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US military to provide PHL aid

Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) personnel evacuating people in Cebu province on Nov. 4, 2025. — COAST GUARD DISTRICT CENTRAL VISAYAS FB PAGE

THE United States on Thursday said that its military will provide foreign disaster relief assistance to communities affected by the recent Typhoons Kalmaegi (Tino) and Fung-wong (Uwan), according to the US Embassy in Manila.

“The forward presence and ready posture of United States Indo-Pacific Command in the region facilitated a rapid and effective response to these natural disasters, demonstrating the US commitment as friends, allies, and partners during times of need,” the US Military said in a statement. “We will support the lead of our Philippine counterparts as we carry out this relief mission together as a fully aligned team,” US Marine Corps Brig. Gen. Robert Brodie said.

“Support to our friends, allies, and partners, and their people in a time of need, is non-negotiable. Together, we are overcoming distance, weather, and logistical challenges to save lives,” he added.

The US said that it would coordinate its relief efforts with the Armed Forces of the Philippines, and other agencies.

The Philippines faced consecutive Typhoons Kalmaegi and Fung-wong which brought heavy rains and strong winds, causing numerous deaths, widespread flooding, and damage to property. — Adrian H. Halili

BSP warns vs countries in FATF list

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THE Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) told all its supervised financial institutions to consider the countries recently tagged by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) in their respective risk analysis and mitigation strategies.

In a circular dated Nov. 7, the BSP said financial institutions must take into account FATF publications issued on Oct. 24 regarding high-risk jurisdictions subject to a call for action and under increased monitoring, and the continued membership suspension of the Russian Federation.

“BSFIs (BSP-supervised financial institutions) are likewise directed to regularly refer to the FATF’s website for the latest statements on high risk and other monitored jurisdictions and consider the same in their risk analysis and mitigation strategies,” it said.

In its latest publication, FATF told its member countries to implement countermeasures against money laundering and terrorism financing risks from blacklisted South Korea and Iran.

Meanwhile, member countries should enforce enhanced due diligence against risks from Myanmar, who is also on the blacklist, it added.

“For all countries identified as high risk, the FATF calls on all members and urges all jurisdictions to apply enhanced due diligence, and in the most serious cases, apply countermeasures to protect the international financial system from the money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing risks emanating from the country,” FATF said.

The anti-money laundering watchdog likewise affirmed the suspension of Russian Federation’s membership.

The Philippines exited the FATF’s gray list of jurisdictions under increased monitoring for “dirty money” in February. — Katherine K. Chan

Vida named acting Justice Secretary

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PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has appointed Department of Justice (DoJ) Officer-in-Charge (OIC) Fredderick A. Vida as the new acting Justice Secretary, the DoJ said on Thursday.

The presidential appointment was formalized in a letter dated Nov. 12, shared by the DoJ with reporters, confirming Mr. Vida’s elevation from officer-in-charge to acting Justice Secretary. He succeeds Jesus Crispin C. Remulla, who vacated the post after his appointment to the Office of the Ombudsman last October.

Mr. Vida announced his appointment during the 89th anniversary celebration of the National Bureau of Investigation, also held on Thursday.

He assured that his role, whether as officer-in-charge or acting secretary, would not affect the department’s operations.

“The work continues. Nothing has changed, OIC or acting [secretary],” he told reporters on the sidelines of the event.

In government terms, an Acting Secretary has full powers of the position, while an Officer-in-Charge holds limited administrative authority, as defined by the Administrative Code of 1987, jurisprudence, and Civil Service Commission rules.

Mr. Vida, a seasoned lawyer and public servant, earned a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from the University of the Philippines and a Juris Doctor from Ateneo School of Law, where he was a Silver Medalist. He passed the Bar in 1996 and began his legal career as an associate before establishing his own practice.

His public service career includes stints as Assistant Secretary in the Office of the Chief Presidential Counsel, Municipal Vice Mayor and later Mayor of Mendez-Nuñez, and President of the Mayor’s League of Cavite. He returned to the DoJ in January 2023 as Assistant Secretary and was promoted to Undersecretary in October 2023. — Erika Mae P. Sinaking

Probe of P4.44B Davao project sought

PHILIPPINE STAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

A CONGRESSMAN on Thursday filed a resolution urging the House of Representatives to conduct a congressional inquiry into P4.44 billion worth of sketchy flood control projects along major rivers in Davao province.

