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Agriculture dep’t pursuing soil rejuvenation programs to raise productivity

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) said it is making soil rejuvenation the basis for its farm productivity efforts, with the objective of increasing rice and corn output.

Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar said in a statement Tuesday that he has instructed the DA’s commodity program directors to put soil rejuvenation at the center of their productivity strategies.

“Rejuvenating and enriching our soils with organic nutrients and compost, including animal manure, must be part of all our crop commodity banner programs, including promotion of composting technologies,” Mr. Dar said.

Mr. Dar said farmers should maintain a compost pit, while their cooperatives and associations should be provided with shedders and composting facilities by the farm mechanization program.

“Recycling farm wastes and transforming them into compost and organic fertilizer is not only sustainable, but also provides farmers additional income,” Mr. Dar said.

“As soil is the foundation of agriculture, we must protect, preserve and nurture it to sustainably produce adequate, affordable and nutritious food for all Filipino families,” he added.

Meanwhile, Mr. Dar said there is still a need to pursue a balanced fertilization strategy to maximize farm production during the pandemic.

The DA defines balanced fertilization as the use of inorganic and organic fertilizers.

“We urge farmers and organic agriculture practitioners to elevate their game in promoting not only a healthy ecosystem and producing safe and nutritious food, but also in making organic products affordable for everyone,” Mr. Dar said.

Mr. Dar said the recently signed Republic Act No. 11511, which amended Republic Act No. 10068 or the Organic Agriculture Act of 2010 now provides a cheaper alternative for the certification of organic products with the ‘Participatory Guarantee System’ (PGS).

“The PGS plays a vital role in rural development and farmer empowerment through their active engagement in the whole process of verification, decision-making, and marketing,” Mr. Dar said.

The new law also creates the National Organic Agriculture Program-National Program Coordinating Office, which will serve as the planning, secretariat, and coordinating office of the National Organic Agriculture Board. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

New DoLE guidelines for additional protection of kasambahay

In a recent survey conducted by the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) and the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), about 1.4 million Filipinos are working as domestic workers or kasambahay. They consist of about 3.2% of the labor force in the Philippines as of October 2020. The kasambahay is often considered an essential member in many households across the country. But despite their important role, however, their benefits under the law are often disregarded.

The recent DoLE-PSA survey revealed substantial violations of Republic Act (RA) No. 10361, or the Batas Kasambahay and its Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR):

1. About 4% or 49,000 of kasambahay are child domestic workers, 4,900 of whom are below 15 years old.

2. Only 2.5% or 35,455 of kasambahay nationwide have written employment contracts.

3. 83% of the 1.4 million kasambahay are not covered by any social security benefit.

4. Some live-in kasambahay, or about 36%, work seven days a week, without the benefit of a

rest day.

5. The average monthly salary of a kasambahay is P4,141, ranging from P2,681 in he Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, to P5,958 in the National Capital Region.

To recall, Batas Kasambahay and its IRR prohibit the employment of domestic workers below 15 years of age. The same law mandates both a written employment contract and social welfare benefits for the kasambahay. A kasambahay is also entitled to at least 24-consecutive hours of rest in a week. Currently, the minimum wage for a kasambahay is P5,000 in NCR and ranges from P2,000 to P5,000 in other regions.

To help address these problems and curtail further violations, on Oct. 27, 2020, the DoLE enacted Department Order No. 217, s. 2020 (“DoLE DO No. 217”), otherwise known as “The Rules and Regulations Governing Recruitment and Placement of Domestic Workers by Private Employment Agencies for Local Employment,” which was published on Dec. 23, 2020, and which took effect on Jan. 7, 2021, or 15 days from the date of its publication.

DoLE DO No. 217 was enacted in line with the State’s policy to regulate and recognize the participation of the private sector in the recruitment and placement of workers for local employment through a registration and licensing system, and to recognize the need to protect the rights of the kasambahay against abuse, harassment, violence, economic exploitation, and performance of work that is hazardous to their physical and mental health. It aims to regulate and monitor Private Employment Agencies (PEAs) to ensure compliance with the pertinent provision of the Labor Code of the Philippines, including other related laws, rules and regulations, such as Batas Kasambahay and its IRR.

Despite the fact that the Batas Kasambahay has been in effect for seven years, gaps in its implementation still exist, mainly due to the challenges posed by the constitutionally guaranteed privacy of homes. The labor inspection system of the DoLE is ineffective to boost compliance with the law since a warrant would be required to inspect households where there are kasambahay employed.

