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Dengue cases, deaths fell amid coronavirus, health authorities say

PHILSTAR

DENGUE cases and deaths have fallen this year amid a coronavirus pandemic, the Department of Health (DoH) said on Thursday, citing the government’s enhanced anti-dengue strategies.

Dengue cases have declined by 56% to 21,478 as of April 17, while deaths fell by 55% to 80, DoH program manager Ailene C. Espiritu told an online news briefing.

“We remain hopeful that a decrease in cases would continue,” she said, citing the need for both control management and prevention activities.

Dengue is a mosquito-borne viral infection found in tropical and sub-tropical climates, mostly in urban and semi-urban areas, according to the World Health Organization. There are four dengue virus types and it is possible to be infected four times.

Ms. Espiritu said there were 216,190 dengue cases and 1,083 deaths in 2019. Cases jumped to 437,563, while deaths hit 1,689 due to a national dengue epidemic the following year. Cases in 2020 decreased by 81% to 83,335, with 324 deaths.

She traced the decline to the lockdown that forced people to stay home, as well as to efforts to destroy mosquito breeding sites, self-protection, early consultation and fogging at dengue hotspots.

People staying home led to better water sanitation and hygienic practices, which also led to a decrease in mosquito breeding grounds, Ms. Espiritu said.

She said the government met its goal of keeping the death rate below 1%, but fell short in cutting the rate by 0.1% annually.

The death rate was 0.5% in 2018, 0.37% in 2019, 0.39% in 2020 and 0.37% in 2021, she said.

She also said Dengue Centers of Excellence were being set up at seven hospitals and would become operational in 2024.

These are Jose B. Lingad Memorial Regional Hospital, National Children’s Hospital, Philippine Children’s Medical Center, San Lazaro Hospital, Southern Philippines Medical Center, University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital and Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Hospital.

“We are capacitating these hospitals to provide optimum patient care,” she said. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Bill on rent subsidy for informal settlers hurdles Senate committee

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

THE SENATE urban planning, housing, and resettlement panel has approved the bill granting rental subsidy to informal settlers affected by the coronavirus pandemic and other calamities.

Senator Francis N. Tolentino, chair of the panel, said in a statement on Thursday the committee approved the separate bills filed by Senators Leila M. de Lima, Ramon B. Revilla, Jr., and Christopher Lawrence T. Go as well as the counterpart House Bill No. 8736 or the Rental Housing Subsidy Program Act.

The House measure was approved last March and was transmitted to the Senate in April.

The committee will form a technical working group to consolidate the measures, he said.

Mr. Tolentino said the subsidy program should go beyond the pandemic as rental and other monthly fees are constant challenges for informal settlers in the capital region Metro Manila and other urban areas.

He also noted that institutionalizing the rental subsidy program “will support short-term housing relief efforts and affordable housing programs for low-income families.”

The proposed law aims to provide a monthly housing subsidy to informal settler families whose scheduled relocation were delayed because of calamities.

The subsidy will be in effect until the affected families are transferred to a formal housing settlement or after five years, whichever comes first.

He noted in the statement that the National Housing Authority is already providing a one-time rental subsidy for qualified informal settler families in Metro Manila who will be relocated to a government housing project in Rizal, Batangas and Laguna. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Romualdez says he is open to running in 2022 polls

PCOO

HOUSE Majority Leader Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez on Thursday said he is open to the possibility of running in the 2022 elections, after President Rodrigo R. Duterte vowed to support him should he decide to run for vice president.

“Currently, I am keeping my options open with regard to the 2022 elections,” Mr. Romualdez said in a statement.

“For sure, the President’s warm support and words of encouragement will weigh heavily on whatever decision I have to make in October 2021.”

Mr. Romualdez said he will ensure the passage of the administration’s priority bills for now.

Mr. Duterte on Wednesday said he would not join the vice presidential race if Mr. Romualdez decides to run for the country’s second highest post, citing a deal between the two of them in 2019, when the lower chamber had to select a new speaker amid a leadership squabble.

