Home Blog Page 6260

Deaths rise, births fall as pandemic continues

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS
Funeral workers wear personal protective equipment as they enter the Baesa crematorium in Quezon City, April 15, 2021. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

THE NUMBER of registered deaths in the country rose by an annual 35.2% in 2021, while births fell by 19% as the coronavirus pandemic continued, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said on Tuesday.

Preliminary vital statistics data from the PSA showed deaths last year reached 829,955, rising by more than a third from 613,936 in 2020.

The Calabarzon (Cavite-Laguna-Batangas-Rizal-Quezon) Region accounted for 16.1% of the total deaths last year at 133,570. This was higher by 40.8% from 94,898 recorded in 2020.

It was followed by Central Luzon, with 13.1% share at 108,851, National Capital Region (11.9% at 98,834), Western Visayas (8.4% at 69,663), and Central Visayas (7.6% at 63,328).

Registered births, meanwhile, declined by almost a fifth to 1,237,748 in 2021 from 1,528,684 tallied in 2020.

Calabarzon likewise has the largest share of births at 15.3% (188,935), followed by Metro Manila’s 12.1% share (149,735), Central Luzon’s 11.8% (146,298), Central Visayas’ 8% (99,091), and Bicol Region’s 6.5% (80,480).

However, Calabarzon’s birth tally last year was lower by 18.8% annually compared with 232,606 in 2020. Registered births in the National Capital Region also contracted by 24.7%.

Meanwhile, registered marriages climbed by 35.2% year on year to 325,448 last year from 240,775 in 2020.

Calabarzon had the highest share of registered marriages at 14.8% with 48,038. Metro Manila had an 11.3% share or 36,872 marriages, followed by Central Luzon’s 11.2% (36,371), Central Visayas’ 9.3% (30,302), and Western Visayas’ 7.3% (23,899).

The information in the vital statistics report was compiled from tallies generated by city or municipal Civil Registrars during the period, consolidated by the PSA’s Provincial Statistical Offices and then submitted to the Office of the Civil Registrar General as of Jan. 31.

CAUSE OF DEATH
In a separate report, the PSA said that ischaemic heart diseases were the leading cause of deaths in the country with 125,913 cases as of end-November. This is equivalent to 17.9% of the 704,202 total deaths listed in the January to November period.

Cerebrovascular diseases were the second-highest cause of death with 68,180 (9.7% share). Meanwhile, COVID-19 as the cause of death totaled 97,212.

Deaths associated with COVID-19 are classified into those with the virus identified and not identified at the time of death.

COVID-19 with virus identified accounted for 67,494 or 9.6% of total deaths. Taken by itself, this category would be the second leading cause of death during the period.

Some 29,718 deaths due to COVID-19 fell into the “virus not identified” category — 4.2% of total deaths, or tenth overall.

According to the PSA, data on COVID-19 deaths were based on death certificates received and certified by health officers of local government units.

This is a departure from the data collected by the Department of Health (DoH), which maintains a separate COVID-19 tracking system and only counts confirmed cases.

DoH reported an additional 1,019 new infections on Feb. 22, bringing the total cases in the country to 3.65 million. Active cases stood at 56,668, while total deaths were recorded at 55,776. — Ana Olivia A. Tirona

CREIT climbs 11%, closes at P2.84 on market debut

By Keren Concepcion G. Valmonte, Reporter

CITICORE Energy REIT Corp. (CREIT) finishes 11.37% higher on its first day at the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE), closing at P2.84 apiece from its IPO price of P2.55.

The company’s shares opened 9.02% higher to P2.78 per share.

“The issue climbed to as high as P2.94 during the first few minutes of trading, but eventually retraced and moved sideways above the P2.78 area,” Timson Securities, Inc. Trader Darren Blaine T. Pangan said in a Viber message on Tuesday.

“Market participants may have decided to buy shares of CREIT amid the attractive dividend yields as well as the success of the previous REITs in the local scene,” he added.

In a text message, COL Financial Group, Inc. First Vice-President April Lynn C. Lee-Tan added that the stock performed well “most likely because of [the] good outlook of solar [firms] and high yield.”

The company is projected to have a dividend yield of 7% this year based on projected earnings and 7.4% by 2023.

“CREIT had a stellar debut today with many investors banking on its dependable income, stemming from guaranteed lease revenues from its properties plus a variable lease accruing to the firm based on 50% of the incremental revenue in excess of the agreed base revenue of each of the lessees,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said in a separate Viber message on Tuesday.

PSE President and Chief Executive Officer Ramon S. Monzon said over 19,400 investors participated in CREIT’s P6.4-billion initial public offering (IPO). The company deferred its listing to Feb. 22 from Feb. 17 due to “voluminous transactions arising from the huge number of retail and individual investors.”