The responsibilities of the PEA under the recently enacted DoLE DO No. 217 include, among others: (a) ensuring that the employment agreement between the kasambahay and the employer stipulates the terms and conditions of employment and all the benefits under the law, (b) providing a Pre-Employment Orientation briefing to the kasambahay and the employer about their rights and responsibilities, and (c) keeping copies of employment contracts and agreements pertaining to recruited kasambahay.

The same Department Order mandates the PEAs to assist the kasambahay in filing his/her complaints or grievances against the employers, and to cooperate with government agencies in rescue operations involving abused or exploited kasambahay.

With the enactment of DoLE DO No. 217, it is expected that measures to address such gaps in the implementation of Batas Kasambahay will be finally identified, and information on the rights of kasambahay and obligations of employers will be widely disseminated. The responsibility mandated upon the PEA to assist domestic workers in filing their complaints and grievances will essentially put another concerned party in the implementation of the law other than the employer.

Further, the responsibility of the PEA to conduct Pre-Employment Orientation briefings with both the kasambahay and the employer would inform both parties of their respective rights and obligations even prior to entering into a contract of employment.

As highlighted in the survey conducted by the DoLE-PSA, only 41% of kasambahay are aware of Batas Kasambahay, indicating a low level of awareness of their rights and benefits. To be sure, it is insufficient that such rules and regulations exist, they must also be effectively enforced and implemented. And raising awareness of Batas Kasambahay and other related rules and regulations is the first step towards improving policy and program development and in strengthening compliance with the law.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author. This article is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not offered as and does not constitute legal advice or legal opinion.

 

Constance Marie C. Lim is an Associate of the Angara Abello Concepcion Regala & Cruz Law Offices in Cebu (ACCRA Cebu).

cclim@accralaw.com

A budget for recovery?

In a pandemic, the prevention of a wider spread of a virus and economic recovery are the essentials of the day. Among other things, budgeting during a pandemic needs to focus on three things: response measures, social protection, and economic stimulus.

The theme of the 2021 General Appropriations Act (GAA), signed and approved on Dec. 28, 2020, is “Reset, Rebound and Recover: Investing for Resiliency and Sustainability.”

With this theme, building health and economic resilience, specifically the “Build, Build, Build” program, agriculture, the food value chain, and other new normal priorities will be given due importance by reprioritizing the 2021 and 2022 national budgets, according to the National Economic Development Authority (NEDA).

NEDA also emphasized the following measures as the focal point of the recovery program, namely, the Bayanihan to Recover as One Act and other key legislation, i.e., Financial Institutions Strategic Transfer (FIST) bill, Government Financial Institutions Unified Initiatives to Distressed Enterprises for Economic Recovery (GUIDE) bill, Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) bill, the “Build, Build, Build” infrastructure program, the national budgets for 2021 and 2022, Amendments to Public Service Act, Amendments to the Foreign Investment, and the Amendments to Retail Trade Liberalization.

Pegged at P4.506 trillion, the 2021 GAA has seemingly defined a recovery outlook for the new normal and beyond. However, in the latest Stratbase Occasional Paper entitled “The 2021 National Budget: What Promise Does It Bring to the Filipino People?,” authors Edwin P. Santiago and Venice Isabelle T. Rañosa of the Stratbase ADR Institute look into the sectoral and departmental distributions of the GAA. Their comparative analysis of departmental budgets raises intriguing questions.

By sectoral distribution, the Social Services sector (P1.7 trillion or 37.0%), Economic Services (P1.3 trillion or 29.4%), General Public Services (P747.8 billion or 16.6%), Debt Burden (P560.2 billion or 12.4%), and the Defense sector (P206.8 billion or 4.6%) have been allocated fairly according to the budget theme and the need to prioritize response measures, social protection, and economic stimulus. It also jives with the seven budget priorities expressed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte in his Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2021.

Accordingly, the 2021 Budget Priorities were emphasized, namely, Health, Nutrition, and Wellness; Education; Food Security; Social Protection; Preparedness and Resiliency; Enhancing Interoperability to Address Coordination Gaps; and Safety, Security, and Stability.

There seems to be a disconnect, however, when it comes to departmental distribution. Based on the 2021 GAA, the following top 10 departments were allotted budgets as follows: Education (Department of Education, state universities and colleges [SUCs], Commission on Higher Education [CHED], Technical Education and Skills Development Authority [TESDA]) with P751.7 billion; Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) with P695.7 billion; Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) with P249.3 billion; Department of Health (DoH) with P210.2 billion; Department of National Defense (DND) with P205.8 billion; Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) with P176.9 billion; Department of Transportation (DoTr) with P87.9 billion; Department of Agriculture (DA) with  P71.0 billion; the Judiciary with P4.3 billion; and the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) with P37.1 billion.

