Home Blog Page 7527

BFAR lifts red tide warning across several areas

THE BUREAU of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) removed warnings issued in the areas of San Pedro Bay in Western Samar, Matarinao Bay in Eastern Samar, and Biliran Islands after testing negative for paralytic shellfish poison or red tide.

In its 26th shellfish bulletin, BFAR said areas still affected by red tide include Milagros in Masbate, Dauis and Tagbilaran City in Bohol, Carigaya Bay in Leyte, Dumanquillas Bay in Zamboanga del Sur, Murcielagos Bay in Zamboanga del Norte, and Lianga Bay in Surigao del Sur. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Hospital group outlines need to increase 2022 health budget for Delta response

THE PHILIPPINE Hospital Association (PHA), which represents both public and private medical establishments, has underscored the need to increase the government’s pandemic response budget for next year, citing the increased threat from the coronavirus Delta variant and rising costs of medicines.   

“It will be more than justified considering the uncertainties presented by the pandemic and the need to align and respond to it accordingly,” President Jaime A. Almora told BusinessWorld in an e-mail interview.

He said the group submitted a request for a supplemental fund for health-related items and services under the proposed budget for next year, which is currently under deliberation in Congress and still open to amendments.

Mr. Almora said there is currently a shortage of medicines for the treatment of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients, adding that those available are priced exorbitantly at about three to four times more than earlier costs.

“Just like funding for purchase of vaccines, the government should provide funds for medicines. Preventive and curative should be considered,” he said.

Mr. Almora also urged Congress to provide an adequate allocation to the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) to ensure payment of reimbursements claimed by hospitals for COVID-19 patients.

As of end-August, PHA said PhilHealth owed about P21.1 billion to hospitals, causing “severe financial distress” to medical institutions.

Mr. Almora also pushed for the continuous payment of Special Risk Allowance (SRA) to both public and private health workers.

Senator Richard J. Gordon, Sr. filed in August Senate Bill No. 2371 that mandates the continuing grant of SRA and other benefits to both public and private health workers, whether assigned directly in COVID wards or not, with retroactive application from July 2021.

“Our health workers risk their lives to respond to their duty of collectively operating the country’s healthcare system during this pandemic,” said Mr. Gordon in a statement last Saturday. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

CoA questions Boy Scouts over P4.79M spent on ‘special project’

SCOUTS.ORG.PH

STATE AUDITORS questioned the Boy Scouts of the Philippines (BSoP) over non-compliance with existing laws and regulations as well as lack of supporting documents for the disbursement of P4.789 million in 2019 and 2020 for a program to increase membership.

In its 2020 audit report, the Commission on Audit (CoA) said the funds allotted for the Scout Membership Growth Campaign Program (SMGCP) did not qualify as a “Special Project” under the 2019 national budget

The SMGCP was launched in 2019 with the goal of having 3.7 million scouts by 2025. It granted honoraria to project officers and assistant project officers worth P50,000 and P30,000 in 2019 as well as P60,000 and P36,000 in 2020, respectively, for program implementation.

“The subject SMGCP could not be considered as a ‘Special Project’… inasmuch as the project’s purpose, objectives, and undertakings are very much aligned with the BSoP’s purpose and functions as an organization,” CoA said.

Auditors also noted that payment of honoraria worth P1.993 million or 41.62% of total incentives were paid without any completion of deliverables.

In an audit comment, BSoP said that their legal basis is a resolution issued by their National Executive Board on Feb. 16, 2019, approving the program’s implementation. Aside from that, BSoP said the honoraria were “erroneously termed and accounted” as a personnel services item.

The CoA said in their rejoinder that the board resolution is not an appropriate legal basis and a proper study in 2019 and 2020 should have been conducted on budget items prior to the approval and implementation of the SMGCP. Nevertheless, they said that the funds would still violate existing laws and regulations. — Russell Louis C. Ku

Gatchalian reiterates call for quick passage of bill vs financial fraudsters

SEN. WIN GATCHALIAN FB PAGE

SENATOR SHERWIN T. Gatchalian again called for the speedy passage of a bill that will protect consumers amid prevalence of financial fraudsters.

Senate Bill (SB) No. 2287 or the Financial Products and Services Consumer Protection Act was filed by Mr. Gatchalian, vice-chair of the Committee on Banks, Financial Institutions and Currencies, in June. It is pending at the committee level.