Mr. Romualdez was one of the leading contenders for the speakership at that time, but was asked by the President to drop out of the race and become the leader of the House majority instead.

Mr. Romualdez chairs the Lakas–Christian Muslim Democrats, which was the ruling party during the administration of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

The party currently has 48 members in the House, including 22 party-list allies, his staff told BusinessWorld in a Viber message.

Mr. Romualdez is a cousin of former Senator Ferdinand R.  Marcos, Jr., who is rumored to run in next year’s polls.

Presidential spokesman Herminio L. Roque, Jr. earlier said the President “leaves it to God” whether or not he would run for vice president.

In a televised news briefing on Thursday, Mr. Roque said the President “has until October to decide.” — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Appeals court finds cop in Maguindanao massacre guilty, overturns RTC ruling

PHILSTAR

THE COURT of Appeals (CA) has found a police officer involved in the 2009 Maguindanao massacre “guilty beyond reasonable doubt as accessory” in the killing of 57 people, including 32 media practitioners and a politician’s family members.

Overturning the decision of a regional trial court, the appeals court convicted   

Senior Police Officer 2 Badawi Bakal and sentenced him to four years and two months to 10 years in jail for each of the 57 counts of murder.

He is also liable to pay the heirs of the 57 victims for civil indemnity and damages.

In the 35-page decision promulgated on June 14, the Court of Appeals said Mr. Bakal was proven to have knowledge of the crime despite his denial.

The court cited that he threatened a witness and admitted fearing to disclose information on the heinous crime as it “would put him and his family in danger.”

“Being a police officer in the active service, SPO2 Bakal abused his public office when he concealed the identities of the accused; he failed to effect or cause their immediate arrest; and he contributed to the delay in the investigation of the crime,” the court said.

“Further, SPO2 Bakal’s own admission that he would endanger his and his family’s life had he relayed his knowledge about the abduction of the Mangudadatus and their supporters, only leads to the inevitable conclusion that SPO2 Bakal was aware of the existence of the abduction and the massacre,” it added.

The CA also ruled that the Quezon City Regional Trial Court Branch 221, which acquitted Mr. Bakal in Dec. 2019, “committed grave abuse of discretion” that “resulted in a violation of the people’s right to due process” and “amounted to a mistrial.”

It added that the lower court “turned a blind eye to the prosecution’s having clearly demonstrated the existence of evidence beyond reasonable doubt.”

The Maguindanao massacre is considered the worst election-related violence in the country and the deadliest attack on journalists in the world.

The media workers were covering the filing of candidacy for Maguindanao governor by Esmael “Toto” G. Mangudadatu.

Mr. Mangudadatu’s wife, who led other family members in the filing, was among those killed.

Several members of the then ruling Ampatuan clan have been convicted for the massacre. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

Power co-op vows submarine cable to Samal ready by 1st half 2022

THE P1.1-BILLION submarine cable project that is seen to stabilize power supply in Samal is expected to be operational within the first half of next year, according to the island’s city’s electricity distributor.   

Northern Davao Electric Cooperative, Inc. (NORDECO) General Manager Mario Angelo Sotto said the materials for the project have started arriving after delays due to the coronavirus pandemic since last year.

Delivery of materials imported from Europe are “almost 100% complete,” he said in an online briefing on Wednesday.

Foreign experts are also expected to arrive within the year to work with local contractors. The project also covers the installation of substations.   

Mr. Sotto said it will only take three to four months to install the submarine cable, which will have a carrying capacity of 50 megawatts (MW).   

“The submarine cable will give power supply reliability… once it is connected to the (Mindanao main) grid, it will deliver a big supply of electricity to Samal,” he said.

Current infrastructure has a capacity for only 8 MW of supply to the island, which has more than 100 tourist resorts. — Maya M. Padillo   

ASF threat in 6 villages in Iligan City contained 

REUTERS

THE THREAT of African Swine Fever (ASF) outbreaks in six villages in Iligan City in southern Philippines has been contained, according to human and animal nutrition provider ADM Philippines.   

