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Full capacity allowed in Alert Level 1 areas

REUTERS

THE GOVERNMENT has allowed businesses in Alert Level 1 areas to operate at full capacity, including public transport vehicles, though participants in mass gatherings will still need to present proof of full vaccination, the Palace said.

Palace Spokesman Jose Ruperto Martin M. Andanar said in a statement that the decision was arrived at by the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases and applies to areas under Alert Level 1, the most permissive quarantine setting.

Most of the Philippines, including the capital region, is under Alert Level 1 between June 1 and 15.

The government also relaxed face mask rules for athletic activities in well-ventilated areas, and outdoor sports or exercise in areas where “physical distance can be maintained.”

All government work is to be performed onsite under Alert Level 1.

The full capacity rule for public transport does not apply when traveling to areas where the alert level is less permissive. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Easing land rules for foreigners could boost renewables industry

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THE Philippines’ plans to develop its renewables industry will require an easing of land ownership restrictions currently in place for foreigners, Bain & Co. and Temasek Holdings Ltd. said in a report.

The “Southeast Asia’s Green Economy 2022: Investing behind new realities” report, prepared with the participation of Microsoft Corp., said investment will hinge on foreign companies being able to access land.

“(The government should) eliminate land restrictions for foreign firms to further facilitate foreign investment in renewables,” the report said. “It should also develop clear decarbonization targets and establish decarbonization roadmap,” it added.

The report backed the establishment of a carbon tax and emissions trading scheme, increasing renewable sourcing requirements, and removing contractual obligations to produce energy from coal.

“(The Philippines has made the) slowest progress among Southeast Asian nations towards a carbon tax. (There are) ongoing discussions over the last few years but no concrete decision and/or implementation plan,” the report said.  

The report noted that the Philippines is aiming to reduce carbon emissions by 75% by 2030, of which is 72.29% is conditional on the availability of foreign funding.

However, the report said the Philippines has not defined its net-zero target.

As a result, one challenge is that emissions may continue to rise under current policy rather than drop to meet the conditional target.

“Recent implementation of a coal power moratorium (is) encouraging. However, it is essential to also enact a moratorium on current pipeline projects and phase out all coal by 2040,” according to the report.  

In October 2020, the Energy department stopped approving new coal-fired power plants.

The report also noted improvement in Philippine policy towards electric vehicle (EV) manufacturers, though it cited the absence of incentives to spur consumer demand.

In March, the Trade department announced that it is pushing for the implementation of a zero-tariff regime for imported EVs to encourage adoption.

Bain and Temasek, the Singapore government-controlled investment firm, called the Philippine renewables sector “attractive” due to government support and capacity potential.

Some opportunities include sustainable farming via farmer service platforms that boost production with the use of digitalization; commercial and industrial solar power; onshore and offshore wind; and energy efficiency in the built environment.

They said the downsides include a lack of government advocacy and support for digital agriculture; lengthy and complex procedures for obtaining solar project permits; and the weakness of the regulatory regime. 

“With its vibrant and dynamic digital-fueled economy, Southeast Asia has tremendous potential to make a long-term, meaningful impact in the global green transition,” Temasek Chief Sustainability Officer Steve Howard said.

“The opportunities are immense, but it will take collective will, unprecedented collaboration and meaningful financing to unlock the full potential of decarbonization levers across all green investment asset classes,” he added. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

DBM says 2022 budget release rate tops 88%

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THE Department of Budget and Management (DBM) said on Tuesday that it had released P4.46 trillion, or 88.8% of the national budget, to national agencies and local government units as of the end of May.

The DBM said in its Allotment Releases report for May that P562.50 billion remains to be distributed.

The release rate is running ahead of the pace in 2021. That year, the DBM had released P3.74 trillion or nearly 83% of the budget by the end of May 2021.

In May 2022, releases to government agencies and departments amounted to P2.74 trillion, or 95.1% of their allocations.

Special Purpose (SP) funds released by the end of the month amounted to P251.56 billion, or 55% of the SP budget.