“We need to strengthen the powers of government and clear up the lines on who will protect financial consumers and what are the mechanisms for financial consumers to tap into in case of fraud,” said Mr. Gatchalian in a statement on Sunday.

The proposed measure aims to institutionalize proper mechanisms to protect consumers alongside the growth of financial products and services in the country.

The bill seeks to expand the powers of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas and other financial regulators such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, Insurance Commission, and the Cooperative Development Authority to cover crimes related to digital transactions.

“We need to stay ahead because hackers and fraudsters also evolve and they know how or where people are lax when it comes to protecting their identity and personal information,” said Mr. Gatchalian, also vice chair of the Committee on Economic Affairs. — Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

Rights group says Parlade, Sinas appointments to worsen culture of impunity

PHILSTAR/ FREEMAN

HUMAN rights group Karapatan on Sunday said the recent appointments of retired general Antonio P. Parlade, Jr. and former police chief Debold M. Sinas to key government posts will further worsen the culture of impunity in the country, noting that the two are currently facing legal complaints at the Office of the Ombudsman.

In a statement, Karapatan Secretary General Cristina E. Palabay said the appointments send a message that “those promoting the administration’s bloodlust will be rewarded with higher posts in the government.”

Mr. Sinas, now an undersecretary at the Office of the President, and Mr. Parlade, now part of the National Security Council, are still “facing complaints and allegations of human rights violations and war crimes,” Karapatan reiterated.

“Their appointments mean that President (Rodrigo R.) Duterte is not making them accountable for these acts,” it said.

Karapatan and other cause-oriented groups filed complaints last year against Mr. Parlade before the Ombudsman for red-tagging activists, citing potential violations of Republic Act No. 9851 or the Philippine Act on Crimes Against International Humanitarian Law, Genocide, and Other Crimes Against Humanity, and the Ombudsman Act of 1989.

Mr. Sinas led a bloody anti-communist operation called Oplan Sauron, which led to more killings in Negros in central Philippines, according to international group Human Rights Watch.

Karapatan said Mr. Sinas has presided over police raids leading to arbitrary arrests of activists in Negros and Manila.

Mr. Sinas is facing a complaint for violating health protocols last year.

“Their appointments should be strongly denounced by all freedom-loving Filipinos as we demand that they be held accountable for their crimes,” Ms. Palabay said. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Teen qualifier Emma Raducanu captures US Open Women’s title

EMMA Raducanu of Great Britain celebrates with the championship trophy after her match against Leylah Fernandez of Canada (not pictured) in the women’s singles final on day thirteen of the 2021 US Open tennis tournament at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. — REUTERS

NEW YORK — Britain’s Emma Raducanu completed a Grand Slam fairytale on Saturday by beating Canadian Leylah Fernandez (6-4, 6-3) in the clash of the teens to be crowned US Open champion.

It was a victory that required blood, sweat and in the end a few tears as the 18-year-old became the first qualifier to win a Grand Slam title and the first British woman to hoist a major trophy since Virginia Wade, who was watching from courtside, triumphed at Wimbledon in 1977.

Wade has been in New York cheering from courtside seats while an infatuated Britain gathered around televisions and held its collective breath on Saturday as the teenager played out a Hollywood ending on an improbable script.

Raducanu’s win received the royal stamp of approval with Queen Elizabeth taking to Twitter to offer congratulations along with other members of the royal family.

“It’s an absolute dream,” beamed Raducanu, who will shoot up from 150th to number 23 in the world rankings on Monday. “I’ve always dreamed of winning a Grand Slam. You just say these things.”

The first Grand Slam final — men’s or women’s — to be contested by two unseeded players was an unfathomable match-up featuring qualifier Raducanu and little-known Fernandez, who was 73rd in the standings going into the tournament.

One unseeded player making a major final would be considered remarkable — two enters the realm of unbelievable.

All the more remarkable was that Raducanu’s march to the title required 10 matches and she did not drop a single set or even play a tie-break, swatting aside more experienced opponents with the same ease as she hammered winners.

Fernandez left a graveyard of seeds and champions in her trail to the final, her victims including second-seeded Aryna Sabalenka, four-time Grand Slam winner and defending champion Naomi Osaka, fifth seed Elina Svitolina and three-time Grand Slam winner Angelique Kerber.

Despite what the statistics might say, Raducanu insisted that winning the US Open was not a easy as it might have looked.