ADM said in a statement that joint efforts with the Philippine College of Swine Practitioners (PCSP) and the city and village officials addressed the threat of the disease in the barangays of Abuno, Dalipuga, Digkilaan, Tipanoy, San Roque, and Pugaan.

“The city has successfully contained the transmission of the ASF virus in the originally-affected barangays, Digkilaan and Pugaan, and maintained control to prevent any new cases. In addition, some affected areas have already started initiating repopulation procedures,” Iligan City Veterinarian Dahlia M. Valera said.   

ADM said about 40,000 pigs being raised in the six barangays are currently being protected by a joint project called ‘Bantay ASF sa Barangay’ (BABay ASF).   

“Every aspect of the project helped control the ASF outbreak in the city such as the biosecurity training equipped barangay personnel with the needed knowledge to supervise local hog raisers’ proper entry and exit. At the same time, the ASF test kits (provided by ADM) helped the city pinpoint potential areas for repopulation and focus on those that needed more attention,” Ms. Valera said.   

She added that some of the affected barangays already started preliminary repopulation measures but said the course of the virus spread makes it too early to determine the projected recovery period of the city’s hog industry.   

Meanwhile, ADM and PCSP said they are looking to assist other areas affected by ASF following the positive outcome in Iligan City.   

“In a span of a few months, we are seeing results leading to repopulation of the city’s hog farms, and it gives us the confidence to launch the project in other provinces in the country,” PSCP BABay ASF project leader Max M. Montenegro said.   

ADM Animal Nutrition Philippines Managing Director Lorenzo Mapua, for his part, said, “We are glad to know that all of our efforts to fight the ASF epidemic are paying off. We will remain committed to protecting the livelihoods of hog farmers until the virus is no more and bring the hog industry back to its full strength.” — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave  

SC employee dismissed for smoking marijuana in Court premises 

THE SUPREME Court (SC) dismissed one of its employees after being proven to have smoked marijuana within the court’s premises.

The employee, who worked under the Property Division, was expelled and all benefits forfeited except accrued leave credits, the High Court said in its resolution dated March 16 and made public on June 8.

The termination was also “with prejudice to reemployment in any branch or instrumentality of the government including government-owned or controlled corporations,” the resolution said.

The dismissed employee was also referred to a drug rehabilitation facility “where he may be able to undertake programs for his rehabilitation at his own expense.”

According to the court’s resolution, several complaints were filed against the worker for smoking within court premises. The “most disturbing report,” the court said, was in Dec. 2020 when other court staff detected marijuana, a prohibited drug under Philippine law.   

The employee tested positive and later admitted to drug use “due to family and marital problems that were compounded by further stress from the ongoing pandemic.”

The court said this case serves as “another reminder to all court personnel whose conduct is expected, at all times, to be characterized by propriety and decorum and above all else, be above suspicion so as to earn and keep the respect of the public for the Judiciary.” — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

Still no consensus on BTA extension after Wednesday meeting at Palace

THERE is no consensus yet on whether the elections for the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao’s (BARMM) parliament members will push through in 2022 or will be postponed by three years, a senator said on Thursday.

Senator Majority Leader Juan Miguel F. Zubiri said BARMM officials led by Chief Minister Al Haj Murad Ebrahim, President Rodrigo R. Duterte, and members of the Senate met on Wednesday night to discuss the measure postponing the first regular elections in the region.

“President Duterte stood largely neutral on the issue and just pointing out the pros and cons of each side,” he told reporters via Viber.

“Unfortunately, there still was no consensus at the end of the meeting and the President directed them all to meet as a Council of Leaders meeting and resolve the issue amongst themselves before having them come back to Malacañang for the final meeting with him on the 24th,” Mr. Zubiri said, adding that hopefully a consensus will be reached by then.

The BARMM parliament is currently composed of the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA) members, who were nominated by various stakeholders and appointed by the President.   