SP funds include budget support for local government units, the Contingent Fund, the Miscellaneous Personnel Benefits Fund, and the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Fund.

Automatic Appropriation releases amounted to P1.33 trillion, representing 79.4% of the funds allocated to them.

This includes P10 billion for the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund and P1.60 billion in funding for retirement and life insurance premiums of various National Government agencies, the DBM said.

Other automatic appropriations include the internal revenue allotment for local governments, block grants, interest payments, the tax expenditure fund, and customs duties and taxes.

The national budget for 2022 is configured to bring about a recovery from the pandemic. The budget is equal to 21.8% of the projected gross domestic product, with about a fifth set aside for capital outlays, which include infrastructure spending. — Tobias Jared Tomas

Duterte urges Filipinos to fully support Marcos

GERMAN Ambassador Anke Reiffenstuel pays President-elect Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. a courtesy call. — BONGBONG MARCOS MEDIA BUREAU

OUTGOING Philippine President Rodrigo R. Duterte has asked Filipinos to support and avoid criticizing his successor, whom he called a weak leader during the campaign.

“I am leaving, I will say nothing,” Mr. Duterte, 77, said at a taped briefing aired on state television on Monday night. “What I don’t want is, some will still be politicking and just plain criticizing the new administration. You do not do that. We have no room for politicking or actions that are divisive to the country.”

Mr. Duterte  said the government of president-elect Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr., needs the cooperation of all Filipinos.

“We must give it to him,” he said. “That is democracy, that is how we operate,” said  the tough-talking leader, whose daughter Sara Duterte-Carpio will take her oath as vice-president this month.

Mr. Duterte likened criticism to efforts meant to destroy the government. “So the better policy is just to ignore them and that’s what we did,” he said.  “We never bothered to even hear what they were uttering or complaining about.”

Mr. Duterte also used his parting message to pitch the continuation of his war on drugs that has killed thousands and his government’s anti-insurgency campaign, which Filipino lawyers said had led to the arrest of activists and other dissenters.

Political analysts have said a quiet retirement for Mr. Duterte, whose six-year term ends on June 30, is unlikely as his critics try to make him accountable for the deaths of thousands of Filipinos.

Reuters recently reported that the official death certificates of at least 15 drug war victims had been falsified to “show they died of natural causes.”

On Tuesday, Senator Leila M. de Lima, who was sent to jail after she launched a probe into extrajudicial killings involving Mr. Duterte and his former police chief, urged the Department of Justice to conduct a deeper and comprehensive investigation into the falsified death certificates.

Foreign and local analysts have said the international community would closely watch the moves of Mr. Marcos after he stayed mum on key issues during the campaign.

The human rights situation in the Philippines had worsened under the Duterte administration, according to a European Union (EU) report on human rights and democracy in 2017.

On Tuesday, Germany’s envoy to the Philippines Anke Reiffenstuel underscored the importance of human rights and the rule of law during her meeting with Mr. Marcos.

“I underlined the importance Germany attaches to rule of law and safeguarding human rights and assured him of our continued commitment in this regard,” Ms. Reiffenstuel told a news briefing after her courtesy call on Mr. Marcos. 

More than 70,000 people were jailed, about 34,000 were tortured and more than 3,000 people died under the martial rule of Mr. Marcos’ late father, according to Amnesty International.

The European Parliament has consistently condemned extrajudicial killings and harassment of critics under the Duterte administration.

The European Commission last year said it was closely monitoring political developments in the Philippines after flagging “serious concerns” about the country’s human rights situation.

The European Parliament in 2020 asked the commission to start the process of withdrawing trade incentives from the Philippines after the government failed to improve the human rights situation.

More than 6,000 Philippine products enjoy zero-tariff entry to the European Union (EU) as long as the country complies with 27 core international conventions that include human and labor rights, environmental protection and good governance. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Court acquits 21 protesters in food aid rally in 2020

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARS

A QUEZON City metropolitan court on Tuesday acquitted 21 people whom police arrested in 2020 for violating lockdown rules during a protest where they demanded food aid amid a coronavirus pandemic.