House Resolution No. 464 urges the House committees of public works and public accounts to investigate 80 “red-flagged” contracts totaling P4.44 billion awarded from 2019 to 2022, citing “grave irregularities” that include project overlap, redundant funding and fund disbursement without being in the yearly government’s yearly budget.

“Our preliminary analysis reveals the same patterns of corruption in Davao that have been uncovered in Bulacan, Oriental Mindoro, and other parts of the country,” Deputy Minority Leader and Party-list Rep. Antonio L. Tinio, who filed the measure, said in a statement.

He said the House committees should “determine the full extent of irregularities, identify all responsible parties, recommend appropriate charges, propose legislative reforms and ensure recovery of misused funds.”

“Billions of pesos meant to protect communities from flooding have been plundered through ghost projects, overpricing, and kickbacks,” he said. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

DA, TESDA to modernize agricultural training

REUTERS

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) said on Thursday it has partnered with the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA) to modernize the country’s agricultural training programs, aiming to improve farmers’ productivity and income.

Following a meeting between key officials, the two agencies agreed to roll out a series of updated training programs covering rice machinery operations, agri-entrepreneurship, and refrigeration systems.

The program will also include training on fisheries postharvest and canning operations, with TESDA preparing the modules together with the DA’s Fisheries Development Council.

The DA said TESDA will launch new courses on cooperative management, butchery and slaughterhouse operations, and seaweed processing, all of which will be integrated into next year’s national curriculum.

The programs will be offered in multiple modalities (institution-, enterprise-, and community-based, and online learning) to ensure accessibility for students in remote and rural areas.

“We’re aligning our plans with the President’s vision for a modern, technology-driven agriculture. With new machinery, greenhouses, and improved seeds coming in, our farmers and fisherfolk must be fully equipped to handle these innovations,” Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr. was quoted as saying in a statement.

The DA said it will also develop parameters to measure the effectiveness and benefits of the updated training programs. — Vonn Andrei E. Villamiel

Uwan damage in Nueva Vizcaya reaches over P307.5M

BAGUIO CITY — Typhoon Fung-wong, locally called Uwan’s wrath in Nueva Vizcaya left P307.5 million in agriculture and infrastructure damage, the Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office (PDRRMO) reported.

Partial reports placed damage to agriculture and infrastructure at P250 million and P53.7 million, respectively, while livestock damage amounted to P3.8 million.

A total of 5,575 houses were affected — 5,141 partially damaged and 434 totally destroyed.

The figures could still climb as field inspections continue.

Officials explained that the report only covers properties owned by the Provincial Government.

Damage to roads, schools, and other facilities under the municipal, barangay, or national government has not yet been included.

The Nueva Vizcaya Provincial Police Office confirmed four storm-related deaths: five-year-old twins from Kayapa, a 10-year-old boy from Kasibu, and a 30-year-old man from Quezon. All were killed in landslides.

Several areas are still difficult to reach due to landslides and damaged bridges. — Artemio A. Dumlao

House panel OKs bill creating anti-graft body amid flood control scandal probe

A HOUSE of Representatives committee on Thursday approved a measure seeking to institutionalize a government anti-corruption body focused on graft in public works, as part of efforts to strengthen investigations into a widening multibillion-peso flood control scandal.

Congressmen approved the unnumbered substitute bill that seeks to empower the Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI) just days after House Speaker Faustino “Bojie” Dy III pledged the chamber will have “zero delays” in passing it, as pressure over a graft-weary public mounts.

A copy of the revised bill was not immediately available, but it seeks to grant sweeping powers to the proposed investigative body like authorizing it to investigate allegations of graft, corruption, ill-gotten wealth and plunder in national government public works projects.

It also proposes that the commission be composed of a retired senior judge, an engineer, an accountant, a public finance academic, and a representative from a non-government organization. They would operate under a sunset provision, with its mandate set to expire in 2028. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

PSE index extends climb as buying continues

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THE MAIN INDEX moved higher on Thursday as investors continued to pick up blue chips following the market’s decline.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) rose by 0.22% or 12.97 points to close at 5,726.99, logging a second straight day of gains. Meanwhile, the broader all shares index slumped by 2.8% or 98.19 points to end at 3,400.68.

