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Global and personal upheavals 

In this time of global upheaval, our country has experienced natural disasters full of devastation, suffering and anguish. For millions of people there is confusion and uncertainty. Illness and death struck suddenly — so close to home.

One tries to grapple with disbelief while reaching for a sense of balance. There seems to be no consolation. So many others are going through their own disruptions and personal devastation. What was a graph and statistics in the news became a reality in the context of one’s family.

Losing a loved one, a sibling or parent is very personal and profound.

No two individuals can ever feel the same. It is incomparable and immeasurable. It sears the soul and tears the heart. It lingers deep within for a long time. Then it surfaces abruptly and explodes when it is least expected. It has one purpose — to make one strong and resilient in the avalanche, turmoil and fear.

But there is some comfort when others reach out unexpectedly, from distant places, to offer support — a hand to hold, a shoulder to lean on, and soothing words of solace — albeit virtually.

This experience is an indescribable period — the catharsis, a purging that one can compare to a coal in a furnace. The polishing under extreme heat and pressure creates a brilliant, indestructible diamond. There have been a series of losses the past years. The wounds heal but are torn open with yet another loss.

Reclusion, retreats are the chosen phases in one’s life — when there is safety in a chrysalis. It is a rough-hewn cocoon of darkness during the cold months, or the rainy season.

The lockdown has made staying invisible and quiet seem like a normal state.

After much effort and extreme stretching, the cracked cocoon releases the translucent, luminous butterfly. Free at last.

Many of us who have suffered a personal loss may feel the oppressive haze will never lift. We try to keep a stiff upper lip and keep our wits about us. We try to stay stoic and steady.

There is an antidote to depression. By reaching out to help other people — the abused and vulnerable, the marginalized and jobless, we can focus the mind and channel the energy.

Despite personal grief, it is uplifting to think of the people out there who need our prayers and immediate relief during this seemingly endless crisis.

The act of helping others goes beyond the self.

One seeks guidance, a sign from above.

In the spiritual realm, one can find divine grace and serenity.

Happiness cannot be found through great effort and willpower,

But there is in letting go.

Only our search for happiness prevents us from seeing it.

It is like a rainbow

Which you run after without ever catching it,

Although it does not exist, it has always been there and accompanies you every instant.

Wanting to grasp the ungraspable, you exhaust yourself in vain.

As soon as you relax this grasping, space is there

Open, inviting and comfortable.

All is yours already.

Don’t search any further.

Don’t go into the inextricable jungle looking for the elephant

Who is already at home.

Nothing to do.

Nothing to force, nothing to want.

And everything happens by itself.

— Venerable Lama Gentun Rinpoche

 

Maria Victoria Rufino is an artist, writer and businesswoman. She is president and executive producer of Maverick Productions.

mavrufino@gmail.com

Time to end troll armies

Is there anything more pernicious than the online troll? Angry, vulgar, and common. What should have been a vehicle for people coming closer together and promoting better understanding has been hijacked by a bitter few intently spewing their hatred on others.

According to a 2014 Pew survey, 40% of online users have experienced being the subject of online harassment; 65% of young adults, 18-29 years of age, have been victimized by trolling, with women in particular subjected to stalking (26%) or sexual harassment (25%).

Studies have been made on the psychology of trolls. Australia’s Federation University lecturer Evita March tells us that “trolls tend to be male, show higher levels of psychopathy traits — low levels of empathy, guilt and responsibility for their actions — and higher levels of sadism traits, the enjoyment of causing others physical and psychological pain.”

March recommends, for individuals targeted by trolls, to simply ignore them: “If the troll knows they have succeeded in disrupting the social environment in some way, this will reinforce their behavior.”

Nevertheless, having said that, governments may need to come in and help stamp out trolls.

There are laws, of course, for these types of people. Cyberbullying, libel, and measures against misinformation are aplenty. The UK’s Crown Prosecution Service, for example, has issued rules designed to criminalize trolling.

For the Philippines, there is the Cyber Bullying Act, RA 10627, which covers “any severe or repeated use by one or more students of a written, verbal or electronic expression, or a physical act or gesture, or any combination thereof, directed at another student that has the effect of actually causing or placing the latter in reasonable fear of physical or emotional harm or damage to his property; creating a hostile environment at school for the other student; infringing on the rights of the other student at school; or materially and substantially disrupting the education process or the orderly operation of a school.”

The problem with that law is it limits protection only to students, while at the same time throwing responsibility to the schools, and with merely a passing referral to existing penal laws, presumably the Cybercrime Prevention Act (RA 10175) and the Revised Penal Code.

Sadly, actions against trolling have been hindered by some raising fears that doing so may violate freedom of speech or other rights. But such arguments are misguided.

Firstly, the Supreme Court has long been consistently clear that certain speech can and should be regulated. Child pornography is one, falsely shouting “fire” in a crowded theater is another. There have been various standards laid down by the Supreme Court to determine if certain speech should be silenced: balancing of interests, clear and present danger, and the balancing of interests test.