Senator Francis N. Tolentino sponsored to the plenary in May Senate Bill No. 2214, which sought to postpone the 2022 Bangsamoro Government first regular election until 2025 to implement peace-building efforts in the region which was also affected by the pandemic. It is pending on second reading. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Brooke’s Point mayor suspended by Ombudsman over closure of mining operations 

THE OFFICE of the Ombudsman has suspended Mayor Mary Jean D. Feliciano of Brooke’s Point in Palawan after being found guilty of “oppression or grave abuse of authority” on her actions against the operations and mining properties of Ipilan Nickel Corp. (INC).   

Based on the Ombudsman’s consolidated decision dated Feb. 19, 2021, Ms. Feliciano was ordered suspended for one year without pay for taking “undue advantage of her official position.”  

“(It was) substantially proven that Mayor Feliciano had abused her authority in impetuously ordering the closure of INC’s mining operation and the demolition of the structures within its mining site without waiting for the final resolution on the issue of INC’s environmental compliance certificate (ECC),” the decision said.   

INC said in a statement on Thursday that Ms. Feliciano issued a closure order on May 22, 2017, a cease and desist order on July 24, 2017, and a demolition order on Aug. 11, 2017 against the company based on a resolution from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) in 2016 that revoked the miner’s ECC.    

“But the DENR resolution has yet to attain finality at the time pending a decision on INC’s motion for reconsideration, making the ECC valid and subsisting,” INC said.   

“Without authority, Ms. Feliciano led the demolition of gates, fences, staff house, and other structures in the mine site,” the company added.    

The Ombudsman cited in its decision that the DENR released a resolution on June 5, 2020, which reconsidered the cancellation order of INC’s ECC.    

“Mayor Feliciano could not have validly ordered the closure of INC or halted its operations because its ECC still existed pending resolution,” the order said.    

Carlo Matilac, INC project operations head, said the company always conducted its operations in accordance with applicable rules and regulations.   

“We hope this decision will allow us to move towards community development and sustainable growth in Brooke’s Point and nearby communities,” Mr. Matilac said.   

Local media company Palawan News reported that Ms. Feliciano already received information about her suspension but did not provide confirmation, saying that she has yet to receive any official document.    

BusinessWorld sought Ms. Feliciano comment on the Ombudsman’s decision but she has not responded as of deadline time. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave   

Biden talks down Russia in bid to back Putin into a corner

US PRESIDENT Joseph R. Biden and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin — REUTERS

WASHINGTON/GENEVA -— President Joseph R. Biden on his first foreign foray sought to cast Russia not as a direct competitor to the United States but as a bit player in world where Washington is increasingly pre-occupied by China.

Aides said Mr. Biden wanted to send a message that Mr. Putin was isolating himself on the international stage with his actions, ranging from election interference and cyber-attacks against Western nations to his treatment of domestic critics.

But Mr. Biden could struggle in a parallel attempt to stop the rot in US-Russia relations and deter the threat of nuclear conflict while also talking down Russia, some observers said.

“The administration wants to de-escalate tensions. It’s not clear to me that Putin does,” said Tim Morrison, a national security adviser during the Trump administration. “The only cards he has to play are those of the disruptor.”

Officials on both sides had played down the chances of major breakthroughs at the talks, and they were right. None materialized.

But the two leaders pledged to resume work on arms control as well as cyber security and to look for areas of possible cooperation, signs of some hope for a relationship between two countries with little common ground of late.

Ties were already frayed when Mr. Biden, at the start of his administration, repeated his description of Mr. Putin as “a killer.” That deepened a diplomatic rift that saw both countries withdraw their ambassadors from each other’s capital.

Echoing an approach by former President Barack Obama, who called Russia a “regional power” after it annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, Mr. Biden sought to cast Russia not as a direct competitor to the United States.

Speaking after his meeting with Mr. Putin, Mr. Biden said Russia wants “desperately to remain a major power.”

