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Speed and time

The term “Time sickness” refers to the neurotic belief that time is always running away from us. People feel the compulsion to keep up and go faster and faster. They think that it’s the only way to get value for money. Dr. Larry Dossey coined the term to describe the western attitude “Time is money.”

The idea is absurd — putting quantity and speed ahead of quality.

“The best way to get value from our time is to give things the time they deserve,” he wrote. “We need moments of inactivity, of boredom even, in order to relax, reflect and recharge.”

There is a movement that challenges the cult of speed: Slowness

Our pace of life has accelerated to a breathless, adrenaline-charged heart-stopping, backbreaking speed. As a result of the high-charged momentum, things are spinning out of control.

Multi-tasking is a talent that is cultivated and encouraged. It’s a can do superhuman attitude — the ability to juggle and accomplish many things simultaneously.

The high-powered Alpha male can speak on the cellphone, write on the laptop, sip coffee, nibble a sandwich, attend two separate lunch meetings, give a speech in one room, shake hands with dozens of associates in another function room — all within the span of a few minutes.

The speed is dizzying, relentless.

Superwoman does multiple roles with élan. Multi-faceted, she is career girl, wife, mom, hostess, chef, driver, tutor, gardener, and civic worker. The non-stop whirlwind uses a smartphone most of the time.

Stress levels are very high. People are collapsing from various disorders — chronic fatigue syndrome, anxiety, and exhaustion. It is like being on a perpetual treadmill — “Running on empty.”

The symptoms are hypertension, hyperacidity, palpitation, cramps, shortness of breath, angina, fever, allergies and insomnia.

People hardly have time to inhale and exhale — they rush to and fro until they are blue in the face from lack of oxygen.

A foreign correspondent Carl Honore experienced a “bedtime epiphany” during his flight to London. He chatted on the cellphone with his editor, skimmed a news article, “The One Minute Bedtime Story.” Then he realized, “have I Gone completely insane?”

He decided to take time off, do important research and write a book In Praise of Slowness: How a worldwide Movement is challenging the Cult of Speed.

He revealed, “I am Scrooge with a stopwatch, obsessed with saving every scrap of time, a minute here, a few seconds there. Everyone around me — colleagues, friends, family — is caught in a vortex.”

The workplace is considered a critical battlefront. Corporate America has “a pathological fear of slowness,” he added.

It is possible and desirable to decelerate. Business could gain much from a sense of work-life balance. The payoff would be in higher productivity and good staff retention. When the staff is more relaxed, there is more time to think creatively.

On the personal and professional aspects of life, Mr. Honore wrote that his life as a free-lance journalist is busy. However, he changed his whole approach and attitude.

Here are some suggestions.

1) Cut back the activities that take more time than they are worth. This eases the pressure.

2) The family can spend one day of the weekend doing nothing, just hanging out at home. The kids would be more relaxed and attentive. The family would be calmer.

3) At work, it is better to space deadlines and resist the temptation to take on too many assignments, no matter how irresistible.

4) Switch off the cellphone when one is not expecting an urgent call.

5) Leave the desk and in a quiet space by a window or a corner for a few moments — just to relax the mind.

6) Turn off the TV and read a book.

7) Listen to music.

8) Listen to the rocks grow in the garden. (This Zen practice is peaceful.)

9) Daydream. Watch the clouds and look for animal shapes in the sky.

10) Unplug to de-stress. On a vacation trip, resist the urge to stay wired via cellphone, laptop and Internet. It is time to switch off.

11) Stop to smell the flowers.

Multitasking should have limits. For example, some people can converse while surfing the Net. How would anyone get anything interesting out of the conversation if they were distracted?

We are rushing though life rather than living and vaporing it.

We should have tranquil time to connect with our inner selves, with the people and things that matter most.

When we have a yearning for slowness and focus on it, we can attain serenity.