In a 14-page order, Presiding Judge Boomsri S. Rodolfo said the protesters did not violate the law in their attempt to get food at the start of the lockdowns imposed nationwide. They were within their rights to protest and could not have resisted arrest, it added.

“The accused were acting within their rights when they were outside of their respective residences to plea for food,” the court said. “The police officers, at the time they confronted the accused and under the circumstances established in this case, cannot compel the latter to obey their directive to go home.”

The law on public assemblies only punishes organizers who fail to secure permits to hold a rally, the court said.

“Even if we assume for the sake of argument that the accused indeed engaged in a rally without the required permit under the law, they cannot be convicted as charged in the information because section 13 of the said law is limited to penalizing the leaders of organizers,” it added.

The lawyers of the 21 residents of San Roque in Quezon City said justice had been served. “The dismissal of the motley of trumped-up charges against the residents seeking aid in the midst of a lockdown is a triumph we share with the many others who helped and empathized,” The National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers said in a statement. 

“Political repression always thrives on fear and sheer might,” it said. “But with the law in our favor, the people should always have the right to reason and resist.”

The government had banned mass gatherings and required physical distancing to contain the pandemic that has killed more than 6 million people worldwide.

In 2020, former police chief Debold M. Sinas threatened to arrest and charge people who violate quarantine protocols. He was later caught attending a birthday party with friends amid the lockdowns.

“Let this case not be remembered for the inhumanity of President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s administration’s grossly disproportionate and incongruent response to a public health problem; let it stand testament to the enduring spirit of bayanihan in each one of us,” the lawyers said. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

43 Immigration officials charged for illegal scheme

SCREENGRAB FROM YOUTUBE/SENATE OF THE PHILIPPINES

THE OMBUDSMAN has charged with corruption 43 former Immigration officials who allegedly extorted money from Chinese nationals in exchange for a trouble-free entry to the country.

The bail for each of the accused was set at P90,000.

The officials committed graft when they allowed Chinese nationals to bypass procedures to enter the country, according to a 17-page indictment paper submitted to the anti-graft court Sandiganbayan by Ombudsman Samuel R. Martires.

Allowing the foreigners to enter the Philippines without the stringent profiling and screening processes were to the “prejudice of the government and public interest,” according to a copy of the document.

The rolls of money received by the agents were made to look like a Filipino treat called pastillas, from which the scheme got its name.

The Department of Justice’s own investigation of the scam would be finished soon, Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra told reporters in a Viber message.

He said the administrative complaint filed before the agency had a set of immigration officers different from the Ombudsman’s case.

In 2020, Senator Risa N. Hontiveros-Baraquel led a Senate investigation of the scam. A whistleblower from the Immigration bureau testified at a hearing that the Chinese nationals involved in the scheme had been blacklisted from the country and entered through a “special arrangement.”

President Rodrigo R. Duterte relieved all the immigration officers involved in the scam that year. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

DoH posts 3 more BA.5 cases, 7 more BA.2.12 infections

THE PHILIPPINES on Tuesday reported three more infections involving the BA.5 Omicron subvariant of the coronavirus, bringing the total to five.

Seven more cases of the BA.2.12.1 Omicron subvariant were also detected in the latest genome sequencing of 190 samples on June 6, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire said in a statement.

Two of the BA.5 patients were from the Calabarzon region, while the location of the third was still being verified, she said.

The third patient had been fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, while one of the patients from Calabarzon was unvaccinated. The status of the other patient was still being verified.

All three patients have recovered, but the Department of Health was looking at the symptoms that they and they close contacts had experienced, Ms. Vergeire said.

Of the total samples, 114 or 60% were Omicron, 14 or 7.4 percent were Delta, one had “other lineages“ and 61 had no lineage, she added. — KATA

Marcos says he didn’t spend own money on campaign

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PRESIDENT-ELECT Ferdinand “Bongbong” R. Marcos, Jr. did not spend his own money for his campaign, having received more than P600 million in contributions from various sources, according to an expense statement he submitted on Tuesday.

