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High fuel prices seen dampening fisheries output in fourth quarter

PHILSTAR

FISHERIES production in the fourth quarter is expected to suffer due to high fuel prices, which prevented many fisherfolk from heading out to sea, an association of small fishermen said.

The Pambansang Lakas ng Kilusang Mamamalakaya ng Pilipinas (PAMALAKAYA) said in a statement on Tuesday that its members are also taking on other jobs because of their inability to operate their boats.

It cited “ever-rising production costs, in which 80% goes to fuel expenses alone.”

Oil companies implemented price hikes on Tuesday, with the price of gasoline raised by P0.80 per liter, diesel P2.70, and kerosene P2.90.

The group asked the government to address inflation via price controls, a freeze on the excise tax on fuel products, and fuel subsidies to the marginalized.

“As the Agriculture Secretary, President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has a lot of responsibility (for) the continued decline of agricultural and fishery production due to neglect (in addressing) the rising price of fuel and other commodities,” PAMALAKAYA spokesman Ronnel S. Arambulo said.

The Philippine Statistics Authority estimates that fisheries output dropped 3.4% to 4.25 million metric tons in 2021. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Philippine Justice chief rejects resignation calls

JUSTICE SECRETARY JESUS CRISPIN REMULLA — PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

THE PHILIPPINES’ Justice chief on Tuesday rejected calls for his resignation after police arrested his son for drug possession last week.

“It will not happen,” Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin C. Remulla told a news briefing after coming home from a working visit to Geneva. “I will not comment anymore on the other issues there, but it will not happen.”

Officials of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) on Oct. 11 arrested Mr. Remulla’s son Juanito Jose for possession of high-grade marijuana worth about P1.3 million.

He is facing a charge of illegal drug possession before a Las Piñas court, while another complaint for illegal drug imports will undergo preliminary investigation before the Pasay City Prosecutor’s Office.

PDEA Director Derrick Arnold C. Carreon earlier said the younger Mr. Remulla was the lone suspect in the anti-illegal drug operation conducted in Las Piñas City near the Philippine capital.

The Justice chief said he would not interfere in his son’s case.

The arrest prompted calls for Mr. Remulla’s resignation, even among some lawmakers who questioned how an impartial probe could be done by prosecutors under the watch of the Justice department.

Mr. Remulla said quitting is not his decision to make.

“That is not my call. I am a very honorable person when it comes to this. It’s the president’s call,” he said, referring to President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr.

“And if I feel later on that I’m not anymore effective in this position, then I will talk to the president about what has to be done in the future.”

Mr. Marcos has also rejected calls for his Justice secretary to quit, saying he hasn’t done anything wrong.

“The moment I arrived, I called him immediately when I landed,” Mr. Remulla said. “He just said he commiserates with my plight as a parent, that’s all.”  “And he said ‘Just go back to work because we need you.’”

Mr. Remulla said he had yet to talk to his 38-year-old son. “I’ve stayed away from the case. I have not talked to anybody. I have not asked anybody any favor. I just talked to a cousin of mine who’s a lawyer, who will start or has started representing him already.”

The Justice chief also said he would not talk to Prosecutor General Benedicto A. Malcontento about his son’s drug case. He also said he would not entertain any appeals from his son’s lawyers, adding that the case would probably go straight to the courts.

“I know it’s not only me on trial here. It’s my son on trial, it’s the country on trial in some ways. It’s par for the course. It happens,” he said.

Mr. Remulla spent touted the success of his Geneva trip, where he met with United Nations officials on the Philippines’ human rights situation. He called the trip productive, citing the UN’s decision not to take action on the Southeast Asian nation.

The UN Human Rights Council ended its 51st session in Geneva on Oct. 7 without taking action on the Philippines, despite dire expressions of concern from the UN human rights office, civil society organizations and families of victims of abuses.

The council dealt victims of human rights violations in the Philippines a serious blow by failing to pass a resolution that would ensure continued scrutiny of the country’s rights situation, Human Rights Watch said this month.

The 2020 Human Rights Council resolution on the Philippines required the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to monitor and report on the Philippine rights situation through 2022.