 

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

mavrufino@gmail.com

Miseducated and disinformed

The problematic — and for many Filipinos, depressingly predictable — results of the May 13 senatorial elections have provoked the usual mini-debate on whether the mass of the electorate is really so stupid as to vote against their own interests. They have after all elected, among others, accused plunderers, liars, supporters of tyrannical rule, opportunists, enforcers of extrajudicial killings, and, in general, the yes-men and chorus line of the Duterte regime.

Those who say “yes” to that question point out that the voters have instead denied the human rights defenders and progressives aware of the need for an independent Senate the opportunity to implement the legislative programs that can address the majority’s concerns and the country’s legions of problems.

The question has been raised in past elections. But as seemingly relevant as it is to the bigger issue of how elections can better serve the country’s short- and long-term interests, it needs to be re-phrased.

Rather than “stupid,” the key word should be “ignorant.” Stupidity is inherent, and the result of genetics and breeding. Not even a sackful of college degrees can do much about it. Ignorance or lack of knowledge is on the other hand the consequence of such man-made factors as the cultural, social, political and economic environments, the absence of opportunities for enlightenment, and even deliberate manipulation.

More than the honestly uninformed, those responsible for it deserve the condemnation of anyone who still cares for this country and its people. At the top of that list are the oligarchs and political dynasties that have made campaigning for public office orgies of disinformation, vote-buying and intimidation, as well as occasions for displaying their singing and dancing abilities, and regaling their audiences with sexist, vulgar and tasteless jokes rather than as once-every-three-year opportunities for voter education.

The educational system that’s the creation of the bureaucrats in the service of the dynastic overlords of this supposed democracy is also part of the problem. Some of its graduates who claim to have voted for the candidates of the Duterte regime have trotted out their master’s and even PhD degrees to contest the argument that they’re ignorant. In the process they have only confirmed that suspicion.

A degree in a particular specialization is not necessarily any assurance of expertise and wisdom on political and other issues. One MA graduate of a US Ivy League school and the holder of a PhD degree from the University of the Philippines, for example, could not see the implications on press freedom of the killing of journalists, and has even justified those killings on the argument that the victims were corrupt as well as incompetent because most of them have had no formal training in journalism.

In one forum on Philippine governance, a participant who identified himself as a professor of politics in the most expensive university in the country argued in support of the Duterte drive for one-man rule because, he said, his research has established the need for strong government in the Philippines as in Singapore and Malaysia. It was an argument whose advocate was apparently unfamiliar with, and as a result ignored, the differences between the political elites of those countries and the incompetent and corrupt dynasties that rule the Philippines.

Holders of advanced degrees nevertheless make it seem that a PhD is the absolute determinant of intelligence. They disparage those without it when no one else is listening, and weigh in at every opportunity on everything from global warming to foreign affairs to Arundhati Roy’s political writings and her novel The God of Small Things.

The “barbarism of specialization,” the liberal Spanish philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset observed decades ago, indeed breeds experts — but often only in narrow fields of knowledge. In too many instances these “learned ignoramuses” have little or no understanding of the broader issues of science, society and politics. But as limited as their areas of competence and understanding are, because of their credentials they are nevertheless presumed to know everything, and often impose their views on everyone else.

There is as well the truth that much of what passes for “education,” as the historian Renato Constantino pointed out, is mis-education, or its very opposite. Beneath the pretense at nonpartisan scholarship can in fact lurk disguised programs of indoctrination in unquestioning obedience to “authority” and uncritical acceptance of what’s going on regardless of its horrors. In the Philippines we have entire generations who have been made to think that the Marcos dictatorship was the golden age of recent history by the “education” they received in the primary and secondary grades and even in college.

Much of the corporate media are no less complicit in the veritable conspiracy to keep in ignorance the millions many practitioners secretly hold in contempt. They report on and quote the powerful to the exclusion of the poor and marginalized, thus assuring the dominance of the former’s narrative in the national discourse. They provide little knowledge if at all, nor any of the information voters need during elections, among them the track records of candidates and their programs, if they have any. Instead they religiously cover the campaign sorties of the politicians who’re spending millions in advertising in their networks. Still others have in their staffs creatures who call themselves journalists but who are skills- and ethically-challenged hacks of the monied and powerful.

