednesday, bringing the hosts back down to earth after they secured World Cup qualification at the weekend.

Wout Weghorst won the game for the Dutch, scoring with a header four minutes into stoppage time, straight after Wales looked to have snatched a late draw when Rhys Norrington-Davies netted two minutes into stoppage time.

Teun Koopmeiners opened the scoring five minutes into the second half to give the visitors the lead, after coach Louis van Gaal had changed his entire team from the side that opened their League A Group Four campaign with a 4-1 thumping of neighbor Belgium last Friday.

Wales also rested some of its senior squad members after winning a World Cup place for the first time in 64 years when they beat Ukraine 1-0 on Sunday, allowing fringe players to stake a claim for selection in the Qatar-bound team.

Despite looking the brighter of the two sides in the first half, Wales was caught early in the second when Koopmeiners found a pocket of space to fire home from the edge of the area with his weaker right foot after being set up by debutant Jerdy Schouten.

The Dutch had only one chance in the first 45 minutes, on the stroke of half time, when Cody Gakpo’s shot was deflected away for a corner by Chris Mepham.

Before that, Wales’s Harry Wilson hit the target with a free kick but his effort was punched away by Dutch goalkeeper Mark Flekken.

Welsh talisman Gareth Bale made a cameo appearance in the final quarter-hour, but it was Norrington-Davies who rose powerfully at the back post to head home an equalizer.

Yet almost straight from the kickoff, Frenkie de Jong surged forward at the start of a move that ended with Weghorst diving to head home a dramatic winner.

“It was a fantastic counter but we were sloppy in the first half, turned over a lot of possession and so we couldn’t attack. But I keep saying we have a tremendous squad,” Van Gaal told Dutch NOS television after the game.

Wales has now lost both games of the new Nations League campaign after defeat in Poland a week ago and also saw a 19-match unbeaten home record come to an inauspicious end.

Wednesday’s win extended the Netherlands’ 100% record over Wales to nine matches and put it top of the Nations League group.

The Dutch next hosts Poland in Rotterdam on Saturday when Wales hosts Belgium. — Reuters

Celtics edge

EVEN those with just a passing interest in the National Basketball Association Finals would have predicted the Celtics’ renewed aggression yesterday. After practically having been bullied off the court by the Warriors in Game Two, they knew they had to at least match the intensity of the Western Conference champions moving forward. And, in this regard, they understood that they had both the means and the opportunity to live up to potential. It wasn’t simply that they would be moving to familiar TD Garden, where a capacity crowd of 19,156 awaited. More importantly, it was that they had the stronger, more physical, and better-balanced lineup.

Perhaps the outcome was to be expected given the extent to which the Celtics were punked by the Warriors on the strength of former Defensive Player of the Year awardee Draymond Green’s exertions. To a man, they resolved to be more focused even in the face of extra-legal provocations designed to get their goat. And, to their credit, they set the tone from the get-go; bully ball was on display, but upon their instigation. They made their presence felt — in the paint, off the boards, on the ground. The result: an emphatic 16-point victory in which they were ahead for all but 33 seconds of the set-to.

Needless to say, the Celtics now have the decided edge — and not just because history has two-one leaders claiming the Larry O’Brien Trophy four out of five times. To contend that the Warriors need to take Game Four would be to underscore the obvious. The green and white are too big, too strong, and too heady to squander three chances to bring home the hardware. They have the talent and athleticism to counter their seeming lack of experience. Moreover, they’re quick learners, as evidenced by their capability to immediately bounce back from setbacks; through the postseason to date, they have yet to lose twice in a row.

That said, the Celtics know there is no sure thing in the Finals, and especially against the gritty Warriors. The latter’s third-quarter charges are no fluke, and serve to remind them of the singular impact two-time Most Valuable Player awardee Steph Curry can have on proceedings. Which, for all intents, is why they would do well to press their advantage. The last thing they want is for the tide to turn on account of their complacency.

 

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.

In shadow of Ukraine war: US and China set to clash at Asian security meeting

US AND CHINESE national flags are at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, July 10, 2014. — REUTERS/JASON LEE/FILE PHOTO

SINGAPORE — The United States and China are expected to use Asia’s top security meeting this week to trade blows over everything from Taiwan’s sovereignty to the war in Ukraine, although both sides have indicated a willingness to discuss managing differences.

The Shangri-La Dialogue, which attracts top-level military officials, diplomats and weapons makers from around the globe, will take place June 10-12 in Singapore, the first time the event has been held since 2019 after it was postponed twice because of COVID-19.