A September report by the high commissioner’s office highlighted prevailing rights violations and recommended continued monitoring and reporting to the council.

But council member states and donor countries that supported the 2020 resolution and the ensuing Philippine-UN Joint Program did not press for a 2022 resolution, Human Rights Watch said.

Meanwhile, Mr. Remulla said his agency aims to build new prisons in the countryside in the next three to four years to ease jail congestion.

“There is a need to humanize our prisoners and to treat inmates as people, not just a number out of 39,000,” he said. “We also have about 318 names of prisoners lined up with the executive secretary for executive clemency.”

He earlier said the national penitentiary, which was designed to house 6,000 prisoners, had 17,000 inmates.

The DoJ also plans to relocate the national penitentiary’s minimum security facility to Nueva Ecija in northern Philippines.

With 215,000 prisoners nationwide, Philippine jails and prisons are overfilled more than five times their official capacity, making them the most overcrowded prison system in the world, according to the World Prison Brief.

Many of the country’s jails fail to meet the minimum United Nations standards given inadequate food, poor nutrition and unsanitary conditions, according to Human Rights Watch (HRW). — Norman P. Aquino and John Victor D. Ordoñez

Palace: Oct. 31 will be a special nonworking day to boost tourism

BW FILE PHOTO/ KOALA CRUZ

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has issued a proclamation making the eve of All Saints’ Day, Oct. 31, a special nonworking holiday, according to the presidential palace. 

The president issued the order so Filipinos can spend more time with their families and boost local tourism, Acting Press Secretary Cheloy Velicaria-Garafil told a news briefing.

All Saints’ Day on Nov. 1, which falls on a Tuesday, is also a special nonworking day. 

The “no work, no pay” policy covers special non-working holidays unless there are company rules or agreements “granting payment on a special day,” according to a Labor department order.

Employees asked to work on a special nonworking day should be paid 30% more of their daily pay for the first eight hours of work. Workers who work overtime should receive 30% more of their hourly rate.

On the other hand, workers who don’t work on regular holidays get paid. Those who work are paid 200% of their regular rate.

Only people from middle to upper classes will go out and enjoy tourism activities, said Jairus D. Espiritu, who teaches philosophy at the Mapua University.

“Those who live from paycheck to paycheck would likely stay home,” he said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

The Marcos government prioritizes the growth of the tourism sector along with manufacturing, agriculture, outsourcing, and creative industries, Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Arsenio S. Balisacan separately told a news briefing.

The tourism sector accounted for 12.8% of the Philippines’ economic output in 2019, or about P2.48 trillion.

Tourism’s contribution to the country’s economy fell to 5.2% last year after a global coronavirus pandemic forced many countries to close their borders.

Mr. Balisacan said recession in developed economies and the Philippines’ economic partners means weaker tourism demand, as well as exports and investment.

Mr. Marcos, 65, said in his first address to Congress in July he would boost tourism by improving roads and ports to give people easier access to tourism spots.

Earlier this month, his office said the Transport department would develop Philippine ports to boost the country’s cruise tourism.

The Philippines is known for its beautiful beaches and mountains, as well as its hospitable citizens. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Philippines logs 1st cases of Omicron subvariant XBB and XBC variant

Commuters pass through a walkway in Recto, Manila, Aug. 25. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

THE PHILIPPINES has logged its first cases of the Omicron subvariant XBB and the XBC variant, the Department of Health (DoH) said on Tuesday.

The country detected 81 cases of the new XBB subvariant and 193 cases of the XBC variant, which is said to be a recombinant of the Delta and BA.2 variants, Health office-in-charge Maria Rosario S. Vergeire told a news briefing.

She said the 81 XBB cases were detected in two regions in the country.

Seventy of the XBB patients have recovered, eight were still isolated, while the remaining three patients were still being verified.

Ms. Vergeire said the 193 XBC cases were detected in 11 regions.

She said 176 of the patients have recovered, three were still isolated and five have died. The remaining nine patients were being verified.