The mass of voters so victimized cannot be blamed for voting for the very same class responsible for their misery out of ignorance. But those who vote in full awareness of what they’re doing and its impact on others must be held accountable for their actions. These are the bought-and-paid-for partisans of the powerful whose greed drives them as heads of this or that shady group or equally shady church to sell their votes and those of their followers for pelf and the illusion of power.

What’s evident in these isles of perpetual darkness is that elections as supposedly democratic expressions of the popular will are caught between the rock of stupidity and the hard place of ignorance.

Much of the latter is deliberately cultivated by those who fear and despise the people’s capacity to make informed choices. Over a hundred years ago, Jose Rizal wisely argued for education as the antidote to the ignorance on which tyranny thrives. But it should be evident that only the unwilling victims of dynastic manipulation, educational system indoctrination, and some of the media’s bias for the wealthy and powerful can be truly educated. The consciously logic-defiant and fact-resistant are unteachable, quite simply because it is in their interest to intentionally propagate ignorance, while believing themselves to be intelligent.

Looking out for and enhancing their economic and political interests is in their view the wisest course of all. But despite their pretensions they are still the most ignorant of them all — the most clueless about the immense cost of human rights violations, incompetence, brutality, corruption and tyranny on the lives of millions including themselves, their children, and the future. These and their dynastic patrons are the true enemies of the people, the ineducable “mass-men” of Ortega y Gasset who have helped bring this country closer and closer to perdition.

The education of the misled, miseducated, disinformed and disempowered can help combat the disciples of self-aggrandizement and dynastic rule. But it will take the combined efforts of true educators, the men and women dedicated to the service of the people, and the competent and independent journalists and progressive organizations that are still among us to achieve it. And it won’t happen overnight.

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro).

www.luisteodoro.com

It’s not always about you

By Tony Samson

IN SURFING THE NEWS, we often skip items that do not affect us directly or pique our personal interest. So, a winter vortex in Northeast America is merely noted in passing, unless relatives are caught up in it in their travels there. When reporting international crises, the local news slants the coverage in terms of compatriots that were injured.

Selective perception in psychology refers to what reality we view, and how we remember it. We pay attention only to details that concern us directly. Thus, in a group picture, we search out our own faces in the crowd around us. The selfie is a short-cut to putting our photo on center stage.

For busy executives or politicians, selective perception has long been outsourced. Some entity serves as a clipping service to search for news that pertains to a company or personality, maybe including the industry and competition. These items are searched and compiled for the client’s morning read. The term “clipping” itself harks back from an older time when newspapers dominated media coverage and stories were clipped with scissors and compiled in one bulging folder for the day.

Now, this physical task is facilitated by the net with its search engines relying on key words to algorithmically troll the stories in cyberspace. This same technology allows phrases to be checked for plagiarism. Using “mentions” (name of a company or personality, industry, or product category) in media coverage ensures finding all news stories dealing with a subject.

Does this excerpting of news present a balanced view of reality? Is anyone paying attention to stories other than the one mentioned in them? Is it always about you?

The clipper can get a warped view of media’s interest in him. He is bound to define the state of his image, often exaggerated on the negative side, by a very biased sample of news that has been preselected.

With the burgeoning blogs, tweets, social networks piled on top of traditional media (not to mention insider info and gossip) and twenty-four-hour news cycles on TV and radio, the possibility of getting mentions and clips can only rise. A fresh crisis can be counted on to overtake whatever story is worrying to a news subject.

Even the most insignificant news gets in the mix to fill up the ever-hungrier beast of news content. On the rise are unworthy news subjects, even someone whose mugging is caught in the ubiquitous CCTV. (And he wasn’t even resisting arrest.)

