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Analysts say civic groups must make gov’t accountable

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter

CIVIL society groups will play a key role in seeking accountability in the government’s pandemic response before President Rodrigo R. Duterte steps down in 2022, political analysts said on Sunday.

Nonstate actors and institutions must evaluate the government’s pandemic efforts, Human Rights and Peoples Empowerment Center Executive Director Bryan E. Gonzales said in a Facebook messenger chat.

“Our social and political movements achieve more victories when they work together,” he said.

Out of all Southeast Asian countries, Filipinos were most disapproving of their government’s response to the pandemic, according to a study by the ASEAN Studies Centre.

Based on the survey that involved 1,032 people living in Southeast Asia, 53.7% of Filipino respondents thumbed down the government’s handling of the health crisis, making them the most dissatisfied.

Several countries including the Philippines have used the pandemic to harass journalists, activists, health workers and “anyone else who dares to criticize the official response to the coronavirus,” according to Human Rights Watch.

More than 120,000 violators of quarantine protocols had been arrested in the Philippines since Mr. Duterte locked down the entire Luzon island in mid-March last year.

They included aid distributors, jeepney drivers, rallyists and others critical of the government’s slow delivery of social services during the pandemic, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said last year.

In mid-2020, the tough-talking leader railed against medical workers for criticizing his government’s pandemic response, daring them to stage a revolution.

“The mere fact that the government has taken advantage of the current health crisis to quell critics is proof that dissent among sectors most affected by the ongoing pandemic and recession has become too loud to ignore,” Mr. Gonzales said.

“Our civil society did not take these issues sitting down,” he added.

Mr. Duterte in August placed the capital region under stricter quarantine status after 80 local groups representing 80,000 doctors called for tighter health protocols.

Mr. Gonzales said it would be “pointless to concentrate on coalition-building efforts on the major political blocs of the opposition.”

“We’ve seen dozens of coalitions emerge across the years but hostilities among conflicting political blocs have created cleavages in these alliances,” he said. He cited the need to focus on homeowners’ associations, transport and other sectoral groups.

“Let’s look at the unaffiliated groups and associations in our communities,” Mr. Gonzales said. “Let’s look at the younger generations. If we can build a broad coalition with these people and create with them a new message and a new politics of change, the warring groups in the opposition will have no choice but to tag along.”

He said the 2022 elections would become a referendum on the work of social and political movements.

“It does not help that the political class always sees civil society organizations as critics and adversaries,”  Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco, a research fellow at the Ateneo de Manila University Policy Center said in a Facebook messenger chat.

“This administration in particular has always been suspicious of civil society organizations,” he said. “The latter’s reputation as government watchdogs has made some politicians wary of dealing with them on a professional level, specifically in terms of exacting or ensuring accountability.”

The Duterte administration has tagged humanitarian organizations and workers as communist fronts.

Citing Congress’ oversight function under the 1987 Constitution, Mr. Yusingco said legislators must “put more effort in exacting accountability.”

“This is their constitutional duty after all,” he said. “If lawmakers fail in doing this job, then voters must make them pay in 2022. Citizens must not relent in making sure our lawmakers fulfill this constitutional mandate.”

InfraWatchPH convenor Terry L. Ridon said voters must know whether the government made real gains in making corrupt officials accountable.

”In order to convince the public that the President is serious and sincere in exacting accountability, we would like to see cases filed against people accused by the President of corrupt activities.”

Mr. Ridon said civic groups should continue to seek social accountability, especially in infrastructure projects involving the involuntary resettlement of urban poor families.

“It is the government that should keep an open mind on the importance of civil society not only in exacting accountability, but also in governing the nation,” he said.