CREIT sold 2.509 billion shares for P2.55 apiece. It sold 1.05 billion primary common shares, while sponsor Citicore Renewable Energy Corp. (CREC) sold 1.13 billion secondary shares and an overallotment of 327.27 million shares.

CREIT plans to use net proceeds from the IPO to purchase properties in Bulacan and South Cotabato.

These will be added to the company’s renewable energy property portfolio, which includes the Clark property, Armenia property, Toledo property, Dalayap property, and the Silay property. The five properties are being leased to solar power plant operators under the Citicore group.

Sponsor CREC has 1,500 megawatts (MW) of pipeline projects to be built within the next five years, which will be infused into CREIT “in batches.”

In a press briefing on Tuesday, CREIT President and Chief Executive Officer Oliver Y. Tan said CREC is “studying probably the first batch of around 120 MW to be infused as early as first quarter next year.”

“It really took us several challenges, several sleepless and tireless nights just to make this happen because the structure of the REIT (real estate investment trust) law in the Philippines is really geared to real estate so we only really needed to make so many workarounds just to make the structure to be able to work,” CREIT Chairman Edgar V. Saavedra said during the hybrid briefing.

CREIT is the first energy-themed REIT to list at the PSE. The company is the sixth REIT firm to brave the stock market, trailing five REITs with office and mixed-use assets in their portfolios.

“Everyone who wants to participate in the REIT finds our REIT law limiting [because] when the Congress enacted that REIT law, it was primarily for property REIT, for the typical office REIT,” Mr. Tan told BusinessWorld at Shangri-La The Fort in Bonifacio Global City.

“So outside of that typical [model], like us, where our revenue really is from the sale of electricity, so because of the limitation of the REIT [law], a REIT company cannot recognize revenue outside of rental income. That’s why we had to structure it such that the power company is selling electricity and paying lease to the REIT company to qualify, among others,” he added in a mix of English and Filipino.

The company engaged BDO Capital and Investment Corp., PNB Capital and Investment Corp., Investment & Capital Corporation of the Philippines, Unicapital, Inc., CLSA Ltd., and CIMB Investment Bank Bhd as its underwriting syndicate.

By the end of the trading day on Tuesday, a total of 521.43 million CREIT shares worth P1.48 billion were traded. It currently has a free float level of 38.33% and a market capitalization of P16.69 billion.

According to Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III, CREIT’s listing raises the total market capitalization of REITs at the stock exchange “to nearly P300 billion.”

“The Philippine REITs now constitute 1.4% of our GDP (gross domestic product). This is just the beginning. This powerful financial instrument holds much promise to help boost our economic recovery,” Mr. Dominguez said during the listing ceremony.

CREC’S CAPITAL SPENDING
Meanwhile, CREC has earmarked P3 billion this year for its existing projects’ capital expenditure (capex) and up to P70 billion in the next five years for projects in its pipeline.

“For this year, we are targeting around P3 billion [for capex],” Mr.  Tan, who also heads CREC, said in the press briefing.

He said this year’s budget is intended for: Citicore Power, Inc.’s 25-megawatt-peak solar farm expansion in Silay City; the construction of the second phase of its 72-MW Arayat-Mexico power plant with AC Energy Corp; the installation of 6.64 MW solar rooftop systems in Bataan; and the completion of three projects in Batangas.

In 2021, the company spent P4 billion for capex projects. Its biggest budget of P10 billion was allotted in 2015 when it was racing to qualify for perks under the feed-in tariff system.

CREC is eying a P70-billion capex spread in the next five years to add 1,500 MW of renewable energy to its portfolio. — with M.C. Lucenio

Remembering the Battle of Manila

AS the end of World War II loomed, the month-long Battle of Manila destroyed the city. From Feb. 3 to March 3, 1945, Japanese and American armed forces clashed, the city’s districts burned and were reduced to rubble. By the end of the month, over 100,000 civilians had died.

“The fires intensified as the afternoon turned to dusk and then evening. Block by block the Japanese methodically destroyed much of the 160-acre Walled City, erasing four centuries of history in an afternoon. The Japanese had rigged explosives in the Manila Cathedral and surrounding buildings, detonating them early that evening,” American author James M. Scott wrote in Rampage: MacArthur, Yamashita, and the Battle of Manila (2018).

To commemorate the Battle of Manila and what was lost, four heritage and tourism groups — WanderManila, Don’t Skip Manila, The Heritage Collective, and Renacimiento Manila — have come together for 1945: In Memoriam, an online experiential tour on Feb. 26, 7 p.m. The virtual tour will detail how the Battle of Manila unfolded, how the city of Manila fell, and the lives that were lost during that period.