“We saw much of the bargain hunting concentrated in blue chips, especially the telcos,” AP Securities, Inc. Research Head Alfred Benjamin R. Garcia said in a Viber message. “The long wait for the Konektadong Pinoy Act IRR (implementing rules and regulations) was a significant regulatory uncertainty for them, and the selloff during the past few months was likely overdone. Now that the IRR is out, the market can finally price in the potential impact on the telco sector and the recent rally in PLDT Inc., Globe Telecom, Inc., and Converge ICT Solutions, Inc. is likely a result of this repricing.”

He added that Manila Electric Co. and International Container Terminal Services, Inc. were among the top movers as they are emerging as the “most favored” stocks for foreign buying.

“The Philippine market ended slightly higher as buying pressure remained strong, with investors taking advantage of relatively cheap stock prices. The positive momentum was driven by renewed optimism following the release of some corporate earnings,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said in a Viber message.

Most sectoral indices closed higher on Thursday. Services jumped by 2.17% or 51.32 points to 2,406.18; mining and oil went up by 1.61% or 218.81 points to 13,762.97; property rose by 1.02% or 20.72 points to 2,041.34; and industrials climbed by 0.61% or 51.36 points to 8,446.92.

Meanwhile, financials dropped by 1.12% or 21.26 points to 1,861.30 and holding firms fell by 1.10% or 50.02 points to 4,474.72.

Advancers outnumbered decliners, 95 to 82, while 51 names were unchanged.

Value turnover went up to P6.51 billion with 825.45 shares traded on Thursday from the P6 billion with 1.30 billion issues that changed hands on Wednesday.

Net foreign selling increased to P409.21 million from P36.3 million.

Meanwhile, Wall Street’s main indexes were mixed on Wednesday, with the Dow notching a record-high close and the Nasdaq losing ground as investors rotated out of pricey technology stocks while focusing on a likely end to a historic US government shutdown, Reuters reported.

The S&P 500 climbed 0.06% to end the session at 6,850.92 points.

The Nasdaq declined 0.26% to 23,406.46 points, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.68% to 48,254.82 points.

The government shutdown has weighed on the economy and created a data gap for both the US Federal Reserve and traders, leaving them reliant on private economic indicators. — Alexandria Grace C. Magno with Reuters

EDCOM II raises concerns over prevalent “diploma mills” in teacher education

Education and professional regulatory agencies vow to address the nationwide diploma mill crisis. - ALMIRA S. MARTINEZ

The Second Congressional Commission on Education (EDCOM II) on Wednesday said that the proliferation of low-quality post-graduate teacher education from “diploma mills” is impacting students’ learning nationwide.

This comes after a recent study by the commission and the Ateneo de Manila University found that more than half of the country’s graduate programs focus on the education field.

“There are graduates (from institutions) that are not yet CHED-recognized, then 100 students were suddenly given masters, the system really needs to be fixed,” EDCOM II Executive Director Karol Mark R. Yee told reporters at the sidelines of a press briefing.

“There’s actually a lot in BARMM,” he added in Filipino.

Among the 1,470 teacher education institutions in the country, over 400 offer doctoral and master’s degrees. Mr. Yee said that some of the schools allegedly engage in fraudulent activities and provide poor-quality education in exchange for diplomas.

“PhDs are finished in six months to one year, which should be three to five years,” he said. “It’s hard because if our graduate programs don’t have quality, teachers are paying, students are paying but it’s just a paper, there’s no real learning.”

“The quality of their teaching is also affected. The learning of the students is also affected,” he added.

Mr. Yee noted that the demand for higher studies stems from the Department of Education’s (DepEd) vertical qualification requirements and point-based promotion systems.

“The teachers were saying that no matter where we get our master’s or PhD (Doctor of Philosophy), as long as we have a degree, as long as we have a diploma, we can still be promoted,” he said.

“There are schools that, even if they don’t attend (classes), they will graduate. Schools are offering tours, parties, and food in exchange for degrees,” he added.

Diploma mills also lead to a mismatch between teachers’ specialization and their subject assignments.