Nationwide round-up (03/07/21)

House leaders vow to act fast on amnesty resolutions for former rebels

LEADERS of the House of Representatives have filed a resolution calling for swift congressional action on granting amnesty to former rebels. In a statement Sunday, House Majority Leader Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez said he, along with House Minority Leader Joseph Stephen S. Paduano, and House Speaker Lord Allan Jay Q. Velasco filed House Concurrent Resolutions 12, 13, 14, and 15 that called for an immediate review and decision on the proposed amnesty coverage for specific members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, Moro National Liberation Front, Rebolusyonaryong Partido ng Manggagawa ng Pilipinas/Revolutionary Proletarian Army/Alex Boncayao Brigade, and the Communist Terrorist Group that includes the New People’s Army. “We commit that the House of Representatives, under the leadership of Speaker Lord Allan Velasco, will work towards the timely adoption of these amnesty resolutions in line with the government’s peace program,” Mr. Romualdez said. President Rodrigo R. Duterte issued Proclamation Nos. 1090, 1091, 1092, and 1093 in early February, which grant amnesty to members of the rebel groups who committed crimes punishable under the Revised Penal Code and special penal laws in line with their political beliefs. A list of those who will be covered by the amnesty program are subject to congressional concurrence. An Amnesty Commission will be formed to handle the final review of the amnesty applications. — Gillian M. Cortez

Human Rights Watch calls for probe on Sunday’s raids in PHL

INTERNATIONAL GROUP Human Rights Watch on Sunday called on the Philippine government to investigate the simultaneous raids conducted by police in several areas where five members of left-leaning legal organizations were killed and several others arrested. The group said the string of police raids conducted in the neighboring provinces of Laguna, Rizal, Batangas and Cavite are “clearly part of the government’s increasingly brutal counter-insurgency campaign aimed at eliminating the 52-year-old Communist insurgency.” Human Rights Watch Deputy Asia Director Phil Robertson, said in a statement, “It is not a coincidence that these deadly raids happened two days after President Rodrigo Duterte ordered police and military to ‘kill all’ communists and ‘don’t mind human rights’.” He also said, “The fundamental problem is this campaign no longer makes any distinction between armed rebels and noncombatant activists, labor leaders, and rights defenders.” Local group Kapatid, composed of family and friends of political prisoners, confirmed the killing of Manny Asuncion, Bayan-Cavite coordinator; Michael Dasigao and Mark “Makmak” Lee Corros Bacasno, urban poor leaders in Montalban; and Chai Lemita-Evangelista and Ariel Evangelista, fisherfolk leaders in Nasugbu, Batangas. Those arrested were Nimfa Lanzanas, a human rights worker; Steve Mendoza, executive vice-president of Olalia-KMU and former union head at F-Tech; and Elizabeth Camoral, spokesperson of Bayan-Laguna, according to Kapatid. Human Rights Watch noted that the raids occurred in provinces overseen by Lt. Gen. Antonio Parlade, Jr., who has been known for tagging groups and individuals as communist members or supporters without legal evidence. At least 188 human rights defenders have been killed under the Duterte administration while 426 activists and community organizers were arrested, according to Karapatan, an alliance of human rights groups in the Philippines. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Regional Updates (03/07/21)

Davao de Oro molecular laboratory opens

DAVAO de Oro province officially opened its biomolecular laboratory Friday, a project funded through the coronavirus budget under the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act or Republic Act No. 11469. Governor Jayvee Tyron L. Uy, in a social media post after the inauguration ceremony, said the laboratory was recommended by the province’s medical team as a long-term investment for improving public healthcare services. “Wayback last year, when the national government gave us our share of the Bayanihan to Heal as One Grant to the Provinces, we consulted our medical team what good project we can use the money for that will not just be for temporary use. Our doctors suggested the building of our own molecular laboratory,” he said in a mix of English and Visayan. The laboratory is immediately crucial in terms of speeding up the release of test results for coronavirus for residents and lessening the load of neighboring laboratories within the Davao Region. The facility, located within the Davao de Oro Provincial Hospital-Montevista, also upgrades the medical institution’s capacity for research. “God forbid, COVID-19 might not be the last pandemic in our lifetime, what’s important is we are prepared now. And also, this laboratory will also be useful for research extension,” Mr. Uy said. The laboratory was planned and built in partnership with the Department of Health, Department of Science and Technology, and the University of the Philippines-Mindanao. Davao de Oro, formerly named Compostela Valley, is commemorating its 23rd founding anniversary on March 8. The celebration on Monday will include the rollout of the first batch of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines allocated to the province. — MSJ