Perversely, it can then be a cause of dismay if a company or personality continues to be unreported and ignored in this assault of media on news or near-news. Staying under the radar is getting to be more difficult, sometimes a symptom of being not important enough to be worth reporting.

A psychological phenomenon related to selective perception is the “spotlight illusion” where someone imagines that people are looking at her all the time, as being in the spotlight and center of attention. Do they notice a missing button in her blouse or her new neck tattoo? In truth, people are seldom under constant scrutiny. Others will not remember what dress one wore in a party. (Can I wear the same dress I wore last year at another wedding? Yes, Dear.)

The challenge for the image consultant is how to restrain a client from overreacting to a story which only she and some little-read columnist (most will not accept such a characterization of their output) are aware of. Reacting too vehemently and publicly to a slur, whether imagined or real, magnifies the comment beyond its already routine reception.

Even the non-clipper is not spared the effects of selective perception. An obscure story will have been read by another and passed on to her to check on. (Did you see that item on you in a near-fistfight that appeared last Thursday?) The informer embellishes the tale and challenges the clueless subject to give a public response on a news item she already missed.

Worse is reacting violently to a blind item that happens to refer to somebody else — My dear, it’s about somebody more famous than you.

Selective perception makes the ordinary person lose a sense of proportion. With political figures reaction can take the form of retribution…or at least a few choice invectives in public.

 

Tony Samson is Chairman and CEO, TOUCH xda.

ar.samson@yahoo.com

PHL stocks snap four-day climb on profit taking

By Arra B. Francia, Senior Reporter

LOCAL SHARES slipped on Thursday as investors decided to stay on the sidelines and take profits amid lingering trade tensions.

The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) went down 0.14% or 11.04 points to close at 7,804.03, snapping the index’s four-day winning streak. The broader all-shares index likewise dropped 0.26% or 12.59 points to 4,809.26.

“As trade frictions rose, and the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) minutes came out muted, investors remained on the sidelines and even took profit after successive positive sessions,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said in a text message.

Papa Securities Corp. Sales Associate Gabriel Jose F. Perez said Thursday’s decline served as a technical correction after a four-day rally.

“The index finally corrected after surging for four straight days as it closed in the red… The index initially fell by as much as 50 points at its intraday low, before being bought up at the close,” Mr. Perez said in an e-mail.

Following its ban on Chinese tech giant Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd., the US government was reported to be considering more export bans on several Chinese surveillance companies. Banned firms will have to secure approval from the US government before it can do business with US companies.

US President Donald J. Trump is also threatening to hike tariffs on another $300 billion worth of Chinese goods following its imposition of higher duties on $250 billion in Chinese imports earlier this month.

The PSEi joined other markets that were rattled by trade concerns between the US and China. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.39% or 100.72 points to 25,776.61, while the S&P 500 index declined 0.28% or 8.09 points to 2,856.27. The Nasdaq Composite index also went down 0.45% or 34.88 points to 7,750.84.

Asian indices were also mostly in negative territory. Japan’s Nikkei 225 plummeted 0.62% or 132.23 points to 21,151.14. The Hang Seng index slumped 1.69% or 467.84 points to 27,238.10, while the Shanghai Composite tumbled 1.36% or 39.19 points to 2,852.52.

Back home, four sectoral indices moved to negative territory led by financials which plunged 0.85% or 14.84 points to 1,712.15, followed by services which retreated 0.54% or 8.99 points to 1,652.67. Industrials shed 0.3% or 35.02 points to 11,362.17, while holding firms dipped 0.1% or 7.96 points to 7,408.30. In contrast, property climbed 0.39% or 16.41 points to 4,228.14, while mining and oil added 0.05% or 3.66 points to 7,232.54.

Some 3.45 billion issues valued at P7.20 billion switched hands, lower than the previous session’s P10.14 billion.

Decliners outpaced advancers, 110 to 87, while 53 names were unchanged.

