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Marcos vows to get investment deals in two state visits

PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

PHILIPPINE President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on Sunday promised to secure investment pledges as he left for his state visits to Indonesia and Singapore.

In a speech before his flight, the president said his state visits would “seek to harness the potentials of our vibrant trade and investment relations.”

“An economic briefing, business forums and meetings have been organized to proactively create and attract more investments and buyers for our exports, in order to accelerate the post-pandemic growth of our economy,” he said.

Mr. Marcos and other state officials will stay in Indonesia until Tuesday and will head to Singapore next.

Among those who accompanied him were Trade Secretary Alfredo E. Pascual and Foreign Affairs Secretary Enrique A. Manalo.

Vice-President Sara Duterte-Carpio will serve as officer-in-charge in the president’s absence, according to an order signed by Executive Secretary Victor D. Rodriguez.

The president’s first stop in Indonesia is Jakarta, where he will meet President Joko Widodo to discuss bilateral relations and geopolitics.

They will witness the signing of several agreements, particularly on defense and security, the creative economy and culture.

These include the Philippines-Indonesia Plan of Action for the next five years, which Mr. Marcos said “commits both countries to projects and activities covering the full range of bilateral ties.”

“We will reaffirm our ties with a fellow archipelagic nation and ASEAN co-founder, Indonesia, with whom we share an extensive maritime border in the south of the Philippines.”

The Philippine leader said he would seek partnership with Indonesia for investments in critical areas such as agriculture and energy, his administration’s major priorities.

In his Singapore visit on Sept. 6 and 7, Mr. Marcos will meet both President Halimah Yacob and Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong to boost trade and investment relations.

He is expected to renew the Philippines’ commitment to bilateral relations and discuss regional and global issues with them.

Singapore has become the Philippines’ top trading partner in the region and the top source of approved investments in 2021, Mr. Marcos said.

“I expect that we will be coming back with a harvest of business deals to be signed in my state visits that will further strengthen our economic ties with both Indonesia and Singapore,” he said.

Mr. Marcos said the initiatives are in line with his government’s priorities. These include agriculture, food security, energy and long-term plans for the country’s emergence into the new global economy.

He will also meet with the Filipino community in Singapore, which is home to 200,000 Filipinos, the presidential palace said. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Calaca now a city of Batangas 

MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT OF CALACA FACEBOOK PAGE

The town of Calaca, Batangas is now a city after residents voted in favor of a conversion law, the Commission on Elections (Comelec) said on Sunday, paving the way for a bigger share in national taxes. 

In a statement, Comelec said 29,424  of 33,205 voters agreed with Calaca’s cityhood, a 56.39% voter turnout for the plebiscite held on Sept. 3.  

Calaca, about 100 kilometers south of Manila, the capital used to be a first-class municipality with a population of 87,361 as of 2020. It is home to the economic zone Phoenix Petroterminals and Industrial Park.  

Calaca is the fifth city in Batangas province after Lipa, Tanauan, Santo Tomas and Batangas City.  

Cities in the Philippines get a bigger share in internal revenue allotment and are generally more autonomous than municipalities. — John Victor D. Ordoñez 

State allots P1-B for Marawi siege victims 

Damaged properties in the aftermath of the Marawi City siege in 2017. — REUTERS

THE GOVERNMENT has allotted P1 billion in next year’s national budget to pay Marawi residents who lost their homes in the 2017 attack by extremists linked to the Islamic State, a congressman said on Sunday. 

Owners of residential and commercial buildings that were damaged or destroyed by the siege will be paid tax-free, Surigao del Sur Rep. Johnny T. Pimentel said in a statement. 

“We expect the compensation payout to rev up reconstruction activities in Marawi by private property owners,” he said. 

A multiplier effect on the economy through job creation that tends to benefit poor households is expected from private rebuilding activities, he added. 

The fund, which is part of the P31-billion calamity fund, will also cover mosques, schools, colleges, hospitals and other health facilities, he said. Also covered are home appliances, jewelry, machinery, rice mills and other expensive equipment. 

The Marawi siege began on May 23, 2017, when military forces set out to capture Isnilon Hapilon, the head of the Abu Sayyaf group, which had pledged allegiance to the ISIS group. 

The five-month siege, which involved heavy gun battles between government and extremist forces, left the central part of Marawi in ruins.   

Mr. Pimentel said 95% of buildings in 24 villages were damaged or destroyed by aerial and artillery bombardment. More than 200,000 Marawi residents fled. — Kyanna Angela Bulan 

Congress asked to prioritize health, education and jobs 

PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

By Kyanna Angela Bulan 

CONGRESS should pass bills on health, education and labor, as well as ban political dynasties, analysts said at the weekend. 