Cebu province to launch ‘affordable’ tour packages to encourage more visitors; ramps up agribusiness program

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

CEBU’s tourism sector is currently working on “affordable” packages — including airfare, accommodations, and land transport for going around sites — to attract more visitors in the province, especially with the coming summer season. Governor Gwendolyn F. Garcia last month issued an order for easing travel requirements across the province, citing the need to jumpstart the tourism industry and boost the local economy. Ms. Garcia, in a press release from the provincial government, said the tour packages “should be affordable for tourists” while tourism establishments should ensure the observance of health guidelines and protocols. “Let’s work together,” she said during a meeting with stakeholders and Department of Tourism-Central Visayas Regional Director Shalimar Hofer Tamano last week. The packages will be patterned after the “Suroy-Suroy Sugbo” tourism program of the provincial government prior to the coronavirus pandemic. The program set up clusters of tourism sites where visitors can go on pre-arranged tours.

COUNTRYSIDE DEVELOPMENT
At the same time, the local government is rolling out a province-wide economic recovery program focusing on the agribusiness sector. The provincial government, represented by the governor, signed a memorandum of agreement with three government banks last Friday, March 5, for the Enhanced Countryside Development Program, wherein farmers and fisherfolk will be given financial support to restart or expand their production. The soft loan program, with a combined initial fund of P20 billion, is backed by the Landbank of the Philippines, Development Bank of the Philippines, and Philippine Veterans Bank. At the signing ceremony, Ms. Garcia rallied the city and town mayors under the province’s jurisdiction to help in bringing the program to their areas. “We will need all of you. All hands on deck… Cebu is moving on and moving forward,” she said. Among the priority livelihood sectors are corn, cassava, hog raising, mud crabs, milkfish, and food processing such as squash noodles and cassava chips, among others. The provincial government will also help in linking producers to the market to ensure the “right price for the farmers and the right volume for the buyers.”

China Feb exports post record surge from COVID-19-depressed 2020 levels

BEIJING — China’s February exports grew at a record pace from a year earlier when coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) battered the world’s second-biggest economy, customs data showed on Sunday, while imports rose less sharply.

Exports in dollar terms skyrocketed 154.9% in February compared with a year earlier, while imports gained 17.3%, the most since October 2018. The data did not include figures for January alone.

In the January-February period, exports jumped 60.6% from a year earlier, when lockdowns to contain the pandemic paralyzed the country’s economic activity. That exceeded the forecast of analysts in a Reuters poll for a 38.9% surge.

Strong exports, which benefited from China’s success in largely containing the public health crisis, have helped fuel the country’s recovery from a pandemic-induced paralysis.

The surge was driven by a rebound in foreign demand, customs said in a statement on its website, citing improvements in manufacturing industries in the European Union and the United States, and their increased imports of Chinese products thanks to fiscal stimulus measures.

“In addition, a majority of manufacturing employees (in China) chose to stay put over the Lunar New Year holidays,” the statement said. “Our survey showed a lot of firms in export-oriented provinces stayed open, and orders that usually only get delivered after the new year had been delivered normally.”

Chinese factory activity usually goes dormant during the Lunar New Year break, which fell in the middle of February this year, as workers return to their hometowns. This year, the government appealed to workers to avoid travelling to curb the risk of a spread of the coronavirus.

In January-February, imports increased 22.2% from a year earlier, above the 15% forecast, partly due to stockpiling of semiconductors and energy products, according to customs. 

China posted a trade surplus of $103.25 billion for the first two months. Analysts had expected the trade surplus to narrow to $60.15 billion from $78.17 billion in December. –

In yuan terms, exports rose 50.1% in the two months from a year earlier, while imports gained 14.5%.

“Due to the impact of the new coronavirus, overall trade (in yuan terms) in January-February last year fell 9.7%, and the low base was one of the reasons for the larger increase this year,” customs said. “But even when compared with normal years, such as the comparable periods in 2018 and 2019, growth in China’s overall trade was around 20%.”

China’s economy expanded 2.3% last year, helped by solid demand for Chinese-made goods such as medical and work-from-home equipment, although the growth was its weakest in 44 years.