Net foreign selling slimmed to P177.41 million, much lower than Wednesday’s P3.52 billion net outflow.

Peso rises slightly on fresh RRR cuts, oil prices

THE PESO strengthened against the greenback on Thursday as global crude oil prices declined and the reduction in smaller banks’ reserve requirement ratio (RRR) announced yesterday.

The local currency closed at P52.50 against the US dollar, three centavos stronger than the P52.53 finish the previous day.

The local currency opened stronger at P52.48 against the greenback, which was already its best showing for the day. Meanwhile, it posted an intraday low of P52.55.

Trading volume thinned to $740 million yesterday from the $777.95 million that switched hands the previous day.

Michael L. Ricafort, economist at the Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC), said the peso strengthened “after the latest decline in global crude oil prices and as the markets anticipate the latest RRR cut for smaller banks.”

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) yesterday said its policy-setting Monetary Board (MB) decided to cut the reserve ratios of thrift, rural and cooperative lenders following the reduction of the RRR of universal and commercial banks (UKBs) announced last week.

MB Member Felipe M. Medalla said thrift banks’ RRR, currently at 8%, will be cut by 200 basis points (bp) in three tranches to 6%, following the same schedule set for UKBs.

The 5% reserve ratio imposed on rural and cooperative banks’ demand and savings deposits will also be cut to 4% by May 31 — the effectivity of the first tranche of reductions for UKBs’ and thrift banks’ RRRs.

Last week, the BSP said that it will slash big banks’ RRR by 200 bps to 16% from the current 18%, with the first 100-bp reduction to take effect on May 31. This will be followed by a 50-bp cut on June 28 and another 50-bp cut on July 26.

The peso also climbed “on seasonal increase in OFW (overseas Filipino workers) remittances and conversion to pesos to finance some tuition payments, school opening-related expenses, vacations, and fiesta celebrations around the country, all for the month May, especially in the latter part of the month and even up to June,” RCBC’s Mr. Ricafort added.

He said proceeds from the government’s recent euro and panda bond sales also supported the peso.

“Recent upward correction/gains in the local stock market especially after the RRR cut announcement since last week also led to a stronger peso,” Mr. Ricafort added.

‘Bikoy’ surrenders, tags LP in plot against Duterte

PETER Joemel Advincula, the man claiming to be the netizen “Bikoy” in the video series against President Rodrigo R. Duterte, surrendered to the Philippine National Police (PNP) on Wednesday.

“He surrendered to us, particularly sa Northern Police District yesterday afternoon. He heeded…our call na mag-surrender na lang siya (to just surrender) because he felt the pressure of manhunt operations against him,” PNP chief Gen. Oscar D. Albayalde said in a press briefing on Thursday, May 23.

Charges of large-scale illegal recruitment and estafa filed in Baguio City are pending against Mr. Advincula, who now claimed that the video series “Ang Totoong Narcolist” (the Real Narcolist) — linking Mr. Duterte and his family and associates to the drug trade — was orchestrated by the opposition Liberal Party (LP), together with Senator Antonio F. Trillanes IV.

“‘Yun ay pawang orchestrated lamang ng mga nasa kabilang party (It was all orchestrated by the other party) which is the Liberal Party under the handling of Senator Antonio Trillanes IV,” Mr. Advincula said in a press conference by the police.

Mr. Advincula said he met Mr. Trillanes through a certain Fr. Albert Alejo. He also said the video series was part of a “Project Sodoma” aimed at ousting Mr. Duterte.

Ang Project Sodoma ay isang proyekto para pabagsakin si President Duterte at makaupo sa posisyon ay si Vice President Leni Robredo (Project Sodoma is a project to oust President Duterte so Vice President Leni Robredo could take over),” Mr. Advincula said. “Hinahabol ni Senator Trillanes bago matapos ang term niya (This was being pushed by Senator Trillanes before the end of his term)….The Vice-President will then appoint from the Senate or from the House (someone) to become the vice-president, and Senator Sonny will be in (that) line (of succession).”