While there could be no question about Education garnering the top spot, the distribution gets a little skewed on two grounds. Should the priority on health (for COVID-19 vaccines), social protection (for dislocation), digital infrastructure and technology (for digital transactions and services), trade and investments, and job creation and income generation be on top of the list to facilitate recovery? If so, should the departments like the DoH, DSWD, DA, Department of Science and Technology (DoST), Department of Information and Communication Technology (DICT), DoLE, and the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) be on the priority list?

More so, the departmental distribution or allocation insinuates partisan budgeting at work. In turn, the disconnect between budget priorities and departmental funding can put the whole recovery program at risk.

Less becoming a so-called people’s budget, the increases and decreases of departmental allocations between the 2020 and 2021 fiscal years based on the authors’ computations become more illustrative of budget misalignments and the obvious priorities of the national administration. While the 61.3%, 14.5%, and 10% respective increases in the budget of DPWH, DND, and the Judiciary are not politically surprising, the notable decrease in the DSWD budget, from P366.6 billion to P176.9 billion or -51.7%, is quite disturbing.

Further, the 2021 budget distribution specifically allocates for COVID-19 vaccines funds amounting to P2.5 billion. This, however, thinly compares with the provision of P19.1 billion for the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict. As the Stratbase study puts it:

“Ironically, even during a pandemic and a public health emergency, the government seems to be singularly focused on national security.”

On this note, one wonders: Could we have budgeted more for social and health interventions to address rising inequality and the continuing health crisis and its economic consequences?

Another area that appears to have been mis-budgeted is preparedness and resiliency. Under the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Plan, the DoST is the overall responsible agency for Disaster Prevention and Mitigation, the DILG for Disaster Preparedness, the DSWD for Disaster Response, and the NEDA for Disaster Rehabilitation and Recovery. Given such a disposition, how in particular can DoST and DSWD perform their mandate if they have been allocated such budgets?

In its entirety, the 2021 GAA significantly reflects the outlook for recovery within the pandemic and beyond. Nonetheless, would the disconnect between budget theme, sectoral distribution, budget priorities, and departmental distribution be a critical factor in disrupting a recovery program?

 

Dr. Jaime Jimenez is the Deputy Executive Director for Research at the Stratbase ADR Institute.

I spoke to 99 big thinkers about what our ‘world after coronavirus’ might look like – this is what I learned

Back in March, my colleagues at the Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future at Boston University thought that it might be useful to begin thinking about “the day after coronavirus.” For a research center dedicated to longer-term thinking, it made sense to ask what our post-COVID-19 world might look like.

In the months that followed, I learned many things. Most importantly, I learned there is no “going back to normal.”

The project took on a life of its own. Over 190 days, we released 103 videos. Each was around five minutes long, with one simple question: How might COVID-19 impact our future? Watch the full video series here (The World After Coronavirus: A Pardee Center Video Series | The Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future (bu.edu)).

I interviewed leading thinkers on 101 distinct topics — from money to debt, supply chains to trade, work to robots, journalism to politics, water to food, climate change to human rights, e-commerce to cybersecurity, despair to mental health, gender to racism, fine arts to literature, and even hope and happiness.

My interviewees included the president of the US National Academy of Sciences, a former CIA director, a former NATO supreme allied commander, a former prime minister of Italy, and Britain’s astronomer royal.

I “Zoomed” — the word had become a verb almost overnight — with Kishore Mahbubani in Singapore, Yolanda Kakabadse in Quito, Judith Butler in Berkeley, California, Alice Ruhweza in Nairobi, and Jeremy Corbyn in London. For our very last episode, former UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon joined from Seoul.

For me, it was truly a season of learning. Among other things, it helped me understand why COVID-19 is not a storm that we can just wait out. Our pre-pandemic world was anything but normal, and our post-pandemic world will not be like going back to normal at all. Here are four reasons why.

Just as people with pre-existing medical conditions are most susceptible to the virus, the global impact of the crisis will accelerate pre-existing transitions. As Eurasia Group President Ian Bremmer highlights, a year of a global pandemic can pack in a decade or more of disruption as usual.

For example, Phil Baty from Times Higher Education warns that universities will change “profoundly [and] forever,” but mostly because the higher education sector was already screaming for change.

Pulitzer Prize-winning editor Ann Marie Lipinski arrives at the same prognosis for journalism, and Princeton economist Atif Mian worries similarly for structural global debt.