“We’re aiming to make 1945: A Memorial more than a simple online presentation. While the bulk of the presentation will be done live, we will incorporate a lot of pre-recorded segments to help people visualize how the battle was waged. We will also be soliciting pictures and videos from our followers so that they can be part of this presentation as well,” WanderManila Head Tour Guide Benjamin Canapi told BusinessWorld via Messenger.

The presentation, which is divided into four parts, will highlight the landmark sites of the Battle of Manila, such as the University of Santo Tomas which served as an internment camp for American prisoners, Intramuros which was almost completely destroyed, and the various sites of massacres around the city.

Joining Mr. Canapi in the virtual tour is Don’t Skip Manila co-founder Andrei Julian, cultural entrepreneur and owner of The Heritage Collective Stephen Pamorada, and Renacimiento Manila president Diego Torres.

“Each of us have different perspectives and different ways of telling our narratives, which will make this online presentation a memorable one,” Mr. Canapi said.

“All of us have one goal: to make the public more aware of the happenings of the Battle of Manila, and for us to help give the victims of the battle gain the closure they deserved,” Mr. Canapi said.

The virtual tour will stream live at the Facebook pages of Don’t Skip Manila, The Heritage Collective, Renacimiento Manila, and WanderManila. The presentation will be accessible at those pages after the livestream.

For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/WanderManila. Michelle Anne P. Soliman

STI Holdings reports P171-M profit in second quarter

STI Education Systems Holdings, Inc. generated a P171.09-million net income attributable to the parent firm in its second quarter ending Dec. 31, 2021 after the company saw an 18% increase in revenues.

STI Holdings’ fiscal calendar starts July 1 and ends on June 30 the following year.

In a statement on Tuesday, the listed educational institution said it saw an 18% increase in overall enrollment to 82,629 students for the school year 2021 to 2022 from the 70,223 students enrolled the previous school year. STI Holdings said it saw a 40% increase in tertiary enrollment to 56,342 students from 40,176 previously.

“The increase in our enrollment and in the number of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) vaccinations throughout the country are signs that the ‘new normal’ may be just in our midst,” STI Holdings President and Chief Executive Officer Monico V. Jacob said.

According to a regulatory filing on Feb. 21, the P171.09-million profits generated during the quarter are nearly double the P90.32 million logged in the same period last year. Total revenues grew 18% to P749.1 million from P632.42 million.

For the first six months, STI Holdings swung to profitability. The listed educational institution recorded a P56.85-million net attributable income, a turnaround from the P112.32-million loss in the same period in 2020.

Meanwhile, its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, amortization (EBITDA) for the period grew 37% to P419.1 million from P305.6 million last year. The company posted an 11% topline growth to P1.12 billion from P929.06 million.

STI Holdings said classes are still fully conducted online through the ONline and ONsite Education at STI (ONE STI) Learning model for the STI Education Services Group (STI ESG) and STI West Negros University, while iACADEMY uses the Guided Online Autonomous Learning (GOAL) program.

The company said its schools transitioned “seamlessly” as they had a blended learning model even before the pandemic hit.

STI ESG collaborated with the country’s major telecommunications providers for monthly data plans and loads of up to 34 gigabytes, allowing students to access their electronic Learning Management System, Microsoft Office 365 accounts, One STI Student Portal app, among others.

Meanwhile, Bacolod-based STI WNU subscribed to online school management software SchoolAutomate system by GTI Software Developer.

iACADEMY also upgraded its subscription to Adobe Creative Cloud-All Apps to accommodate more students.

“These technological enhancements are our ways of strengthening our commitment to help our students, faculty, and staff, not just survive, but thrive in days to come,” Mr. Jacob said.

STI shares at the stock market closed unchanged at 35 centavos apiece on Tuesday. — Keren Concepcion G. Valmonte

A look at our bloody past

By Jonathan Best

Book Review
Púgot: Head Taking, Ritual Cannibalism, and
Human Sacrifice in the Philippines
By Narciso C. Tan

Vibal Foundation –
Academica Filipina.
shop@vibalgroup.com.
Hardbound, P2,500

NARCISO C. Tan’s long-awaited study of the ritual practices of the Philippine’s many ancestral, ethnolinguistic groups has finally been launched by the Vidal Foundation as part of its Academica Filipina series of books on Philippine history, culture, and the arts. This latest publication is in the form of an elegant coffee table book, fully illustrated, annotated and designed with all the necessary addendum of a truly scholarly work. The title is Púgot: Head Taking, Ritual Cannibalism, and Human Sacrifice in the Philippines. The subject matter is both disturbing and controversial; however, Tan manages to handle it in such a professional manner that despite the gruesomeness at times, it never fails to be fascinating and informative. It rises above the sensational aspects of the violent subject matter and thoroughly explores the deep religious and spiritual beliefs which evidently sustained these ritualistic practices over centuries and possibly millennia before the modern Filipino nation fully evolved. Some of these lingering practices have been documented in remote mountainous areas as late as the mid-20th century during the Japanese occupation and the chaos of World War II.