There are, relatively recently, laws against joking about bombs at airports or spreading disinformation about the coronavirus.

It is time indeed for Congress to take a serious look into the matter and provide legislation criminalizing trolls. In this regard, two things need to be looked at: the individual troll and that of troll armies.

As mentioned above, the Cyber Bullying Act needs to be expanded to protect every innocent person. Teachers, professionals, businessmen, writers — they all need to be shielded from trolls. And the laws should have sufficient teeth to enable effective prosecution and imposition of the necessary punishment against individual trolls.

On the other hand, troll armies (which accessnow.org defines as “a group of people assume false identities in order to participate in internet forums and social media to send — or suppress — a specific message”) are even more malignantly harmful, endangering not only an individual’s wellbeing but profoundly to society itself.

The fact that troll armies are primarily organized to advance particular politicians’ interests and policies, while demonizing opposing ideas and harassing those they disagree with, makes inutile the very concept of free speech.

To allow them to hide behind the very right they are corrupting, while at the same time denying that right to others, is utterly ludicrous.

An avenue worth exploring is prosecution based on election law violations, particularly those requiring supporters or donors that engaged in election advertising (which troll armies are perverse versions of) to be named, identified, and reported.

Finally, along the same logical lines providing Constitutional rationale for legislation sanctioning conspiracies to commit sedition, rebellion, and terrorism, or business officials for their individual or their corporation’s illegal acts, Congress would be completely within its mandate to enact laws criminalizing and putting to jail:

• those organizing and paying trolls to bully, ridicule, or silence a person, whether public or private;

• organizing and paying trolls to engage in “virtual mobbing” whereby groups of trolls comment or contact a person, either using harmful or supposedly neutral language, designed to harass or silence that person; and

• individuals that received money to predatorily troll another person as described above.

Trolls and troll armies have no place in a decent democratic society.

 

Jemy Gatdula is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constitutional philosophy and jurisprudence.

jemygatdula@yahoo.com

www.jemygatdula.blogspot.com

facebook.com/jemy.gatdula

Twitter @jemygatdula

Endless first wave: How Indonesia failed to control coronavirus

JAKARTA/SYDNEY — Only last week Luhut Pandjaitan, Indonesia’s maritime minister and close confidant of the country’s president, touted herbal mangosteen juice as a coronavirus remedy.

His suggestion was the latest in a string of unorthodox treatments put forward by the president’s cabinet over the past six months, ranging from prayer to rice wrapped in banana leaf to eucalyptus necklaces.

The remedies reflect the unscientific approach to battling the coronavirus in the world’s fourth-most populous country, where the rate of testing is among the world’s lowest, contact tracing is minimal, and authorities have resisted lockdowns even as infections spiked.

Indonesia has officially reported 6,346 deaths from COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019), the disease caused by the new coronavirus, the highest overall toll in Southeast Asia. Including people who died with acute COVID-19 symptoms but were not tested, the death toll is three times higher.

Indonesia shows no signs of containing the virus. It now has the fastest infection spread in East Asia, with 17% of people tested turning out positive, rising close to 25% outside the capital, Jakarta. Figures above 5% mean an outbreak is not under control, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

“This virus has already spread all over Indonesia. What we are doing is basically herd immunity,” said Prijo Sidipratomo, dean of the Faculty of Medicine at the National Veterans Development University in Jakarta. “So, we should just dig many, many graves.” Herd immunity describes a scenario where a large proportion of the population contracts the virus and then widespread immunity stops the disease from spreading.

Government Spokesman Wiku Adisasmito did not respond to detailed questions from Reuters. He said the number of infections was “a warning for Indonesia to continuously improve its handling effort,” and that positive cases per capita in Indonesia were lower than most countries. President Joko Widodo’s office did not respond to questions sent by Reuters.

To be sure, Indonesia’s confirmed 144,945 infections out of a population of 270 million are much less than the millions reported in the United States, Brazil and India, and below the neighboring Philippines, which has less than half Indonesia’s population. But the true scale of Indonesia’s outbreak may still be hidden: India and the Philippines are testing four times more per capita, while the United States is testing 30 times more.

Statistics from Our World in Data, a nonprofit research project based at the University of Oxford, show Indonesia ranked 83rd out of 86 countries surveyed for overall tests per capita.

“Our concern is that we have not reached the peak yet, that the peak may come around October and may not finish this year,” said Iwan Ariawan, an epidemiologist from the University of Indonesia. “Right now we can’t say it is under control.”

‘PURE NONSENSE’
At the outset of the pandemic, Indonesia’s government was slow to respond and reluctant to reveal what it knew to the public, according to more than 20 government officials, test laboratory managers and public health experts who spoke to Reuters.

Despite surging cases in neighboring countries and having 3,000 polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test kits — the WHO-approved test for detecting the coronavirus — ready by early February, the government said fewer than 160 tests were conducted by March 2.