At Harvard, trade policy expert Dani Rodrik thinks the pandemic is hastening the “retreat from hyperglobalization” that was already in train before COVID-19. And Pardee School economist Perry Mehrling is convinced that “society will be transformed permanently … and returning to status quo ante is, I think, not possible.”

While the clouds over the global economy are ominous — with even the usually optimistic Nobel Prize-winning economist Sir Angus Deaton worrying we might be entering a dark phase that takes “20 to 30 years before we see progress” — it is political commentators who seem most perplexed.

Stanford University’s political theorist Francis Fukuyama confesses he has “never seen a period in which the degree of uncertainty as to what the world will look like politically is greater than it is today.”

COVID-19 has underscored fundamental questions about government competence, the rise of populist nationalism, sidelining of expertise, decline of multilateralism and even the idea of liberal democracy itself. None of our experts — not one — expects politics anywhere to become less turbulent than it was pre-pandemic.

Geopolitically, this manifests itself in what the founding dean of Harvard’s Kennedy School, Graham Allison, calls an “underlying, fundamental, structural, Thucydidean rivalry” in which a rapidly rising new power, China, threatens to displace the established power, the United States. COVID-19 accelerated and intensified this great power rivalry with ramifications across Asia, Europe, Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East.

Not all turbulence, however, is unwelcome.

Across sectors, expert after expert told me that habits developed during the pandemic won’t go away — and not just the habits of Zoom and working from home.

Robin Murphy, engineering professor at Texas A&M University, is convinced that “we are going to have robots everywhere” as a result of COVID-19. That’s because they became so pervasive during the pandemic for deliveries, COVID-19 tests, automated services, and even home use.

We hear from both Karen Antman, dean of Boston University’s School of Medicine, and Adil Haider, dean of medicine at Aga Khan University in Pakistan, that telemedicine is here to stay.

Vala Afshar, chief digital evangelist at Salesforce software company, goes even further. He argues that in the post-COVID-19 world “every business will be[come] a digital business” and will have to take a great deal of its commerce, interactions and workforce online.

Science journalist Laurie Garrett, who has warned about global epidemics for decades, imagines an opportunity to address the injustices of our economic and societal systems. Because “there will not be a single activity that goes on as it once did,” she says, there is also the possibility of fundamental restructuring in the upheaval.

Environmentalist Bill McKibben says the pandemic could become a wake-up call that makes people realize that “crisis and disaster are real possibilities” but can be averted.

They are not alone in this thinking. Economist Thomas Piketty recognizes the dangers of rising nationalism and inequality, but hopes we learn “to invest more in the welfare state.” He says “COVID will reinforce the legitimacy for public investments in [health systems] and infrastructure.”

Former Environmental Minister of Ecuador Yolanda Kakabadse similarly believes that the world will recognize that “ecosystem health equals human health,” and focus new attention on the environment. And military historian Andrew Bacevich would like to see a conversation about “the definition of national security in the 21st century.”

Achim Steiner, administrator of the United Nations Development Programme, is awestruck at the extraordinary amount of money that was mobilized to respond to this global crisis. He wonders if the world might become less stingy about the much smaller amounts needed to combat climate change before it is irreversible and catastrophic.

Ultimately, I think Noam Chomsky, one of the most important public intellectuals of our times, summed it up best. “We need to ask ourselves what world will come out of this,” he said. “What is the world we want to live in?”

 

Adil Najam is the Dean of the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies in Boston University. John Prandato, communications specialist at the Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future, was series editor for the video project and contributed to this essay.

Professional Fighters League sets sights on further growth

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

IN just a short time, United States-based Professional Fighters League (PFL) has positioned itself as a mixed martial arts organization of note, and it is looking to further its growth and showcase its brand of combat sports action to more areas in the world.

Founded by former fighter Ray Sefo in 2017, the PFL takes pride in being an innovative player in the sport, allowing it to make inroads in its push to put out quality events and capture its fair share of fight fans.

“The Professional Fighters League in just two years has become the fastest-growing and most innovative sports league in the world. Since its inception in 2017, the PFL has been responsible for building some of the biggest stars in the MMA world, and we’re only getting started,” said PFL vice-president of communications Loren Mack in an online interview with BusinessWorld.

The PFL boasts of a unique format, featuring a regular season, a playoffs and a finals, similar to that employed in sports like baseball, basketball and football.

“[It’s structured] that way so the fighters are rewarded for their performances and their accomplishments, rather than just because of matchups. It makes the league fighter-friendly. The format is also quite fan-friendly, because the fans can easily follow along with their favorite fighters’ progress,” said Mr. Mack.