The book is divided into three sections devoted to the three rituals noted in the title but in reverse order; human sacrifice, ritual cannibalism, and head taking. Barbara Watson Andaya of the University of Hawai’i provides a foreword which clearly establishes the importance of Mr. Tan’s book in the long line of studies and anecdotal references to “ritualistic violence” in early and even modern Philippine ethnographic history. Each section of the book provides numerous quotes relating to the given subject matter in both the original language of the source and accompanied by an English translation. As an added benefit to the reader, Mr. Tan includes brief biographical sketches in the footnotes for all the major scholars and informants he quotes, giving their names, dates, and when they were active in the Philippines if they were foreigners, which the majority of them were.

The research covers practices documented from Mindanao and Jolo in the south, to Apayao and the Batanes Islands in the north. From one end of the Philippine archipelago of 7,641 island to the other and with 77 different ethnolinguistic groups listed. The majority of information comes from groups in Mindanao or the Mountain Province region in northern Luzon. The author makes a point of only listing practices which can be defined as community sanctioned rituals, either of a religious nature or condoned by the local community as legitimate acts associated with ongoing regional conflicts. This criterion becomes somewhat ambiguous at times because the practice of slave taking and trading both had a commercial aspect and also was in many instances tied to human sacrifice. Racial attacks against the indigenous Negrito population were not necessarily motivated by any religious beliefs, and attacks against Spanish colonizers, lowland Christian communities, or Japanese occupiers during the war would be better characterized as political or military actions.

The rituals that Narciso Tan discusses can be broadly characterized as acts of supplication or acts to propitiate good or evil preternatural entities or to placate the spirits of the constantly watchful deceased ancestors or powerful members of the community who had recently died. Killing one or more male or female slaves or a loyal servant or even the wife of an important man so that the victim’s spirit could accompany the dead and serve him or her in the afterlife was a common belief. In some cases, the bravery or strength of the victim of a head-taking was believed to be transferred of the warrior who made the killing. Eating the victim’s heart, liver, or brain was also believed to magically transfer beneficial powers to warriors or to the male shaman or female priestesses who officiated at sacrificial rituals on behalf of the community.

In some instances, the entire community would be involved in these gruesome rituals, women and children included. Their aim was to placate spirits hungry for blood to insure good harvests, protection from illness and natural disasters such as typhoons or volcanic eruptions, or for protection from headhunting and slave trading raids from hostile neighbors or marauding pirate fleets. To win a wife and ensure a fertile marriage, young men were expected to bring home a head or at least be part of a successful head-taking raid.

When a community acquired a slave to sacrifice or a head or several heads or even a few body parts from a successful raid or an outright battle, it was cause for a cañao or festive celebration with many laudatory speeches, hours of dancing to the gansa (brass gongs), feasting and binge drinking. With the slow yet relentless pressure over the centuries of the more civilizing influences of Islam and Christianity, many of these violent rituals died out and animals such as carabaos, pigs, or chickens were substituted for hapless human victims. After 1900, American colonial administrators, more intent on building modern infrastructure, and mining for gold than on saving souls, were better able than the obsessively religious Spanish administration to pacify outlying and inaccessible regions. Eventually most of these cruel and barbaric practices died out as schools, clinics, and modern transportation systems were developed.

The author provides useful tables in each section listing the numerous groups involved and their specific practices.

Narciso Tan, a graduate of Xavier College in Manila, spent 10 years combing through libraries here and abroad, accompanied by his wife, Sharon, interviewing any scholars who could add to his almost encyclopedic archive of historical source material. His book includes quotations from rarely seen 11th century Chinese historical records, early Spanish colonizers such as Antonio Pigafetta, Juan de Salcedo, Sinabaldo de Mas, and numerous Catholic missionaries and chroniclers from the 17th through the 19th century such as Francisco Colin, Manuel Buzeta, Fr. Pablo Pastells, and many others. In the late 19th century, famous French and German anthropologists made extended visits to the Philippines such as Dr. Joseph Montano who researched in Mindanao, and Fedor Jagor and Alfred Marche who traveled in the Visayas, and Hans Meyer, Alexander Schadenberg, and Otto Scheerer who explored the Mountain Province region. The Americans arrived late on the scene but Fay Cooper Cole, R. F. Barton, Otley Beyer, Albert and Maud Jenks, Laura Benedict, Dean Worcester, and David Barrows all published important findings. More recently, William Henry Scott of Sagada published numerous books and articles which were valuable sources for Mr. Tan’s project. Although he never visited the Philippines, Jose Rizal’s good friend Dr. Ferdinand Blumentritt wrote extensively on the anthropological history of migrating Filipino ethnic groups.