Hindi lang si Senator Trillanes kundi pati ‘yung iba pang staff, miyembro ng Liberal Party (It’s not just Senator Trillanes, but also other staff, members of the Liberal Party), gaya ng staff ni Senator [Leila] De Lima at mismo si Senator Risa Hontiveros (just like the staff of Senator Leila de Lima and even Senator Risa Hontiveros herself). Ilang beses kami nagkaroon ng pag-u-usap at deliberation (We had several discussions and meetings before).”

Mr. Advincula said that among the LP-led Otsyo Diretsyo candidates, Manuel A. Roxas II was the only one he didn’t meet. On the other hand, he met Vice President Maria Leonor G. Robredo once.

Si Ma’am Leni Robredo po, isang beses lang po (I only saw Ma’am Leni Robredo once)….Hindi po siya humarap sa meeting, parang nagpakita lang (She did not attend the meeting, she just showed up),” he said.

Mr. Advincula said he was promised P500,000 as well as the dismissal of his cases in exchange for participating in the videos.

For its part, The Department of Justice (DoJ) reiterated its request to Mr. Advincula that he submit himself for investigation.

“We reiterate that call today in light of his new revelations regarding his transactions with certain personalities in the production and dissemination of those videos, and the equally serious implications of those revelations,” DoJ Undersecretary and spokesperson Markk L. Perete said in a statement.

Mr. Advincula first surfaced at the Integrated Bar of the Philippines on May 6 where he applied for but was denied legal assistance.

Malacañang, for its part, said Thursday that Mr. Advincula should sign a sworn statement on his allegations.

In his press briefing, Presidential Spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo said, “As a lawyer, I just don’t believe in what [the] person says. He has to substantiate [his claims]. He has to submit proof.”

Mr. Panelo also denied claims by critics that “Bikoy” is the administration’s “creation.” “Ha, ha, ha, ha. That’s my response,” he said.

Davao City First District Rep. Paolo Z. Duterte, for his part, said, “a proper investigation is in order.”

In a news conference that Thursday, Ms. Robredo said she never met Mr. Advincula.

“Waste of time iyong pagpaplano para pabagsakin iyong administrasyon. Saka tingin ko subversion iyon ng will ng mamamayan,” the Vice-President also said. (Ouster plots are a waste of time. And it’s subversion of the people’s will.)

(K)ung ito ay ginagawang paraan para lalong yurakan at tapakan iyong Liberal Party o kaming nasa oposisyon, gusto ko lang sabihin sa ating mga kasama na hindi ito magiging dahilan para magpapatinag tayo.” (If this is a way to trample on the Liberal Party, this won’t affect us).

Mr. Trillanes said in a separate statement, Thursday.“This could be another ploy of the administration to harass the opposition. For now, I will be consulting with my lawyers so that we could also file the appropriate charges against him.”

Akbayan Senator Risa N. Hontiveros-Baraquel said in part, “And now, when he sings a different song and accuses the opposition of outlandish things, all of a sudden his credibility is restored? How absurd.” — Vince Angelo C. Ferreras, Vann Marlo M. Villegas, Arjay L. Balinbin, and Charmaine A. Tadalan

Police-training bodies transferred to PNP

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Reporter

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte has signed a law transferring the Philippine National Police Academy (PNPA) and the National Police Training Institute (NPTI) from the Philippine Public Safety College (PPSC) to the Philippine National Police (PNP) in a bid to “beef up” the agency’s internal cleansing efforts.

Mr. Duterte signed Republic Act (RA) No. 11279 on April 12, amending Sections 24, 35, 66, 67, and 68 of RA No. 6975, or the Department of the Interior and Local Government Act of 1990, for the purpose of transferring the PNPA and the NPTI from the PPSC to the PNP. The Palace released copies of the new law to reporters on Thursday.

Sen. Panfilo M. Lacson, the law’s author, said in a statement that the PNP now has an “added tool to build a physically and morally competent force while beefing up its internal cleansing efforts.”

He said the new law will help the PNP leadership in its “internal cleansing efforts,” noting that the agency will now be “accountable for the entire gamut of responsibility from recruitment, education, field training and deployment of police officers.”

As for the transition, the law states that within 120 days from its effectivity, the PNP Chief will submit the revised table of organization. And equipment and staffing pattern of the PNPA and the NPTI to the NationalPolice Commission (Napolcom) and the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) for approval.

The Secretary of the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) and the ex officio Chairman of the Napolcom are tasked to formulate and implement a five-year transition plan to ensure the smooth transfer of the PNPA and the NPTI to the PNP.

“Within 90 days from the effectivity of this Act, the National Police Commission, in coordination with the Philippine National Police, Philippine Public Safety College, and Department of the Interior and Local Government shall promulgate the necessary rules and regulations to implement the provisions of this Act,” the law also reads.

Palace: PHL to send back Australian trash

MALACAÑANG on Thursday said the government wants the trash recently dumped in Misamis Oriental shipped back to Australia.

A shipment of trash from Australia was intercepted recently in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental, according to GMA’s 24 Oras exclusive report last Wednesday.

In a press briefing at the Palace, Presidential Spokesperson Salvador S. Panelo said regarding the trash from Australia: “It will be offensive to this government to be a recipient of trash or ‘basura.’ We are offended by that. We will not allow it. We’ll send them back.”

According to Mr. Panelo, the government will order the private firm responsible for the shipment to send the garbage back to Australia.

Ipapabalik natin sa kanila (We will ask them to ship [the garbage] back),” he said.

Asked what measures should be taken to avoid the same incident from happening again, he said the policy is to send all the trash back to their countries of origin.

Aba eh di (Of course), as soon as we discover that, then we will have the same procedure. We’ll have the same stand.”

“We will not allow ourselves to be [a] dumping ground of trash.”

On the trash from Canada, Mr. Panelo said it will be transported by the Philippine government “soon” despite the Canadian government’s announcement that it has hired a private firm for the shipment.

Sabi nila (They said) it will take about end of June pa. Hindi papayag si Presidente roon (The President will not allow that). And I understand from [Finance] Secretary [Carlos G.] Dominguez [III] that malapit nang ipadala (the trash will be shipped back soon),” Mr. Panelo said. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Comelec vows to learn from midterm polls’ glitches, do better in 2022

THE COMMISSION on Elections (Comelec) said it will assess the glitches encountered in the May 13 midterm polls and use the lessons learned in preparing for the 2022 Presidential elections.

Comelec Chairman Sheriff A. Abas told reporters on Wednesday that the poll body will do the evaluation as soon as the 2019 national and local election period officially ends on June 12.

Mag-assess kami kung saan kami nagkaproblema at ayun ang proposal para sa 2022 (We will assess where we encountered problems and that will be [the basis] of our proposal for 2022),” he said.

The Presidential elections, which will also include other national as well as local positions, is set on May 9, 2022.

In the just concluded 2019 midterm elections, nearly 2,000 SD cards were reported to be defective while nearly 1,000 vote counting machines (VCMs) were also ruled defective.

The Comelec system also experienced a seven-hour data blackout during the initial transmission of votes right after the polls closed last May 13.

YOUTH PARTY-LIST
In another development, Comelec Commissioner Rowena Amelia V. Guanzon dismissed reports that the poll body has already allowed former National Youth Commission chairman Ronald Gian Carlo L. Cardema to be the first nominee of youth sector party-list Duterte Youth.

In a social media post on Thursday, Ms. Guanzon stressed that she has not signed any resolution regarding Mr. Cardema’s application for substitution to be the first nominee of the group.

“I have not signed a Reso about giving due course to Cardema’s application for substitution but I will dissent,” she said.

At 33 years old, Mr. Cardema is deemed unqualified to be a nominee of a youth sector party-list, with the age range set at 25 to 30 years old.

The Comelec has yet to issue an official statement or resolution regarding Mr. Cardema’s substitution application, in which he seeks to replace the first nominee of Duterte Youth, his wife Ducielle Marie. — Gillian M. Cortez

New appointments include replacement for late BTA member Jaafar

PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. Duterte has appointed Mudjib C. Abu as member of the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA), replacing former Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) vice-chairman Ghazali Jaafar who died on March 13. Mr. Jaafar was chairman of the Bangsamoro Transition Commission, which drafted what would become the Bangasamoro Organic Law following the peace deal between the MILF and the government. Mr. Duterte has also appointed Grepor B. Belgica, father of Presidential Anti-Corruption Commission Commissioner Greco Antonious Beda B. Belgica, as his adviser for religious affairs. Other appointments include: Jose Sylton V. Solidum, assistant secretary at the Office of the Cabinet Secretary; Fernando S. Borja, presidential special envoy to Japan for business and investment promotion; Almarim C. Tillah, presidential special envoy to the Organization of Islamic Cooperation; Teresita M. Marañon, member of the board of directors of the Coconut Industry Investment Fund (CIIF) Oil Mills Group; Leonor I. Cabral-Lim, member of the Philippine Council for Mental Health of the Department of Health; and Celerino L. Umandap, member of the board of trustees of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration of the Department of Labor and Employment. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Marawi’s homeless and scarred

TWO years since the Marawi conflict, which broke out on May 23, 2017, the supply of potable water remains a concern in some displacement sites, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The humanitarian organization said over 100,000 people from the war-torn city “still do not have a home to return to.” Martin Thalmann, head of the ICRC delegation in the Philippines, said, “Despite the numerous aid efforts that have truly helped those in need over the two years, the people of Marawi have grown tired and frustrated. They want to stand on their own feet again and stop depending on assistance.” On top of continued help for physical survival, Mr. Thalmann stressed the need to address the “invisible scars” by strengthening the public health system in the area of psychosocial support.

12 in Caloocan, 2 in Legazpi face tax evasion charges

THE BUREAU of Internal Revenue (BIR) offices in the cities of Caloocan and Legazpi filed 12 complaints before the Department of Justice against taxpayers for willful failure to pay taxes amounting to a total of more than P776 million.

In a press release, BIR-Caloocan City said it filed 10 complaints against seven corporations and three individuals for failure to pay taxes amounting to P755 million for the years 2011 to 2015, while BIR-Legazpi City filed cases against two individual taxpayers for deficiencies of more than P21 million for 2010.

The BIR said records from its offices showed that the taxpayers were served with necessary documents for tax assessments such as Letter of Authority, Preliminary Assessment Notice and Final Decision on Disputed Assessments, among others, “but failed to pay and submit relevant supporting documents to either substantiate their claims or to refute said assessments, hence making the said assessments final, executory, and demandable.”

“The…respondents’ failure and continued refusal to pay their long overdue deficiency taxes, despite repeated demands, constitute wilful failure to pay the taxes due to the government,” BIR said.

The seven corporations in Caloocan City are Taoyuan Textile Manufacturing Corp., Primekit MFG. Corp., Spinmaster Textile Manufacturing Corp., Bicol Apparel Corp., Nature’s Best Agri Foods Corp., Amhran Trading Corp., and Innovative Technology & Environmental Solution.

The three individuals are Manuel T. Espiritu, Armando David Lagamson, and Ma. Reztiliza N. Sosa.

The two charged by the BIR in Legazpi were Amador V. Abichuela, proprietor of Amador V. Abichuela Enterprise, and Reuben L. Salopaso, owner of DNK Construction & Supply.

The cases filed are the 438th to 449th complaints filed under the BIR’s Run After Tax Evaders program. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas