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SGA takes on UAE national team in Dubai basketball tilt opener

AND the redemption tour begins.

Strong Group Athletics (SGA) takes on the United Arab Emirates (UAE) national team as its first test in Group A of the 34th Dubai International Basketball Championship on Friday at the Al Nasr Club.

Game time is at 11 p.m. (Manila time) as per the revised schedule of the Middle East tourney as SGA’s debut got moved to the second game from the opener of a triple-header bill.

Host team Al Nasr opens the curtain against Lebanon’s Beirut First at 9 p.m. as another Lebanese squad Sagesse SC battles UAE’s Sharjah SC at 1 a.m.

Another Philippine team in Zamboanga Valientes, in Group B, will debut on Saturday against Sharjah at 11 p.m.

But the spotlight is on SGA for now with hopes of kicking off its revenge bid on a high note after a buzzer-beating defeat against Lebanon’s Al Riyadi in the Dubai finals last year to bleed for a runner-up finish.

Al Riyadi, however, is out of the 10-team field this time around to crown a new Dubai king.

Bannering SGA’s mission is former NBA All-Star Demarcus Cousins alongside ex-PBA champion import Chris McCullough, who steered the Philippine club to the Jones Cup title last year to make up for its Dubai shortcoming.

Also in the fray for head coach Charles Tiu’s squad is another American import Malachi Richardson as well as Gilas Pilipinas naturalized players Andray Blatche and Ange Kouame.

Mikey Williams, Jason Brickman, Chris Koon, Rhenz Abando and Dave Ildefonso will spearhead the local roster with Mr. Tiu’s College of St. Benilde players in NCAA MVP Allen Liwag, Tony Ynot and Justine Sanchez.

Meanwhile, Zamboanga will be led by former UAAP MVP Malick Diouf,  7-foot-6 sensation Sam Deguara, former PBA pros Prince Caperal, Mike Tolomia, Rudy Lingganay and Kyt Jimenez as well as collegiate stars Forthsky Padrigao and Nic Cabañero of the University of Santo Tomas. — John Bryan Ulanday

Houston makes clutch plays, holds off Cleveland

ALPEREN SENGUN sank two free throws with 4.5 seconds left and the Houston Rockets survived a seven-minute scoring drought in the fourth quarter to outlast the visiting Cleveland Cavaliers 109-108 on Wednesday.

Sengun rebounded a Donovan Mitchell miss and absorbed a foul from Jarrett Allen before snapping a tie at the foul line.

The Cavaliers appeared to secure the upper hand when Darius Garland was fouled on a 3-pointer with 2.8 seconds left, with Tari Eason charged with a flagrant on the play after his reckless closeout resulted in Garland crumpling to the floor on his attempt.

But Garland missed the first two free throws and Mitchell missed once again at the buzzer.

Cleveland dropped to 3-3 over its last six games despite erasing an 11-point deficit entering the final period with a 19-0 run that included a Garland layup resulting in a 99-98 Cleveland lead.

Fred VanVleet stalled the Cavaliers’ rally with consecutive 3-pointers to knot the score at 104-104 with 2:51 left.

VanVleet led Houston with 26 points; Sengun (18 points, 11 rebounds) and Amen Thompson (16 points, 16 rebounds) chipped in double-doubles. Eason (12 points, six rebounds, three steals) and Cam Whitmore (16 points) excelled off the Houston bench.

Garland paced Cleveland with 26 points while Mitchell added 19 on 7-of-21 shooting. Allen posted 17 points and 13 boards while Ty Jerome tallied 18 points off the Cleveland bench.

Houston responded to an early salvo from the Cavaliers with 3-point proficiency, starting with consecutive 3s from VanVleet and Eason that shaved a nine-point deficit to 23-20. When Whitmore followed an Eason steal with a transition dunk, the Rockets pulled even at 27-27.

Eason and Whitmore combined for 16 points on 4-of-6 3-point shooting in the opening period, propelling the Rockets to a 39-32 lead entering the second despite the Cavaliers shooting 54.5% in the first.

When Cleveland opened the second with a 10-2 burst keyed by 3-pointers from Sam Merrill and Georges Niang for a 42-41 lead, the Rockets punched back with a 13-0 run fueled by a Whitmore one-handed alley-oop dunk and a three-point play by Eason.

The Cavaliers missed eight consecutive shots and committed five turnovers during the Rockets’ rally. Cleveland shot just 7 of 25 from the field in the second period and trailed 61-53 at the intermission. — Reuters

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander explodes for 54 points as Thunder beat Jazz

SHAI GILGEOUS-ALEXANDER scored a career-high 54 points to lead the Oklahoma City Thunder to a 123-114 home win over the Utah Jazz on Wednesday.

Neither team led by double digits until the Thunder pulled away in the last 3 1/2 minutes.

Jalen Williams finished off a three-point play to break a tie at 106-106 with just more than five minutes remaining, kicking off a closing 17-8 run.

Gilgeous-Alexander helped break the game open, coming up with the rebound on his own missed 3-pointer, then making a 3-pointer to put Oklahoma City ahead by nine with 3:32 remaining.

After he hit a pair of free throws put the Thunder ahead by 11, their biggest lead of the game, Gilgeous-Alexander hit a fadeaway jumper in the lane for his first career 50-point game.

Gilgeous-Alexander’s previous career high was 45, accomplished twice earlier this season. He attempted a career-high 35 shots, making 17, and also went 17 of 18 from the free-throw line.

Gilgeous-Alexander also had eight rebounds, five steals, three steals and two blocks.

Williams, who missed Sunday night’s win over Brooklyn with a strained right hip, had 25 points with his parents in the stands wearing split Oklahoma City-Utah jerseys.

Williams’ brother, Cody, plays for the Jazz but missed the game with a sprained left ankle.

After a bit of a slow start, Gilgeous-Alexander surged late in the first, scoring 15 points in the quarter. But the Thunder were just 2 of 10 from beyond the arc in the opening quarter.

Oklahoma City led by nine with just more than five minutes remaining in the second quarter before the Jazz ripped off a 15-6 run to tie the game.

Lauri Markkanen scored seven of his 17 points during the stretch.

Gilgeous-Alexander scored 18 points in Oklahoma City’s 38-point third quarter.

John Collins led Utah with 22 points and added 12 rebounds, Collin Sexton finished with 18 points and nine assists, and Walker Kessler had 17 points and 15 rebounds.

The Thunder have 21 of their last 23 games, while the Jazz have lost four straight and 12 of 15. — Reuters

Take 3: Rivals Philadelphia, Washington collide in NFC title game

JAYDEN DANIELS and the underdog Washington Commanders are one win away from the Super Bowl with a familiar roadblock standing in the way.

East division rivals meet in Philadelphia on Sunday to decide the NFC in the third meeting between the teams since the Eagles posted a 26-18 win on Nov. 14 with a 20-point fourth quarter. The Commanders have two road playoff wins in the same postseason for the first time in history, including a 45-31 dismantling of the Lions at Detroit last week.

But don’t tell Commanders coach Dan Quinn his team is an underdog.

Washington pulled the “upset” of the Eagles five weeks after their first meeting. The Commanders claimed the 36-33 nailbiter after Eagles quarterback (QB) Jalen Hurts exited with a concussion five minutes into the game.

Kenny Pickett replaced Hurts on the fifth play of the second offensive possession and gave the Eagles a 14-0 lead on a 4-yard toss to AJ Brown as part of Philadelphia’s 21-point opening quarter at Washington. The Commanders shifted into rally mode to hand Philadelphia its only loss since September.

Quinn said it’s Daniels’ in-the-moment skills that separate him from others. He led the NFL in completions (101) and touchdowns (TDs) (12) against the blitz this season.

Commanders wide receiver Terry McLaurin said Daniels knows only one way.

Hurts began the week with his status unclear because of a knee injury. Head coach Nick Sirianni said his quarterback and rookie cornerback Quinyon Mitchell (shoulder) were attendees for a light walkthrough practice. Sirianni said beating Daniels won’t motivate Hurts, who commonly uses the phrase “keep the main thing the main thing.” On Sunday, the main thing is punching a ticket back to the Super Bowl.

“He’s the same guy all the time. No matter who we’re playing, when we’re playing, practice, game. He’s the same guy,” Sirianni said. “He loves football. Jalen’s pretty stoic and I love that about him. The same thing I say about Jayden Daniels, that he’s calm, cool, I say the same thing about Jalen Hurts.”

Daniels and the top-down regime change in Washington have changed the fortunes of the franchise, now sitting on a 10-win improvement over their 4-13 record in 2023. The No. 2 pick in the 2024 draft was 6 years old when the franchise last won a playoff game (at Tampa Bay in January 2006) before the current postseason. They’re appearing in a conference championship game for the first time since 1991 and sixth overall (5-1).

Quinn again puts trust in a player he calls “a rare dude” as the No. 6 seed in the NFC attempts to storm all the way to New Orleans with a third upset in these playoffs. Daniels can become the first rookie quarterback to win three postseason games and surpass Ben Roethlisberger (14 wins, 2004 Steelers) to claim the record for wins in a season, including playoffs.

The Eagles intercepted Daniels three times in two games in the regular season.

Washington had to make a change at right guard. Sam Cosmi left the win at Detroit with a torn anterior cruciate ligament and Trent Scott, a 30-year-old on his fifth NFL team, enters the fire against All-Pro defensive tackle Jalen Carter on Sunday. Carter had two sacks, five QB pressures, forced a fumble and batted a pass in a game-altering performance against the Rams last week.

He’s a player Commanders offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury has been worried about since the teams first met in Week 11.

Outside linebacker Nolan Smith leads the Eagles with three sacks in the playoffs alongside linebacker Zack Baun, a finalist for NFL Defensive Player of the Year.

Washington has two of the NFL’s top three tacklers in the playoffs in Jeremy Chinn (19 total tackles) and Bobby Wagner, a tandem abundantly aware of their mission Sunday. Wagner, who has 16 postseason tackles, didn’t practice Wednesday. He plans to play through an ankle injury suffered late in the wild-card win at Tampa Bay.

Commanders defensive tackle Daron Payne (knee, finger) missed practice Wednesday but said he wouldn’t miss the “dogfight” with the Eagles.

Eagles offensive coordinator Kellen Moore didn’t attempt to mask his intent against Washington, saying the game plan would follow the same formula even if Hurts is limited or out.

Because of seven sacks, the Eagles had 65 net passing yards against the Rams. Hurts was not as explosive in the second half but had a 44-yard touchdown run in the first half.

Barkley remains the essential ingredient for the Eagles’ offense otherwise playing more of a supporting role to Philadelphia’s No. 1-ranked defense in the playoffs. The Eagles rushed for more than 200 yards in both regular-season games, averaging 219.5 yards on the ground, and Barkley provided the big plays. He gained 146 yards on the ground in the first meeting, 150 in the second and scored four touchdowns highlighted by TD runs of 39 and 68 yards. He also caught a 43-yard pass in the November game.

Including the playoffs, Barkley’s historic season puts him third in single-season rushing yards (2,329) and fourth in total yards (2,638) by any player in NFL history. Broncos running back Terrell Davis had 2,476 yards in 1998 as part of a Super Bowl-winning run in Denver. — Reuters

Novak braces for Zverev

Novak Djokovic didn’t exactly have an auspicious start to his latest Australian Open foray. Controversy dogged him even as he had yet to set foot in Melbourne Park. In a GQ article published three days before the curtains were drawn on the year’s first major tournament, he could not help but look to his 2022 deportation with bitterness; he even speculated that he was poisoned during his detention at an immigration hotel in an attempt to overturn his ban.

Interestingly, Djokovic didn’t fare much better once he got to the court; he looked rusty and, for lack of a better term, playing to his age. He dropped his opening set in his opening match, never mind that he faced a wild card entrant. He then lost another set to a qualifier in his second round encounter. In other words, he was far from his normal invincible self Down Under. Which, for all intents, was why he headed into his quarterfinal round clash with familiar foe Carlos Alcaraz as a heavy underdog.

In doing battle against the tournament’s third seed, Djokovic again found himself behind the eight ball. On paper, and certainly given the way the contest was unfolding, Alcaraz appeared to get the better of him. It also didn’t help that he suffered an injury that required him to take a medical timeout right before he ceded the first set. Still, he found a way to compete, and, ultimately, to win — not coincidentally in Rod Laver Arena, from where he claimed his record 10 Norman Brookes Challenge Cups.

No doubt, Djokovic leaned on his experience to keep Alcaraz at bay. At 47, it’s by far his biggest — and perhaps last remaining — advantage over the 21-year-old wunderkind. He took the last three sets of the Round of Eight set-to 6-4, 6-3, and 6-4 on the strength of a more aggressive style of play. And not for nothing was it his fourth victory in their last five meetings, the gold medal encounter at the Paris Olympics included. In his box, old rival and new coach Andy Murray beamed with pride.

Up next is yet another uphill climb against World Number Two Alexander Zverev. Djokovic being Djokovic, however, it’s evident that he deems himself superior as he preps for Friday’s match. Is he “overrated” and “a has been,” as local broadcaster Tony Jones dared describe him? Or is he still among “the best players that probably ever touched a racket,” as his would-be opponent noted? The answer draws near.

 

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.

Trump threatens Russia, other countries with tariffs if Ukraine deal not reached

U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks at the Roosevelt room at White House in Washington, US, Jan. 21, 2025. — REUTERS

WASHINGTON — US President Donald J. Trump said on Wednesday he would add new tariffs to his sanctions threat against Russia if the country does not make a deal to end its war in Ukraine and added that these could also be applied to “other participating countries.”

In a post on Truth Social, Mr. Trump modified comments he made on Tuesday that he would likely impose sanctions against Russia if President Vladimir Putin refused to negotiate an end to the nearly three-year conflict.

“If we don’t make a ‘deal,’ and soon, I have no other choice but to put high levels of Taxes, Tariffs, and Sanctions on anything being sold by Russia to the United States, and various other participating countries,” Mr. Trump said.

Mr. Trump’s post did not identify the countries that he considered participants in the conflict, or how he defined participation.

Former US President Joseph R. Biden’s administration heaped heavy sanctions on thousands of entities in Russia’s banking, defense, manufacturing, energy, technology and other sectors since Moscow’s February 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which has killed tens of thousands of people and reduced cities to rubble.

Russia’s deputy United Nations Ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy said Moscow will have to see what Mr. Trump thinks a “deal” to end the war in Ukraine means.

“It’s not merely the question of ending the war,” Mr. Polyanskiy told Reuters. “It’s first and foremost the question of addressing root causes of Ukrainian crisis.”

In the runup to his Nov. 5 election victory, Mr. Trump declared dozens of times that he would have a deal in place between Ukraine and Russia on his first day in office, if not before. But Mr. Trump’s aides have conceded a deal to end the war could take months or longer.

Earlier this month, the US Treasury hit Russia’s energy revenues with its hardest sanctions yet, targeting oil and gas producers Gazprom Neft and Surgutneftegas, as well as 183 vessels that are part of the so-called dark fleet of tankers aimed at evading other Western trade curbs.

SANCTION AND TARIFF THREATS
Mr. Trump has sought to use the threat of tariffs to achieve non-trade goals, including threatening Mexico, Canada, and China with duties to push them to stop illegal migration and the flow of the deadly opioid fentanyl into the United States.

Those three countries are the top US trading partners, accounting for more than $2.1 trillion in annual two-way trade.

Russia is far down the list, with US imports from Russia falling to $2.9 billion through the first 11 months of 2024 from $29.6 billion in 2021.

The US imported $13.5 billion worth of Russian petroleum products in 2014, but this has fallen to zero after Ukraine war-related sanctions. Some other top import categories a decade ago, including semi-finished steel and pig iron, have also fallen to zero.

The US still imports significant amounts of Russian fertilizers used in agriculture — about $1.4 billion worth in 2023 — as well as more than $1 billion each worth of uranium for nuclear power use and palladium and rhodium used in automotive catalytic converters.