On March 13, Mr. Widodo said the government was withholding information so as not to “stir panic.” During the first two weeks of March, the government concealed at least half of the daily infections it was aware of, two people with access to the data told Reuters. The two people said they were later restricted from seeing the raw data.

A call in March by Mr. Widodo for a massive expansion of rapid diagnostic testing may have undermined the country’s testing regime, according to Alvin Lie, a commissioner in the office of the Indonesian Ombudsman, an official government watchdog.

Scientific studies have shown rapid tests, which test blood samples for antibodies, were found to be far less accurate than the PCR method, which tests swabs from the nose or throat for genetic material. Mr. Widodo’s push to use a less reliable test diverted resources away from PCR tests, three lab managers told Reuters.

Mr. Lie told Reuters that importers of the rapid tests, including large state-owned enterprises and private companies, made “huge profits” by charging consumers up to 1 million rupiah ($68), even though each test costs only 50,000 rupiah ($3.50).

By mid-April, provincial governments said rapid testing in the provinces in West Java, Bali and Yogyakarta produced hundreds of false negatives and false positives.

But the tests continued to be widely used and it took until July for imports of rapid tests to be halted and for the government to introduce a price cap of 150,000 rupiah ($10). In July, Indonesia also formally advised provincial governments and others not to use rapid testing for diagnostic purposes in their updated guidelines for COVID-19 prevention and control.

But Mr. Lie said there is a huge stockpile and rapid tests are still being broadly deployed, including for screening office workers and travelers to allow them to move freely for 14 days.

“That is like saying for the next 14 days after the rapid test they are free from the virus. That’s pure nonsense. All it indicates, and not very accurately, is they were free from the virus when the sample was taken,” said Mr. Lie.

Mr. Adisasmito declined to comment on whether the president’s call for rapid testing undermined its overall testing efforts. He did acknowledge the inaccuracies of rapid testing but said it was still useful in some situations where the capacity to use PCR tests is limited, including screening travelers. He did not directly answer questions about companies making large profits from tests.

The central government does not disclose the level of national rapid testing. But data from West Java, Indonesia’s largest province with 50 million people, shows that it has conducted 50% more rapid tests than PCR tests.

Government officials say 269 labs with PCR machines are now operating. However, the labs are increasingly unable to meet demand as infections rise. The number of suspected cases — those with COVID-19 symptoms who have not been tested — has doubled to 79,000 in the past month, according to government data.

Part of the problem is that lab capacity is far from being fully utilized, according to four health officials. One senior health ministry official, Achmad Yurianto, told Reuters Indonesia was able to test 30,000 people per day, more than twice the daily average of 12,650 people tested over the past month.

Five lab managers and consultants contacted by Reuters said the failure to use the country’s testing capacity was due to government mismanagement that had led to shortages of staff and reagents, chemicals needed for the tests.

Mr. Adisasmito did not respond to questions about the government’s management of testing. Last week, explaining the shortfall in testing, Mr. Yurianto said labs did not have enough time to check all specimens, with some labs working limited days and hours.

MINIMAL CONTACT TRACING
Widespread PCR testing and quick results are essential for tracing the contacts of those infected by the coronavirus. According to national guidelines released by Indonesia’s health ministry on July 13, contact tracing is “the main key in breaking the COVID-19 transmission chain.”

Reuters spoke to 12 health workers across Indonesia who described the country’s contact tracing effort as bungled and ineffective.

Rahmat Januar Nor, a health official in the delta city of Banjarmasin in Indonesian Borneo, said information about new coronavirus cases often came into his office in varying states of disorder, with incomplete names, inactive phone numbers or outdated addresses for patients and their contacts, problems seen by healthcare workers across the country.

“We asked the village leaders for help,” Nor told Reuters. “But in the end we didn’t find them (the contacts) most of the time.”

When they did reach contacts, many refused to be tested, fearful they would lose their jobs or be ostracized in the community, Nor and other health officials said.

Unpublished data from the government COVID-19 task force, reviewed by Reuters, shows only 53.7% of people identified as confirmed or suspected carriers of the disease were subjected to contact tracing by June 6.

Mr. Adisasmito did not provide more recent contract tracing data but acknowledged it “remains low” and said the government aimed to track 30 people per positive case. That is still low compared to other Asian countries. South Korea said in May it traced and tested almost 8,000 people after a man with the virus visited a nightclub.

According to five people familiar with the matter, the WHO advised Indonesian authorities that contact tracing should involve at least 20 people tracked per confirmed and suspected case. But Indonesia is only averaging about two traced contacts per case, according to provincial officials and data reviewed by Reuters.

In Jakarta, where the epidemic first took hold in the country, the data shows fewer than two contacts traced, on average, for each confirmed and suspected case in July.

In East Java, another hot spot, tracing rates are 2.8 contacts per each confirmed and suspected patient, according to researchers from Airlangga University.

A WHO spokesperson said Indonesia began following its contact tracing recommendations in mid-July.