This year, China has set a modest growth target of at least 6%, planning a careful course out of a year disrupted by COVID-19 and amid heightened tensions with the United States.

China’s trade surplus with the United States stood at $51.26 billion in January-February. Chinese customs did not give a monthly breakdown. The surplus was $29.92 billion in December.

Katherine Tai, President Joe Biden’s nominee to be US trade representative, said last week she would work to fight a range of “unfair” Chinese trade and economic practices. -— Reuters

Democrats push Biden’s $1.9-T COVID 2019 bill through Senate

REUTERS

WASHINGTON — The US Senate on Saturday passed President Joseph R. Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief plan in a party-line vote after an all-night session that was delayed repeatedly as the Republican minority tried but failed to push through around three dozen amendments.

The plan passed in a 50-49 vote with the support of every Democrat but no Republicans. It is one of the largest stimulus bills in US history and gives Mr. Biden his first major legislative victory since taking office in January.

The partisan victory was made possible by Democrats winning two Senate seats in Georgia special elections in January, giving them narrow control of the chamber.

Mr. Biden said on Saturday he hoped for quick passage of the revised bill by the House of Representatives so he could sign it and start sending $1,400 direct payments to Americans.

“This plan will get checks out the door starting this month to the American people, who so desperately need the help,” Mr. Biden said at the White House after the vote.

The final bill includes $400 billion in one-time payments of $1,400 to many Americans, with a phase-out starting for those with annual incomes above $75,000.

It also includes $300 a week in extended jobless benefits for the 9.5 million people thrown out of work in the crisis.

Democrats agreed to reduce those benefits from $400 a week in order to secure passage in the Senate. They want the bill signed into law before current unemployment benefits expire on Mar. 15.

About $350 billion in aid was also set aside for state and local governments that have seen the pandemic blow a hole in their budgets.

House of Representatives Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said on Twitter that the House will vote Tuesday on the Senate-passed bill.

Democrats broke out in applause amid passage of the bill in the Senate on Saturday and liberal independent Senator Bernie Sanders fist-bumped Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.

Mr. Schumer said the bill would help the country get the upper hand against a pandemic that has killed more than 520,000 people across the United States and upended most aspects of daily life.

“I want the American people to know that we’re going to get through this and someday soon our businesses will reopen, our economy will reopen and life will reopen,” Mr. Schumer said.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, however, had harsh words about the measure. “The Senate has never spent $2 trillion in a more haphazard way or through a less rigorous process,” he said.

Republicans had sought a new round of aid about one-third the size of Mr. Biden’s plan.

Mr. McConnell argued that even without this legislation, “2021 is already set to be our comeback year” because of relief bills enacted last year.

The measure comes as an increasing number of states have relaxed restrictions designed to curb the pandemic.

Texas earlier this week allowed most businesses to operate at full capacity and California saying it would soon allow Disneyland and other theme parks as well as sports stadiums to reopen at limited capacity.

But even as more and more Americans get vaccinated against COVID-19, top infectious disease official Dr. Anthony Fauci has said that “now is not the time to pull back.” — Reuters

Vaccine blunders alarm stock investors

EUROPE’s vaccine blunders are alarming some of the world’s top investors, who see economic growth imperiled by a slow pace of business reopenings.

While the region’s stocks are riding the global rally and faring well against the selloff in US big tech, prolonged lockdowns threaten the economic recovery. Investors are taking notice. European equity funds have recorded three weeks of outflows, with Bank of America Corp. and BlackRock Investment Institute warning that the continued virus outbreak could hurt trading strategies in the single-currency bloc.

“The Europeans desperately need to accelerate the pace of their vaccine rollout if they want to get a handle on the virus,” said Seema Shah, the London-based chief strategist at Principal Global Investors Ltd., which manages $544 billion. “Bureaucracy and confused messaging from governments has weighed on the process.”

Principal prefers US equities over Europe, citing President Joseph R. Biden’s $1.9 trillion pandemic relief bill as economic fuel. Europe’s recovery fund “pales in comparison,” she said.