Lawmakers should prioritize bills that will generate more jobs and income so people would want to work rather than rely on the state for aid, Ronald M. Castillo, a professor and political researcher at the University of Sto. Tomas, said in a Facebook Messenger chat.  

He also cited the need to boost science and health management, including pandemics.  

“People act like the coronavirus is gone but it’s not,” he added. The Department of Health has said infections may rise again as more students attend face-to-face classes.  

Meanwhile, Dennis F. Quilala, a political science professor at the University of the Philippines said the government should revisit the K-12 program, which critics said has caused a job and skill mismatch.  

“Our students are not doing well, according to those who measure academic performance,” he said in an e-mail. “This is not good for a country that relies on its manpower for economic growth.”  

Mr. Quilala said people should expect more from the education sector, which received the biggest budget among departments next year at P852.8 billion.  

He also said Congress should once and for all ban political dynasties.   

“The Legislature is mandated to pass a measure against political dynasties,” the analyst said. “Few people monopolizing power are a threat to democracy. It is more difficult to hold elected public officials to account without such a law.”  

Mr. Quilala said passing the bill might be wishful thinking. “I do not think Malacañang would support this measure.”  

“A good Executive branch wants to improve the capacities of its citizens,” Mr. Castillo said. “But a corrupt one will focus on expenses and infrastructure projects. The succeeding months will show which one is which.” 

Duterte’s top envoy named UK ambassador 

DFA.GOV.PH

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has appointed the country’s former top envoy as ambassador to the United Kingdom, according to the presidential palace. 

Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro L. Locsin, Jr. will also serve as ambassador to Ireland, the Isle of Man, Bailiwick of Jersey and Bailiwick of Guernsey, according to an appointment paper dated Aug. 30.  

Mr. Locsin, who served as Foreign Affairs secretary under ex-President Rodrigo R. Duterte, had spoken against Chinese intrusions in the South China Sea.  

He had cussed at China for failing to reciprocate the Philippines’ goodwill. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza 

Senator pushes processing plants for mining 

REUTERS

THE GOVERNMENT should maximize profits from the mining industry by encouraging investors to set up local processing plants, a senator said at the weekend, amid a proposal for a new mining regime.  

“We cannot allow mining companies to just leave the country after the extractive activity is finished,” Senator Maria Imelda “Imee” R. Marcos, who heads the Senate economic affairs committee, said in a Viber message.  

“The mining industry must also invest in local processing plants and be connected to existing local value chains to maximize the return to the local economy,” she added. 

The House of Representatives ways and means committee earlier approved a new fiscal regime that raises the tax rate on the mining sector to 51% from 38%. 

The measure aims to increase government revenue from mining to P37.5 billion in its first full year of implementation.  

Ms. Marcos agreed with the proposal as the country tries to deal with record debt at P12.89 trillion at the end of July.  

“Any move to promote the mining sector and improve revenue generation is crucial given our goal of managing the country’s debt burden while still providing adequate social services,” she said. “Mining is a way to provide employment in the countryside as well.”  

Under the proposal, a royalty of 5% will be imposed on the market value of gross output of large-scale mining operations. 

A minimum government share of 60% of net mining revenue, including all taxes and charges, will also be imposed on all mining operations.  

A 10% export tax will also be levied on the market value of mineral ore exports to encourage domestic ore processing.  

The bill also proposes a government system for the public disclosure of all mining tax and revenue data in the extractive industry value chain.  

“While we understand the need for additional government revenue, our concern is in making sure that we maximize the return to the Filipino people,” Ms. Marcos said. “As such, we would like to ask for a clarification on the application of the 10% export tax of mineral ore, and whether that will be considered part of 60% of net mining revenues.”  

“Such clarification is important to make sure that we provide an incentive for investment in domestic processing plants,” she added. 

Albay Rep. Jose Maria Clemente S. Salceda, who heads the House ways and means committee, said the export tax would be part of the 60% net mining revenues.  

“If they don’t export, then they pay the 60%,” he said by telephone. He expects the incentive to mineral ore exporters to benefit the country because “we’re a major producer of nickel and it’s good for electric vehicles, as well as many conductors.”   

The Philippines boasts the fifth-largest reserves of nickel in the world, according to the US Geological Survey. S&P Global, Inc. said it accounted for a quarter of Asian mined nickel production in 2021.  

The Chamber of Mines of the Philippines has said the bill could set back the revitalization of the industry.  