On the sidelines of the summit, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Chinese Minister of National Defense General Wei Fenghe are expected to hold their first face-to-face meeting since President Joseph R. Biden took office.

“We expect, from our perspective, the substance of that meeting to be focused on managing competition in regional and global issues,” a senior US official said.

Chinese media have also said Beijing will use the meeting to discuss cooperation with the United States.

Mr. Austin and Mr. Wei are likely to then use speeches over the weekend to re-affirm their commitment to the Asia-Pacific region, while delivering some pointed remarks in the direction of the other.

Relations between China and the United States have been tense in recent months, with the world’s two largest economies clashing over everything from Chinese belligerence towards Taiwan, its military activity in the South China Sea and Beijing’s attempts to expand influence in the Pacific region.

Although the summit is focused on Asian security issues, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will remain central to discussions. The conflict, which has killed tens of thousands of people, uprooted millions and reduced cities to rubble, entered its 100th day last week.

Ukraine will send a delegation to the meeting but the Russians will not be attending, according to a source familiar with the list of attendees.

“American participants will use the occasion to criticize China’s strategic partnership with Russia,” said Li Mingjiang, associate professor at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.

“We’ll see some inferences of the China-Russia partnership as a coalition of autocracies … China will defend their relationship with Russia, their position and policy in response to Ukraine.”

‘COME OUT SWINGING’
With US military and political capital soaked up by the war in Ukraine, Mr. Austin will be under pressure to convince China’s rivals in Asia that they can rely on Washington.

“They say that China is this huge threat and they’re even saying it’s an acute threat. Yet it seems a major part of the attention and resources are basically going to Europe,” said Elbridge Colby, a former senior Pentagon official. “It’s not about words, it’s about walking the walk.”

Bilateral talks between the United States and China, and much of the conference, will likely focus on Taiwan.

China, which claims democratic Taiwan as its own territory, has increased military activity near the island over the past two years, responding to what it calls “collusion” between Taipei and Washington.

“The US is going to come out swinging on Taiwan specifically but also China’s growing assertiveness throughout the Indo-Pacific,” said Derek Grossman, a senior defense analyst at the RAND Corporation, a think tank.

This month, Mr. Biden said the United States would get involved militarily should China attack Taiwan, although the administration has since clarified that US policy on the issue has not changed and Washington does not support Taiwan’s independence.

Washington has had a long-standing policy of strategic ambiguity on whether it would defend Taiwan militarily.

The Pacific islands have also emerged as a key front in Washington’s strategic competition with China.

Mr. Biden’s special envoy is due to visit the Marshall Islands next week amid growing US worries about China’s efforts to expand its influence in the region. Last week, a virtual meeting of 10 Pacific foreign ministers hosted by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Fiji agreed to defer consideration of a Chinese proposal for a sweeping trade and security pact.

Also looming over the Shangri-La Dialogue is the increasing military threat posed by North Korea, which has carried out at least 18 rounds of weapons tests this year, underscoring its evolving nuclear and missile arsenals.

Officials from South Korea, the United States and Japan said on Wednesday that North Korea’s recent missile tests were “serious, unlawful” provocations.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida will open the conference on Friday with a keynote speech in which he is expected to call for peaceful resolutions to disputes in the Asia-Pacific region. — Reuters

OECD slashes growth outlook to 3%, but sees limited stagflation risk

REUTERS

PARIS — The war in Ukraine has made the growth outlook far bleaker even though the global economy should avoid a bout of 1970s-style stagflation, the OECD said on Wednesday, slashing its growth forecasts and jacking up its inflation estimates.

The world economy is set to grow 3% this year, much less than the 4.5% expected when the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) last updated its forecasts in December.

Growth will then slow further next year, easing to 2.8%, down from a previous forecast of 3.2%, the Paris-based policy forum said in its latest Economic Outlook.

“Russia’s war is indeed posing a heavy price on the global economy,” OECD Secretary General Mathias Cormann told a news conference.

“Global growth will be substantially lower with higher and more persistent inflation,” he said, adding the OECD was not forecasting recession although there were numerous downside risks to the outlook.

Meanwhile, any quick relief from soaring costs is unlikely, with inflation expected to peak at 8.5% this year in OECD countries before slipping to 6.0% in 2023. Previously the OECD had expected inflation to peak at 5% before gradually receding to 3% in 2023.

Despite the lower growth and higher inflation outlook, the OECD saw a limited risk of “stagflation” like that seen in the mid-1970s, when the oil price shock triggered runaway inflation and surging unemployment.