“Russia is in a very, very difficult spot right now. They are being squeezed by China,” Mr. Biden said before boarding his plane out of Geneva, quipping that the Russians “don’t want to be known as, as some critics have said, you know, the Upper Volta with nuclear weapons.” Mr. Biden was referring to the former French West African colony, which changed its name to Burkina Faso.

Mr. Biden also pointed to the troubles of Russia’s economy and called out Mr. Putin on Russia’s detention of two Americans, and threats toward US government-funded Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty.

American businessmen “don’t want to hang out in Moscow,” he said.

Matthew Schmidt, associate professor at the University of New Haven and a specialist on Russian and Eurasian affairs, said Mr. Biden was seeking to undermine Mr. Putin’s importance on the global stage.

“The strategy is very simply to push Putin’s buttons, but with some real facts,” Mr. Schmidt said. “Backlash will happen anyways, regardless.”

Mr. Putin, a former agent in Russia’s KGB security agency, lived through the fall of the Soviet Union, a humiliation for the nation that he has sought to right with increasingly aggressive foreign policy, as seen in the Crimea move and Russian support for separatists in eastern Ukraine.

Mr. Biden arrived at the lakeside villa in Geneva where he met Mr. Putin on Wednesday on the back of meetings of the G7 group of nations and the NATO alliance.

A senior administration official said Mr. Biden’s approach to Russia was more likely to be successful because Mr. Biden met Mr. Putin straight after rallying allies around the principle of upholding a “rules-based international order” at a G7 meeting in Britain and talks with NATO members in Brussels.

“There was strong alignment on the basic proposition that we all need to defend … this order, because the alternative is the law of the jungle and chaos, which is in no one’s interest,” the official said.

At home, Mr. Biden’s Republican opponents quickly criticized Mr. Biden for failing to block a major Russian-backed natural gas pipeline being built in Europe.

US Senator Lindsay Graham, a frequent Republican critic of Mr. Biden, said he was disturbed to hear the president suggest Mr. Putin would be troubled by how other countries view him.

“It is clear to me that Putin could care less about how he’s viewed by others and, quite frankly, would enjoy the reputation of being able to successfully interfere in the internal matters of other countries,” the South Carolina senator said. — Reuters

Australia limits use of AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine to people over 60

REUTERS

SYDNEY/CANBERRA — Australia will recommend only people over 60 receive AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine, the country’s minister for Health Greg Hunt said on Thursday, following a spate of blood clots in those who have received the inoculation.

Australia has administered 3.3 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, and it has been linked to 60 cases of blood clots, the government has said. So far, two people have died, which Mr. Hunt said has driven the policy shift.

“The government places safety above all else,” Mr. Hunt told reporters in Canberra.

“This updated advice received today is based on new evidence demonstrating a higher risk for the very rare (thrombocytopenia syndrome) condition in the 50-59 year-old age group.”

Australia in April moved to limit the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine to people over 50 years old.

Several European Union member states have stopped administering the AstraZeneca vaccine to people below a certain age, usually ranging from 50 to 65, restricting its use to older people, due to very rare cases of blood clotting, mainly among young people.

Mr. Hunt said the recommendation would not delay its inoculation timetable, which has a target of giving at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose to every Australian before the end of 2021.

Australia in April expanded its order of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine to 40 million doses, while it has also ordered 25 million shots from Moderna. Australia’s amended vaccine policy comes as the country’s most populous state battles to contain a cluster of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases.

New South Wales (NSW) said it now recorded four local cases of COVID-19, with the source of the outbreak still unclear.

“At this stage, we are all on high alert,” NSW state Premier Gladys Berejiklian told reporters in Sydney.

A man in his 60s, who works as a driver for international airline crews, was detected with the virus on Wednesday, the state’s first case in more than a month, and his wife has since tested positive. Genetic tests found the man has the Delta virus strain, officials said.

The Delta variant, which has been classified by the World Health Organization (WHO) as among the four COVID-19 variants of concern due to evidence that they spread more easily, likely caused the latest devastating outbreak in India.