“We lament the fact that no consultations took place with the industry that would have allowed us to prove that the onerous provisions of the bill would make the Philippine mining industry one of the highest taxed in the world,” it earlier said in a statement.  

“Foreign investors will simply look elsewhere; we are not the only country blessed with mineral resources. If further tax increases are unavoidable, the tax structure should not be onerous as to stop investments from coming in,” it added.  

Mr. Salceda said lawmakers are prepared to discuss the bill with the mining industry and other stakeholders. “We’re just following the pronouncements of the president. The entire driving force for that bill are presidential pronouncements.”  

Finance Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno last month said mining companies could potentially be a key driver of the Philippines’ long-term growth.  

“The mining industry holds the greatest potential to be a key driver in our recovery and long-term growth, especially now that world metal prices are high… We recognize that apart from boosting local development, mining is a strong magnet for investments that can propel our economy into a higher growth trajectory,” he said.  

The Marcos administration is committed to creating an enabling environment that will allow the mining industry to flourish, he added.  

The mining industry should adhere to responsible and sustainable practices, which is a nonnegotiable condition, Mr. Diokno said. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

Bill gives workers 10-day bereavement leave 

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

A BILL giving workers a 10-day paid bereavement leave has been filed at the House of Representatives. 

Party-list Reps. Yedda Marie K. Romualdez and Jude A. Acidre said this would allow both state and private sector workers to grieve without sacrificing their income.   

The lawmakers noted that employees are entitled to service incentive, maternity and paternity leaves, as well as leaves for solo parents and women under the Violence Against Women Act.   

“However, no mandatory leaves are granted to employees who have recently lost a family member,” they said in the bill’s explanatory note.   

Under House Bill 2345 or the proposed Bereavement Leave Act of 2022, a bereavement leave allows a worker to grieve and attend to the funeral of an immediate family member — a spouse, parent, child, brother or sister, and other relatives within the third degree of consanguinity or affinity.   

Employees who avail themselves of the bereavement leave will be assured of job security, and the leave should not be used as a reason for misconduct, demotion or termination.  

Employers who violate the proposed law will be fined as much as P20,000 or imprisoned for up to a month. — Kyanna Angela Bulan

Senator bats for higher-paying jobs for the youth 

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

YOUNG Filipinos need better quality jobs, a senator said at the weekend, as he noted that majority of the jobs held by those aged 15 to 30 are some of the lowest-paying.  

“The quality of jobs that we produce is what we should be looking after,” Senator Juan Edgardo “Sonny” M. Angara said in a statement. “We should be asking ourselves and our government agencies should be asking themselves what we can do to help enable the private sector to produce higher-paying, higher-quality jobs.”  

The senator, who heads the Senate youth committee, said public investments should be channeled to digital and green industries that will produce a significant number of new jobs and boost the country’s economic output.  

Youth employment rate was at 85.7% as of April, higher than the February 2021 rating of 81.5% and lower than the recorded employment rate in January at 86.2%.   

About 838,000 of 6.2 million Filipino youths were underemployed, while 1.03 million were jobless.  

Mr. Angara said the top local employment opportunities are wholesale and retail, repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles, agriculture and forestry, construction, manufacturing and administrative and support service activities.  

“Looking at the top industries, clearly these are not high-paying, high-quality jobs. This is a problem because it means they are not able to feed their families or that their income is not enough for their needs,” he said.  

Young people are likely to accept jobs for which they are overqualified, putting them at risk of being employed informally and receiving low pay,” Mr. Angara said. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

Rubilen Amit to defend Predator World Ten-ball crown in Austria

MULTIPLE SEA Games gold medalist Rubilen Amit reigned supreme in the event twice. — PHILIPPINE STAR FILE

RUBILEN Amit sets out on another voyage to further establish her status as the country’s greatest pool player of all time as she guns for a third title in the Predator World Ten-ball Championship unfurling tomorrow in Klagenfurt, Austria.

The 40-year-old multiple Southeast Asian Games gold medalist reigned supreme in the event twice, the first in the inaugural staging in 2009 and the fifth edition in 2013 that were both hosted by the Philippines.

It turned out Ms. Amit’s last as the annual event was shelved in the next nine years until it was revived by the Predator Group, the industry leader in pool billiards products, this year.

Now Ms. Amit will have a chance to defend her crown and a shot at the lion’s share of the $148,000 prize fund (about P8.4 million).

Chezka Centeno, who recently reigned supreme in the inaugural Asian 9-ball Women’s Championship in Singapore, will join Ms. Amit in the five-day event that drew participation of the globe’s 64 best cue masters that included reigning world 9-ball titlist Kelly Fisher of Great Britain.