In particular, developed economies are much more driven by services and less energy-intensive than in the 1970s and central banks have a freer hand to fight inflation, independent of governments more concerned about unemployment.

“To mitigate the cost of inflation, the burden will need to be split between profits and wages, that is about employers and employees negotiating to share this cost in a fair way and avoid a wage price spiral,” OECD chief economist Laurence Boone said.

DOWNGRADED OUTLOOK
The OECD said it saw a strong case for steady removal of monetary policy stimulus in high-inflation economies, such as the United States and eastern Europe.

As the pandemic-related fiscal boost expires, the US economy was seen growing 2.5% this year before slowing to 1.2% in 2023, down from previous forecasts of 3.7% and 2.4% growth, respectively.

China’s economy, which has been hit by a fresh wave of COVID-19 lockdowns, is seen growing 4.4% this year and 4.9% next, down from 5.1% previously expected in both years.

More exposed to Russian energy imports and the fallout from the war in Ukraine, the euro zone economy was seen growing 2.6% this year and 1.6% in 2023, down from forecasts of 4.3% and 2.5% respectively. — Reuters

Russia attacking Ukraine food targets to scare world, says regional governor

REUTERS

MYKOLAIV, Ukraine — Russia is attacking food and agriculture targets in Ukraine in order to scare the world into agreeing a deal to reopen the Black Sea on Moscow’s terms, the head of the region where a major agricultural storage facility was struck on Sunday said.

Vitaliy Kim, governor of the Mykolaiv region, where Russian shelling destroyed the warehouses of one of Ukraine’s largest agricultural commodities terminals over the weekend, said Moscow wanted to make global food shortages “look like a catastrophe”.

“They want to do this because they are trying to trade about opening the Black Sea” in the hope of a deal that might allow Ukrainian and Russian grain to use the waterway, possibly in exchange for an easing of sanctions, Mr. Kim told Reuters in an interview on Wednesday.

“That is why they shoot more. Why they shoot the agricultural enterprises and even fields — just for their own movie that fields are on fire,” said Mr. Kim, who was speaking outside his former office, which was destroyed by a Russian missile in March, killing at least 35 people.

Since Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine, Kyiv has repeatedly accused Russia of targeted attacks on infrastructure and agriculture in an effort to provoke a global food crisis and pressure the West.

Moscow, which calls the war a special military operation and denies hitting civilian targets, blames Western sanctions on Russia and sea mines set by Ukraine for the drop in food exports and rising global prices.

Ukraine’s southern military command, in a statement on Wednesday, accused Russia of “attacking farmland and infrastructure sites where fires of considerable scale have broken out”.

A large producer of tomato pulp was also destroyed in Mykolaiv earlier in the conflict, Mr. Kim’s spokesman said.

Mr. Kim was speaking as Turkish efforts to ease a global food crisis by negotiating safe passage for grain stuck in ports in the Black Sea were being met by some resistance.

Ukraine said Russia was imposing unreasonable conditions and the Kremlin said free shipment depended on an end to sanctions.

The Turkish plan, Mr. Kim said, was a good idea, “but it all depends on the cost… what Ukraine should pay for opening the Black Sea,” he said.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Wednesday the onus was on Ukraine to solve the issues with grain shipments by de-mining the approaches to its ports. He accused the West of exaggerating the global importance of Ukrainian exports.

Ukraine, the world’s fourth largest grains exporter, operates dozens of export terminals along the Black Sea, where cities are regularly shelled by Russia. A Russian blockade is preventing Ukraine from using the sea for exports.

Ukrainian conglomerate Group DF identified the target of Sunday’s Mykolaiv attack as its Nika-Tera port facility in Mykolaiv, saying the attack rendered the port facilities entirely unusable.

Mr. Kim’s spokesman said the shelling hit a warehouse where sunflower meal was stored. — Reuters

Sri Lanka hit by power cuts after key union goes on strike

A MAN waits in line to buy a domestic gas tank in Colombo, Sri Lanka, June 1. — REUTERS/DINUKA LIYANAWATTE

COLOMBO — Swathes of Sri Lanka were hit by electricity cuts on Thursday after a power sector union went on strike opposing new government regulations, compounding hardships as the country tackles a crippling economic crisis.

About 900 out of around 1,100 engineers of the state-run Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB), Sri Lanka’s main power company, went on strike at midnight, stalling operations at eight hydropower plants that generate around 1,000 MW of electricity.