The author repeatedly compares and contrasts similar violent ritualistic practices found in neighboring Southeast Asian countries, Polynesia, South Asia, and China so there can be no question of this study being a biased critic of Filipinos or their early history and evolutionary development. Some of his sources’ findings have been questioned as sensational exaggerations or racially and religiously prejudiced, but these issues Mr. Tan fully acknowledges and tries to offer as much explanatory context as possible so the reader can fully evaluate any questionable or biased misinformation. The breadth of his own research is overwhelming as evidenced in the 52-page glossary, bibliography, and index at the back of the book. This alone is a veritable gold mine of information and sources for anyone studying Philippine history.

The book is fully illustrated in color with reproductions of antique prints, maps, photographs, and drawings, from the Boxer Codex to National Geographic magazine, and many other sources interspersed with illustrative watercolors by talented local artists.

I first met Narciso Tan several year ago while he was doing research at the Ortigas Foundation Library and lent him four vintage photographs from my collection which he added to “An Early 20th Century Photo Folio of Headhunting Rituals” which he has placed at the end of the main text of his book. This folio of 28 sepia toned photos taken in the early 20th Century give the reader a somewhat lurid glimpse of the primitive rituals which existed centuries ago, common not only to the Philippines but to all evolving societies over the millennia.

Púgot is not an easy read but it is always fascinating and an invaluable source of arcane information regarding rarely explored aspects of the Philippine past.

 

Jonathan Best is a senior consultant at the Ortigas Foundation Library in Greenhills, Metro Manila.

PLDT says 11th data center to rise in Sta. Rosa, Laguna

THE PLDT group announced plans on Tuesday to build additional 100 megawatts (MW) of data center capacity, starting with a new hyperscale, telco-neutral, and purpose-built facility in Sta. Rosa, Laguna.

The project will be carried out by PLDT, Inc.’s information and communications technology arm ePLDT.

Prior to this project, PLDT has been serving the “unique requirements of hyperscalers” through the existing facilities, the group said in an e-mailed statement.

The group’s 11th data center will rise in a five-hectare PLDT property in Sta. Rosa.

“The city is geographically ideal being 100 meters above sea level and far from liquefaction, earthquake, and other natural disaster risks. Sta. Rosa is also a highly developed industrial area accessible through three major highways,” the group noted.

The project will be the “first of a series of hyperscale data centers totaling to a power requirement of 100 MW over the medium term,” it added.

PLDT and Smart President and Chief Executive Officer Alfredo S. Panlilio said the group’s data centers are being expanded “to accommodate the [growing] demand [and] to ensure that we are able to keep up and deliver future requirements.”

In 2021, the group announced that it would start building a hyperscaler data center in the country this year. It targets to complete the project in 2024.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Art in busy spaces

Nurturing Ubuntu (Connected in our Humanity) by Woman Create

IN a busy business district filled with high-rise buildings, otherwise blank walls are painted with colorful murals that not only beautify the area but also make a statement.

The Bonifacio Global City (BGC) district, through its Public Art program ArtBGC, recently added new murals throughout the area.

The business district began its mural project in 2014. Currently, there are 36 murals, 22 art installations, and 110 pieces of street furniture scattered in and around BGC. The project aims at improving the area’s open spaces with parks and art installations.

In the past year, the Bonifacio Art Foundation commissioned artists to create seven additional murals which carry the theme “Rolling Out a Better World.”

“With all the crises we are all experiencing led by the [COVID-19] pandemic, including those brought on and further deepened by the pandemic, like the crisis in education, culture, environment, we all want our common areas to help shape an attitude that we have the power to roll out a better world,” BGC Arts Program’s Head of Content Maria Isabel Garcia told BusinessWorld in an e-mail.

Ms. Garcia said that muralists can join ArtBGC by signing up with the ArtBGC Artist Pool and submitting the requirements.

Shortlisted artists have to submit a design concept based on the location and theme, and these are assessed. Artists are then chosen based on the approved concept and are awarded a mural contract.

Ms. Garcia noted that their team has “an inventory of BGC surfaces that we got consent from property owners” to paint murals on. The designs, she said, “stems from what the partner stands for” and will be related to the umbrella theme.

“We prioritize surfaces that are new, but when there are partners who would like [to use] surfaces that have existing murals and the partnerships for [those old murals] have already lapsed, we consider those as well,” Ms. Garcia added.

The artists behind the approved mural designs are then given four to six weeks to complete the work after the partnership is sealed.

The new murals will be on display for a maximum of five years, depending on the duration of the partnerships.

THE NEW MURALS
The seven new murals were painted by Glendford Lumbao, Patmai, Zoë Rosal, Deafeye Studio, Kankan Ramos, Elie Quial, and Woman Create. The murals were finished by the end of 2021. They are:

What’s Your Culture? by Glendford Lumbao

W Global Center, 30th street corner 9th Avenue

The mural highlights how different narratives are intertwined to make it part of a bigger picture. It hints the Pinoy concept of “kapit-bisig” (joining arms) to visualize how a community could be of service to one another.

Atin ang Love for All by Patmai

Hobbes-Timezone Corridor, Lane O, Bonifacio High Street

The parallel murals depict images on various kinds of love — love for family, friends, and even pets.

Atin ang Araw by Zoë Rosal

C1 MRF, BHS Central, 28th Street

The mural presents playfulness with large images of animals. Yarn is used to link humans from one side of the artwork to the other.

Let Compassion, Empathy and Kindness Flow by Kankan Ramos

High Street South, 11th Avenue

The abstract mural emulates the flow of waves. With the use of cool tone colors, the piece represents the vibrance of the sea.

Atin ang Bawat Sandali by Deafeye Studio

Kalayaan Flyover, 32nd Street

The collective of fine and digital artists Deafeye Studio said that the mural depicts hopefulness and happiness. “We featured moments and memories that might spark a sense of nostalgia and belongingness to each person passing by, representing people from different backgrounds,” the collective said in an e-mail to BusinessWorld. “It’s a quick reminder before they enter to take it easy, have a break and say that life is kind and beautiful, that they are deserving of a relaxing day.”

The Land We Walk On by Elie Quial

The Flats Parklet, 5th Ave. cor. 34th St.

The mural features a jungle in the middle of the city. “As an artist, I feel privileged to use my art as a voice to bring awareness to issues that I feel passionate about. When Art BGC gave me the opportunity to create a mural concept from the prompt: ‘Rolling Out A Better World,’ what better way to bring to the forefront, the plight of Philippines’ endangered species,” Ms. Quial told BusinessWorld.

The wall features species such as the Philippine eagle, the Palawan peacock pheasant, the Red-vented cockatoo, the Philippine forest turtle, the Philippine tarsier, Walden’s hornbill, and the Visayan spotted deer. A portion of the mural also features the waling-waling orchid with bees pollinating the flowers.

“Among the flora and fauna are sets of giant feet representing our role and intentions in our actions towards our ecosystem. It is a reminder that we create an impact on our surroundings and that we affect the lives around us,” Ms. Quial said.

Nurturing Ubuntu: Connected in Our Humanity by Woman Create

The Flats, 5th Ave. cor. 34th St.

The mural depicts the expansion of oneself through community. Ubuntu is an African philosophy which directly translates as “humanity” or “I am because we are.”

“As someone whose work mainly dabbles on the identity theme, I found it fascinating that the Self becomes fully realized when we recognize the value of other people — living fully the ideals of acceptance, empathy, and connection, despite differences. Ingrained behind ubuntu is the hope that our communities and the world can be a better place if we could see through the lens of others,” Marika Callangan, founder of Woman Create, said of the mural’s design.

The various gemstones scattered across the mural represent healing, strength, empowerment.

To know more about BGC’s public art, a virtual art tour is accessible via https://www.bgcartscenter.org/artsatbgc. For updates on the arts program, visit the official Facebook pages of Bonifacio Global City and Bonifacio High Street.

The project is supported by Yamaha Motor Philippines, Globe Telecom, and Boysen Paints Philippines. The Bonifacio Art Foundation accepts donations to help sustain the art programs. Donors can visit https://www.bgcartscenter.org/support or send an e-mail to programs@artsatbgc.org. Michelle Anne P. Soliman

Aces face the Road Warriors in resumption of Governor’s Cup

ALASKA ACES’ JERON TENG — PBA IMAGES

ALASKA coach Jeff Cariaso braces for the Aces’ toughest test in the middle of their farewell tour today when they battle NLEX in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Governors’ Cup at the Ynares Center in Antipolo City.

The Aces have racked up three straight victories, posting two of them last week when management announced the franchise’s exit at tournament’s end, to climb to solo third at 5-2. But standing in the way in the 3 p.m. match are the Road Warriors (5-3), who have been a major force all conference.

“With all due respect to our last two opponents (Rain or Shine and Terrafirma), I feel tomorrow (today) will be our biggest test since our resumption,” Mr. Cariaso said ahead of the encounter that marks the PBA’s Antipolo return after nearly three years.

“They (NLEX) have a phenomenal import (KJ McDaniels) with a very good local support. They’re always a tough opponent.”

The Aces, according to Mr. Cariaso, are embracing the mantra “living the moment” and “staying within what we’re doing” as they continue the final stretch of their PBA journey.

NLEX, for its part, eyes to make it back to back after a 117-97 beatdown of Blackwater and wrest third spot from Alaska.

“We have to come out of the jump ball with high-energy defense,” said coach Yeng Guiao. “Every game, we have to go out and set the tone defensively; if we can do that, we feel our offense comes easier.”

Meanwhile, San Miguel Beer (SMB) (4-3) and Phoenix Super LPG (4-3) break their tie for fifth in the 6 p.m. second game.

SMB guns for its fifth win amid reports it is bringing in Philippine Basketball Association (NBA) veteran Shabazz Muhammad to replace Orlando Johnson, who posted 31 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists in the team’s 110-102 victory over Barangay Ginebra last Sunday.

Dominique Sutton and the Fuel Masters are bent on rebounding from their 103-83 blowout loss to pacesetter Magnolia last Saturday. — Olmin Leyba

App offers confidential care for HIV patients

QUICKRES.ORG

By Brontë H. Lacsamana, Reporter

QUICKRES, a digital platform under a global initiative to end the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic by 2030, aims to deliver testing and healthcare services to persons living with HIV (PLHIV). 

“The Philippines is part of a global effort towards ending HIV by the 95-95-95 fast-track targets, which means [getting] 95% of people tested, 95% [of positive cases] enrolling for treatment, and 95% [of those being treated] having the virus suppressed,” said Teresita Marie P. Bagasao, director of Meeting Targets and Maintaining Epidemic Control (EpiC) Project Philippines, at the app’s launch on Feb. 16.  

Citing epidemiologic data from the Department of Health (DoH), she pointed out that these percentages, as of December 2021, are at 63-63-95 in the Philippines (63% of PLHIV getting tested and knowing their HIV status, 63% of people who know their HIV-positive status on treatment, 95% of people on treatment with suppressed viral loads). 

The QuickRes platform is also part of “Free to Be U,” an HIV awareness campaign backed by DoH and community-based organizations that provide healthcare facilities for PLHIV.  

Through the app, clients can set an appointment in pilot sites in Metro Manila, Central Luzon, and Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, and Quezon). A nationwide online reservation system is among the project’s long-term goals. 

“QuickRes has a call-me-back feature and counselors can contact a person who books an appointment so that they can address all the other concerns of the client. The counselors are also trained to be client-centered,” said Joven R. Santiago, EpiC Philippines technical advisor for social and behavior change communication. 

For HIV case manager and counselor Anthony Louie V. David, case management and education regarding accessible services require more effort in the Philippines.  

“People don’t know that PhilHealth has packages for free viral load count tests and budget for cartridges for viral load aside from what DoH supplies,” he said. “Viral load count is important to see the antiretroviral therapy’s adherence on the body.”  

Mr. David added that he is a living example of treatment rendering HIV undetectable and untransmittable. He and his boyfriend, who tested negative, are proof, too, that a serodiscordant relationship (PLHIV with a negative partner) is possible.  

“We must share knowledge on how to handle HIV stigma and discrimination,” he said, mentioning his own YouTube channel PLHIV Diaries as his own way of doing so. 

EpiC’s Ms. Bagasao said that a “welcoming approach” toward the prevention, testing, and treatment of HIV should be the aim.   

HIV prevention drugs such as pre-exposure prophylaxis and the tenofovir, lamivudine, dolutegravir combination are approved by the DoH and will be procured by the government.  

Their distribution is being scaled up in the Philippines through donations from the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief and the US Agency for International Development, which are also funding the EpiC Project.

Converge seeks better technologies to make internet safe for children

CONVERGE ICT Solutions, Inc. on Tuesday said it is increasing its investments in technologies that would ensure its services are safe from the online sexual abuse and exploitation of children.

“In the recent months, we invested a lot of money (over P100 million) to have substantial upgrades on our system to ensure that our network is safe against children sexual abuse,” Converge Chief Technology Officer Ronald G. Brusola said during a virtual briefing.

“We will continue to invest more in latest and best technologies available to ensure that the internet service we are providing is safe. We will continue to partner with other organizations with the same goal of reducing sexual abuse and exploitation of children,” he added.

Converge signed a memorandum of agreement with child rights protection group Stairway Foundation, Inc. to advance the cause of preventing the abuse of children online.

“More than curbing the consumption of OSAEC (online sexual abuse of children) content, the market for which is the West, we are making strides to ensure the creation of such content is stopped,” Converge Strategy Officer Benjamin B. Azada said.

“Through programs of rights awareness and education, Converge can more actively contribute to child protection in a preventive, not just a palliative way,” he added.

According to Stairway Foundation, the average age of children first going online is 10 years old. “With the basic education continuity plan of the Department of Education, the number may be much lower. They spend an average of two hours online. The internet is very much ingrained into children’s lives today and we have to be aware of the greater risk involved,” said Ysrael Diloy, Stairway Foundation child protection specialist.

Converge also introduced its own information and awareness campaign, “Undo Filter.” The campaign aims to encourage Converge employees and third-party stakeholders to monitor their children’s activities online.

The company said it has blocked 20,000 websites that host images and videos of child sexual abuse. — Arjay L. Balinbin

‘Artivism’ amid gentrification

PHOTO BY BASILIO SEPE/GREENPEACE

IN CELEBRATION of National Arts Month, Filipino artists called on today’s generation of creatives to continue the dialogue in public spaces and pursue creative forms of activism — or “artivism” — in the new normal.

“Public art can create connections and be a catalyst for change, for creating places for people to evolve,” said AG Saño, a landscape architect turned street artist and environmental activist, at a Feb. 18 webinar organized by the National Committee on Architecture and the Allied Arts.

He added that though public art includes big monuments, its most common form in the Philippines is street art due to the ease of access to spaces and materials.

Some well-known locations that have murals are Bonifacio Global City, the outside of Camp Aguinaldo, and the Balara Freedom Wall along Katipunan Avenue.

“The Tawi-Tawi murals stand out because of the beauty of seeing Muslim kids and Christian soldiers paint together for peace and nature,” he added of the Camp Aguinaldo piece, when asked about the most significant wall art he had encountered in his career.

One of his latest projects was a collaboration with Greenpeace Philippines about climate justice, wherein youth and environmental groups painted on various public walls in Albay, Bacolod, Bataan, Bohol, Iriga, Marikina, and Tacloban in Nov. 2021.

Meanwhile, Angely Chi, a film worker and artist from Davao City, documented the use of stickers as a form of graffiti art in public spaces.

“In this movement of communing through a simple object like a sticker, you get to know people and you get to take their works elsewhere,” she said.

However, public spaces are now shrinking due to the gentrification of many areas in the country, making public art a way to claim space for communication amid their decline.

“Our public activities are becoming activities that are performed in commercial spaces owned by big corporations and business tycoons. Sometimes that becomes the death of the public market and plaza that are really important to our identity,” said Ms. Chi.

She called on today’s generation of artists to stop playing it safe and to take risks when it comes to public art.

Mr. Saño, who gained widespread recognition over the last decade for painting a dolphin on a public wall for every dolphin captured or trafficked from the wild, said that an advocacy can be formed just by putting a message on a wall using paint.

In 2020, during the first few months of the pandemic, one of his works was a mural of the Filipino comic book character Captain Barbell wearing a mask, which was a tribute to frontliners and a call for mass testing painted on the exterior of Sterten Place in Quezon City. — Bronte H. Lacsamana

Some 74% of CIMB’s loan clients are first time borrowers — survey

NEARLY three in four or 74% of CIMB Bank Philippines’ personal loan clients are first time borrowers, its survey conducted in December showed.

CIMB Bank Philippines Chief Executive Officer Vijay Manoharan said the long evaluation process for credit underwriting is among factors that hinder borrowers from getting loans for urgent needs.

“One of the biggest barriers to formal credit is the application itself. Banks would usually ask for a lot of income and supporting documents, which Filipinos working in the informal sectors may not necessarily have,” he said in a statement on Tuesday.

To respond to this, CIMB started offering their REVI Credit and Buy Now Pay Later products via online applications processed in less than five minutes. For preselected users eligible to access the product, submitting income-related documents is not required anymore as the bank uses an alternative credit scoring process.

Since REVI Credit was launched in December, CIMB has extended a credit limit of P2 billion to users.

CIMB said it is eyeing to offer REVI to more than a million clients in the next two years.

The service gives clients access to higher credit limits of up to P250,000 and interest rates as low as 1%. There are no annual fees to maintain the credit line as clients only pay when they use it.

The credit line can be used to pay bills and will also soon be available for online shopping payments with installments through its Buy Now Pay Later feature. REVI also allows clients to convert a portion of their credit lines into cash or a term loan at any time, making it ideal for emergency needs.

CIMB has 5.2 million clients in the Philippines to date and over one million lending customers.

Its total assets as of September 2021 stood at P18.833 billion, based on central bank data. — L.W.T. Noble