“I’d say even though I didn’t on paper drop a set, I think I faced a lot of adversity in every single one of my matches,” she said. “I can pick moments where I was down.”

ICY COOL
For the first time during the Flushing Meadows fortnight, the 19-year-old Canadian faced a younger opponent, if only by a couple of months. But she had no answers for the icy cool Raducanu.

Both players walked onto a frothing Arthur Ashe Stadium court with “I can’t believe I am here” ear-to-ear grins, but soon had their game faces on, focusing on the challenge ahead.

The charismatic teens had charmed the New York crowds with fearless play and contagious enthusiasm, leaving excited fans a difficult choice over who to back in the final, which in the end was evenly split.

While the scoreline might hint at a one-sided affair, the near two-hour contest featured plenty of jaw-dropping tennis and more than a dash of drama, particularly in a second set that Raducanu threatened to run away with when, at 5-2 up, she earned two match points on Fernandez’s serve.

The battling Canadian mounted a comeback to stay alive and when the Briton went down chasing a ball and scraped her knee — leaving blood dripping down her leg — the tide looked ready to turn.

As trainers bandaged the wound, Fernandez, who had just earned a break point, looked on in frustration, not wanting to lose the building momentum.

In the end, however, nothing was going to prevent Raducanu from realizing her destiny, as she returned to finish off her opponent with an ace.

“I have no idea what I’m doing tomorrow,” said Raducanu, who might indulge in a New York shopping spree after pocketing a winner’s purse of $2.5 million, almost 10 times her previous career earnings of $303,000. “I’m just really trying to embrace the moment, really take it all in.

“Right now, no care in the world, I’m just loving life.” — Reuters

Rain or Shine earns big win against San Miguel, 95-93

SANTI Santillan (in photo) and the Rain or Shine Elastopainters hacked out a 95-93 victory in PBA Philippine Cup action on Sunday. — PBA IMAGES

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

THE Rain or Shine Elastopainters halted the charge of the San Miguel Beermen in the (Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Philippine Cup, hacking out a 95-93 victory in league action on Sunday at the Don Honorio Ventura State University (DHVSU) Gym in Bacolor, Pampanga.

Towed by the spirited play of young cogs Santi Santillan and Javee Mocon and the clutch shooting and playmaking of Rey Nambatac late in the game, the Elastopainters pulled off the big win that thrust them to a 6-4 record and in a good position to finish among the top teams as the playoffs approach.

Rain or Shine trailed San Miguel throughout the first half and stared at a 10-point deficit, 51-41, at the break.

In the third quarter, the Elastopainters would gain some headway in their push, led by rookie Santillan and third-year man Mocon, who combined for 20 points of their team’s 31 points in the frame to sway the favor to their side.

They levelled the count at 66-all with 58 seconds to go and used it as a springboard to go on top, 72-69, heading into the final quarter.

The teams slugged it out in the fourth canto, fighting to a tight contest of 87-all with 5:09 to go.

Rain or Shine though would get some breathing room, 92-87, in the next two minutes and threatened to go for the closeout.

But the Beermen made one last push, tying the score at 93-all with 12 seconds to play after a basket off a steal by CJ Perez.

That set up the heroics of Mr. Nambatac.

Off the bench, he would score the go-ahead basket, banking in an off-balance shot to push his team ahead, 95-93, with two seconds left.

San Miguel sued for time after but could not get a decent shot in the ensuing play to preserve the win for Rain or Shine.

Mr. Santillan top-scored for the Elastopainters with 21 points, followed by Mr. Mocon, who had a double-double of 18 points and 12 rebounds.

Rookie Anton Asistio also scored in double figures for Rain or Shine with 11 points while also adding seven assists.

“I just asked them to be fearless today. And they responded,” said Rain or Shine coach Cris Gavina in the post-game press conference.

For San Miguel, which saw its win streak stop at two and drop to 5-3, it was Terrence Romeo who showed the way with 20 points, with Mr. Perez and Arwind Santos adding 18 points apiece.

Filipino pole-vaulter Obiena sets new Asian record in winning gold in Austria

FILIPINO pole-vaulter EJ Obiena now holds the new Asian record in his event after clearing 5.93m in the 17th Golden Roof Challenge in Austria on his way to winning the tournament title. — ERNEST OBIENA-EJ OBIENA FB PAGE

FILIPINO pole-vaulter Ernest John U. Obiena bagged the gold medal in the 17th Golden Roof Challenge in Innsbruck, Austria, on Sunday (Manila time) and he did it in grand fashion, setting a new Asian record.