The Omicron XBB subvariant has been the primary cause of fresh spikes in infections in Singapore, Ms. Vergeire said. The Singapore Ministry of Health had said there was no sufficient evidence that the sublineage causes a more severe illness, she added.

Evidence “does not suggest any differences in disease and/or clinical manifestations” between the XBB subvariant and the original Omicron variant, Ms. Vergeire said, citing the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“The XBC variant is under monitoring and investigation as classified by the United Kingdom Health Security Agency,” she said. Other global health agencies such as the World Health Organization and European Centers for Disease and Control have yet to determine the variant’s risks. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Sandiganbayan junks graft charges vs ex-TRC officials

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE PHILIPPINES’ anti-graft court has junked graft charges against former officials of the defunct Technology and Resource Center (TRC) over the release of more than P20 million to a group owned by a lawmaker.

In a 51-page decision dated Oct. 14, the Sandiganbayan Second Division said government prosecutors had failed to prove the guilt of former TRC Deputy Director General Dennis L. Cunanan and Manager Francisco B. Figura.

The two were accused of releasing P20 million of congressional funds from an Isabela congressman to the Aksyon Makamasa Foundation, Inc., owned by the lawmaker. The court said the officials had also expressed doubt about the fund release.

“Even as Cunanan had been a signatory as then deputy director general in the two disbursement vouchers involving the priority development assistant fund (PDAF), he had unequivocally indicated his misgivings on the process of implementation, through the attention of group Manager Figura,” it said.

The TRC, formerly known as the Technology and Livelihood Resources Center, was dissolved in 2014, according to a 2017 memo by the Department of Science and Technology.

The malversation charges against the former officials were also dropped for lack of evidence.

“Accused Figura and Cunanan are properly entitled to exculpation in light of the misgiving and protestation they timely raised with respect to the PDAF transactions.”

In August, the court rejected a plea by businesswoman Janet Lim-Napoles, the so-called mastermind of the PDAF scam, to suspend malversation cases against her.

She is under trial in a separate graft case involving the release of congressional funds worth P15 million for a nonexistent livelihood project in Nueva Ecija province.

The PDAF allowed legislators to fund small-scale projects in their districts that fell outside the national infrastructure program and was voided by the Supreme Court in 2013 for being illegal. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Gunman in broadcaster’s murder surrenders, points to 3 other hired killers

DILG

A SUSPECT in the killing of radio broadcaster Percival Mabasa has voluntarily surrendered, authorities announced on Tuesday. 

In a news briefing streamed online, Interior Secretary Benjamin C. Abalos, Jr. said the gunman turned himself in because he feared for his safety after law enforcement agencies released photos of his face to the public.  

The Interior chief said the Philippine National Police’s special task force on the radioman’s killing will continue its investigation to apprehend other individuals involved in the incident.  

Mr. Abalos identified the suspect, who was presented to the media wearing a bulletproof vest and helmet, as Joel Salve Estorial, 39.  

The suspect told the same briefing that he, along with three others, were contracted by someone from inside the national penitentiary. He said they were paid P550,000, which they divided among themselves.  

Police earlier reported that the 63-year-old radio journalist was killed by two assailants while he was on board his vehicle at the gate of a residential compound in Las Piñas City on the evening of Oct. 3. 

Roy Mabasa, the late broadcaster’s brother, thanked the police in a Facebook post for the progress in the case and expressed hope that the person who ordered the killing would also be brought to justice.  

“We hope this development leads to the identification, arrest and prosecution of the mastermind,he said.We hope Percy does not become part of the statistics and continue to clamor for justice for Percy and the nearly 200 journalists killed since 1986.  

Global watchdog Reporters Without Borders earlier said at least 187 journalists in the Philippines have been killed in the last 35 years, including 32 killed in a single incident in 2009.  

Mr. Mabasa’s case followed a fatal stabbing last month of radio journalist Rey Blanco in Negros Oriental in central Philippines. 

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) welcomed the development in the case. 

“Accountability in this case will help chip away at the culture of impunity around journalist killings that media, civil society and government agencies have been working to change,” the group said in a statement.  

Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin C. Remulla told a separate briefing that his department will protect the suspect, who will be tapped as a witness in the case “to the fullest extent possible.”  

The Akbayan political party earlier said the killing highlights the prevailing culture of impunity in the country.  

House Speaker Martin G. Romualdez said the arrest of the suspect is a step closer to resolving the murder case.  

“The protection of members of the Fourth Estate is of paramount importance as they play a vital role in nation-building,” he said in a statement.  

Mr. Mabasa’s YouTube Channel, which had over 200,000 subscribers, showed he had been critical of former President Rodrigo R. Duterte and some policies of current government officials. John Victor D. Ordoñez

SC acts swiftly on petition vs village election deferment, sets Oct. 21 oral arguments

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

THE SUPREME Court (SC) has set October 21 as the start for the oral arguments on an election lawyer’s petition to stop the postponement of the village elections to next year.  

In a statement, the tribunal ordered the Commission and Elections (Comelec) and the Office of the President to file comments by Friday noon. 

“The court directed that notices be served to the parties through personal service,” it said. 

Lawyer Romulo B. Macalintal filed the petition on Monday, asserting that Congress does not have the power to defer the elections set for December. 

Clearly, the 1987 Constitution does not give Congress the power to postpone the village elections or to extend the term of office of village officials,he said in the 27-page plea. 

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. signed a law on Oct. 10 that moved the elections from December this year to October 2023. 

The elections will be held on the last Monday of October 2023 and every three years thereafter, according to the new law. 

Mr. Macalintal said the law violates voters’ right to due process since they would be forced to accept village leaders whose terms would be extended.

The elections had previously been deferred due to the coronavirus pandemic. 

“From now on, if ever the Supreme Court issues a definite ruling, we will use this as a basis for subsequent cases on these election postponements,he said in Filipino in a Viber message to reporters on Monday. 

The Comelec chief earlier said they had spent more than a billion pesos on preparations.

In August, Comelec’s George Erwin M. Garcia told a Senate committee hearing that postponing the elections would require as much as P18 billion, more than double its original budget of P8.44 billion. John Victor D. Ordoñez

House human rights chair joins calls for De Lima’s release

PHILIPPINE STAR/ RUSSELL PALMA

THE CHAIR of the House of RepresentativesCommittee on Human Rights has joined calls for the release of former senator Leila de Lima, citing that there are no more witnesses in the drug trafficking charges against her, a congressman said on Tuesday. 

I think that the (courts) should realize that there are no more witnesses against former senator Leila de Lima, why is she still in custody?Manila Rep. Bienvenido M. Abante, Jr. said in a mix of Filipino and English in an interview with ABS-CBN News Channel. 

I would believe that the former senator Leila de Lima should be released from custody, he said. 

Ms. De Lima, a known critic of former President Rodrigo R. Duterte, was arrested in 2017 for alleged involvement in drug trafficking at the national penitentiary when she was Justice secretary.

Last week, she was taken hostage by one of three inmates who tried to escape the custodial center at the police headquarters.

Even prior to the incident, several lawmakers as well as human rights advocates have been calling for her release.

ACT-Teachers Party-list Rep. France L. Castro has urged her peers to support the passage of House Resolution 198, which seeks to withdraw the charges against the former senator. 

Mr. Abante said he is also counting on the statement of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. in his first State of the Nation Address that respect for human rights will thrive in the current administration. 

In the same interview, Mr. Abante also recommended that the police should coordinate with media organizations in their efforts to protect journalists.

(The police visits) are not normal, this would be a human rights violation because they caused trauma and intimidation towards our media practitioners,the congressman said, referring to an incident at the weekend where a non-uniformed police officer visited the home of a broadcast journalist. 

The police have since apologized for the incident and acknowledged a lapse in judgement over the directive.

Ms. Castro, along with Reps. Arlene D. Brosas of Gabriela and Raoul Danniel A Manuel of Kabataan, have filed a resolution seeking a House probe on the incident and other similar cases.