Nearly a dozen venues in Sydney including a cinema in a shopping center in the popular tourist spot of Bondi and a supermarket have been listed as virus hotspots.

Australia has successfully suppressed past outbreaks through snap lockdowns, swift contact tracing and tough social distancing rules. It has reported just under 30,300 cases and 910 deaths since the pandemic began. — Reuters

Apple Daily newsroom raided by 500 HK police

HONG KONG — Five hundred Hong Kong police officers sifted through reporters’ computers and notebooks at pro-democracy tabloid Apple Daily on Thursday, the first case in which authorities have cited media articles as potentially violating the national security law.

Around dawn, police arrested five executives of the newspaper, and officers were later seen sitting at computers in the newsroom after entering with a warrant to seize journalistic materials.

The raid is the latest blow to media tycoon Jimmy Lai, the tabloid’s owner and a staunch Beijing critic, whose assets have been seized under the security law and who is serving prison sentences for taking part in illegal assemblies.

Police said the warrant was aimed at gathering evidence, including from reporters’ phones and computers, raising alarm about media freedoms.

It said the tabloid published dozens of reports dating back to 2019 that may have breached the security law, without saying when the most recent articles in question were. The legislation is not retrospective but prosecutors can use actions from before its implementation as evidence.

“The nature of the articles is very simple: inciting, requesting foreign countries to impose sanctions on Hong Kong and the People’s Republic of China. Very straightforward,” senior superintendent Li Kwai-wah told reporters outside the paper’s headquarters.

Mr. Li said police have also frozen HK$18 million ($2.32 million) of assets owned by three companies linked to Apple Daily and that the raid was not targeted at the media industry as a whole.

“This is a blatant attack on the editorial side of Apple Daily,” Mark Simon, an adviser to Mr. Lai who is outside Hong Kong, told Reuters. “They’re arresting the top editorial folks.”

It was the second time police have raided the Apple Daily headquarters; 200 officers went in last year to arrest Mr. Lai on suspicion of colluding with foreign forces.

Mr. Lai has been in detention since December, denied bail under the security law and serving several sentences for taking part in some unauthorized rallies, including during the global financial hub’s mass pro-democracy protests in 2019.

The security law was Beijing’s first major move to set China’s most restive city on an authoritarian path. It punishes anything Beijing deems as subversion, secessionism, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces with up to life in prison.

National security police said in a statement that five directors of a company had been arrested on suspicion of collusion with a foreign country or with external elements. Hong Kong police do not name arrestees.

Apple Daily said editor-in-chief Ryan Law, chief executive officer Cheung Kim-hung, Chief Operating Officer Chow Tat-kuen, Deputy Chief Editor Chan Puiman and Chief Executive Editor Cheung Chi-wai had all been arrested in morning raids.

Pictures published by Apple Daily showed police sitting at reporters’ desks and using their computers. A person streaming a live feed for Apple Daily’s Facebook page said reporters were prevented from accessing certain floors or getting their equipment or notebooks.

Chief editor Mr. Law was seen walking in handcuffs, flanked by police officers. The Apple Daily paper’s general news desk told reporters in a text message seen by Reuters to carry on with their assignments outside the building for the time being.

The move is the latest blow to Apple Daily after authorities last month directed jailed tycoon Mr. Lai’s shares in Next Digital, publisher of the newspaper, to be frozen.

Asked how long he thinks the newspaper can survive, Simon said: “It’s not up to us. It’s up to them. There’s 100 police officers in our newsroom. They decide, not us.”

Apple Daily is an unapologetic tabloid that mixes pro-democracy discourse with celebrity gossip and investigations of those in power and is popular in Hong Kong.

In May, Reuters reported that Hong Kong’s security chief sent letters to Mr. Lai and branches of HSBC and Citibank threatening up to seven years in jail for any dealings with the billionaire’s accounts in the city.

Mr. Lai’s assets were also frozen under the same law. — Reuters

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