“One way to hit Russia hard would be to sanction and stop the use of Russian wood in finished wood products coming from China, Vietnam and other countries,” said Tim Brightbill, a trade attorney at the Wiley Rein law firm in Washington.

As for other participants, the Biden administration had imposed sanctions against entities in North Korea and Iran for weapons supplies to Russia and against Chinese entities that supply components and other goods that Russia’s war effort.

Mr. Trump said he was “going to do Russia, whose Economy is failing, and President Putin, a very big FAVOR. Settle now, and STOP this ridiculous War!”

The negotiating positions of the two warring sides remain far apart, and some Ukrainians fear they could be forced to make massive concessions after three years of brutal combat.

The conflict has developed into a war of attrition largely fought along front lines in eastern Ukraine, with huge numbers of casualties on both sides. — Reuters

Trump’s DEI cuts force Davos elite to find new words for diversity

RAWPIXEL.COM

DAVOS, Switzerland — President Donald J. Trump’s escalating pressure on the private sector to ditch diversity programs has left some in Davos searching for new words to describe workplace practices they say are essential to their businesses.

Mr. Trump has issued a series of executive orders cutting federal diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs, which attempt to promote opportunities for women, ethnic minorities, LGBTQ+ people and other traditionally underrepresented groups.

He has also sought to dissuade private companies that receive government contracts from factoring underrepresentation into hiring decisions.

Mr. Trump’s moves on DEI have reverberated through the corridors of the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, where gender parity, diverse work forces, and better representation of minorities around the world continue to be key goals.

While tech companies Meta and Amazon, which hold US government contracts, say they are scaling back some initiatives, other executives at Davos told Reuters they will remain, if by another name.

“There’s a lot of talk and a lot of maybe even controversy around the names of things,” said Miguel Stilwell d’Andrade, CEO of Portugal’s largest utility company EDP, which has 40% of its investments focused on renewable energy in the US.

“The important thing is we want to have the best talent in the company, from wherever it may be, men, women, different ethnicities, and we want to make sure that people … have the best working conditions and feel comfortable,” he said.

“We’re not working for DEI tick the box,” Mr. Stilwell added.

Other policymakers and executives said the acronym DEI had become damaging, even as they doubled down on their commitment to diversity.

“It became toxic, as has ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance), and there are some wrong reasons for that and there are some right reasons for that,” Lutfey Siddiqi, Special Envoy of the Head of the Interim Government of Bangladesh, said on a panel about gender parity.

“But I’m more interested in what is effective, how do we get to the result as opposed to the label,” Mr. Siddiqi added.

DEI initiatives were introduced by many companies and governments around the world to address historical inequities in the workforce. While some gains have been made in recent years, gender parity has not been reached in any country.

Proponents warn that continued rollbacks may endanger recent advances.

TECH CONTRACTS
Reuters spoke with at least three tech executives whose companies have contracts with the US government. They said they remained committed to diversity programs in the workplace.

Although the risk of losing contracts because of Trump’s executive orders would force them to look for new ways to describe DEI initiatives, they would not cut them entirely.

One European tech company executive, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that it would not be rowing back on its commitment to inclusion and diversity.

“For many years we have worked to shape a more sustainable, equitable world. It’s rooted in our company culture,” the person said.

“The world is diverse, and employee base reflects that diversity. It is one of the keys to great innovation and is good for business.”

Not all in Davos share that sentiment.

Alexandr Wang, Chief Executive Officer of high-profile start-up Scale AI, cheered Mr. Trump’s executive orders in a post on X and called for the promotion of MEI (merit, excellence and intelligence) in tech.

Nikki Haley, former US ambassador to the United Nations, also welcomed what she said was a retreat from DEI.

“In every business, you are starting to see pulling back from DEI and I welcome that, I think it’s really important,” Ms. Haley told a panel on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum meeting.

“What we’re seeing in America, everybody just wants to be Americans. They don’t want to be a label. They don’t feel like they can take it anymore,” Ms. Haley added.

One European industrial company with a large US footprint said it would continue with its diversity and inclusion programs because they were important to the business as well as society.

“We will stick to our values of tolerance and respect; inclusion is important,” a board member told Reuters, adding: “Companies need to stay the course of the agenda in terms of values and policies, and that’s what we’re doing.”

“You want diverse opinions in the room, and you want every opinion to have a similar weight. You want to move away from group think, especially when the pace of change is so rapid.”

MONEY FLOWS
Investment in diversity is also unlikely to dry up because of Mr. Trump’s moves, said bankers at Davos.

“For the investors of this world, ESG criteria — of which DEI is a part — are very important and will continue to be very important,” said Bain & Company’s Alexander Schmitz, who heads up the firm’s Private Equity practice in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

“When I look at it from a higher level, the overarching, mega themes of ESG investing are still there: I haven’t seen much rolling back of that as yet. If you are a private equity fund and start rolling back DEI strategies, then – among other effects — you will likely have a problem in fundraising and that’s not where you want to be.”

Bank of America Chief Executive Brian Moynihan described diversity as having “commercial logic.”

“There’s going to be a lot of good, courageous conversations going on,” Mr. Moynihan said. “Do we have the thoughtful balance right in companies and institutions … Do we have the balance right that everybody feels included?” — Reuters

Two to Eight tropical cyclones likely from January to June, says PAGASA

After a series of tropical cyclones impacted the country in October and November, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) forecasts the development of two to eight tropical cyclones in the first half of 2025.
Insights from Ana Liza S. Solis, Assistant Weather Services Chief and Chief of the Climate Monitoring and Prediction Section of PAGASA.

Interview by Edg Adrian A. Eva
Video editing by Arjale Queral

First months of 2025 likely rainy amid La Niña conditions, says PAGASA

The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) shares its seasonal weather outlook for the first months of 2025. Insights from Ana Liza S. Solis, Assistant Weather Services Chief and Chief of the Climate Monitoring and Prediction Section of PAGASA.

Interview by Edg Adrian A. Eva
Video editing by Arjale Queral

Philippine water company Maynilad hires banks for over $500 million IPO, sources say

SINGAPORE — Maynilad Water Services has hired banks including Morgan Stanley and UBS to work on a more than $500 million initial public offering in the Philippines, according to two sources with knowledge of the matter.

The IPO is expected to hit the market as early as this year, or in 2026, and would likely value the Philippine water and wastewater services company at more than $3 billion, the sources told Reuters on Wednesday, declining to be named as the matter was private.

“Our legislative franchise requires that we do an IPO no later than January 2027. Accordingly, we are making the necessary preparations to allow us to comply with that listing requirement,” Maynilad said in a statement to Reuters on Thursday, adding that it couldn’t provide any further information for now.

In December 2021, the Philippine government granted Maynilad a 25-year franchise to establish, operate and maintain a waterworks system and sewerage and sanitation services in the west zone service area of Metro Manila and the province of Cavite, according to its website.

Morgan Stanley and UBS declined to comment.

The planned listing adds to a growing pipeline of IPOs in the Philippines, where IPO proceeds surged sharply to $234.1 million last year, from $72.9 million in 2023, LSEG data showed.

Maynilad is the largest private water concessionaire in the Philippines in terms of customer base, according to its websites.

The Quezon City-based company provides water and wastewater services to the 17 cities and municipalities that comprise the west zone of the metropolitan Manila area, its websites showed.

Maynilad is managed by Maynilad Water Holdings Company, a joint venture between infrastructure conglomerate Metro Pacific Investments Corp, construction-to-nickel mining group DMCI Holdings and Japanese trading company Marubeni Corp, according to its website.

The consortium took control of Maynilad in January 2007. — Reuters

Philippine foreign ministry taking foreign spying reports seriously

OFFICIALGAZETTE.GOV.PH

MANILA — The Philippine foreign ministry said on Thursday it takes any indication of espionage operations by foreign nationals seriously, after the arrest this week of a Chinese national on suspicion of espionage.

Philippine law enforcers said they recovered in the suspect’s possession equipment they believe could be used for spying on military facilities.

Investigators said Deng Yuanqing, who is affiliated with the Army Engineering University of PLA (People’s Liberation Army), was part of a group that authorities had been tracking, based on intelligence indicating they arrived in the Philippines to conduct surveillance on critical infrastructure, including military installations.

“In accordance with its mandate to help protect national security, the department takes any indication of espionage operations by foreign nationals seriously,” the Department of Foreign Affairs said in a statement, adding it is ready to help the investigation.

Authorities did not say how Deng had responded to the spying allegations. Two Filipino alleged accomplices were also detained.

China’s embassy in Manila in a statement on Thursday said it hoped the Philippines would “stop shadow-chasing, stop peddling the so-called ‘Chinese spy’.”

Deng’s arrest comes amid growing suspicion in the Philippines of Chinese activities, including the conduct of its coast guard and fishing militia in Manila’s exclusive economic zone. — Reuters

Unveiling microinsurance secrets: The story behind CARD Pioneer’s success in Covering Nanay

In photo (L to R): Alejandro Simon, Grupo Sancor Seguros CEO (Argentina); Kazunari Takahashi, Zenkyoren (Japan) Senior Managing Director; Shaun Tarbuck, International Cooperative and Mutual Insurance Federation (ICMIF) Chief Executive; Dr. Aris Alip, CARD MRI Founder; and Chairman Emeritus, Lorenzo Chan, Jr., Pioneer, Inc. President and CEO

The transformative power of microinsurance takes center stage in Covering Nanay: The Philippine Microinsurance Journey, a groundbreaking book authored by Dr. Aristotle Alip, Lorenzo Chan, and Pia Benitez Yupangco.

Launched in April 2024, this compelling narrative explores the trailblazing partnership between CARD and Pioneer that reshaped the microinsurance landscape in the Philippines.

Covering Nanay has captured readers’ interest, holding its place on the Top 10 Best-Sellers list for months and prompting a second reprint in December.

Its success underscores the book’s resonance with local and global microfinance and microinsurance communities, highlighting CPMI’s (CARD Pioneer Microinsurance, Inc.) innovative approach to financial inclusion.

Journey on Global Platforms

The authors have taken their story to some of the most prestigious microfinance and insurance events in the world, delivering insights and inspiration to diverse audiences.

Following the book’s initial launch, Messrs. Alip and Chan shared the book’s insights during the Microfinance Council of the Philippines (MCPI) annual conference.

Their session sparked lively discussions on CPMI’s transformative practices and their potential replication in other markets.

Covering Nanay was unveiled globally at the 20th edition of the International Conference on Inclusive Insurance (ICII) held in Nepal, where the authors participated in a 90-minute session moderated by Antonique Koning of the World Bank’s CGAP.

Their engaging discussion of CPMI’s grassroots approach, speedy claims processing, and tech-driven solutions ended with a standing ovation from the global microinsurance community from over 50 countries.

The authors were also interviewed in Buenos Aires by ICMIF Chief Executive Shaun Tarbuck during a session on partnerships fostering resilience in business.

They highlighted CPMI’s unique collaboration model, which fuses grassroots engagement with technology, creating a scalable and sustainable impact.

The session concluded with enthusiastic applause and a round of book signings.

Secrets behind CPMI’s success

Covering Nanay highlights the key elements that set CPMI apart.  First, its rapid claims processing ensures swift and efficient handling, allowing policyholders to recover quickly from unexpected events.

Second, CPMI’s cost efficiency, driven by innovative operational models, enables the company to offer affordable and accessible coverage through its extensive network of nanays.

Finally, the integration of advanced technology with a robust network of nanays enhances outreach and amplifies impact.

These pillars, combined with a partnership-driven approach and shared values, have established CPMI as a global leader in financial inclusion and social transformation.

A Call to Action

Covering Nanay offers invaluable lessons and insights for microfinance practitioners, policy makers, or anyone inspired by stories of resilience and innovation.

It is still available at select Fully Booked branches or online via Amazon.

The book tells the story of how shared vision and innovation have impacted lives, one nanay at a time.

 


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