Plagued by political infighting, supply disruptions and public resistance, continental Europe is far behind in distributing the vaccine. The EU has administered 8 doses per 100 people, compared with 33 for the UK and 25 for the US, according to Bloomberg’s Coronavirus Vaccine Tracker. A delay of one to two months in reopening could cost the EU economy between 50 billion and 100 billion euros in lost output, according to calculations by Bloomberg Economics.

“At the risk of sounding like doomsdayers, we unfortunately have to repeat that the sluggish pace of vaccination continues to jeopardize the recovery in the eurozone,” wrote Peter Vanden Houte, chief economist at ING Belgium SA in Brussels.

There is some progress. In Germany, the infection rate in people over the age of 80 has plummeted by about 80% since late December as doctors prioritize giving shots to the elderly. Thanks to new supply pacts and increased production, the EU may be able to vaccinate 75% of its adult population by the end of August, about two months earlier than previously forecast, according to London-based research firm Airfinity Ltd.

In the eyes of investors, that could still be too late. “These are the critical summer months,” wrote Bank of America strategists including Athanasios Vamvakidis. “Losing a second tourist season is a risk for the EU.”

The bank expects the euro to weaken to $1.15 by year-end from a current level of $1.19, citing “American exceptionalism” as the driving force. The US is vaccinating people faster and its total fiscal support is up to six times greater than the EU’s recovery fund. Plus, American shoppers have saved more money to spend after the pandemic, Bank of America strategists said.

UNEVEN RECOVERY
The rally has left European stocks looking expensive relative to the United Kingdom (UK), and by some measures stocks are already pricing in a full recovery. The Euro Stoxx 50 index is trading at 18 times estimated earnings, compared with 14 times for the FTSE 100.

The Stoxx 600 Travel and Leisure Index is near pre-pandemic levels, despite depressed earnings and warnings that business travel won’t return anytime soon. Deutsche Lufthansa AG said it could take until the middle of the decade for business to fully recover.

“Valuations are very high,” said Miguel Angel Garcia, chief investment officer at Diaphanum Valores in Madrid. “We have reduced our exposure to European equities recently and are currently underweight.”

Of course, there’s a bull case for some sectors, even in a slow growth environment. Banks are the third-biggest industry weighting in the Stoxx 600 and stand to profit from rising bonds yields and booming markets for IPOs.

“At a security level, we are finding plenty of opportunities,” said Suzanne Hutchins, a portfolio manager at Newton Investment Management. On an index basis, “European equities are more challenged.” — Bloomberg

Further TNT adjustments heading into new season

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

WHAT was expected to be a busy offseason for the TNT Tropang GIGA got more toiling as the team found itself needing to make added adjustments heading into the new season of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

Finished runner-up in the lone PBA tournament last year, TNT was looking to shore up its thrust by bringing back Chot Reyes as coach and previously retired Kelly Williams for another tour of duty with the team.

The Tropang GIGA also signed up free agents to help them in their bid in the new PBA season, which is targeted to start next month.

But while things were seemingly going well in its preparation, TNT was dealt a surprising news after key cog Ray Parks, Jr. announced that he will be skipping the entire PBA season this year for “personal reasons.”

Mr. Parks, 28, in a statement at the weekend said, “It is with a heavy heart that I will have to excuse myself and not partake in this year’s PBA season due to personal reasons which in particular, my family. It was not an easy decision to make, especially since I’ve been in constant talks with TNT management, but right now, this is what’s best for me and my family.”

Adding, “I will always be grateful for the opportunity to represent TNT and be part of such a special team and culture. Hopefully, one day, once everything is resolved, I can come back to the team and help bring a championship to TNT.”

Mr. Parks, son of PBA import great Bobby and a former University Athletic Association of the Philippines most valuable player, joined TNT midway in the 2019 season from Blackwater and immediately made his presence felt.

In the Philippine Cup “bubble” last year, he averaged 22.5 points, 3.1 assists, 3.1 assists and 1.3 steals while helping the team reach the finals against eventual champions Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings.

Unfortunately, he only got to play one game in the best-of-seven championship series after injuring his calf in Game One.

