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Davis, James carry LA Lakers past Utah Jazz, 121-96

LOS ANGELES — Anthony Davis scored 26 points, and LeBron James added 20 points as the visiting Los Angeles Lakers got off to a fast start and held off the Utah Jazz 121-96 on Wednesday.

The Lakers won a game for the second consecutive night, a back-to-back feat made even more impressive by the fact that they played at altitude in Denver on Tuesday and did it again at Salt Lake City.

The Lakers improved to 10-0 away from Staples Center.

James, who leads the NBA in assists, added 12 more to his season total. He played 29 minutes while Davis played 26 after they each saw 37 minutes of action at Denver.

Rajon Rondo contributed 14 points and 12 assists for Los Angeles.

Donovan Mitchell had 29 points, and Rudy Gobert added 13 points and 10 rebounds as the Jazz lost at home for just the second time in 10 games. Bojan Bogdanovic had 23 points for Utah.

The Lakers trailed by eight points early in the first quarter, but they refused to let the hole get any deeper. They turned the game around quickly to lead by as many as 10 in the opening quarter before pushing their margin to 65-47 at halftime.

Instead of retreating in the second half, the Lakers led by as many as 25 midway through the fourth quarter before coach Frank Vogel started to unload his bench with 4:44 remaining.

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope scored 14 for the Lakers, while Kyle Kuzma scored 13 in his return to Utah, where he played in college. The Lakers had a 46-40 rebounding advantage one night after setting a season high with 56 boards against the Nuggets. — Reuters

Overworked Tiger

Tiger Woods had an up-and-down round yesterday, but he looked none the worse for wear as he met members of the media in the aftermath. Considering all his responsibilities apart from participating at the Hero World Challenge, perhaps he understood that an even-par 72 wasn’t bad at all. It certainly could have been better; he carded a bogey and a double bogey in his last two holes after nicely getting back on track following a poor front nine. But it could have also been worse, what with his mind occupied by other off-course pursuits.

Granted, Woods is Woods, and his intrinsically competitive nature compels him to try to show his best every time he tees off. It’s why he managed to string together a sterling birdie-par-birdie-birdie-eagle stretch from the 11th that would have put him firmly in contention had he just coasted to the finish. It included a sterling drive on the par-five 12th in which his ball went a full 20 yards past much-younger playing partner Justin Thomas; after seeing the distance, he couldn’t help but good-naturedly needle his friend’s effort.

Then again, Woods already has countless miles on his odometer. He’s an old 43, and with hosting duties overlapping concerns as playing captain of the Team USA for the Presidents Cup, he finds his relatively brittle body and taxed mind under the wringer. The other day, he even had to be part of the Hero Shot, an event at nearby Baha Mar resort complex that also tested the short game of five other players. He wound up beating them all in effective measures of accuracy off an elevated platform through palm trees, over a reflecting pool, and to a makeshift green 130 yards away.

Given the proximity and importance of the Presidents Cup, Woods found himself answering more queries about it than on the state of his game yesterday. Not that he minded. At the same time, it’s fair to argue that he will be more prepped inside the ropes. It doesn’t matter that his is an unofficial event in the Bahamas. Forget that he’s swamped with work. When the ball is in front of him and he’s ready to swing, he’ll strive to carve his shot according to his intention. To him, winning may not be everything. When he’s primed to play, however, winning does wind up being the only thing.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

PSE index drops further as Nov. inflation picks up

By Denise A. Valdez, Reporter

THE MAIN INDEX recorded its third straight day of decline on Thursday amid the pickup in November inflation and positive developments in the US-China trade negotiations.

The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) fell 25.02 points or 0.32% to close at 7,790.91 on Thursday, as the broader all shares index shed 17.18 points or 0.36% to 4,640.63.

“With trade talks ongoing and November inflation coming in a little over expected, local shares slid this trading session,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan said in a mobile message yesterday.

Bloomberg reported late Wednesday that US and China are close to finalizing the tariff rollbacks that will be part of their “phase one” trade agreement, citing information from people familiar with the negotiations. It noted the deal may be signed before Dec. 15, when American tariffs are scheduled to increase.

Wall Street took the news with optimism on Wednesday, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average index, the S&P 500 index and the Nasdaq Composite index all rose 0.53%, 1.24% and 1.56%, respectively.

Inflation data from the Philippine Statistics Authority also affected the local market on Thursday, as the report showed headline inflation last month landed at 1.3% — still within the central bank’s 0.9-1.7% estimate range but also the first time it picked up in the second half of the year.

Despite Mr. Limlingan’s comments attributing the market’s decline to the inflation report, AAA Southeast Equities, Inc. Research Head Christopher John Mangun said it “had almost no effect on the market as investors ignore fundamentals and focus on the sentiment.”

Mr. Mangun said what drove the market were foreign investors which recorded a net buying of P37.85 million.

Sectoral indices at the PSE were mostly down on Thursday. Services dropped 30.72 points or 2% to end at 1,503; industrials gave up 87.19 points or 0.89% to end at 9,629.35; mining and oil lost 55.71 points or 0.72% to 7,582.57; property decreased 17.07 points or 0.41% to 4,067.93; and financials slipped 1.38 points or 0.07% to end the session at 1,889.48.

Holding firms was the lone increasing sector that climbed, adding 19.07 points or 0.24% to end at 7,715.23.

Value turnover closed at P6.51 billion yesterday, lower than Wednesday’s P7.72 billion, with 514.81 million issues changing hands.

There were more stocks that lost than those that gained, 117 against 68, while 54 names were unchanged.

Net inflows stood at P37.85 million, lower than Wednesday’s P922.23 million.

“We still believe the PSEi can end the week above 7,800,” Mr. Mangun said. — with Bloomberg

Peso rebounds on inflation, US-China trade talks

THE PESO strengthened anew following the release of local inflation data.

THE PESO regained its strength versus the dollar on Thursday as markets picked up a sense of optimism that trade talks between the US and China are still in progress despite the situation in some of China’s territories and following data showing manageable inflation in November.

The local unit closed at P50.80 against the greenback on Thursday, strengthening by 22 centavos from the P51.02-a-dollar close on Wednesday, according to data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines.

The peso opened at P50.95 against the dollar. Its weakest point was at P50.95 while its strongest was at P50.78 versus the greenback.

Dollars traded dropped to $1.022 billion from $1.428 billion seen on Wednesday.

The peso’s rebound on Thursday came after positive leads about the US-China trade talks, according to one trader.

“The peso appreciated sharply from renewed market optimism amid news that the US and China resumed negotiations despite geopolitical noise involving Hong Kong and the Uighurs,” the trader said in an e-mail.

Reuters reported that Chinese ambassador to the United States Cui Tiankai said the world’s two biggest economic powerhouses have been working to resolve their differences over trade.

However, he warned of “forces” that may be a source of conflict between the two countries.

Mr. Cui urged US and Chinese companies keen to expand trade between the two countries to stand up against what he called efforts to “spread hostility and even create conflict between us,” as well as “fake news” about the situations in both Hong Kong and Xinjiang, China’s troubled western region that is home to a large Uighur Muslim minority, whom some US officials have said are the victims of human rights abuses.

The House of Representatives in the US voted nearly unanimously on Tuesday for a bill that would require the administration to toughen its response to China’s crackdown on the Uighurs.

Meanwhile, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort attributed the peso’s movement to the November inflation report.

“Latest inflation data [is] still considered relatively low despite some uptick from unusually low levels, thereby supporting the sentiment on the peso,” he said in a text message.

November inflation was seen at 1.3%, according to data from the Philippine Statistics Authority. This is a pickup from the 0.8% rise in the overall prices of commodities in October.

For today, the trader sees the local unit moving within the P50.70-50.90 range, while Mr. Ricafort gave a forecast of P50.65-50.95. — LWTN with Reuters

Investigating the grid

It is a simple case to make. We are totally dependent on energy for our essential needs. Our stores and factories require electricity. Our airports, sea ports, and all sorts of transport terminals require power to operate. By any definition, legal or otherwise, any facility that provides such a service is a public utility, a vital installation of national interest for national security.

ON THE ROLES AND OWNERS OF THE NGCP
After good old Napocor (National Power Corp.) was privatized, an entity called the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) became the operator of our national electrical grid that transmits electricity from the source of power generation to the distribution utilities. Even if the name has the word “national” in it, it is purely a private corporation.

This private corporation is actually a concessionaire, much like any other similar business arrangements. A school or a jail owns a canteen and a concessionaire runs it. A mall owns a parking building and a parking company manages the operation.

Now, this private corporation is 60% owned by Filipinos and 40% owned by foreigners. In the case of the NGCP, it is owned by the Chinese. And it is not just any Chinese individual or company. It is owned by a government-owned company, the State Grid Corporation of China (SGCC). Just note the corporate name, it is a “state” grid of “China.” The SGCC serves as the technical partner in the NGCP as the Filipino owners do not have the experience or expertise to operate a national grid.

ON FOREIGN AND CHINESE OWNERSHIP AND OPERATION OF THE NGCP.
While 40% foreign ownership of utilities is allowed under the law, it means that the majority stockholder here — the 60% Filipino — is the controlling and presumably dominant owner that watches out for the best interests of the private company. This best interest is the maximization of profits and is expected of any private company.

A usual concern of the minority stockholder is how to secure their investment in a foreign land and to make a return on their capital. In the strategic view of a state company of China, the security lies in technically managing the transmission grid to make the Filipino partners entirely dependent on them for the highly complex aspects of the operations.

It also helps to keep the Filipino owners happy with consistent and good dividends year in and year out that in sum is now more than the concessionaire fee. It means the NGCP is profitable. Guess where its income is coming from?

The related problem is under-investment. In public utilities with consistently good margins, it can mean two things: one, the rates or fees are higher than necessary, or, two, under-invest so that the yields will be higher. It can be that these two are happening at the expense of optimization of the grid infrastructure that is necessary to power a developing economy like the Philippines, and at the expense of consumers especially the poor and the middle class who may otherwise use the savings for education and health.

As a concessionaire with a mandate given by law, is expected to comply with all the conditions. One requirement is to undertake an initial public offering (IPO) of 20% of its stock 10 years from 2009. The year 2019 is ending. The NGCP continues to cite pending matters to delay the public ownership of a portion of it as a “public” utility. This is a way to redistribute the profits from the private to the public. It is also to make a vital installation more transparent.

INVESTIGATING THE GRID
While it is a given the private companies exist to make money, does the same logic apply to the Chinese state company which owns a part but effectively runs the national electricity grid of another state — the Philippines — with which it has opposing territorial disputes?

The answer is no. The SGCC’s first and only interest is the government of China, being its owner.

If the NGCP says otherwise, the way to resolve it is relatively easy. The first step to investigating the grid is for policymakers and technical experts to do a site inspection. One can tell who actually calls the shots in the control room. The second step is to ask the Filipinos, who are presumably loyal to the flag and the Republic, to operate and shut down a least disruptive component of the grid. If it can be done, in the event of a switch-off at least the Filipino engineers know where to look.

An electrical grid is a terribly territorial business. It wholly runs within the national territory. It means that there is no need for any network connection overseas. There ought not be any industrial type or commercial speed internet link to China. This is the third step of the investigation.

There are other technical and management actions for sure. The governance course of action is to amend the law. No justification is necessary. Any country has the right to protect itself.

Cauldron of errors

The transport, accommodations, athletic facilities, press accreditation and food issues, among others that hounded the Philippines’ hosting of the 30th Southeast Asian Games prior to its opening date, were real enough. But the response of government officials, Netizens, much of the public, and even the press itself to that “cauldron of errors” being reported by the Philippine media also underlined the need for developing authentic media literacy programs not only for the enlightenment of the citizenry but also, and perhaps even more urgently, for the education of the so-called leaders of this country.

However, if their coverage of the SEA Games controversy, which surged during the Senate budget hearings in early November, is any gauge, much of the media themselves need to seriously examine how they’ve been reporting the current chaos in Philippine governance and its consequences.

The value of such a review won’t be limited to the potential improvement in the way the press provides the information-needy public the reports about the Duterte regime that could help enhance its critical understanding of it. It would also upgrade the press’ capacity to report governance and politics in general as well as such other crucial issues as human rights and the environment.

Some media organizations had been on and off covering the preparations for the 2019 SEA games since early this year. But only opposition Senator Franklin Drilon’s questioning the P50 million+ cost of the “cauldron” that would contain the eternal flame that is the competitions’ symbol made the headlines. (It made the news again on Dec. 1. Instead of its being lit on the SEA Games’ Opening Day on Nov. 30 by boxer and part-time senator Manny Pacquiao, a tape of him doing it earlier was shown during the performance instead.) What followed Drilon’s complaint that that vessel cost too much was a veritable witches’ brew of finger-pointing, conflicting claims, and media battering.

House of Representatives Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano, whose private foundation, the Philippine Sea Games Organizing Committee (Phisgoc), was incorporated in 2018 to organize things and undertake the preparations — and to get its grubby hands on the billions appropriated for the project — dismissed Drilon’s criticism, and then blamed him and the Senate for supposedly cutting the budget for the games. As Opening Day approached, and some foreign sports teams started arriving, the many gaffes that occurred also made the front pages, the six o’clock news, and the foreign newspapers and newscasts.

Almost predictably did Phisgoc officials and other Duterte regime partisans shift the blame from themselves to the press for reporting such instances of appalling incompetence as the Cambodian team’s being forced to sleep on the floor of the hotel where they were supposed to be billeted, Muslims athletes’ being served pork, and some game venues’ being unfinished. Cayetano even claimed that some members of the press may have been bribed to sabotage the Philippines’ hosting of the SEA Games and threatened to sue them for libel. One member of the House of Representatives went as far as to suggest the filing of sedition charges against the alleged “conspirators” behind the “plot.”

Still others, among them someone from Phisgoc who’s better left unnamed, demanded, bad grammar and all, that press reports be “positive” for the sake of patriotism — which in practical terms means journalists’ censoring themselves so as to keep the blunders and sheer incompetence of the organizers out of the media and hence out of the public mind and eye.

Few government bureaucrats and even fewer of their accomplices can get over their confusing journalism for public relations. The clueless creatures of the Duterte clique are no exception. Either they’re unable to think through the differences between one and the other, or simply can’t abide the fact that the primary responsibility of reporters is to report what happened, and, when necessary, to explain the meaning of the news regardless of the demands of this or that interest group, government official, or personality.

Unfortunately, however, the demand that journalists either report only the good news or else frame their reports in furtherance of an agenda flattering to a country, a government, or anyone else with a stake in favorable publicity is a perspective widely shared among the citizenry. This much was evident in the demand over social media that the press stop reporting the blundering incompetence of the SEA Games organizers, and to instead “unite” the country behind its athletes. It’s a legitimate enough wish, but keeping the citizenry ignorant of what’s happening has nothing to do with it.

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) said it all when it took exception to the press’, rather than the Phisgoc’s being blamed by the regime, its usual trolls, and its old media hacks for the further erosion of the country’s already damaged reputation worldwide.

The duty of journalists, said the NUJP, “has always been to report things as they are based on verifiable facts and not to pander to anyone’s perception of what is, or should be.

“It (is) ridiculously unacceptable when the officials responsible for the (SEA Games) disaster resort to bashing media… as if the reports on their shortcomings were to blame for the disaster. (Dictating) how the media should report the news has no place in a democracy.”

The Foreign Correspondents Association of the Philippines (FOCAP) also denounced “remarks by Southeast Asian Games organizers blaming the media partly for the flurry of negative reports on logistical issues…

“Independent journalists report problems and issues imbued with public interest as they happen and become evident… We report defeats and victories, failures and triumphs.

“We specially take exception to insinuations by House Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano… that there may have been attempt to bribe the media to malign the Philippines’ hosting of the Southeast Asian Games. Such sweeping accusations without a shred of evidence are totally unacceptable and tend to intimidate journalists from reporting irregularities objectively.”

What’s ironic is that despite what the bashers of media say, much of the press has actually taken the greatest pains to report even the attacks on itself, as well as Cayetano’s and his Phisgoc accomplices’ excuses for what is now likely to go down in the history of Philippine sports as the “2019 SEA Games mess.”

Quoting whatever the notorious, the famous, the powerful, the wealthy, or anyone with some kind of official title say is, in fact, the most common form that what’s known as “he-said-she-said” reporting takes in the Philippine press. It was very much in evidence in the reporting of the SEA Games gaffes and their aftermath. The result in this instance is the dominance in the media of the Cayetano-Phisgoc narrative, and hence, much of the public’s buying into it — thanks to the very same press community they’ve been accusing of negative, unpatriotic, and even malevolent reporting.

The practice doesn’t help make already confused and confusing events, issues, policies, and developments any clearer. It instead contributes to the misinformation and disinformation crisis that has constricted democratic discourse and made it dangerous and difficult among a citizenry that today needs it most.

Apparently not only must the public be media literate. Much of the press also have to re-examine themselves, and evaluate how they’ve been reporting that area of Philippine life that the Duterte regime has made even more problematic: politics and governance. Paraphrasing what Shakespeare’s three witches cackled at each other while stirring their own non-SEA Games cauldron of horrors, reviewing journalism practice and encouraging public understanding of the media are double the toil because it’s double the trouble.

 

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

www.luisteodoro.com

Ribbons in the sky

The world undergoes upheavals and periods of turmoil. There have been many crises — floods, earthquakes, epidemics, and wars.

The past few decades have seen immense devastation from natural calamities. The hurricane threats continue in different regions.

The ancient mystics used to gaze at the heavens to seek guidance during times of distress and strife. In the Medieval Times, the astronomers and astrologers charted planetary positions among the stars. The French clairvoyant Nostradamus foretold events centuries before they happened. He composed archaic poetic quatrains that people still use as historical or prophetic reference materials. When analyzed, the coincidences are eerily accurate.

Modern astrologers calculate their forecasts for personal charts that are puzzling and surreal. The configurations of stars and confluence of events coincide with violent confrontations and intense conflicts in the politically sensitive areas of the globe.

The solar and lunar eclipses and meteor showers are subjects for interpretation in the context of civil protests and a sudden change in leadership in several countries. There is a contagious effect.

When the torrential rains and storm surges occur, people search for the proverbial rainbow.

The prism symbolizes the ancient divine promise that a deluge would not destroy the world again. The biblical story of Noah’s Ark that survived nonstop rain for 40 days and 40 nights comes to mind whenever a super-typhoon approaches.

The community fervently prays the Oratio Imperata for deliverance from calamities. This prayer acknowledges mankind’s abuse against nature and the environment that resulted in the perennial threat of global warming.

On a lighter note, the rainbow is a poetic vision of translucent colorful ribbons in the sky. It is fascinating, ephemeral, vivid or translucent. It seems close but never close enough. The prism is visible yet intangible. One blink and it vanishes.

The optimist sees the arch in the sky as a sign of good luck. In a tropical paradise where the trade winds blow, rainbows always appear during a rainfall. The island is lush with trees and exotic blooms from the frequent showers on the volcanic soil. In every sense, it is the idyllic refuge.

Once in a while, one sees the phenomenon of twin rainbows stretched over a misty mountain range. As the sun peeks from billowing clouds, its rays illuminate, reflect, or refract millions of tiny raindrops. Amidst the dissipating fog, the diffused half circles appear to be on top on each other.

Across the Pacific Ocean, the famous gnarled lone cypress stands at the extreme edge of a coastal cliff. Buffeted by strong winds, the century-old tree has survived and withstood so many storms. The forest of slanted cypress trees remains frozen in time.

On a cold, foggy afternoon, after a passing shower, a majestic rainbow briefly hovered like a half-halo above the Lone Cypress. The crashing waves splashed against the rocks ad the craggy cliffs along the coastline. A distant foghorn sounded soulfully. The colorful ribbons disappeared like a broken spell.

Miles away, a horse and its rider cantered along the beach of Half Moon Bay, chasing another rainbow.

Once upon a time, a favorite childhood game was spotting a rainbow after the rain. There is an ageless charm that appeals to kids of all sizes. On breezy weekends, while riding or walking in an open field, one feels immersed in nature. The passing showers are blessings. Then it comes — the much-awaited inspiration to create, to capture the mood and the quality of diffused light.

Does the mythical pot of gold at the end of the arch really exist? That is a mystery that needs to be revealed.

One time, this dreamer followed one rainbow and traced it to a surprise end — atop the weather-beaten, shingled roof of a rustic inn. In an incredible flash, it explained why the restaurant attracted a queue of gourmets. Then it faded. It was magic in practice.

And now, amidst the raging storm winds and torrential rains, one recalls the story of Noah’s Ark. After 40 days and nights, the deluge subsided. The dove flew out and returned with the olive twig and leaves.

Beyond the rainbow, the symbol of hope and divine promise, one can have a glimpse of infinity.

 

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

mavrufino@gmail.com

Latin America’s generals know their place

By Mac Margolis

THE FIRST time I caught a glimpse of Latin American democracy in peril, it hadn’t even arrived. This was Brazil, in 1983, when the military government was stewarding what General Ernesto Geisel, president from 1974 to 1979, called a “slow, gradual and secure political opening.” Jobless protesters and union militants were in no mood to wait and, blessed by politicized Catholic bishops, capped three days of rage by rushing the governor’s palace in Sao Paulo. Police beat them back and the governor — the first elected by popular vote since the 1960s — threatened to call in federal troops. “The street violence is testing the opening to democracy,” President Joao Baptista Figueiredo, a retired general, warned. After two decades of military rule no one needed a translation.

Sao Paulo’s state house did not fall that day and federal troops did not ride to the rescue. Brazil’s tenuous opening to democracy crawled apace and has not been interrupted in the 35 years since. Despite massive foreign debt, two presidents brought down by impeachment, unprecedented graft, violent demonstrations and a lately hepped-up military presence in Brasilia, the armed forces are not making a comeback. What’s in play today in Brazil and its neighbors is not a return to martial rule, but the parlous state of democracy, and lingering doubts over whether elected leaders can meet the rising expectations of a demanding public without trampling the rule of law or ringing for backup.

Guatemala, Peru, Ecuador, Chile, Bolivia, Colombia: Every week seems to bring another conflagration in the Americas. Authorities are bewildered and lash out, answering the rolling fury in the streets with truncheons and tear gas, or worse. When none of that works, besieged leaders retreat behind palace doors and a phalanx of military commanders.

Latin America’s praetorian temptation has plenty of reasons. World-beating criminal violence, the venal political establishment and the slowest growing economies corrode confidence in the ability of civilian authority to deliver stability and relief, never mind prosperity. And when frustrations flare, as they have from Tegucigalpa to Santiago, enfeebled leaders know whom to call. “There’s still a widespread feeling among many in Latin America that in times of trouble, the armed forces are the last resort,” Christoph Harig, a Latin America scholar at the University of the Federal Armed Forces in Hamburg, Germany, told me. “In many ways, they were never gone.”

This assessment might seem incongruous. Rule by junta went out of fashion decades ago. Except for Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, where the armed forces are part of the governing franchise, free and mostly fair elections are the regional standard. In most countries of Central and South America, the courts and legislatures keep presidents in check, or when they don’t, people protest — sometimes to a fault.

Sure, some unreconstructed military men are only too willing to reprise an imagined martial golden era. Even after they vacated the palace, the Brazilian brass made sure to extend their lease well into democratic times. The current charter of 1988, which was stuffed with safeguards against authoritarian fiat, had a fail-safe provision (Article 142) enshrining the armed forces as the guarantors of “constitutional powers.” It was as if everyone agreed “that the republic still needs a crutch,” writes historian Jose Murilo de Carvalho, a scholar of military politics.

Increasingly, however, the region’s military commanders accepted their new brief and busied themselves with professionalizing the armed forces, leaving politics to politicians and mostly holding their noses when civilians misbehaved. Not coincidentally, coups have declined sharply since the region’s return to electoral democracy in the 1980s and 1990s.

Part of the new abstinence owes to shifting sensibilities in the barracks. Younger officers raised after the dictatorship have a deeper connection to democracy. They know that military minders not only eclipsed freedom and political liberty across Latin America but also sponsored horrific violence and unspeakable human rights violations that have left scars, not least on their own corporation.

Even the old guard is aware that the age of juntas didn’t end well, and that the restoration of civilian rule also comes bundled with truth commissions, human rights trials, and demands for reparations. Perhaps nowhere was this more evident than in Argentina, where a combination of crimes (the Dirty War), strategic blunders (the disastrous Malvinas/Falklands war), and retribution shamed the armed forces into retreat. “There was a time when off-duty military wouldn’t wear their uniforms in public,” said Argentine historian Federico Finchelstein, of the New School for Social Research. “There is no place for the Argentine military in politics today.” The reticence over crossing lines even extends to Chile, where the memory of General Augusto Pinochet still makes recrudescent hardliners’ pulses race. “Chilean military are not interested in a new state of exception,” said Harig. “Like most armed forces, they are wary of taking on governing functions and fear institutional backlash if things go wrong.”

The retreat from politics after democracy’s return has helped to cleanse the armed forces’ reputation and restore their standing and image as honest brokers. It was never quite that way, yet the fantasy has earned the armed forces, long disgruntled over under-funding, some quid pro quo: South American military spending rose 3.1% last year. In turn, civilian rulers cashed in on the military’s reputational collateral. “There are reasons why the military becomes a useful political tool,” Matthew Taylor, a Latin America specialist at American University, told me. “They have fairly enduring legitimacy when other institutions have seen declining approval.”

The point was not lost on Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, a former army captain who packed his cabinet with decorated retired generals, outdoing even the bygone military governments he so admires. Never mind that most of Bolsonaro’s brass are far more politically moderate than he.

The danger is when struggling national leaders call upon the military to solve problems it has no business taking on. Latin America is the world’s most murderous region, and metastasizing violence has undermined faith in justice, law enforcement, and most of the political establishment. Hence the preference by officials in high-crime nations to deploy soldiers for police work. In Mexico and Brazil, traditional police are overwhelmed or compromised by drug trafficking. In Colombia, armed forces have long been part of the domestic response to outlaw gangs and insurgents.

Aside from credibility-seeking leaders, however, militarizing police work pleases no one. It brings the weapons of war to crowded city streets and miscasts soldiers, trained to subdue and kill an enemy, as peacekeepers. The risk is of disproportionate violence, increased human rights violations, and tarnishing the military’s own brand. So it was in April, when soldiers assigned to contain street crime in Rio fired more than 80 rounds into what they mistook as a stolen vehicle, killing a 51-year-old musician and wounding two of his family on their way to a baby shower.

Nonetheless, the military’s relative cachet has proved expedient when democracy turns messy and civilian authorities stumble. In Bolivia, self-declared socialist President Evo Morales actively courted the military high command, a deference that backfired when he lost his grip in the turbulent aftermath of a tainted election. In Brazil, Workers Party leader Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva lavished the troops with big budgets and gadgets, including a questionable $5.4 billion bequest of 36 fighter jets from Sweden — although none of that did his hapless successor Dilma Rousseff any good when she flirted with calling on the military to prevent her impeachment.

In many situations, the military has been called into action to defend constitutional order, not to usurp it. Blocked by an intransigent opposition-controlled legislature, Peru’s Martin Vizcarra invoked a controversial rule to dissolve parliament and call new elections, leaning on the military as a backstop. A transitional congressional committee will prevail until the January elections. In October, Ecuador’s Lenin Moreno turned to the military when protesters surrounded the palace in Quito after he declared austerity measures that were fiscally salutary but politically disastrous. After all, while the Ecuadoran military has rarely clung to power, “they’ve loomed behind every political upheaval and regime change since the restoration of democracy,” says Andres Mejia Acosta, a lecturer of political economy at Kings College London.

In Bolivia, Morales precipitated his own fall by seeking a fourth straight mandate, flouting the public will and the term limits laid out in the constitution that his own party wrote. Yes, the military overreached by advising him to resign — a request that civilian leaders ignore at their own peril. However, it did so only after the streets exploded, the police mutinied and the Bolivian Workers Central, a longtime ally, called for Morales’s resignation upon widespread evidence that he’d claimed victory in a stolen election. Worries of military overhang in politics eased last week when the Bolivian congress, dominated by Morales’s party, voted overwhelmingly to hold new elections. Bolivians will see if the caretaker government of Jeanine Anez, a rabid Morales critic, sticks to her transitional mandate or warms to the throne.

The last thing Bolivia and its neighbors need is an activist military, which may exact temporary redress against adventurers and wannabe tyrants but is anathema to the rule of law and constitutional order. In a proper democracy, defending the constitution is a job for the courts and legislatures. Too often, both institutions are weak or captured, creating a vacuum where epaulets stand in for the checks and balances upon which democracy flourishes or fails. The challenge today is not so much how to contain an overeager armed forces, but how to fix an under-performing political class all too eager to trade on borrowed prestige.

Latin Americans might take a cue from Uruguay. In October, when right-wing lawmakers stoking fear over spiking crime proposed a constitutional amendment to militarize policing, tens of thousands of angry citizens poured into the streets of Montevideo — not to jeer a discredited government but decry what they saw as a menace to democracy. Happily, Uruguayans voted to keep the military where they belong, in their barracks.

 

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Gov’t studying legal options on contracts with water utilities

THE government is studying its legal options over what it claims are onerous provisions in the contracts of two water utilities, Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra said on Thursday.

Lawyers would probably draft a new version of the agreements with Manila Water Co. and Maynilad Water Services, Inc. without the clauses that are against the law and public policy, he told reporters in a Viber group message.

“We’ll probably start with the drafting of a new version that excises all provisions in the concession agreement that we believe are contrary to law and public policy, as well as those that are highly prejudicial to the interest of the consuming public,” he said.

Mr. Guevarra said President Rodrigo R. Duterte had asked the department to come up with an “integrated solution.”

The justice secretary on Monday said they found a dozen provisions that disadvantaged the government and consumers after reviewing the water concessionaires’ contracts with stated-owned Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS).

For one, the contracts bar state interference in rate-setting and protect the water companies if losses arise from government intervention, Mr. Guevarra said.

Mr. Duterte on Tuesday slammed Manila Water and Maynilad over the contracts.

Manila Water on Friday told the Philippine Stock Exchange that the Permanent Court of Arbitration in Singapore had ordered the Philippine government to pay the company P7.9 billion for losses after the government allegedly breached its obligation.

In September last year, the Singapore High Court also upheld the arbitral award to Maynilad of at least P3.4 billion after the government failed to appeal the court’s decision. The losses were due to MWSS’ refusal to implement tariff adjustment that included recovery of corporate income tax payments.

Mr. Guevarra said the legal remedies “are not mutually exclusive.”

The Office of the Solicitor General is contemplating judicial remedies here and overseas, he said.

Some Cabinet members want an overhaul of the existing concession agreements, while others are thinking of more drastic actions. Mr. Duterte has asked the Justice department to come up with an integrated solution, he added.

“The government is more interested in getting a new deal than in compromising the arbitral award,” he said.

The presidential palace on Wednesday said the president had ordered the filing of appropriate criminal, civil, and administrative charges against state officials involved in the making of the contract.

Manila Water on Wednesday said it had complied with its obligations as a concessionaire.

Meanwhile, three congressmen have filed a resolution seeking an investigation of the contracts “in aid of legislation.”

“It is the primordial duty of Congress in the exercise of its legislative and oversight functions to protect the Filipino people from onerous agreements,” according to a copy of the five-page resolution signed by Bayan Muna Reps. Carlos Isagani T. Zarate, Ferdinand Gaite and Eufemia C. Cullamat.

The Senate may also review water concession agreements with utilities deemed onerous in the exercise of its oversight function, Senator Francis N. Tolentino said at a forum on Wednesday.

The concession agreement states that “all disagreements, disputes, controversies or claims which cannot be resolved through consultation and negotiation among the parties shall be resolved not by the Philippine justice system but by a foreign tribunal.” — Vann Marlo M. Villegas and Genshen L. Espedido

Fish prices shoot up amid closed season; DA approves importations

PRICES of fish have gone up during the closed fishing season, the Department of Agriculture (DA) said on Thursday.

Prices have been increasing because fishermen spend more on gasoline trying to catch fish that go to warmer waters, Agriculture spokesperson Noel O. Reyes said at a briefing.

Based on the agency’s daily price monitoring, as of Thursday, the prices of milkfish averaged P175 per kilo from P170.81 per kilo the day earlier; tilapia prices increased to P111.59 from P107.26; local round scad or galunggong prices rose to P222.40 from P221.36, and mackerel prices increased to P300 from P252.

To curb this, the Agriculture department approved as early as October the importation of 45,000 metric tons (MT) of frozen fish and other aquatic products to ensure enough supply during the closed fishing season.

The Zamboanga Peninsula also started its three-month ban on sardine fishing on Dec. 1.

The closed season gives fish species the time to spawn or breed freely and restore its population.

“In order to ensure national food security taking into consideration public welfare… the importation of 45,000 MT of frozen fish and fishery or aquatic products for wet markets is hereby certified as necessary,” the agency said in a certificate of importation signed by Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar.

This is in line with the Fisheries Code, which contains guidelines on imports and exports.

Under the law, an import certificate is valid for 90 days. Fish that will be imported will depend on what the market needs, which is mostly round scad, mackerel and squid.

Mr. Reyes said the import volume was enough to meet the demand for the last three months of the year.

In 2018, the agency allowed imports of round scad imports to ensure sufficient supply during the holidays after local production stopped during the closed fishing season that ran until March this year. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

Output losses from typhoon reach almost P2B

PRODUCTION losses from Typhoon Kammuri, which battered several provinces south of the Manila early this week, have reached P1.93 billion, the Agriculture department said on Thursday.

Volume of production loss has reached 106,525 metric tons (MT), affecting 47.639 hectares and 20,830 farmers, the agency said in a bulletin.

Reports from Regions III, IV-A and IV-B, V and VI showed that most of the affected crops were rice, corn and high-value crops, as well as livestock and agriculture facilities.

Rice losses reached P606.74 million, covering 32,179 hectares or 27,002 metric tons, while corn damage reached P142.64 million covering 5,486 hectares equivalent to 1,733 MT.

Meanwhile, 133,623 animals worth P40.2 million were. A total of 201 farmers were affected nationwide.

The agency said P1.13 billion worth of high-value crops were damaged covering 10,002 hectares of land or 77,837 MT.

Meanwhile, P11.72 million worth of infrastructure facilities were damaged including animal cages, warehouses and nurseries.

“Interventions are ready for distribution to affected farmers and fisherfolk in Bicol Region amounting to P181 million for rice, corn, high value crops, livestock, credit fund, relief goods, fishing paraphernalia, allocation for dry season planting and coconut seedlings,” the Agriculture department said.

Typhoon Kammuri, locally known as Tisoy was already outside the Philippine area of responsibility as of 8 a.m. on Thursday, according to the local weather bureau. At least 18 people died from the typhoon, the local disaster agency said.

The Philippines has ranked second as the country that is most affected by extreme weather events in 2018, think tank Germanwatch said in its Global Climate Risk Index for 2020.

“Japan, the Philippines and Germany were the most affected countries in 2018 followed by Madagascar, India and Sri Lanka,” Germanwatch said in the 15th version of the study released on Thursday.

The Philippine ranking was a big leap from 20th place in 2017. The country scored 11.17 points, with the death toll reaching 455, absolute losses amounting to $4.547 billion, and 0.48% loss per unit of gross domestic product (GDP).

“Countries like Haiti, the Philippines and Pakistan that are recurrently affected by catastrophes continuously rank among the most affected countries both in the long-term index and in the index for the respective year,” the think tank said.

Some countries including the Philippines were still in the process of recovering from the previous year’s storms.

The country is regularly exposed to tropical cyclones such as Bopha in 2012, Hayan in 2013 and Mangkhut in 2018 due to its geographical location, it said. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

PSA taps agencies for national ID

THE Philippine Statistics Authority is on track to roll out the registration for the national identification system that is targeted to start by July.

The agency will continue pilot-testing the registration to see how it can improve the process, PSA Undersecretary Dennis Clare S. Mapa told reporters yesterday.

The pilot registration is being done at the Finance department and House of Representatives, he said.

The statistics agency is targeting about 1,000 registrating for the pilot test by June, Mr. Mapa said.

The national ID system includes registration, automatic biometric system and the card production, among other things.

The PSA earlier signed a memorandum of agreement with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), which will subsidize the production of blank cards for the ID system. The central bank has set aside P3.4 billion for 116 million blank cards that can help more Filipinos open their bank accounts by having their own ID as part of lenders’ Know-Your-Customer process, Mr. Mapa said.

Applicants may register through PSA’s regional and provincial officers by next year. Partners for the projects such as some offices of Philippine Postal Corp., Government Service Insurance System, and Social Security System will also be used as registration centers for the project.

PSA expects to issue 100 million IDS for both Filipinos and aliens by 2022. — Luz Wendy T. Noble