Mr. Abante said the committee would act on the resolution and investigate the matter. Kyanna Angela Bulan and Matthew Carl L. Montecillo

Senate bill seeks free medical, dental services for poor children

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

A SENATOR has filed a bill that will require public and private health institutions nationwide to provide free medical treatment and dental healthcare to poor children.  

Senate Bill 1107 or the Indigent Children Free Medical and Dental Service Act would cover those aged 18 years and below who have no means of support or whose parents or guardians have no means of providing for their immediate medical and dental needs.  

If passed, the Department of Social Welfare and Development will be mandated to determine if a child is indigent, while the Department of Health will be in charge of the laws implementation.  

Senator Jose JinggoyE. Estrada, the bills author, said despite the passage of Republic Act 10932 or the Anti-Hospital Deposit Law, some hospitals continue to demand advance payment before administering basic emergency care. 

We should put an end to such practice by providing a law that would require both private and public hospitals and clinics to render free medical and dental services to indigent children and penalize those who will violate such a requirement,he said in a statement on Tuesday. 

Only through a concrete legislative measure can we fully realize the principles and policies sought to be affected by the various laws protecting the rights of the child,he added.

Under RA 10932, in emergency or serious cases, it shall be unlawful for any hospital or medical clinic to request, solicit, demand or accept any deposit or any other form of advance payment as prerequisite for administering basic emergency care, for confinement or medical treatment, or to refuse to administer medical treatment and support to any patient.Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

Leaders UP, NU battle capable foes UE and DLSU for solo lead

JOINT leaders National U Bulldogs collide with De La Salle Green Archers. — PHILIPPINE STAR/JUN MENDOZA

Games On Wednesday
(Mall of Asia Arena)
11 a.m. — DLSU vs NU
1 p.m. — ADMU vs AdU
4:30 p.m. — UE vs UP
6:30 p.m. — UST vs FEU

PACESETTERS University of the Philippines (UP) and National U (NU) try to break locks with each other for a solo lead when they battle separate but capable foes as teams start to jockey for positions in the UAAP Season 85 men’s basketball tournament at the Mall of Asia Arena.

Currently knotted atop the league with similar 4-1 cards, the Fighting Maroons and the Bulldogs clash with University of the East and La Salle, respectively, in the crucial duel among the top four teams so far nearing the end of the first elimination round.

Reigning champion UP takes on the  UE Red Warriors (3-2), the league’s most surprising team with a scorching start into the playoff picture thus far, at 4:30 p.m. as the red-hot NU collides with the Green Archers (3-2) at 11 a.m.

In between games of the loaded four-game bill, Ateneo (3-2) attempts to break out from an unfamiliar territory at the middle of the standings against Adamson (2-3) at 1 p.m. while struggling squads Santo Tomas (1-4) and Far Eastern U (0-5) meet at 6:30 p.m.

A string of vital duels it is for the UAAP with only two games left in the first round as only a game separates the league leaders from third to sixth spot.

As NU turned into a major force and rose to contender status with UP on top, UE after a winless campaign last season made heads turn and emerged as the darkhorse at No. 3 — even over La Salle and Ateneo — with Adamson and UST just lurking behind. Consistent semifinalist FEU, for its part, is suddenly kissing the cellar with no wins to show.

UP coach Goldwin Monteverde said it’s testament to the league’s even playing field and unpredictable outcome as his Fighting Maroons brace for an expected feisty encounter with the Red Warriors, who are on a two-game win streak for the first time in three years.

“…On our part, we’re focused on ourselves trying to improve every game. Against UE, we’ll definitely be prepared,” said Mr. Monteverde as UP kept mastery of Ateneo, 76-71, last weekend in a thrilling rematch.

The Bulldogs, riding on their own three-game streak as the hottest team in the league, preach the same mindset in a relentless prey hunting as they are out to prove their place on top of the UAAP food chain.

Standing in the leaders’ way are UE and La Salle, which came off big wins against Santo Tomas and FEU, respectively, to fill the Final Four so far following the sudden fall of Mighty Ateneo to fifth spot. — John Bryan Ulanday

TNT, Phoenix look to keep rolling vs separate opponents

Games Today
(PhilSports Arena)
3 p.m. — Meralco vs Phoenix
6 p.m. — TNT vs NLEX

TNT and Phoenix — teams that have overcome adversity to string up back-to-back victories — look to keep on rolling today against separate opponents in the PBA Commissioner’s Cup at the PhilSports Arena.