He spent P623 million of the P624.68 million campaign contributions, according to his statement of contributions and expenditures filed with the Commission on Elections.

Mr. Marcos will pay income tax on the unspent balance, Drixel Jann S. Dabatos, a member of Mr. Marcos’ legal team, told reporters.

Mr. Marcos got cash contributions from “other sources” worth P373.25 million and in-kind contributions worth P4.2 million. He also received P247.234 million in in-kind donations from his political party.

A report by the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) in May showed that Mr. Marcos Jr. and his main rival, outgoing Vice-President Maria Leonor G. Robredo topped ad spending on mainstream media among presidential bets from January 2021 to March 2022 at P1.4 billion each.

Mr. Marcos did not record any ad spending on Facebook, PCIJ said in a January report. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Tiger Woods declines ‘enormous’ offer to join LIV Golf — Norman

LIV GOLF will make its debut this week at London without Tiger Woods, but it made a substantial offer to lure the 15-time major winner to the new international golf league, according to a new report.

In an interview with the Washington Post, LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman said that Woods was offered a “mind-blowingly enormous (deal); we’re talking about high nine digits.”

Woods, who has played in just two tournaments since a devastating leg injury after a car crash in February of 2021, has maintained his loyalty to the PGA Tour as recently as last month at the PGA Championship.

The new Saudi-backed golf league has landed some top names, though, with reports on Monday that Phil Mickelson will play in the inaugural event which starts on Friday at the 7,100-yard Centurion Club outside London. Dustin Johnson also will be participating, along with Sergio Garcia, Louis Oosthuiszen and Kevin Na, among other top names.

The PGA Tour has threatened a ban of any players that compete in a LIV Golf event. Woods, 46, was not ready to sever ties with the tour where he made a name for himself and where he has won 82 total events. — Reuters

I would probably not have played any other Grand Slam with my injury, says Nadal after French win

PARIS — Rafael Nadal would probably not have played any Grand Slam other than the French Open with the chronic foot injury that needed numbing injections in Paris, the 14-time Roland Garros champion said on Monday.

The Spaniard’s record-extending triumph on the Paris clay earned him an all-time best 22nd men’s singles major with a 6-3, 6-3, 6-0 crushing of Norway’s Casper Ruud and put him two titles clear of Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic.

It was the “most unexpected” of his French Open titles, Nadal told Reuters on Monday after limping into the scintillating salon of a central Paris hotel.

Asked if he would have played any other Grand Slam with the injury that forced him to have injections to numb his foot, Nadal said: “Probably not.”

“We have been through a lot of emotions. Probably the most unexpected, surprising (title) and all the things I had to do to play the event makes the title one of the most special,” the 36-year-old said.

Nadal said that because of the injury, which also meant he arrived in Paris with no title on the European clay, he was not confident he would be able to fight for the Musketeers’ Cup.

“Of course, when you arrive with a poor preparation like I did, every day is a challenge; you need to increase your level of tennis every single day,” he explained.

Nadal has traditionally started his French Open campaigns with at least one claycourt title under his belt but this year got to the French capital empty-handed.

“(Winning those titles) gives you an extra security if you want to reach at least the level you need to fight for the final rounds,” the Mallorcan said.

“This time before the tournament started I didn’t know if I would be able to fight for the second week so I just took it one (round) at a time.”

DEFEAT OF DJOKOVIC
While there was no doubt in his mind that he would take part in the claycourt major, whether he would be capable of gunning for the title was another matter, especially with world number one Novak Djokovic awaiting in the quarterfinals.

“I always had the confidence that I would be able to play because I played with no feeling in the foot, with a foot asleep because of the anaesthetic injections into the nerve,” he said.

“But the problem is not just the match, it’s also the practice. I never thought about not playing here, but I thought it would be very difficult to be competitive.”

While he appeared below his best physically at times, Nadal still managed to beat Felix Auger-Aliassime in five sets in the last 16 before taking down Djokovic in a four-set thriller.