TNT was negotiating for a new contract with Mr. Parks since the start of the year, hoping that upon his return the team would be deeper with the additions that it had. Until he said he was sitting out in the upcoming season.

The Tropang GIGA said losing Mr. Parks was a big blow on their part considering the versatility that the player brings to the team.

But they are determined to move on and work with the pieces they have just as they wish Mr. Parks the best and the resolution of his personal problems at the soonest possible time.

Interestingly, not everyone in the TNT camp is convinced of the reason for Mr. Parks sitting out.

No less than PLDT Chairman and Tropang GIGA owner Manny V. Pangilinan is second-guessing Mr. Parks and his decision.

In a cryptic post on social media, the business tycoon wrote, “This photo taken Thursday last week, around 9 pm. Feb. 25, in San Juan, La Union. Don’t see any mother being cared for, and as far as I know, La Union is nowhere near California. Judge for yourself. #PBA #onesports.”

The post shows Mr. Parks in La Union posing for a photo with a fan.

Sans Mr. Parks, TNT will be bannered by the likes of veteran Jayson Castro, Roger Pogoy, Troy Rosario, JP Erram, Simon Enciso, Mr. Williams and Ryan Reyes as well as newly signed free agents Dave Marcelo, Glenn Khobuntin, and Ping Exciminiano.

Filipino-Kiwi Mark Abelardo stops ONE skid with impressive win

FILIPINO-KIWI fighter Mark “Tyson” Fairtex Abelardo halted his skid in ONE Championship last Friday with an impressive knockout victory at “ONE: Fists of Fury II” in Singapore.

Mr. Abelardo, 29, took on American Emilio “The Honey Badger” Urrutia in a bantamweight clash and came away a winner after unleashing a well-timed elbow in the second round that immediately sent the latter crashing on the mat and ended the fight.

Lost his last two fights in the promotion entering the contest, Mr. Abelardo said those were lessons for him and was determined to stem the tide and get back to winning.

In Friday’s fights, Mr. Abelardo opened things well and pressured his opponent. He finished the first round strong, connecting on a straight right hand to rock Mr. Urrutia before the bell sounded.

In the second round, action picked up with both fighters having their moments.

But Mr. Abelardo found an opening nearly two minutes into the round, unleashing a perfectly setup elbow to the jaw that signalled the end to the fight.

With the win, the Filipino-Kiwi fighter improved to a 20-8 record (5-3 in ONE) while sending Mr. Urrutia (11-8) to a fourth straight defeat.

Mr. Abelardo now looks to sustain the momentum he got from the victory in the division many consider as one of the deepest in ONE.

SOKOR HEAVYWEIGHT
Also victorious in ONE: Fists of Fury II was undefeated South Korean heavyweight “Mighty Warrior” Kang Ji Won, who shocked with a first-round destruction of highly regarded Greco-Roman Wrestling World Champion Amir Aliakbari, who was making his ONE Championship debut.

Mr. Aliakbari was aggressive early, stalking Mr. Kang along the Circle Wall. The heavy-handed Iranian then hurt Mr. Kang with a pair of monstrous right hands, which created damage around the left eye. As Mr. Aliakbari pressed forward, however, the South Korean avoided a strike and connected with a short left hook to the jaw, which dropped the Iranian and instantly finished the fight.

Next for ONE Championship is “Fists of Fury III” on March 19 in Singapore. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

NBA All-Star 2021 by the numbers

REGULAR National Basketball Association (NBA) season action takes a pause on Monday (Manila time) for the Midseason Classic All-Star festivities.

Happening at the State Farm Arena in Atlanta, this year’s proceedings will be bannered by competing teams led by top fan vote-getters LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers and Kevin Durant of the Brooklyn Nets.

Starting with Mr. James in Team LeBron are Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee), Stephen Curry (Golden State), Luka Dončić (Dallas), and Nikola Jokić (Denver).

Team Durant, for its part, has starters Bradley Beal (Washington), Joel Embiid (Philadelphia), Kyrie Irving (Brooklyn), and Kawhi Leonard (LA Clippers). Because of injury Mr. Durant will not be able to play and was replaced in the starting lineup by Jayson Tatum (Boston).