The Tropang Giga (2-1) gun for their third straight against skidding NLEX (2-2) at 6 p.m. with key players like Jayson Castro and Mikey Williams just fresh out of injuries.

Carrying the same mission in the 3 p.m. curtain-raiser are the Fuel Masters (2-3), who seek to make Meralco (1-3) their latest victims in this run amid their team owner’s financial troubles.

On the heels of their runner-up finish in the Philippine Cup, the Tropang Giga dealt with injury woes to begin their campaign. They lost to Magnolia with a 10-man crew, 94-92, but rebounded against NorthPort, 117-93, and Rain or Shine, 110-91, just as reliables such as Messrs. Williams and Castro started suiting up.

“We still have to get to a point where we play a good full 48 minutes,” said TNT coach Chot Reyes, noting how the 19-point triumph against the Steve Taylor-less ROS last time out was tainted by how badly the team conceded the second-quarter, 30-14.

“And that’s a process because we had so many injuries; we never really got complete until very, very late. Hopefully, we get a chance to win a lot of games while we’re trying to get there.”

Out to foil Mr. Reyes’ troops are the Road Warriors, who are driven to give new mentor Frankie Lim his maiden victory after falling flat against Phoenix and Magnolia in eerily identical losing scorelines of 111-97.

Meanwhile, after a 0-3 start, the hard-fighting Fuel Masters got their bearings against NLEX and Barangay Ginebra (101-93). This they did despite nasty talks going around on social media of the franchise being “up for sale” following news of the company’s woes.

“We took out ‘easy’ from our vocabulary because again, it’s not something that’s going to help us at this point, with everything that’s happening around us,” said Phoenix tactician Topex Robinson. “So we just embrace ‘hard’ and try to get better at handling ‘hard’.”

The Bolts are hard-pressed to climb out of one of their worst openings in an import-laced tournament.

“It’ a must-win situation for us,” said Meralco’s Norman Black, whose quintet absorbed a 106-99 loss to Converge last Saturday. “With Phoenix playing as well as they have been the last couple of games, we will have to be at our best, especially on the defensive end.”

The next-man-up mentality of Mr. Black’s charges will be put to a test again with ace playmaker Chris Newsome still out on calf injury. — Olmin Leyba

Philippine Blu Boys training hard for World Championship glory

THE PHILIPPINE Blu Boys is now training day and night to achieve what they sought for from the start — World Championship glory.

“Although we’re ranked the lowest out of the 12 who made it to Auckland, our mindset is always to win,” said national men’s softball team coach Apol Rosales in yesterday’s online Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum.

The Filipinos are the only team not ranked inside the Top 12 as they are currently at No. 21 in the world.

But despite being lowly ranked, the Blu Boys still barged into the World tilt by finishing second to the mighty Japanese in last month’s Asian Cup in Kochi, Japan.

They are bracketed with reigning world champion Argentina and will face a powerhouse United States in the opener of the meet slated Nov. 26 to Dec. 4 in a group that included the Czech Republic, Cuba and host New Zealand in Group A.

Japan, Australia, Canada, Denmark, South Africa and Venezuela comprise the other group.

And with just over a month to go, the team is the thick of preparation.

In fact, they’re training in the morning at the historic Rizal Memorial Baseball Field every morning to accommodate the college players from the team and at night at the Manila Polo Club in Makati for all.

For the pitchers, Mr. Rosales said they’ve hired a former national team pitcher to do sharpen their tools.

“We’re doing some spot pitching to help us prepare more,” said Juliuz Rosh dela Cruz, a 19-year-old pitcher from Polytechnic University of the Philippines.

The extra load, 24-year-old first base man Julius dela Cruz said, is worth the sacrifice.

“We’re working harder because we’re seeking glory for the country,” said the La Salle baseball standout converted into softball in response to the call of the national team duty. — J. Villar

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