In the PFL, fighters, too, have a chance to win a purse of a million dollars.

The league was steadily ascending in its first two years until its push was stymied in 2020 by the coronavirus pandemic.

But despite the difficulty, the PFL still managed to put out quality content across various platforms.

“Well, obviously we had to postpone our 2020 season, but that hardly meant that we didn’t come up with content. In 2020, the PFL embraced digital by launching an OTT (over-the-top) platform and mobile app that gives fans all over the world access to exclusive and premium PFL content,” said the PFL official.

To help it in this thrust, the group put up the PFL Studios last year. It is responsible for creating original content such as weekly programs and short form features.

Having survived 2020 and adapted with the varying conditions, the PFL is now girding for more activities and engagements moving forward.

It is setting its sights on kicking off its 2021 season in April in a “bubble” setting to safeguard the health and safety of the fighters and staff since the coronavirus is still a concern.

The PFL is also positioning to get its planned expansion to different parts of the world going, including in the Philippines, which Mr. Mack describes as home to some of the passionate and knowledgeable fight fans in the world.

“As soon as the pandemic dissipates, expect the PFL to ramp up its efforts to expand all over the globe. Recently, we were able to secure broadcast deals in Russia and India, and you can be sure that we’re working on securing deals in other countries in Asia, such as the Philippines. Once it’s safe to put on live shows all over the world again, expect us to work towards bringing the PFL cage to Philippine shores,” said Mr. Mack, who is no stranger to the mixed martial arts (MMA) scene in Asia, having worked as an executive for one of the top promotions in the region in the past.

“You can expect the Philippines to be one of the PFL’s main targets. I’ve seen how crazy the Filipino fans are when it comes to MMA, and with the PFL, they’re going to get amazing MMA action from the best fighters in the world, and it’s going to be presented in a format that Filipino sports fans will all appreciate,” he added. 

Of late, the PFL has been shoring up its roster of fighters, signing up former Ultimate Fighting Championship stars like Fabricio Werdum and Anthony Pettis as well as other talents from different parts of the world.

Olympic-bound Irish Magno to make full use of training ‘bubble’

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

TOKYO Olympics-bound boxer Irish Magno is looking to make up for lost time as her preparation for the Games was disrupted by the coronavirus last year.

Speaking on Tiebreaker Vods’ So She Did! podcast from their training “bubble” at INSPIRE Sports Academy in Laguna on Sunday, Ms. Magno said it was a welcome development to return to face-to-face training after months of settling for virtual and individual workouts since various quarantine setups prohibited close contacts.

It is an opportunity that Iloilo fighter Magno intends to make full use of it since the Olympic Games is just less than two hundred days away.

“I’m very thankful that we have this bubble after months of limited training,” 28-year-old Magno said in Filipino.

“Here we can prepare better for the Olympics and the qualifiers. I’m putting my trust in our coaches as far as how the training would go. From my end, I am going to do what I need to do and make up for lost time in training,” she added.

Ms. Magno was joined on the podcast as a guest by fellow national team member Nesthy Petecio.

The two are part of some 60 national team members from boxing, taekwondo, and karate who entered the INSPIRE bubble last weekend.

They are expected to be holed up there for the next couple of months to jack up their training for the Olympics and the qualifiers.

Ms. Magno said at the moment, they are in room quarantine as part of the strict safety protocols issued by the Philippine Sports Commission to ensure the integrity of the bubble, but once allowed to start training she will immediately buckle down to work.

The atomweight boxer booked a spot in the rescheduled Olympics in March last year at the Asia and Oceania Olympic Boxing Qualification Tournament in Amman, Jordan.

She beat Tajikistan’s Sumaiya Qosimova by unanimous decision in their box-off to earn the last Olympic spot in her division.

Ms. Magno was relegated to the box-off after being defeated earlier in the qualifiers by Mary Kom of India.

“I’m just thankful I had the chance to redeem myself. I listened to my coaches and took it from there,” she said.

Ms. Magno was the second Filipino boxer to qualify for the Tokyo Games after middleweight Eumir Felix Marcial, who booked his spot also in the Jordan qualifiers.

Mr. Marcial is currently training in the United States under famed boxing coach Freddie Roach as the former is also a pro fighter under Manny Pacquiao’s MP Promotions.

PPGL poised for a busy year of tournaments

THE Philippine Pro Gaming League (PPGL) returns this year and is set to roll out Riot Games titles all year-round.

Established in 2018 by Mineski Philippines, the official license holder of Riot Games esports, and operated in partnership with Globe Telecom, the PPGL is to host in 2021 year-round tournaments for the first-person shooter game Valorant and mobile MOBA game League of Legends: Wild Rift in the country.

The multi-platform esports league shared that its thrust of becoming the stepping stone for the international success of Filipino gamers continues with the activities it has lined up.

To kick off the Valorant Champions Tour, part of Riot Games’ efforts to make Valorant into a global esport, PPGL will be having the 2021 Valorant Challengers, a national competition that will serve as a qualification path for Filipino gamers to the Valorant Masters, where the best of Southeast Asia will compete.

The Challengers will be divided into three splits, and each split will run three tournaments taking place over six weeks. Only two teams from the Philippines will advance to the Masters.

More than the qualification slots, a total of P1.5 million prize pool is also up for grabs for Filipino teams for the whole year.

The 2021 Valorant Challengers PH – Stage 01 will open registrations this month.

The Challengers will be an all-online tournament for the first split in accordance with safety measures up during this time of the pandemic.

“We are excited to develop new gaming talent in the Philippines. As the largest multi-game esports league in the country, we invite all gamers to find their home in the PPGL. In the years to come, we want to take pride in having one of our homegrown talents win it all in the international scene for Valorant and League of Legends: Wild Rift,” said Mineski Philippines country manager Mark Navarro in a release.

For more updates on the registration and broadcast, follow the official PPGL Facebook page. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Harden, Durant lead Nets over Bucks in thriller

Golden State Warriors escape 19-point hole, stun LA Lakers

JAMES Harden collected 34 points and 12 assists, Kevin Durant added 30, including the go-ahead 3-pointer with 36.8 seconds left and the Brooklyn Nets outlasted the Milwaukee Bucks for a 125-123 victory on Monday night in New York.

Harden became the first Net to get a 30-point game in his first two games with the team and also added four rebounds. He shot 13 of 25 from the floor and scored 13 points in the final 12 minutes when the lead changed hands 10 times.

Harden’s biggest rebound occurred with 38 seconds left when he missed a 3-pointer and got the offensive rebound. He quickly found Durant, who calmly knocked down a 3-pointer from the top of the key to give Brooklyn the lead for good at 125-123.

Milwaukee had a chance to regain the lead, but Khris Middleton missed a 3-pointer with 29.2 seconds. After a turnover by Durant with 5.5 seconds left, Milwaukee called a timeout, but the game ended when Middleton missed left corner 3-pointer with 1.1 seconds left while being closely guarded by Bruce Brown.

Durant surpassed 30 points for the fourth time in five games since returning from missing three games due to health and safety protocols. His 3-pointer helped Brooklyn win its fourth straight and end an eight-game home losing streak to Milwaukee.

Joe Harris added 20 and hit five 3-pointers as Brooklyn shot 54.8% and hit 15 of 31 3-point tries while playing without Kyrie Irving (personal reasons, health and safety protocols) for the seventh straight game.

Giannis Antetokounmpo scored 34 points for Milwaukee, which saw a four-game winning streak stopped. He also grabbed 12 rebounds while shooting 13 of 26 from the floor.

Middleton added 25 and Jrue Holiday contributed 22 as Milwaukee shot 43.8% and misfired on 26 of 37 3-point tries.

The Nets took a 92-81 lead on a free throw by Harden with 2:23 remaining in the third quarter Milwaukee was able to get within 94-89 entering the fourth on a layup by Holiday right before the buzzer.

Milwaukee briefly regained the lead when Pat Connaughton’s 3-pointer made it 98-97 with 10:11 remaining, but Harden scored six points in a 10-2 spurt and his crafty layup pushed the lead to 107-100 with 7:54 to go.

Milwaukee recovered and forged a 110-110 tie on a 3-pointer by Brook Lopez with 5:01 left before taking a 113-112 lead on a Connaughton 3-pointer less than a minute later.

WARRIORS STUN LAKERS
Stephen Curry bombed in Golden State’s final points on a 3-pointer with 1:07 remaining and the Warriors forced LeBron James into an errant 3-pointer at the horn, completing a shocking, 115-113 victory over the Los Angeles (LA) Lakers on Monday.

Curry finished with 26 points, the last three giving Golden State a 115-110 lead.

James countered with two free throws with 51.2 seconds left and Los Angeles’ Dennis Schröder made one 21 seconds later to slice the deficit to two. After Curry missed a jumper, the Lakers had one final possession with 11.3 seconds left.

After a timeout, James could do no better than get an off-balance 28-footer that missed the mark, ending the Lakers’ five-game winning streak.

After trailing by as many as 19 points in the first quarter, the Warriors clawed back into contention, but the Lakers retained a 106-97 advantage with 5:52 to go.