Last Friday, Messrs. James and Durant picked the reserves for their respective teams from the list of players who the league coaches voted in.

Playing with Mr. James are Jaylen Brown (Boston), Paul George (Clippers), Rudy Gobert (Utah), Damian Lillard (Portland), Chris Paul (Phoenix), Domantas Sabonis (Indiana) and Ben Simmons (Philadelphia).

With Mr. Durant are James Harden (Brooklyn), Zach Lavine (Chicago), Donovan Mitchell and Mike Conley (Utah), Julius Randle (New York), Nikola Vučević (Orlando) and Zion Williamson (New Orleans).

Voted in and/or added but cannot play because of injury, like Mr. Durant, are Anthony Davis (Lakers) and Devin Booker (Phoenix).

To better appreciate NBA All-Star 2021, below is a by-the-numbers look to it.

3 – This is the third NBA All-Star in Atlanta, which previously hosted in 1978 and 2003.

4 – Phoenix’s Paul is the third player to be named an All-Star with four different franchises, joining Moses Malone and Shaquille O’Neal.

4 – Four first-time All-Star selections: Boston’s Brown, Chicago’s LaVine and New York’s Randle from the East and New Orleans’ Williamson from the West.

5 – Five players who have combined to win 10 of the last 12 regular-season MVP awards are All-Stars this season: James (4 MVPs), Curry (2), Antetokounmpo (2), Durant (1), and Harden (1).

6 – A record six European players were named All-Stars this season: Antetokounmpo (Greece), Dončić (Slovenia), Gobert (France), Jokić (Serbia), Sabonis (Lithuania), and Vučević (Montenegro).

9/5 – There are a record nine international All-Stars, including a record five international players voted All-Star Game starters.  The nine international All-Stars are Antetokounmpo, Dončić, Embiid, Gobert, Irving, Jokić, Sabonis, Simmons (Australia), and Vučević.

17 – The Lakers’ James has been selected as an NBA All-Star 17 times, third most in league history behind Kareem Abdul Jabbar (19) and Kobe Bryant (18). James is also set to start the All-Star Game for the 17th consecutive year.

20 – At 20 years old, the New Orleans Pelicans’ Zion Williamson is set to become the fourth-youngest player to play in the NBA All-Star Game, behind Bryant, James and Magic Johnson.

27.3 – The Bucks’ Antetokounmpo has the highest scoring average in NBA All-Star Game history at 27.3 points per game.

70 – This is the 70th edition of the NBA All-Star Game, which was first played in 1951.

385 – Mr. James is the leading scorer in NBA All-Star Game history with 385 points.

7,424,951 – NBA All-Star Voting 2021 presented by AT&T set a single-day record with 7,424,951 fan votes cast on Jan. 28.

Apart from the main All-Star Game, also in the festivities are the three-point competition, skills challenge and slam dunk contest.

The NBA All-Star 2021 will be aired over NBA TV Philippines on Cignal TV and One Sports beginning at 7:30 a.m. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

No international games next season but full arenas in the plan, says Silver

THERE will be no international games on the NBA schedule next season, but there is hope teams will be back playing in near full arenas in 2021-22 as the United States gains control of the COVID-19 pandemic, said commissioner Adam Silver on Saturday at his pre-All Star Game media conference.

With last year’s season held in a quarantine bubble in Orlando and the current campaign being played in mostly empty arenas, Silver said the resumption of international games will be on hold until at least the 2022-23 season.

“First of all, no plans yet to travel for next season,” said Silver, talking ahead of Sunday’s All-Star Game in Atlanta. “In all likelihood, we won’t travel internationally until the following season.

“But the plan remains to try to resume our season as close to so-called normal as possible next year.

“Frankly, I’m fairly optimistic at this point that we will be able to start on time, and that we have roughly half of our teams having fans in their arenas right now.

“If vaccines continue on the pace they are, and they continue to be as effective as they have been against the virus and its variants, we’re hopeful that we’ll have relatively full arenas next season as well.”

This season is set to end in mid-July allowing players who want to participate in the Olympics to go to Tokyo.