‘ALWAYS ON THE FIRST WAVE’
Indonesia’s decision to reject full lockdowns was driven by economic and security concerns, said government advisers.

Instead, it has urged Indonesians to wear masks, wash their hands and practise social distancing while working, traveling and socializing.

“The argument was that we could not (afford it),” Soewarta Kosen, a health economist who consulted the government on its coronavirus response, told Reuters. “We were afraid that there would be social unrest.”

Mr. Widodo’s emphasis on the economy is popular, polling shows. The Indonesian economy shrank only 5.3% in the second quarter of 2020, much less than many other regional economies. But epidemiologists say they fear the decision will cost Indonesia more in the long term, especially as its health system is poorly equipped to cope if positive cases continue to surge.

Dr. Bambang Pujo, an avid runner and anesthetist at the main COVID-19 referral hospital in Indonesia’s second-largest city of Surabaya, said mortality rates in his ward are between 50% and 80%, and there are not enough beds.

“Ten hours inside a hazmat suit is like running a marathon twice,” he said, describing the long hours he spends in protective gear inside the intensive care unit. “Imagine how we feel. It is like playing God. We hope that we don’t make mistakes and, if we do, we are forgiven.”

Indonesia has only 2.5 intensive care beds per 100,000 people, according to the country’s national disaster agency, which leads the COVID-19 task force. That compares to 6.9 per 100,000 people in India, according to an April report from Princeton University. Mr. Adisasmito said the health care system is being continuously improved.

“We must know that our infrastructure is not ready for a pandemic like this,” said Mr. Pujo. “Other countries have heard of second waves. We’re always on the first wave.” — Reuters

Kamala Harris accepts US vice-presidential nod

WASHINGTON — US Senator Kamala Harris accepted the Democratic nomination for vice-president on Wednesday, imploring the country to elect Joe Biden in November and accusing President Donald Trump of failed leadership that had cost lives and livelihoods during a pandemic.

Making history as the first Black woman and Asian-American on a major US presidential ticket, Ms. Harris made a direct appeal to Black Americans and other crucial constituencies that Democrats need in the Nov. 3 election.

“The constant chaos leaves us adrift, the incompetence makes us feel afraid, the callousness makes us feel alone. It’s a lot,” she said, speaking from an events center in Mr. Biden’s hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, that was largely empty because of the coronavirus outbreak.

“We must elect a president… who will bring all of us together — Black, White, Latino, Asian, Indigenous — to achieve the future we collectively want. We must elect Joe Biden,” Ms. Harris said.

On the third night of a four-night convention that has featured a crush of women headliners, moderators and speakers, Ms. Harris pressed the case against Mr. Trump, saying his divisive leadership had brought the country to an “inflection point.”

Former US President Barack Obama, speaking just before Ms. Harris, also delivered a sharp rebuke of his Republican successor, saying Mr. Trump had used the power of his office only to “help himself and his friends.”

Mr. Obama, whose vice-president was Mr. Biden from 2009-2017, said he had hoped that Mr. Trump would take the job seriously, come to feel the weight of the office, and discover a reverence for American democracy.

“For close to four years now he has shown no interest in putting in the work… no interest in treating the presidency as anything but one more reality show that he can use to get the attention he craves,” Mr. Obama said, in unusually sharp criticism by a former president of a sitting president.

In a speech from the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia, Mr. Obama warned Mr. Trump and Republicans were trying to make it harder for Americans to vote and called Mr. Trump’s leadership a threat to democracy.

“We can’t let that happen. Do not let them take away your power. Don’t let them take away your democracy. Make a plan right now for how you’re going to get involved and vote. Do it as early as you can and tell your family and friends how they can vote too,” Mr. Obama said.

Democrats have been alarmed by Mr. Trump’s frequent criticism of mail-in voting, and by cost-cutting changes at the US Postal Service instituted by Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a Trump supporter, that could delay mail during the election crunch. Mr. DeJoy said recently he would delay those changes until after the election.

Former first lady and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the 2016 Democratic presidential nominee who lost to Mr. Trump, told the convention she constantly hears from voters who regret backing Mr. Trump or not voting at all.

“This can’t be another woulda coulda shoulda election,” Ms. Clinton said. “No matter what, vote. Vote like our lives and livelihoods are on the line, because they are.”

Ms. Clinton, who won the popular vote against Mr. Trump but lost in the Electoral College, said Mr. Biden needs to win overwhelmingly, warning he could win the popular vote but still lose the White House.

“Joe and Kamala can win by 3 million votes and still lose,” Ms. Clinton said. “Take it from me. So we need numbers overwhelming so Trump can’t sneak or steal his way to victory.”

Mr. Biden leads Mr. Trump in opinion polls, bolstered by a big lead among women voters. Throughout the convention, Democrats have appealed directly to those women voters, highlighting Mr. Biden’s co-sponsorship of the landmark Violence Against Woman Act of 1994 and his proposals to bolster childcare and protect family healthcare provisions.