Ms. Amit is also teaming up with countrymen US Open champion Carlo Biado and Johann Chua in the mixed team event. — Joey Villar

Alex Eala faces Canadian Xu in US Open junior championship

FILIPINO tennis ace Alex Eala — TENNIS CLUB MACON

PINAY tennis ace Alex Eala gets her first taste of juniors action this year with a big stint in the prestigious US Open junior championships at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York.

Ms. Eala, the former world junior No. 2, is seeded 10th in the 64-strong field hoping to capture her first grand slam in the girls’ singles. Ms. Eala is holder of two junior doubles grand slams in the 2020 Australian Open and 2021 French Open.

The 17-year-old wunderkind was to play Canada’s Annabelle Xu in the first round last night as she bids to surpass her quarterfinal finish in the US Open last year.

Ms. Xu, 18, is world No. 24 compared to Ms. Eala, who has slipped all the way to No. 169 due to inactivity in the juniors division in the first half this season.

Ms. Eala opted to focus more on her women’s pro circuit career so far this year, where she has made noise by cracking the Women’s Tennis Association’s Top 300 before opting to return to juniors play in no less than the elite US Open.

She is currently at No. 297 but reached a career-high at 280th last month to bolster a promising pro career highlighted by two titles in Spain and Thailand so far. — John Bryan Ulanday

Gilas girls begin quest for U18 Division A promotion

KRISTAN YUMUL — FIBA

GILAS Pilipinas girls begin its quest for a Division A promotion when it takes on Thailand in the start of Division B action in the FIBA U18 Women’s Asian Championship in Bangalore, India today.

Action sizzles at 6:15 p.m. (Manila time) with the Filipina cagebelles eyeing a good start in Group A that also features Samoa and Maldives.

Gilas missed out on a Division A qualification in the U16 category last June in Jordan with a bronze medal finish, making it a perfect opportunity to get the job done this time.

But that goal is easier said than done, warned coach Pat Aquino, with an expected tough field including Group B’s Jordan, Malaysia, Hong Kong and Mongolia.

“It’s totally different from U16 but as always, we will try to complete to the highest level,” Mr. Aquino told The STAR as only the Division B champion gets to advance in Division A.

Aside from a tough opposition, Gilas will also deal with chemistry issues given a short preparation time and a hybrid squad featuring local standouts and prized recruits from the states led by UC San Diego — commit Sumayah Sugapong.

Kristan Yumul is only among the few familiar names for Gilas girls after leading the U16 team behind averages of 21.6 points, 2.4 rebounds and 3.2 assists.

“Half of the team is from the States and half of team is from here so chemistry was something that needed work but the kids are hungry and ready to go play and represent the country,” added Mr. Aquino.

Gilas battles Samoa and Maldives next tomorrow and Tuesday, respectively, in a bid to finish No. 1 in Group A and clinch an outright semifinal berth. — John Bryan Ulanday

Ateneo scores its first win in Israel, edging A.S. Ramat, 73-69

ATENEO head coach Tab Baldwin — THE UAAP

ATENEO kicked off its Israel straining camp on a bright note, scraping past pro club A.S. Ramat HaSharon with a 73-69 squeaker late Saturday night at the Oranim Sports Hall in Tel Aviv.

BJ Andrade came through with a go-ahead trey in the last 36 seconds as the Blue Eagles survived a near meltdown after a double-digit advantage in the waning minutes.

Mr. Andrade finished with six markers, all in the fourth period, while ace guard Dave Ildefonso bannered Ateneo’s attack with 27 points on five triples.

Forthsky Padrigao (10) and Josh Lazaro (9) threw in help while Ange Kouame had six in his return from meniscal sprain at partial ACL tear injuries, including the key block in the last 12 seconds to preserve Ateneo’s win.

Ateneo had a slow start before regaining groove in the second and third periods to erect a 54-44 lead. The Blue Eagles, however, needed Mr. Andrade’s heroics in the clutch when the home team clawed back to tie the game at 69 in the last minute.

The Blue Eagles, preparing for a revenge bid in the UAAP Season 85 after being denied a four-peat by University of the Philippines, face Elitzur Eito Ashkelon next at the Zysman Arena tonight.

The match will be streamed on the official Facebook page of SMART Sports like the game against Ramat HaSharon.

Meanwhile in South Korea, reigning UAAP champion led by Gilas Pilipinas stalwart Carl Tamayo held its own in a narrow 82-80 defeat against defending Korean Basketball League (KBL) champion SK Knights. — John Bryan Ulanday

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