Sri Lanka’s 22 million people are already suffering the country’s most serious financial turmoil in seven decades, with severe shortages of fuel, medicines and other essentials amid record inflation and a devaluation of its currency.

In a bid to stop the CEB Engineers’ Union from striking, Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa issued a gazette notification late on Wednesday declaring electricity supply as an essential service.

The legal directive makes it mandatory for engineers to report to work.

“President Rajapaksa called the union president late last night and made an appeal not to let the entire grid collapse. So we are working to ensure hospitals and other essential services have power,” the union’s joint secretary Eranga Kudahewa told Reuters.

“But the strike will continue,” he said.

The union is opposed to government plans to amend legislation governing the country’s power sector, which include removing restrictions on competitive bidding for renewable power projects.

But the government, pushing renewable energy as a potential solution for the country’s power woes, has underlined the need for the amendments to allow for quicker approval and implementation of projects.

Janaka Ratnayake, chairman of the power regulator Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka, said regions supplied by hydropower had seen power outages, including parts of the commercial capital Colombo.

“We are working to restore services and will talk with the unions to reduce public inconvenience,” Mr. Ratnayake told Reuters.

Sri Lanka was crippled by long power cuts earlier this year after it was unable to import fuel needed to generate electricity, though the situation has improved as monsoon rains have bolstered hydropower generation. — Reuters

More than 1,000 monkeypox cases reported to WHO

AN ELECTRON MICROSCOPIC image shows mature, oval-shaped monkeypox virus particles as well as crescents and spherical particles of immature virions, obtained from a clinical human skin sample associated with the 2003 prairie dog outbreak in this undated image obtained by Reuters on May 18, 2022. — CYNTHIA S. GOLDSMITH, RUSSELL REGNERY/CDC/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

LONDON — There have been more than 1,000 monkeypox cases reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) in the current outbreak outside the countries in Africa where it more commonly spreads.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the risk of monkeypox becoming established in these non-endemic countries was real but preventable at this point.

Twenty-nine countries have reported cases in the current outbreak, which began in May. None have reported deaths.

At a media briefing in Geneva, Mr. Tedros also said there had been more than 1,400 suspected cases of monkeypox this year in Africa and 66 deaths.

“It’s an unfortunate reflection of the world we live in that the international community is only now paying attention to monkeypox because it has appeared in high-income countries,” he said.

He said the outbreak was showing signs of community transmission in some countries. WHO recommends people with monkeypox isolate at home.

Rosamund Lewis, WHO technical lead on monkeypox, said that “interpersonal close contact” was the main way monkeypox spreads, although she added that the risk of aerosol transmission was not yet fully known. Health workers caring for monkeypox patients should wear a mask, she said.

Cases are still predominantly among men who have sex with men, the WHO added, although cases in women have been reported.

The U.N. agency is working with organizations including UN AIDS and community groups to raise awareness and stop transmission.

Post-exposure vaccination, including for health workers or close contacts, including sexual partners — ideally within four days of exposure — may be considered for some countries, WHO added. The vaccines being used are designed against smallpox, a related, more dangerous virus that the world eradicated in 1980, but also work to protect against monkeypox, studies have shown.

WHO senior official Sylvie Briand said the agency is assessing the potency of vaccines stockpiled against smallpox and contacting manufacturers and countries who have previously pledged vaccines. — Reuters

Media access and the right to know

CAMILO JIMENEZ-UNSPLASH

The accreditation of bloggers that Marcos Junior’s choice for Press Secretary (she will also head the Presidential Communication Operations Office or PCOO) is planning is not new. It was also considered by her predecessor, but abandoned because of problems over which bloggers would join the Malacañang Press Corps in covering the President.

There are thousands of bloggers who report and comment on public events and issues, but only a few can be so accredited. The PCOO will of course choose only those it approves of. Like the incoming PCOO head herself, avid Marcos Junior partisans who very likely even helped him campaign will be its preference.

The exclusion of others who do not meet that “qualification” will make the accreditation of the chosen bloggers, if it does happen, one more means through which the incoming regime can control the manner and extent to which its policies and actions are reported. And that seems to be the exact intention.

In a similar vein is the planned “review” of print, broadcast, and online media representation in the coverage of the Office of the President. Exactly what that review will consist of has not been revealed, but that it is even being planned suggests that only those journalists from “friendly” media organizations could be permitted to cover Malacañang.