Democrats also broadcast videos highlighting Mr. Trump’s crackdown on immigration, opposition to gun restrictions and his decision to pull out of the Paris climate accord. — Reuters

Senior citizen discounts apply for online and proxy transactions — DTI

Consumers must note, however, that different discounts apply for different kinds of goods.

By Mariel Alison L. Aguinaldo

Senior citizen discounts are also honored in online and proxy transactions, reminded the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) during a consumer care session held on August 20.

Online transactions are purchases done on an online platform, including food and grocery delivery applications. Proxy transactions, on the other hand, are purchases done on behalf of a senior citizen, especially when the latter is unable to leave the house.

For online purchases, the consumer must inform the seller about the discount at the very start of the transaction. This is so the seller can apply the discount before the final payment is settled. For validation, the consumer must be ready to present the identification card issued by the Office of the Senior Citizens Affairs (OSCA).

In the case of proxy transactions, the representative must bring their own valid government identification document, the senior citizen’s OSCA-issued identification card, and an authorization letter by the senior citizen. While there is no mandated format for the latter, the DTI recommends including the senior citizen’s name, address, OSCA-issued identification card number, and signature.  

Consumers must note, however, that different discounts apply for different kinds of goods.

Basic needs and prime commodities, which include the likes of rice and fresh and processed meat products, entail a 5% discount without exemption from the value-added tax (VAT). Senior citizens may avail of this discount in supermarkets, grocery stores, and convenience stores but not in wet markets, cooperative stores, and other kinds of small stores and stalls.

Goods and services under the Expanded Senior Citizens Act of 2010 entail a 20% discount with VAT exemption. These include medical and dental services, domestic transportation, dining, and recreation.

In the event that a seller is offering a promotional discount, a senior citizen can only avail of whichever is higher. For example, if the price of a product is discounted by 50%, the senior citizen can of avail of that, and only that; their 5% or 20% senior citizen discount privilege no longer applies.

Should an establishment refuse to acknowledge the senior citizen’s discount, the consumer may file a complaint directly to the OSCA office where the establishment is located. These offices can usually be found at the city hall. 

Online factory outlet to open with a 3-day sale

Factory Outlet Prices with Mall Pick-up Convenience

Bargain hunters who frequent factory outlets will soon have a digital go-to place to hunt for the best deals for some of the top brands in the country.

The new Online Store is set to open with a 3-Day SALE with up to 60% Off on Aug. 22-24, 2020. You need to sign-up with just your email to get an exclusive invite. Click the link below:

https://signup.elfashion.com.ph/?utm_source=businessworld.com.ph&utm_medium=news&utm_campaign=online-factory-outlet

What to expect:
Factory Outlet Prices with up to 60% Off during the 3-Day Sale. There are limited items only so reservation is a must.

Doncic, Dallas Mavericks pull level with LA Clippers

LUKA DONCIC had 28 points, eight rebounds and seven assists, and the Dallas Mavericks earned a 127-114 victory over the Los Angeles Clippers on Wednesday near Orlando to even their opening-round Western Conference playoff series at one win apiece.

Kristaps Porzingis added 23 points and seven rebounds, Tim Hardaway, Jr. scored 17 points, and Trey Burke finished with 16 points as the Mavericks leveled the best-of-seven series.

Seth Curry chipped in 15 points and Boban Marjanovic, a former Clipper, hit six of eight shots on his way to 13 points. Marjanovic added nine rebounds.

Kawhi Leonard had 35 points and 10 rebounds for the Clippers. Lou Williams contributed 23 points, while Paul George, who was limited by foul trouble, had 14 points and 10 boards. Marcus Morris Sr. had 14 points and eight rebounds.

Game 3 is Friday.

The Clippers trailed by 18 points early in the fourth quarter. They sliced the lead to 10 late in the game but got no closer.

Doncic picked up his fifth foul with 11:37 left and sat for more than seven minutes, but the Mavericks didn’t miss a beat. They boosted their lead to 108-90 after a bucket by Burke at 8:53 before hanging on for the win.

After trailing by eight in the third, Montrezl Harrell’s basket helped the Clippers close the gap to 85-83 with 2:28 left in the third. But a 13-2 surge to end the quarter after a layup by Burke put the Mavericks up 98-85.

The Mavericks bolted to a 15-2 advantage to open the game. However, by the end of the quarter, Los Angeles cut the deficit to 29-25.

But the Mavericks increased the margin to 44-27 after Doncic found Marjanovic for a dunk with 7:46 remaining in the second.

The Clippers rallied again. Two free throws by Williams capped a 21-8 run and pulled them within 52-48 with 3:08 left in the quarter.

Dallas led 61-56 at the break.

Clippers guard Patrick Beverley (strained calf) missed the contest.

RAPTORS 104-NETS 99
Norman Powell scored 12 of his 24 points in the fourth quarter, Fred VanVleet had 24 points and 10 assists and Toronto rallied to defeat Brooklyn to grab a 2-0 lead in the first-round series.