Brad Wanamaker then ignited what turned into a 15-2 run with consecutive hoops to get the visitors within 106-101.

After Schröder hit two free throws to open the gap to seven, Curry took over, scoring five consecutive points to get Golden State within 108-106 with 3:13 to play.

Kelly Oubre, Jr. got the Warriors even for the first time since the first quarter at the 3:10 mark, after which Draymond Green, who had totaled just three points to that point, hit consecutive interior shots for a 112-108 advantage with 1:39 to go.

Green complemented seven points with team highs in rebounds (eight) and assists (nine) for the Warriors, who snapped a two-game losing streak.

Schröder had 25 points to pace the Lakers, who are 7-0 on the road this season but just 4-4 at home.

James finished with 19 points, Anthony Davis and Montrezl Harris had 17 apiece and Kyle Kuzma got 15 for the Lakers, who shot just 9-for-29 on 3-point attempts and were outscored 36-27 from beyond the arc.

Davis had a game-high 17 rebounds and Kuzma gained 10 to complete double-doubles for Los Angeles. — Reuters

Australian Open

Anticipation quickly turned to frustration as scores of players found themselves unable to leave their hotel rooms in compliance with Australian government rules designed to combat the spread of the novel coronavirus. They thought they knew what they were getting into as they arrived in the country for the Australian Open; after all, protocols had been communicated to them way back in mid-December, with the first Grand Slam of the year delayed by three weeks precisely to allow for quarantine measures. What they didn’t plan on was being unable to practice at all — a fate they are now resigned to after others in their chartered flights returned positive tests.

To be sure, “resigned” doesn’t exactly describe their sentiments. Some players have taken to social media to air their grievances, and the optics have been far from ideal. Pushback was swift, with not a few responses highlighting their seemingly entitled positions. In any case, there can be no going around the regulations. From the outset, all and sundry have rightly noted that health and safety conditions come first above all else. And with Australia among the few nations appearing to have a good grasp of keeping the spread of the virus to a minimum, there is no chance “special considerations” will be given participants of a sporting spectacle, even one as important as the Australian Open.

Not that the players in hard quarantine don’t have cause to lament their plight. From a competitive standpoint, there is the not insignificant fact that other players who arrived in Australia without complications have been able to break isolation in order to train while under strict supervision. Admittedly, the dichotomy does bring about questions on fair play, or lack thereof. Then again, that was the way the ball bounced, pun wholly intended, and the disadvantaged have no choice but to cope. Among the remedies: using the glass window, the underside of the mattress, or the cabinet to bounce balls off in order to stay sharp while waiting out the mandatory two weeks in isolation. Meanwhile, Tennis Australia chief executive Craig Tiley has promised to “play our part to even [the playing field] up as much as possible;” those who have had to do with little practice time in the interim will likely find their matches scheduled later rather than sooner.

All things considered, though, any news on the Australian Open is good news. The alternative would have been to forego it just as Wimbledon did last year — a no-no for fans already reeling from the absence of normalcy in the sport. It’s not the best case, but the best under the circumstances. As two-time champion of the first event on the major rota noted in an impassioned tweet yesterday, “we need to accept, adapt, and keep moving.” Indeed.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Independent pandemic panel critical of China, WHO delays

GENEVA — An independent panel said on Monday that Chinese officials could have applied public health measures more forcefully in January to curb the initial COVID-19 outbreak, and criticized the World Health Organization (WHO) for not declaring an international emergency until Jan. 30.

The experts reviewing the global handling of the pandemic, led by former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark and former Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, called for reforms to the Geneva-based United Nations (UN) agency.

Their interim report was published hours after the WHO’s top emergency expert, Mike Ryan, said that global deaths from COVID-19 were expected to top 100,000 per week “very soon.”

“What is clear to the Panel is that public health measures could have been applied more forcefully by local and national health authorities in China in January,” the report said, referring to the initial outbreak of the new disease in the central city of Wuhan, in Hubei province.

As evidence emerged of human-to-human transmission, “in far too many countries, this signal was ignored,” it added.

Specifically, it questioned why the WHO’s Emergency Committee did not meet until the third week of January and did not declare an international emergency until its second meeting on Jan. 30.

“Although the term pandemic is neither used nor defined in the International Health Regulations (IHR) 2005, its use does serve to focus attention on the gravity of a health event. It was not until 11 March that WHO used the term,” the report said.

“The global pandemic alert system is not fit for purpose,” it said. “The World Health Organization has been underpowered to do the job.”