Mr. Obiena, 25, cleared 5.93 meters to win the title, shattering the previous Asian mark of 5.92 meters set by Igor Patapovich of Kazakhstan in 1998.

He also eclipsed his personal best and national mark of 5.91m, which he set only last month in the Paris Diamond League.

In winning the title, Mr. Obiena started at 5.60m and 5.70m, which he successfully cleared in his first attempts. He then progressed to 5.80m, clearing it in two tries.

While the field found it tough after 5.8m and started to exit, the Philippine bet, who represented the country in the recent Tokyo Olympic Games, channeled his attention in setting new records and went for 5.93m.

He failed in first two attempts, but egged on by the crowd, Mr. Obiena made one last go at the new Asian record and finally clinched it. After landing, he immediately burst into celebration.

American Matt Ludwig came away with the silver after edging Turkey’s Ersu Sasma by way of the count back rule after both men cleared 5.60m.

Mr. Obiena finished at 11th spot in the Olympics, an outcome which he admitted he did not envision, but has been performing solidly of late, producing steady podium finishes and breaking records just as he has climbed to fifth place in the world rankings. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Ronaldo scores twice as Manchester United thrashes Newcastle to go top of Premier League

MANCHESTER, England — After all the hype, the buildup and expectation, Cristiano Ronaldo delivered in almost inevitable fashion on his return to Manchester United scoring twice to send his side top of the Premier League with a 4-1 win over Newcastle United at Old Trafford on Saturday.

With his compatriot Bruno Fernandes adding an 80th minute screamer and substitute Jesse Lingard producing a lovely finish the fourth, it was the perfect start to what feels like a new era for Ole Gunnar Solskjær’s team.

Long before kickoff, fans in shirts bearing Ronaldo’s name and his number 7 were singing the name of the Portuguese 36-year-old around Old Trafford and they were not to be left disappointed.

Ronaldo has broken all the major goalscoring records in the game and perhaps the only surprise was that it took him until almost half time to score the first of his second spell in English football.

He was placed in the middle of an attacking trio with Mason Greenwood to his right and Jadon Sancho to the left with Fernandes hovering behind the front line.

The five-times Ballon d’Or winner, who returned to United from Juventus last month, opened the scoring on the stroke of half time, pouncing from close range after Newcastle keeper Freddie Woodman spilled out a low drive from Greenwood.

It wasn’t spectacular, but it was the perfect example of the way Ronaldo, a speedy winger in his first spell at United, has reshaped himself as a goal-poaching striker.

It wasn’t all a “welcome home” party, however, as Javier Manquillo brought Newcastle level in the 56th minute with a low right-foot drive after Miguel Almiron had led a swift break from the visitors.

Newcastle had exposed an obvious drawback with the attacking lineup chosen by Solskjær — their vulnerability to the counterattack — and it remains to be seen if better teams will be able to take greater advantage of the lack of protection in front of United’s back four.

United’s momentum was in danger of being lost, but once again the Portuguese showed his deadliness in front of goal, restoring the lead in the 62nd minute with a goal that truly did recall his early days under Alex Ferguson. — Reuters

Historic ascent

In the end, Emma Raducanu did exactly what she expected. She didn’t just claim the United States Open championship; she rose to the top of the last Grand Slam tournament of the year without dropping a single set or even reaching a tie-breaker. And, lest we forget, she’s a qualifier to boot. Never was she threatened; the only time she came remotely close to surrendering a set was in the second of her three required pre-event matches, during which she was stretched to 12 games. That’s how transcendent her title campaign was in the fortnight and change she graced Flushing Meadows with her presence.

Indeed, Raducanu played beyond her years. She’s still two months removed from her 19th birthday, and yet her every step exuded the confidence typically reserved for proven veterans. True, she faced only two seeded opponents en route, and no higher than 11th. Then again, there can be no discounting the aplomb with which she hurdled the obstacles placed before her. She had power, yes — a requisite in this day and age of booming serves and groundstrokes. More importantly, though, she relied on an unwavering self-assurance to prevail.

In many ways, the same can be said of Raducanu’s fellow finalist Leylah Fernandez, who survived tough three-setters against such notables as Naomi Osaka, Angelique Kerber, Elina Svitolina, and Aryna Sabalenka en route to yesterday’s final. That said, she knew and understood how to use the same tools better. Make that much, much better. Not for nothing did she spend the early part of the set-to assessing the challenge in front of her, and then promptly pull away; she won in eight of the last 11 games to stake her claim as the best of the best on the acrylic-topped Laykold surface.