Silver also noted that a July finish will give players a chance to recover as the league looks to get back on a regular cycle.

Although there are currently no plans to return to a quarantine bubble for the NBA playoffs, Silver said he could not rule out the possibility.

“I don’t rule anything out just because one thing we’ve all come to understand over the last year is that the virus is firmly in charge,” said Silver, adding that the league will not require players to be vaccinated against COVID-19. “We need to adjust to circumstances as they present themselves.

“I’d say maybe for the first time in the past year, I’m fairly optimistic right now that as we see fans returning to our arenas.

“By the time we reach the playoffs in mid-May, things will even be considerably better than they are now.” — Reuters

Boxing-Shields makes history with unanimous decision win over Dicaire

AMERICAN boxer Claressa Shields scored a unanimous points victory over Canada’s Marie-Ève Dicaire on Friday to become the first undisputed world champion in two different divisions in the four-belt era.

Shields, 25, retained her WBC and WBO light-middleweight titles, won the vacant WBA belt and also took Dicaire’s IBF crown after all three judges at the Dort Federal Event Centre in Flint, Michigan, scored the fight 100-90 in the American’s favor.

“I was trying for the knockout,” said Shield, who landed 116 punches to Dicaire’s 31. “That’s what I wanted. And I almost had it… at the end of the day, I’m the new undisputed champion at 154 pounds — the first boxer to do it in history.”

Shields, a two-time Olympic champion, had previously unified all four major belts — WBC, WBA, IBF and WBO — at middleweight.

After the fight, she was quick to call out Britain’s Savannah Marshall, the only fighter to have defeated Shields as an amateur.

“You won a lucky decision when we were kids,” Shields said. — Reuters

Messi grabs two assists as Barcelona march on with victory at Osasuna

PAMPLONA, Spain — Barcelona continued their rampant run of domestic form to beat Osasuna 2-0 away from home on Saturday and move to within two points of La Liga leaders Atletico Madrid, with Lionel Messi setting up goals scored by Jordi Alba and teenager Ilaix Moriba.

Messi helped Barça take the lead on the half-hour mark when he carved open Osasuna’s defense with a superb cross-field ball to Alba, who controlled before blasting into the roof of the net.

He then laid the ball off when 18-year-old midfielder Ilaix struck in the 83rd minute, producing a confident finish inside the post from outside the area to score his first goal for the club in only his third league appearance.

The victory followed Barça’s heroic second leg comeback win over Sevilla to reach the Copa del Rey final on Wednesday and notched a 13th league win in 16 games, while they are unbeaten since losing at Cadiz on Dec. 5.

The Catalans stay second but moved on to 56 points after 26 games, two points behind Atletico Madrid who have played 24 matches and host third-placed Real Madrid on Sunday. Osasuna are 13th on 28.

“We just needed to keep on winning. It wasn’t our best performance, but we played well and we deserved the win,” said Barça coach Ronald Koeman.

“We played with a lot of energy. We were tired, but we put in a professional performance and scored two great goals. I’m very happy, this is a very important run and I hope we stay on this path.”

Perhaps still feeling the effects of the 3-0 win over Sevilla after extra time, Barça took a while to settle and nearly went behind in the second minute. They were spared thanks to the first of three impressive saves from Marc-André ter Stegen.

The German had to scurry back to stop an audacious attempt from Osasuna’s Jonathan Calleri, who went for goal from his own half. He also made a truly outstanding save to deny Kike Barja later in the first period, flying to his top right hand corner and throwing up his left hand to swat the ball away.

With Barça then leading through Alba’s vicious strike, Ter Stegen rescued the visitors for a third time, denying midfielder Ruben Garcia from close range.

Having gone through a tumultuous campaign on and off the pitch this season, things are looking up for Barça, who will elect a new president in Sunday’s election.

They then head to France looking for another miraculous Champions League comeback against Paris St. Germain for Wednesday’s last-16 second leg, looking to overturn a 4-1 deficit.

“We have to rest now and then we’ll prepare the game. I don’t want to say it’s impossible, and we’ll go there and try to get a good result,” Koeman added. — Reuters

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