If implemented, both would be consistent with some journalists’ and media organizations’ experience with Marcos Junior and his Spokesperson during the campaign and after. The former did not participate in the debates and panel discussions in which other candidates were present, and instead granted only one-on-one interviews with selected broadcasting and social media anchors. For his part, the latter ignored journalists from media organizations who were asking the hard questions that neither he nor his boss could answer with some credibility.

The apparent policy is to permit only selected journalists and media organizations access to Mr. Marcos. It was also in evidence after the elections. On May 26, for example, only NET25, Sonshine (sic) Media Network International (SMNI) and GMA 7 were invited to the first Marcos Junior press conference after his proclamation as President-elect.

Both NET25 and SMNI TV had endorsed the Marcos Junior-Sara Duterte team, and were even spreading disinformation and personal attacks against Vice-President Leni Robredo, her family, and her supporters before, during, and after the May 9 elections.

The apparent discrimination in favor of the three networks was explained away as a prior commitment to grant them the interviews they had supposedly requested during the campaign period. But online news site Rappler revealed that other media organizations had been misled by an advisory that said that the so-called “BBM Media Center” where the press conference was held would be closed on that date.

More than putting the independent media at a disadvantage, however, limiting media access to information is in violation of both press freedom and the citizen’s right to know. In supposedly democratic societies like the Philippines, that right is premised on the people’s need to monitor via the media what the officials to whom they have delegated their sovereign powers are doing and to hold them accountable.

The same right has already been compromised by the disinformation many bloggers and the usual mercenaries in print and broadcast media have been spreading so successfully as to make even worse the information crisis that is so prejudicial to the making of an informed citizenry.

But in addition to these infirmities is the media network PCOO runs. Its antecedents go back to the Marcos Senior dictatorship, which created the government media and communication system that succeeding administrations have inherited. The system provided information about government, but also limited the capacity of the privately owned media organizations that were then allowed to function to monitor regime policies and activities.

The system was guided by the regime and its allies in academia’s interpretation of “development communication,” of which the idea that development requires media collaboration with government was the most prominent. In practice this meant censorship, monitoring, and even imprisoning critical journalists, and disseminating through the now defunct Ministry of Information and the agencies it controlled only the “good news” about the regime. It called it “public information,” but what the system was actually doing was developing and enhancing a positive regime image.

Some journalists dismiss public information as just another name for public relations. But it does have the function of providing the citizenry with information it has a right to know. After 1986 there were attempts to reform the government media system. But the politicians who saw it as indispensable to their need for favorable publicity that can mean more votes come election time made doing so almost impossible.

Through Executive Order No. 4, the Benigno Aquino III administration reorganized the Office of the Press Secretary and created the PCOO in 2010. EO 4 declared the need for a public information system that would inform the public what the Executive Branch is doing. But the same EO emphasized the dissemination of Presidential “achievements,” which, during both the Aquino III and Duterte administrations, led to the exclusion of “bad news” from the information the system was providing. And yet, reporting relevant issues and events — the good news as well as the bad — can enhance public understanding of the problems the country has to contend with and what policies are needed to address them.

One of the essentials of an authentic public information system is therefore its openness to a diversity of viewpoints. This is unthinkable to the managers of the government information system as it has been handed down from the Marcos dictatorship to its successors. But opening it to diverse views by making the media under its control forums for debate and discourse on public issues is the only way the system can be of real service to citizens who need information that is as complete and as accurate as possible so they can make intelligent decisions on the things that concern them.

That it can be done has been demonstrated in other jurisdictions. Frequently mentioned in academic circles is the example of the British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC), a public media organization that provides information not only on government but on everything newsworthy.

Ending their dependency on whatever administration is in power is what government-owned radio and TV need to make their programming as relevant and open. Since the Marcos Senior dictatorship they have essentially served as the public relations arm of current administrations rather than providing reliable information. As a scan of their performance during the last election campaign will show, this has resulted in unprofessional reporting biased in favor of administration candidates and against their opponents.

The autonomy of the government media system, to start with, can be achieved by it getting a source of funding independent of any administration. The BBC is primarily funded by an annual television license fee paid by every household and organization that records and/or receives television broadcasts. Creating a similar funding source will require legislation, the details of which the legal geniuses of the incoming administration can forge in accordance with Philippine law. Once such funding is assured, the reorientation, reorganization, and professionalization of government radio and TV should follow.

Unfortunately, if the plans of the next PCOO head are indicative of anything, it is that recognizing the independence and respecting the diversity of all the media in furtherance of the people’s right to know is not what the incoming administration has in mind, but the exact opposite.

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro).

www.luisteodoro.com