The Raptors, who raced to a 33-point first-half lead in Monday’s win, fell behind by 14 in the first quarter of Game 2 in the best-of-seven Eastern Conference clash.

The Nets still led by six entering the fourth quarter, but the defending NBA champion Raptors opened the period with a 19-5 run to lead 93-85 with 6:21 remaining.

JAZZ 124-NUGGETS 105
Donovan Mitchell scored 30 points and Jordan Clarkson added 26 to help Utah run away with a victory the Denver in Game 2 of their first-round Western Conference playoff series.

Mitchell also dished out eight assists to help the Jazz even the series at 1-1. Utah finished with 32 assists on 45 baskets and shot 20 of 44 (45.5%) from the 3-point arc. Royce O’Neale chipped in a career-high eight assists to help fuel the offense. The Jazz turned the ball over only eight times.

Nikola Jokic scored 28 points, grabbed 11 rebounds and dished out six assists to lead Denver. Michael Porter Jr. added 28 points for the Nuggets, who trailed the entire second half.

CELTICS 128-76ERS 101
Boston recorded a second straight comfortable win to begin its playoff series against Philadelphia, getting 33 points from Jayson Tatum for a 2-0 series lead.

Equaling the most 3-pointers in their heralded postseason history, the Eastern Conference’s third seed outscored the 76ers 57-15 from beyond the arc to successfully follow up on a 109-101 win in the opener.

Kemba Walker added 22 points and Jaylen Brown 20 for the Celtics, who had lost three of four to the 76ers in the regular season. Joel Embiid led all scorers with 34 points for the 76ers. — Reuters

Long time coming for Striegl to fight in the UFC

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

AFTER nearly a decade of angling to showcase his wares in the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), Filipino mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter Mark Striegl finally gets to do so this weekend.

It is the next level for the 32-year-old, whose career has seen him fight in different promotions in this part of the world, battled some of the tough fighters along the way and succeeded.

Baguio-based Striegl (18-2) is set to face fellow UFC debutant Timur Valiev (16-2) of Russia in a bantamweight clash at “UFC Fight Night” on Aug. 23 (Manila time) at the UFC APEX in Las Vegas.

The fight was made possible through Mr. Striegl’s representatives in the United States who gave him a call during this time of the coronavirus pandemic.

Seeing it as a great opportunity to finally fulfil his MMA dreams, Mr. Striegl, the reigning Universal Reality Combat Championship (URCC) featherweight champion, decided to pack his bags for the US.

For local MMA analyst Nissi Icasiano, to see Mr. Striegl fight in the UFC is long overdue considering the kind of journey that the fighter has had in the sport.

The analyst admits that while Mr. Striegl is no longer young compared to most UFC-debuting fighters, still it could work to his advantage, enabling him perhaps to do better than the other fighters from here who competed in the UFC.

“At 32 years old, he may not be as young as the first six homegrown Filipinos who represented flag and country in the UFC a few years ago, but the good takeaway here is that Striegl is entering his UFC debut as a battle-tested veteran,” said Mr. Icasiano when sought for his thoughts by BusinessWorld.

“He has been in different types of fights and has faced an array of opponents under several organizations in Asia, which is quite vital because the UFC is the ultimate proving ground of the sport,” he added.

However, Mr. Icasiano, also a host for Tiebreaker Vods’ The Hit List podcast, shared some concerns, particularly in Mr. Striegl fighting at bantamweight.

“He will drop down to 135 pounds. The last time he competed as a bantamweight was in 2015. It’s no secret that he has been struggling to make weight as a featherweight, especially in his fight against Andrew Benibe in the URCC. So it’s intriguing as to how he will drop down to 135 pounds for this fight, especially since he has only been given nearly seven weeks to prepare and cut weight without [coach] George Castro in his corner,” he said.

Considering where Mr. Striegl is now in his career, Mr. Icasiano said the Valiev fight is crucial, especially if he wants to stay in the UFC, just as he cautioned that against the Russian he is in for a solid battle.

“Mark is no longer in his 20s. Every fight is a must win for Striegl in order to prove that the UFC didn’t make a wrong investment on a fighter who’s in his early 30s,” the analyst said.

“To tell you honestly, Mark Striegl is not having a tune-up fight or a giveaway opponent in his UFC debut. Valiev is a well-rounded fighter. As expected from a Dagestani fighter, grappling is his strong suit. But he is comfortable in swapping strikes in the standup. Though most of his wins are won by decision, he is the type of a fighter who will make it a point to beat you in every facet of the game,” he added.

But despite that challenge, the Filipino fighter has what it takes to overcome it, Mr. Icasiano said.

“Being the bigger man, having the fight on the mat is his best bet. Besides, it is Mark’s bread-and-butter. I think if Mark can secure better positions, fish some submissions, and sustain his energy against a workhorse like Valieve for three rounds, the scorecards will be in his favor.”

UFC Fight Night will be headlined by the bantamweight clash between Pedro Munhoz and Frankie Edgar.