No doubt, Raducanu’s sterling run to the fourth round of Wimbledon in July as a wild card entry helped steel her nerves for her historic ascent in the US Open. She became the first woman from Great Britain to win a major title since Virginia Wade did so in 1977 as the third seed at the All England Club, and the first ever in the annals of the sport to do so after needing to fight for a spot in the main draw. And given how she comported herself on the court from the get-go, she didn’t seem overwhelmed by the moment. At all. As she noted heading into the final, “Is there any expectation? I’m a qualifier.”

Raducanu was, of course, being disingenuous — because if there was anything that separated her from the field, and even from Fernandez, it was her utter refusal to be fazed by circumstance. She firmly believed that no mountain was too high to climb, and then set off to show all and sundry why.

 

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.

FBI releases declassified 9/11 document after Biden order

THE TRIBUTE IN LIGHT art installation and the One World Trade Center tower are seen over lower Manhattan, on the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, from Brooklyn Bridge Park in New York, US, Sept. 11. — REUTERS

THE Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) on Saturday released the first document related to its investigation of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States and allegations of Saudi government support for the hijackers, following an executive order by President Joseph R. Biden.

Relatives of the victims had called on Mr. Biden to skip memorial events to mark Saturday’s 20th anniversary if he did not declassify documents that they have contended will show Saudi Arabian authorities supported the plot.

The partially redacted 16-page document released by the FBI outlined contacts between the hijackers and Saudi associates, but no evidence the government in Riyadh was complicit in the attacks, which killed nearly 3,000 people.

Saudi Arabia has long said it had no role in the attacks. The Saudi embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent out of hours late on Saturday.

In a statement issued on Sept. 8, the embassy said Saudi Arabia has always advocated for transparency around the events of Sept. 11, 2001, and welcomes the release by the US of classified documents relating to the attacks.

“As past investigations have revealed, including the 9/11 Commission and the release of the so-called ‘28 Pages,’ no evidence has ever emerged to indicate that the Saudi government or its officials had previous knowledge of the terrorist attack or were in any way involved,” the embassy’s statement said.

Fifteen of the 19 hijackers were from Saudi Arabia. A US government commission found no evidence that Saudi Arabia directly funded al Qaeda, the group given safe haven by the Taliban in Afghanistan at the time. It left open whether individual Saudi officials might have.

The families of roughly 2,500 of those killed, and more than 20,000 people who suffered injuries, businesses and various insurers, have sued Saudi Arabia seeking billions of dollars.

In a statement on behalf of the organization 9/11 Families United, Terry Strada, whose husband Tom was killed on Sept. 11, said the document released by the FBI on Saturday put to bed any doubts about Saudi complicity in the attacks.

“Now the Saudis’ secrets are exposed and it is well past time for the Kingdom to own up to its officials’ roles in murdering thousands on American soil,” the statement said. — Reuters

Japan says suspected Chinese submarine seen near territorial waters

REUTERS

TOKYO — Japan’s defense ministry said on Sunday that a submarine believed to be from China was spotted in waters near its southern islands, as maritime tensions persist in the Pacific.

Japan’s navy on Friday morning identified a submerged vessel sailing northwest just outside territorial waters near Amami Oshima island, part of Kagoshima prefecture, the ministry said in a statement. A Chinese destroyer was also spotted in the vicinity.

Tokyo has complained of numerous intrusions by Chinese vessels of its territorial waters and near disputed islands in recent years. China has often reacted angrily to US ships sailing through disputed areas of the South China Sea in what Washington calls displays of freedom of navigation.

Senior Chinese diplomat Wang Yi, visiting Vietnam during a Southeast Asia trip, said those two countries should refrain from unilateral actions regarding the South China Sea that could complicate and magnify disputes.

Sunday’s announcement said Japan’s Maritime Self-Defense Force identified the vessels in a contiguous zone, which is outside territorial waters where vessels are required to identify themselves. Still, Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi instructed his staff “gather information and maintain vigilant surveillance with a sense of urgency,” the statement said.

Officials at the Chinese embassy could not immediately be reached for comment on Sunday.

The submarine continued underwater westward in the ocean near Yokoate Island, the ministry said. — Reuters

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT