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Dance to Hyundai’s ‘Two to Tango’ promo

FILIPINOS are known worldwide for being talented — from singing, acting, boxing, to even dancing. Hitting the highest key, maintaining a tune to even moving fluidly seems like inborn traits for them. But could they translate the same quality of harmonious movements on the road?

Not always. Most of the time, we’re limited to purchasing whatever fits our budget, instead of going for vehicles that can move as smooth and as agile as our elaborate dance routines onstage. The good news is, Hyundai Asia Resources Inc. (HARI), the Philippines’ official distributor of Hyundai passenger vehicles, has composed a special promo that makes purchasing your dream Hyundai models easier and lighter on your pocket.

HARI’s “Two to Tango” promo will definitely make you feel like dancin’ and drivin’, because now, you can get the Hyundai Santa Fe or the Hyundai Grand Starex at zero interest for 24 months at 20% down payment. This means that you can finally experience the luxurious Santa Fe difference of a smooth and stable ride — thanks to its monocoque body — by only paying a monthly amortization of P84,600 for two years, or indulge your family with the Grand Starex van’s tried-and-tested premium riding comfort by only paying the monthly amortization as low as P74,167 for two years. But that’s not all, because those who prefer to pay in cash can even get up to P240,000 discount!

The privilege of owning renowned models like the Santa Fe or the Grand Starex has never been this convenient. Now’s the time to start moving smoothly from Point A to Point B with Hyundai’s “Two to Tango” promo!

The “Two to Tango” promo is made possible by HARI in partnership with BPI, China Bank Savings, EastWest Bank, PSBank, Robinsons Bank, and Security Bank. Promo runs from Aug. 15 to Sept. 30, 2019 only. For more details, visit hyundai.ph or your nearest authorized Hyundai dealership today.

The Metro Sidewalk Sale’s exclusive Sept. deals

A THREE-DAY Sidewalk Sale across all Metro stores will kick off on Sept. 13 and feature shopping deals, discounts of up to 50% off, and doubled rewards points for shoppers throughout the weekend. Buyers can shop on discounted goods until they drop and Metro Rewards Card (MRC) holders get to double their points. Special Buys are exclusive deals that enable each buyer to get 55% off on some featured items with every single receipt purchase worth P1,500 from the Metro Department Store. Among these featured items are: the Tough Mama Electric Kettle, P398; the Tough Mama Rice Cooker, P648; a 40 cm diameter round hanging mirror, P395; and a bench with a bonus two-tier shoe rack for P795. Featured items during the sale include home essentials, and fashion staples for men and women (photo). Meanwhile, MRC members can get 1 liter of One Saver Select dishwashing liquid when they present a single-receipt purchase worth a minimum of P1,500 cash or credit. Apart from Metro Rewards Club, there is the Metro Business Club (MBC) program for business owners and entrepreneurs can avail of exclusive promos and competitive prices. During the sale, MBC members can avail of 5kg of premium rice with a minimum P3,500 cash or credit single receipt purchase. “The Sidewalk Sale is one of Metro Retail’s largest sale events annually, and it’s happening nationwide. It is part of our commitment in enabling consumers to purchase and save on quality products,” Pilut Montes, Metro Retail’s Chief Marketing Officer, was quoted as saying in a press release. The sale’s final day is on Sept. 15.

How PSEi member stocks performed — September 6, 2019

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Friday, September 6, 2019.

 

Duterte risks ratings if prison chief is reappointed

By Arjay L. Balinbin
Reporter

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte risks his popularity if he again transfers his sacked prison chief to another government post, analysts said.

“Reappointing Nicanor E. Faeldon could pull the president’s popularity ratings down,” Polytechnic University of the Philippines sociology professor Louie C. Montemar said by phone at the weekend. “But this is contingent on how enamored to him his followers are, and how effective his camp’s counter-narrative is.”

Mr. Duterte last week fired Mr. Faeldon, head of the Bureau of Corrections, after he allowed the illegal release of about 2,000 felons convicted of heinous crimes for good conduct.

He also ordered his and other prison officials’ probe by the Ombudsman for corruption.

Mr. Faeldon headed the Bureau of Customs but was forced to resign at the height of a controversy involving the shipment of billions of pesos worth of crystal meth from China. He was reappointed to the Office of Civil Defense before heading the BuCor in 2018.

Opposition Senator Franklin M. Drilon earlier said Mr. Faeldon was not only incompetent but also lied under oath to evade accountability for the planned early release of ex-Calauan Mayor Antonio L. Sanchez.

The release of the former politician, who was sentenced to seven life terms in 1995 for the rape and murder of two University of the Philippines students in 1993, was suspended after a public outcry and a Senate investigation of the plan.

“His reappointment of Faeldon could really bring his ratings down,” Mr. Montemar said. “But then again, who really knows how his fanatics’ minds work? Mr. Faeldon, at worst, is merely pictured as a corrupt element with no go-signal from the prexy on his wrongdoings,” he added.

“Given the track record of Mr. Faeldon in the previous posts that he occupied, I think it would not be wise for President Duterte to appoint him again to any public position,” University of the Philippines political science assistant professor Perlita M. Frago-Marasigan said in a mobile phone message.

Reappointing Mr. Faeldon could give the impression that Mr. Duterte is not serious about fighting corruption, Ms. Frago-Marasigan said.

University of Santo Tomas political science professor Marlon M. Villarin disagrees, noting that people would appreciate his act of axing his prison chief.

Mr. Faeldon is a “trojan horse” whom the president uses to reveal corruption at an agency.

“Socially, it is disturbing because reappointing Mr. Faeldon would somehow be seen to be inconsistent with President Duterte’s war against corruption,” he said in a mobile phone message.

“Most of the president’s supporters are after the output and not into processes such as the narrative of axing, which is well understood by the masses,” Mr. Villarin said.

On Friday, Mr. Duterte called his ex-prison chief a “good man.” He recalled that when he was still Bureau of Customs head, he reported to him about a Cebu-based businessman who kept cigarettes with fake tax stamps in three warehouses.

The government earned P37 billion because of that report by Mr. Faeldon, he said.

He was referring to the warehouses of Mighty Corp. that authorities raided in 2017. The cigarette company later paid the taxes.

DoJ says 76 ineligible convicts have yielded

SEVENTY-SIX of about 2,000 convicts who got illegally released for good conduct have surrendered, the Department of Justice said yesterday.

Among those who surrendered were two of the three released convicts involved in the rape-slay case of the Chiong sisters in Cebu, Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra said. The third convict is expected to yield this week.

On Saturday alone, 28 convicts arrived at the Bureau of Corrections facility accompanied by police officers from Region 2, Justice Undersecretary (DoJ) on Sunday reported a total of 76 prematurely released persons deprived of liberty (PDLs) have surrendered to the Bureau of Corrections (BuCor).

“As of 12 midnight, a total of 76 surrenderees are in the custody of BuCor. BuCor continues to receive reports from PNP (Philippine National Police) Regional Offices of more surrenderees,” Justice Undersecretary Markk L. Perete told reporters via teleconference. No convict who was illegal released has left the country, he added.

Members of a DoJ oversight committee met with BuCor officials on Sunday to discuss how to coordinate in the release of convicts for good conducts.

The Senate is investigating parole processes at the country’s prisons. The convicts were not supposed to be freed because they committed heinous crimes.

Former Calauan Mayor Antonio L. Sanchez was almost released if not for the outcry from the public and the family of his victims. The ex-politician was sentenced to seven life terms in 1995 for the rape and murder of two University of the Philippines students in 1993.

The Senate probe also uncovered that three of the seven convicts involved in the rape-slay case of the Chiong sisters had been freed. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Palace justifies transfer of convicts in De Lima case

THE presidential palace sees nothing wrong about President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s order to transfer 10 high-profile inmates to a Marine facility in Taguig.

The prisoners, who testified against Senator Leila M. De Lima — a critic of the government’s deadly war on drugs — were moved from the national jail in Muntinlupa City because their lives were in danger, presidential spokesman Salvador S. Panelo said in a statement at the weekend.

The president “supervises the entire bureaucracy” and has “complete control and supervision over all offices and agencies under the Executive department,” he said.

Ms. de Lima, who was arrested in February 2017 on what she called “trumped-up” drug charges, earlier questioned the transfer.

Dismissed prison chief Nicanor E. Faeldon approved the transfer of “high risk” inmates to the Philippine Marine Barracks in Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City, according to CNN Philippines.

The inmates had linked Ms. de Lima to the illegal drug trade inside the national jail in Muntinlupa when she was still Justice secretary.

Mr. Panelo said the convicts “remain in a detention facility under the control of the Bureau of Corrections without any VIP treatment.”

He said their lives were in danger for testifying against the senator.

Mr. Panelo said Ms. De Lima had accumulated sympathizers or henchmen who might derail the unmasking of the truth about the illegal drug trade inside the prison.

“The transfer is clearly unusual and irregular given the role played by the prisoners in question in the case against Senator Leila de Lima,” Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco, a lawyer and a senior research fellow at the Ateneo de Manila University Policy Center, said in an email. “So it’s only natural that the senator would raise questions about the move.”

While the action was within the president’s authority, the public is entitled to ask why the he ordered the transfer, Mr. Yusingco said.

“The people deserve to know the reasons why the president used his power of control over the executive branch in a way that puts his administration in a negative light,” he said. “His move is very reminiscent of how Marcos ruled during his authoritarian reign. We cannot expect Filipinos to just let this go without raising the alarm,” Mr. Yusingco added. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Police nab most wanted Maoist rebel

POLICE captured in Pasig City a communist rebel listed as most wanted by the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG).

Authorities identified the suspect as 45-year-old Joselito Novelo Naag, who is a member of the New People’s Army, the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines.

Police nabbed the suspect in Santolan, Pasig based on an arrest warrant issued by a Legazpi City trial court.

A P100,000 bounty had been offered for Mr. Naag’s capture.

The arrest of the Maoist rebel was in line with the government’s intensified campaign against criminality, according to police.

Naag is also listed as No. 30 in Police Regional Office 5’s most wanted criminals. He is now under the custody of the Eastern Police District’s Intelligence Division.

A Manila trial court has ordered the arrest of Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) founder Jose Maria “Joma” Sison, his wife and 36 other members of the organization for murder.

In an arrest warrant dated Aug. 28, Judge Thelma Bunyi-Medina did not recommend bail. The communist leaders were charged for the murder of 15 people in the so-called Inopacan massacre more than three decades ago.

Also ordered arrested were National Democratic Front of the Philippines senior adviser Luis Jalandoni, communist leaders Rodolfo Salas and Leo Velasco as well as Mr. Sison’s wife Juliet.

The case stemmed from the purges in Leyte at the height of the communist insurgency in the 1980s. They were charged with murder after skeletons of alleged victims were discovered in a mass grave in Leyte province in central Philippines.

Mr. Sison, who is in self-exile in The Netherlands, has called the list of accused “utterly stupid and obviously fabricated.” — Marc Wyxzel C. Dela Paz

President Duterte urged to hasten creation of Bangsamoro coordination body

THE Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) wants President Rodrigo R. Duterte to hasten the issuance of an order creating a body that will resolve issues between the national government and the newly established Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

At least three executive orders have been drafted — one from DILG, another from his peace adviser and a third from the Bangsamoro entity, DILG Undersecretary Jonathan E. Malaya said in an interview last week.

“We are constantly requesting the Office of the President to issue the order already,” he said. Malacañang is probably trying to reconcile the three versions, he added.

Mr. Malaya said DILG can serve as the secretariat of the so-called intergovernmental relations body.

“We feel that we are in the best position because we exercise oversight over all local governments including the BARMM,” he said.

The Bangsamoro Organic Law calls for the creation of the body “to coordinate and resolve issues on intergovernmental relations through regular consultation and continuing negotiation in a non-adversarial manner.”

Under the law, “the body must exhaust all means to resolve issues brought before it. Unresolved issues will be elevated to the president through the Bangsamoro chief minister.”

The Muslim region in a Jan. 21 referendum overwhelmingly favored the creation of a new autonomous body known as Bangsamoro, which will have its own parliament, more political power and greater funding.

Bangsamoro will govern a greater territory than the old autonomous region after Cotabato, one of the more prosperous cities on the island, voted to be included.

Bangsamoro was created after years of talks with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, a breakaway group from MNLF that signed a separate peace deal with the government under then President Benigno S.C. Aquino III.

Malacañang earlier said it would create a body that will seek to include the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) in efforts to end decades of strife in the Mindanao region.

Mr. Duterte had met with MNLF Chairman Nur Misuari in Davao City to discuss how his group can help bring peace to southern Philippines.

The president told Mr. Misuari about his desire to form a coordinating committee between the government and MNLF.

Mr. Duterte also ordered his peace adviser to convene the coordinating committee by the second week of September in Davao City to set the agenda and start discussions with Mr. Misuari’s group. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Dagupan City to buy boats for waste management in island communities

THE DAGUPAN City government is purchasing six boats this year, two of which will be assigned to the Waste Management Division (WMD) for hauling garbage from the city’s five island communities. At forum on waste management last week, Mayor Marc Brian C. Lim gave this assurance as he called on barangay officials to strictly implement segregation policies. “Maaasahan po ninyo na bibigyan natin ng pansin ang tamang collection ng basura, basta’t kayo rin po sa barangay ay tama rin ang collection niyo ng basura, tama ang (Rest assured that we will attend to concerns on garbage collection, as long as on your part, you observe proper collection and) segregation and the use of your MRF (material recover facility),” Mr. Lim said. Teddy Villamil, WMD consultant, welcomed the announcement, noting that garbage collection in the island villages “had always been a struggle.” He said garbage from the villages of Carael, Calmay and Pugaro are collected twice a week using a six-wheeler truck, which takes a 20-kilometer route via Binmaley town. In Lomboy and Salapingao, garbage is hauled twice a week using an old motorboat of the City Engineer’s Office. “But there were times when village officials rented privately-owned boats just to haul the garbage,” Mr. Villamil said. Two of the four other boats will go to the City Agriculture Office, and one each to the city police and City Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office.

OPEN DUMP
Meanwhile, Mr. Lim reiterated his intent to close the city’s open dump in Bonuan Boquig by the end of this year, recognizing that this facility violates the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act. He stressed that to achieve this, he needs improved waste management systems at the barangay level. “Your commitment to cooperate with the city government is very important,” he said.

Ormoc eyes Lake Danao water supply project for PPP

THE ORMOC City government signed an agreement last week with the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Center for assistance on various projects that will be proposed under a PPP scheme. One of the priority projects that will be pursued is the Lake Danao Water System Project, which still needs a feasibility study. “We will be proposing to provide source of water from Lake Danao to serve potable water throughout the city,” Mayor Richard I Gomez said in a statement. Following the Sept. 3 agreement signing with the PPP center, Mr. Gomez met with the heads of the local engineering and planning departments to discuss how they can fast-track the Lake Danao plan as well as tourism projects at Quintolimbo, site of an eco-park. Lake Danao is part of the bigger Lake Danao Natural Park, a declared protected area.

Iloilo City vendors given until Monday to vacate sidewalks

ABOUT 1,500 sidewalk vendors in Iloilo City have been ordered to vacate their spots by today, Sept. 9, in line with the national government’s directive to clear roads and public spaces from all obstructions. “In my four terms as a mayor, I never ordered for the displacement of the sidewalk vendors. But now, I have no choice because this is the mandate of the President. I am asking for your cooperation and I hope you will understand me,” Mayor Jerry P. Treñas said. Affected vendors will get P5,000 financial assistance from the Department of Social Welfare and Development, Mr. Treñas assured. The city’s Public Employment Service Office, together with the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority, will also provide trainings for alternative livelihood such as food processing, dressmaking, and souvenir-making. There will also be an option to relocate at the old International Hotel on Aldeguer-JM Basa Streets in the city proper district or in a property of Panay Electric Company in JM Basa as well. Despite the assistance programs, several vendors are appealing to stay at their current locations. “They can regulate the sizes of our shoe boxes, we are really amenable to that. Just don’t displace us,” said 40-year old Joeven F. Herrera, who, along with his father and brother, have a shoe repair shop along Ledesma Street. Department of Interior and Local Government-Iloilo City Director Roy D. Defiño, on the other, pointed out that apart from the President’s directive, the city has an ordinance since 1992 prohibiting the use of city sidewalks for the construction of stalls and kiosks for commercial purposes. — Emme Rose S. Santiagudo

Growing condominium lifestyle boosts demand for cleaning services

THE RISE of condo living, fast-paced lifestyle, and online vacation home rentals has prompted strong demand for outsourced house cleaning services in Cebu. Cleanmate Solutions Inc. Chief Executive Officer Azela Honor said what primarily drives the company’s growth is the rising ownership of condominium units used either as residence or for rental. “Most of our buyers or at least 70% of them are working or living abroad or not from Cebu, usually they ask us [agents/brokers] to find people to clean their units. The demand is strong now,” she said in an interview. The company, a subsidiary of all-in-one real estate solutions provider Filipino Homes, was primarily created to support the after-sales need of buyers. But their cleaning services has now expanded to home owners in high-end subdivisions, industrial companies, and offices. Launched last March, Cleanmate Solutions has over 20 accredited cleaners. Service rates are based on a per square meter area. Ms. Honor said they have invested in high-end cleaning equipment and use high-quality cleaning solutions. Ms. Honor said they are now planning to open branches in other major cities such as Iloilo in Western Visayas, Cagayan de Oro in Northern Mindanao, and Davao City in the southern part of Mindanao. — The Freeman