“We have science teachers, English teachers, but their master’s is education leadership even though they are not a principal,” Mr. Yee said. “We can see that we have a mismatch in content knowledge.”

The Joint Memorandum Circular (JMC), signed by the DepEd, Commission on Higher Education (CHED), the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC), and the Teacher Education Council (TEC), aims to curb the diploma mills crisis through an Online National Registry (ONR).

The circular stated that legitimate undergraduate and post-graduate programs nationwide are listed under the Philippine Teacher Education Registry (PhilTER). Only the programs listed under the registry will be considered legitimate for professional and licensure examinations.

The platform will also display the licensure examination results of institutions and quality indicators, such as Centers of Excellence and Levels of Accreditation, to ensure unified, high-quality teacher education.

The quality assurance assessment of teacher education institutions nationwide will commence from December 2025 to March 2028. Higher education institutions that do not meet the minimum standards will be placed on a probationary period within a year to address deficiencies. Failure to comply could lead to being phased out and closure.

“That’s why we facilitated that the agencies talk to each other so that moving forward, the database will be unified,” Mr. Yee said. “So that everyone knows and so that no one can be fooled or misguided.” — Almira Louise S. Martinez

InnovationOne taps VIU to embed brands into streaming content

InnovationOne,  VIU Philippines, and United Neon Media Group executives at the contract signing.— EDG A. EVA

InnovationOne Inc., the digital solutions arm of United Neon Media Group, has partnered with Hong Kong-based streaming platform VIU to help brands connect with viewers by embedding products and campaigns into the shows available on the platform.

“When you think of series, the typical consumer of content like that—series—it takes emotional investment, right?,” Raphael Layosa, managing director of InnovationOne Inc., told BusinessWorld at the sidelines of the event.

“So, you’re able to tap into the power of that emotional investment viewers have in the content on VIU. The role of InnovationOne is to make that accessible to more brands so that they can, they have different choices.”

Mr Layosa said that the partnership is important as it allows brands to reach their consumers amid shifting viewing preferences.

He cited a Statista report, which showed that over-the-top (OTT) platforms like VIU have seen a year-on-year increase of 6% in 2025.

By 2028, OTT revenue is projected to rise to US$528 million, up from US$405 million in 2025.

Meanwhile, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), the exposure rate, or the percentage of people who accessed television, dropped from 96.04% in 2019 to 82.34% in 2024, while video streaming platforms registered a 63.49% exposure rate, making them the third most accessed form of mass media.

Under the partnership, Mr. Layosa said that companies and brands can post advertisements on the platform in various formats, including banner ads, video ads, full-screen ads, and even extend to product placement and co-branded content.

“We are weaving the brand into the very storyline or letting the brand craft the story for the consumer so that they get that same emotional investment… That’s what creates brand love,” he said.

The partnership offers a package deal that brands can take advantage of, promising over 400,000 ad impressions through VIU display ads, including mobile interstitials and MREC banner ads.

A brand’s campaign can also be integrated into offline channels, such as billboards and display ads, through the parent company, United Neon Media Group according to Mr. Layosa.

“So that’s where you have more omnichannel integration applications, so that brands can now be part of the everyday moments that are relevant to the lives of our consumers,” Mr. Layosa said. — Edg Adrian A. Eva

German crackdown pushes Dutch ATM bandits towards Austria

THE SKYLINE with its office buildings and the banking district are photographed during sunset in Frankfurt, Germany, Nov. 18, 2021. — REUTERS

FRANKFURT — For years, it was a common occurrence: Dutch bandits would drive to Germany and in the dead of night blow up ATMs, grab cash and speed back home on the Autobahn.

Now, a crackdown is bearing fruit.

ATM attacks have dropped to 115 so far this year, less than a quarter of their peak of more than one a day – 496 – in 2022, according to German police data provided to Reuters.

The spree of explosions has terrorized residents throughout Germany, where – in contrast to other countries – cash remains popular and ATMs are often built directly beneath apartments and in pedestrian zones. The damage has amounted to more than 400 million euros ($466.48 million) since 2020.

“The threat level in Germany remains high, particularly in light of the use … of extremely unstable explosives,” according to a September report by Germany’s top crime-fighters at the federal criminal police, or BKA.

Now the gangs are driving a bit further to Austria, where using cash is still widespread. Attacks in Austria have doubled this year in what the BKA told Reuters was likely “a squeezing-out effect from Germany”. Dutch police have suspected hundreds of men are responsible, working in ever-evolving groups as new recruits replace those caught.

GERMANS STILL LOVE TO USE CASH
Underscoring the shift to Austria, prosecutors said a Dutchman who stole 220,000 euros from cash machines near Frankfurt in 2023 blew up ATMs in Vienna earlier this year, getting away with 89,000 euros in booty and causing 1.5 million euros in damage.

The person was taken into custody on a European arrest warrant and is awaiting trial.

Over the years, this modern twist on the old-fashioned bank heist arose out of two distinctly German factors, investigators say.

First, Germany is a wealthy nation whose residents love to use cash for purchases, meaning ATMs are aplenty. And second, Germany’s famous highway network makes for a quick getaway.

German banks have also invested more than 300 million euros in security in recent years, according to the most recent figures from Deutsche Kreditwirtschaft, an umbrella group for financial institutions, a drop in the ocean for a sector where profits collectively top 50 billion euros annually.

The measures include mechanisms that blow a thick fog when machines are tampered with or emit dyes that render bills unusable. Many banks now lock lobbies around ATMs at night.

The thefts are less sophisticated than many online scams, where law enforcement in Germany and across the globe are battling a surge.

Last week, Germany announced arrests after a years-long probe of fraudsters who – with the help of German payment providers, sham websites and fictitious companies – stole more than 300 million euros from people in 193 countries.

CASES FALL IN GERMANY, RISE IN AUSTRIA
Cases fell this year in all but three of Germany’s 16 states, according to police statistics.

The state of North Rhine-Westphalia, which borders the Netherlands, was one of the hardest hit in 2022 with 182 attacks. So far this year, they are down to just 25.

Despite the decline, collateral damage is still significant, police there pointed out, with one attack in January near Cologne causing 1.8 million euros in damage.

Police credit cooperation with Dutch investigators to locate and nab suspects. The majority of culprits have been Dutch, but some are German, French and Moldovan. Dutch police did not respond to questions from Reuters but in the past have acknowledged the trend.

Police in the state of Hesse, home to Germany’s banking capital Frankfurt, created a tool that generates a probability forecast of an ATM getting hit, based on make, location and other variables.

Last week, Germany’s parliament voted to increase prison sentences for such attacks.

In Austria, cases have risen to 29 so far this year, up from 13 in 2024, according to figures from the interior ministry, which said they first detected the Dutch gangs in 2023.

Austrians have the highest preference for paying in cash in the euro zone, a 2024 European Central Bank study found, meaning plenty of ATMs.

Police there said they are cooperating closely with the police in Germany and the Netherlands. ($1 = 0.8575 euros). — Reuters

Enrile dies at 101

FILE PHOTO of the late Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile during the impeachment trial of Supreme Court Chief Justice Renato Corona at the Senate headquarters in Pasay city, Metro Manila May 23, 2012. -- REUTERS FILE PHOTO/ROMEO RANOCO

Juan Valentin F. Ponce Enrile Sr., a towering figure in Philippine politics whose government service spanned several administrations over decades, has died at 101.

Mr. Enrile died at his residence on Thursday at 4:21 p.m., his daughter Katrina Ponce Enrile said in a Facebook post, adding he passed “surrounded by our family in the comfort of our home.”

“It was his heartfelt wish to take his final rest at home, with his family by his side,” Ms. Enrile said.

Mr. Enrile was a high-profile and enduring figure whose nearly six-decade career spanned seven administrations, serving in cabinet posts and, more prominently, as a senator.

He was admitted to an undisclosed hospital earlier this week for pneumonia and treated in the intensive care unit. On Wednesday, his daughter said doctors were giving him the “best possible treatment and attention.”

Mr. Enrile had advised President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. as his chief legal counsel since 2022. He had also served as minister for justice and defense under Mr. Marcos’ father and namesake.

He also served as a four-term senator and was the 21st Senate President from 2008 to 2013.

He was also among those implicated in the multibillion-peso pork barrel scam, where lawmakers had siphoned off funding from the Priority Development Assistance Fund. He was acquitted of charges last month. – Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

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