Red Bull unveils skateboarding DIY program to give back to local skate community

IN LINE with its mission of shoring up the growth of skateboarding in the Philippines, Red Bull recently launched a program designed to give back to the local skate community.

Red Bull DIY is a program designed to help develop and promote do-it-yourself skate spots around the country. It seeks to support both beginner and experienced Filipino skateboarders by sponsoring their skatepark projects with the end view of enabling them to pursue their talents and showcase their skills in a Team Competition and Solo Competition.

For the Team Competition, participating skate crews and skate shops must submit their skatepark designs for a DIY setup from Aug. 17 to Aug. 23.

Fifteen team proposals will be selected and given a budget that must be used to begin construction of their setup. Participating teams are given 13 days to build their setups and upload a 60-second video entry online showcasing their skateboard tricks executed on their finished DIY skate spots.

The top five teams, to be selected by Asian and Southeast Asian Games gold medallist Margielyn Didal, will receive additional funding to help realize their DIY skate spot’s potential. The final placements will be determined and announced by Thrasher Magazine’s 2017 Skater of the Year Jamie Foy.

The Solo Competition, Red Bull said, will be announced shortly after the final placements of the Team Competition are announced. The sport made its SEA Games debut in 2019 and did well for the Philippines, garnering 11 medals, six of which were gold.

To register for the Red Bull DIY program, log on to win.gs/redbulldiyph. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Gnabry double sends dominant Bayern into Champions League final

LISBON — Bayern Munich powered into the Champions League final, where they will face Paris St. Germain (PSG), as two goals from Serge Gnabry led them to an emphatic 3-0 win over Olympique Lyonnais on Wednesday.

Bayern will bid for their sixth European Cup triumph when they come up against Neymar and Kylian Mbappe on Sunday and after convincingly beating Chelsea, Barcelona and now Lyon, Hansi Flick’s side will surely start as favorites.

The Germans are unbeaten in 2020, winning 24 of 25 matches in all competitions and they have won every Champions League game this season.

No team has ever won the Champions League with a 100% record but while Bayern will fancy their chances, PSG’s powerful attack should make for an entertaining contest.

“Paris are a good team. For now we celebrate a little bit but afterwards we focus on the next game,” said Bayern’s Canadian left back Alphonso Davies.

“It’s going to be a good game, there’s going to be goals in it. This is what you dream of as a footballer — playing against the best in Europe. And we’re able to do that, I’m excited,” he added.

PSG will take hope from the early chances that Lyon created — Memphis Depay found space behind the Bayern defence but, forced wide, he could only shoot into the side-netting.

Lyon, who upset Juventus and Manchester City in the previous rounds, had warmed up on the field before the game with rarely-seen intensity and it showed as they took the game to Bayern and they went close again in the 17th minute.

Powerful striker Karl Toko Ekambi found space in the Bayern box and should have done better after his first shot was blocked and his follow-up effort struck the post.

But moments later Bayern grabbed the lead — a clever ball from Joshua Kimmich found Gnabry who danced in from the right and unleashed an unstoppable shot, from over 20 metres out, into the top corner.

SNAP-SHOT
Gnabry went close again with a snap-shot that Lyon keeper Anthony Lopes did well to keep out as Bayern pushed hard for a second.

It came in the 33rd minute — and was started and finished by Gnabry.

The former Arsenal midfielder fed Ivan Perisic on the left and the Croatian’s low cross found Robert Lewandowski at the back post.

His weak shot was saved by Lopes, only for the alert Gnabry to pounce and convert his ninth goal in nine Champions League games.

Lewandowski, looking well below his usual levels of sharpness, had another good chance after the interval, but he again made it too easy for Lopes, leaving Lyon still with hope.

Moussa Dembele, the two-goal hero in the quarter-final win over Manchester City, came on for Depay in the 58th minute and added much-needed life to the Lyon attack.

But once again, when the chance came for the French side, they failed to make the most of it — Houssem Aouar finding Ekambi in the box but the Cameroonian’s finish was straight at Manuel Neuer.

Bayern lacked the intensity of their first-half display but they made sure of the win in the 88th minute when Lewandowski rose to head home a Kimmich cross from a free kick for his 15th Champions League goal this season.

Lewandowski has scored in nine straight UEFA Champions League matches – only Cristiano Ronaldo (11) has a longer streak — and has notched 55 goals in all competitions this season.

Lyon’s disappointment will be stronger given that their seventh-place finish in the French league means they will not be competing in European football next season.

“We knew that we were up against a better team and we stuck to our game plan but to beat such a team, you need to score when you have the chance,” said Lyon sports director Juninho.

“Maybe it would have been different if we had converted our early chances.” — Reuters

ONIC PH ready to plunge into action at MPL-PH

ESPORTS team ONIC Philippines is all set to see action when the sixth season of Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Professional League-Philippines (MPL-PH) unfurls on Friday.

Backed now by microfinancial services company Cebuana Lhuillier, the team hopes to continue making waves in the esports scene.