He had already been on court for more than three hours, sweating like never before, when Alexander Zverev sustained a freak ankle injury that ended their semifinal contest with the Spaniard leading 7-6, 6-6.

While he still does not know what his schedule will look like in the coming weeks, Nadal agreed to cast his mind forward to two years from now, when Roland Garros will host the Olympics after the French Open.

Nadal has won both titles, but should he have to choose between the two tournaments in 2024, the French Open would have his preference.

“Roland Garros is part of the history of my career, it’s the most important place in my career and of course, the Olympics is the most important event in the world of sports,” he said.

“So it’s difficult to choose but possibly Roland Garros (the French Open) is a little more special for me.” — Reuters

Curry’s improved defense shows he is more than just a sharpshooter

SAN FRANCISCO — The “Baby-Faced Assassin” is all grown up. Stephen Curry’s youthful appearance mixed with his lethal shooting earned him that moniker early in his career and while opposing teams feared him pulling up from just about anywhere on court, they saw him as a defensive liability.

Not anymore.

Curry not only led the Warriors offense in the team’s 107-88 Game Two win in the Finals on Sunday, at the other end of the floor he disrupted passing lanes, contested shots and recorded three steals against the Celtics.

“Teams used to try to call him into every action and just try to pick on him,” Warriors forward Draymond Green told reporters.

“That doesn’t work anymore. We are all there behind him if he does need help, but he hasn’t been needing that often, and it’s great.”

Curry’s more muscular frame has played a big role in his transformation, Green said.

“I’ve spoke about how much stronger he is. He’s able to hold his ground, so you’re not able to bump him off his spot, and that’s been huge for us,” Green said.

“I’m not shocked he’s playing that type of defense. He’s been doing that for the last couple years.”

Curry, who is searching for his fourth championship and first Finals MVP, said getting better on the other side of the ball has long been a goal for him.

“Over the course of my career, it’s been a physical development that’s happened over time that obviously helps, a lot of work has gone into that,” Curry said.

“But at the end of the day, from my rookie year to now, it’s always been about effort and just a care factor, overcoming physical limitations with matchups or whatever it is.

“If you try hard, good things will happen. And you’ll continue to get better.”

The best-of-seven series is tied 1-1 and will resume in Boston on Wednesday. — Reuters

Quin Snyder on leaving Jazz: ‘It was time’

THE UTAH Jazz held their public farewell to departing coach Quin Snyder on Monday, with Snyder saying the time was right for him to step down while team CEO Danny Ainge said the team had hoped Snyder would stay.

The sides’ recent contract-extension talks failed, prompting Snyder to resign on Sunday.

“It was time,” Snyder said at a Monday press conference. “Time for the Jazz to move forward. Time for me to move forward. It just made the most sense to me.”

Snyder added of Utah, “Two of my kids have lived here their whole lives, so this is a special place, and that’s not going to change for us. What makes it difficult is there are a lot of people in this room that I will really miss. A silver lining is that I will get to go to Halloween with my daughter.”

Ainge said, “We have spent the last few weeks talking, Quin and I, a lot about a lot of different things, and I think it’s pretty clear, we desperately wanted him to stay. And at the same time, I’ve walked away from coaching and I walked away from being a general manager after 18 years in Boston, and so I trust that Quin knows more what’s best for him and his family, much more than we do.”

Snyder, 55, produced a 372-264 (.585) record in eight seasons as the Jazz’s head coach, which includes six consecutive seasons with a winning percentage higher than .580. Only Hall of Famer Jerry Sloan, with 1,127 victories, notched more wins on the Utah bench than Snyder.

“There’s a real sense of sadness and sorrow and loss,” Snyder said of exiting. “That’s to be expected. I gave this everything I had. You try to be introspective and you try to analyze. But, this was a decision to where I just kept coming back to the same place. It was time for me to move on.”

Team owner Ryan Smith said of the process of finding Snyder’s replacement, “We’re going to take our time with the coaching search. We have to get it right.” — Reuters