Under President Donald Trump, the United States has accused the WHO of being “China-centric,” which the agency denies. European countries led by France and Germany have pushed for addressing the WHO’s shortcomings on funding, governance and legal powers.

The panel called for a “global reset” and said that it would make recommendations in a final report to health ministers from the WHO’s 194 member states in May. — Reuters

Previous COVID infection may offer less protection from new variant

JOHANNESBURG — Previous infection with the coronavirus may offer less protection against the new variant first identified in South Africa, scientists said on Monday, although they hope that vaccines will still work.

Studies also found that the new variant binds more strongly and readily to human cells. That helps explain why it seems to be spreading around 50% quicker than previous versions, leading South African epidemiologist Salim Abdool Karim said.

The 501Y.V2 variant was identified by South African genomics experts late last year. It has been the main driver of a second wave of national coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infections, which hit a new daily peak above 21,000 cases earlier this month.

It is one of several new variants found in recent months, including others first discovered in England and Brazil, which scientists worry are hastening the spread of COVID-19.

“Convalescent serum studies suggest natural antibodies are less effective,” Mr. Abdool Karim said, introducing the research, “(but) current data suggest the new variant is not more severe.”

British scientists and politicians have expressed concern that vaccines currently being deployed or in development could be less effective against the variant.

Scientists speaking at the virtual panel on Monday said there was not yet a clear answer to that question and that studies were continuing.

“We have reason to be concerned because the virus has found a way to escape from previous antibodies,” Alex Sigal, a virologist at the Africa Health Research Institute, said.

“The world has underestimated this virus. This virus can evolve, it … is adapting to us.”

Earlier, South African researchers said that since vaccines induce a broad immune response it was unlikely that the mutations in the spike protein of the variant would completely negate their effect.

The researchers reiterated that notion on Monday.

“Our immune systems are extraordinarily clever,” Willem Hanekom, one of the team, said. “There may be compensation through other arms of the immune system that allow vaccines to still work.” The 501Y.V2 variant has spread to nations in Europe, Asia and the Americas, as well as several other African countries, causing some states to impose restrictions on travel to and from South Africa. — Reuters

Biden to block Trump’s plan to lift travel restrictions

WASHINGTON — US President-elect Joe Biden plans to quickly extend travel restrictions barring travel by most people who have recently been in much of Europe and Brazil soon after President Donald Trump lifted those requirements effective Jan. 26, a spokeswoman for Mr. Biden said.

Mr. Trump signed an order Monday lifting the restrictions he imposed early last year in response to the pandemic — a decision first reported Monday by Reuters — after winning support from coronavirus task force members and public health officials.

Soon after Mr. Trump’s order was made public, Biden spokeswoman Jen Psaki tweeted “on the advice of our medical team, the Administration does not intend to lift these restrictions on 1/26.”

She added that “With the pandemic worsening, and more contagious variants emerging around the world, this is not the time to be lifting restrictions on international travel.”

Until Mr. Biden acts, Mr. Trump’s order ends restrictions the same day that new coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) test requirements take effect for all international visitors. Mr. Trump is due to leave office on Wednesday.

Last week, the head of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention signed an order requiring nearly all air travelers to present a negative coronavirus test or proof of recovery from COVID-19 to enter the United States starting on Jan. 26.

The restrictions Trump rescinded have barred nearly all non-US citizens who within the last 14 days have been in Brazil, the United Kingdom, Ireland and the 26 countries of the Schengen area in Europe that allow travel across open borders.

The US restrictions barring most visitors from Europe have been in place since mid-March when Trump signed proclamations imposing them, while the Brazilian entry ban was imposed in May. Ms. Psaki added that “in fact, we plan to strengthen public health measures around international travel in order to further mitigate the spread of COVID-19.” The Biden transition did not immediately respond to a request to comment on if it planned to expand the countries covered.

Mr. Biden, once in office, has the legal authority to reimpose the restrictions.

Last Tuesday, Marty Cetron, director of CDC’s global migration and quarantine division, told Reuters those entry bans were an “opening act strategy” to address the virus spread and should now be “actively reconsidered.”

Airlines had hoped the new testing requirements would clear the way for the administration to lift the restrictions that reduced travel from some European countries by 95% or more.

They had pressed senior White House officials about the issue in recent days.

Many administration officials for months argued the restrictions no longer made sense given most countries were not subject to the entry bans. Others have argued the United States should not drop entry bans since many European countries still block most US citizens.

Reuters previously reported the White House was not considering lifting entry bans on most non-US citizens who have recently been in China or Iran. Mr. Trump confirmed Monday he would not lift those. — Reuters