The runner-up in the last two seasons of the MPL-PH, ONIC PH has been showing fine form in the lead-up, including winning the championship at the Mytel Myanmar COVID-19 Charity Tournament organized by Moonton for Southeast Asia in April.

It is something the team hopes to maintain in the latest season of the MPL-PH.

“We are hungry. ONIC PH made it close to the top spot in the Philippines twice in a row now. Instead of being satisfied with getting first runner-up twice, which is an amazing accomplishment given the more legacy teams we are up against; we have been practicing harder than ever,” said ONIC PH Head of Business Development Louie Cacho in a statement.

Adding, “We also made different changes to our game play, team strategy, and the organization itself, and we are looking forward to seeing how these changes will pay off in the upcoming Season 6.”

The team said with Cebuana Lhuillier on board and backing it up, it is looking at achieving greater heights as an organization while also doing its part in furthering the growth of the sport in the country.

For Cebuana Lhuillier, the opportunity to be part of ONIC PH is something it welcomes and a direction it is excited to explore.

“Esports is a fast-growing industry and it is definitely something worth exploring as the industry is getting larger by the minute. Cebuana Lhuillier is here to support the growth of the industry and help take it to new heights,” said Cebuana Lhuillier President and CEO Jean Henri Lhuillier.

He was seconded by Senior Executive Vice-President Philippe Andre Lhuillier, who said, “This strategic partnership with ONIC PH is a testament to our commitment to grow and dominate the digital space, this is a great step forward as our services cater to a more digitized market. We are also watching out for emerging technologies in various similar industries.”

In the tournament, ONIC PH is joined by Aura-PH, BREN Esports, Execration, Omega PH Esports, Blacklist International, BSB, Blu Fire, Cignal Ultra and NXP Solid.

The teams were divided into two groups of five, with Group A having Aura-PH, Execration, Blacklist International, Blue Fire and NXP Solid while Group B has Onic-PH, BREN Esports, Omega PH Esports, BSB and Cignal Ultra.

The regular season will run every weekend starting from Aug. 21 until Oct. 18.

Aura-PH, formerly known as Sunsparks, is the defending champion.

Champion of the tournament will receive $25,000 while the second place will get $13,000 and third place $7,000. Fourth place will get $3,000 and fifth-eighth place $1,500 each.

To adapt with the situation with the coronavirus pandemic, MPL-PH Season 6 will be played online to ensure the safety and health of the teams, staff, partners and fans.

All matches will be streamed live via its official social media channels (Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Facebook, Mobile Legends Esports Facebook, Mobile Legends: Bang Bang YouTube). – Michael Angelo S. Murillo

United City expresses readiness to compete at the AFC Cup

SET to take the place of Ceres-Negros FC at the AFC Cup, United City Football Club said it is ready to pick up where its predecessor left off and compete despite the challenges presented by the coronavirus pandemic.

Took over from Ceres in the Philippines Football League (PFL) after the “Busmen” decided to fold up, United City is now working at maintaining the club’s competitiveness both in the PFL and the AFC Cup.

The AFC Cup is Asia’s secondary club football tournament organized by the Asian Football Confederation where Ceres was a steady participant in the last few years as champion of the PFL.

Its resumption was delayed by the pandemic but it is angling to return on Sept. 23.

Since assuming the spot of Ceres in the PFL, United City is now tasked to continue what the Busmen had done in the competition this year, something the team said it is ready to take on.

To help it in its quest, the club made sure to keep the core of Ceres intact, signing staples like Stephan Schrock, Bienvenido Maranon, OJ Porteria, Dennis Villanueva, Sean Kane, Takashi Odawara, Hikaru Minegishi, Manny and Mike Ott.

It was not able to secure the return of coach Risto Vidakovic but it is hopeful that its new coach, to be named anytime this week, would be able to do the same kind of job that the Serbian coach did.

Given the limitations presented by the pandemic, particularly in conducting training, United City co-founder Eric Gottschalk admits some challenges have to be dealt with. But, nonetheless, they are determined to work their way through them.

“We are stuck mostly at home and we cannot train yet. But we have come up with training programs for our players. For the AFC Cup, we are looking at two scenarios. If it pushes through on Sept. 23 and we cannot train yet we may bring the players outside of the country to train. If not we will just wait from the go-signal to resume training here,” said Mr. Gottschalk in an online press conference on Wednesday.

He shared that they are excited to get back on the field and are bullish of their chances.

“Obviously this is a new situation for everybody. We haven’t played football for months and there is excitement. The players want to get back on the pitch and play regardless if it’s on the PFL level or AFC Cup level,” said the United City official.

“The good thing is all the clubs are in a similar situation with the pandemic. Nobody really has had a head start in terms of preparation. It’s a level playing level. It’s going to be interesting how the players will react,” he added.

When the AFC Cup resumes, United City will be on top of Group H with seven points built on a 2-1-0 record.  Michael Angelo S. Murillo