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1st batch of former MILF fighters ready to join peace and security force

THE FIRST batch of former Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) combatants, composed of 219 men, have completed their month-long basic military training and will now be joining the Joint Peace and Security Team (JPST), together with members of the Philippine National Police and the Armed Forces of the Philippines. The JPSTs are tasked to secure MILF communities that will undergo the decommissioning process as well as help track and document private armed groups and other lawless elements. A formal ceremony for the first batch of decommissioning is set on Sept. 7, with more than 12,000 of the estimated 40,000 Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces (BIAF), the armed wing of the MILF, to turn over their weapons. The firearms will be handed over to the Independent Decommissioning Body (IDB) and stored in an agreed site. Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) Chief Minister Murad Ebrahim said each combatant will receive an “economic package” worth about P1 million. “This will be given in different forms such as cash assistance, livelihood, housing, and scholarships,” Mr. Murad said. “The overall goal is not only for the combatants to receive cash, but also to transition into civilian but productive life,” BARMM Spokesperson Naguib G. Sinarimbo said in a news conference on Aug. 27. The decommissioning is in accordance with the Normalization Track of the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro signed by the government and the MILF. — Tajallih S. Basman

Nationwide round-up

BTr assures remaining P4B RCEP fund will be released within the year

THE BUREAU of Treasury (BTr) on Thursday assured that it will be able to determine the source for the remaining P4 billion Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF) as early as next month, and that it will be released within the year.

National Treasurer Rosalia V. De Leon told BusinessWorld the P4 billion remaining RCEF funds might be sourced from income in investments, interest, fees and charges and other excess money remitted back to the agency.

Republic Act No. 11203, the Rice Tarrification Law, mandates a P10 billion annual funding for RCEF in the next six years from tariffs collected on rice imports, to support farm mechanization, seed and fertilizer acquisition.

“We’re looking at if there would be excess income already that we can generate. We’ll see, next month or around October. Kasi (Because) by October, depending on our investments, usually du’n nagpapasok ng (that’s when the) coupon payments (come in), mag-ge-generate namin (we can generate our) interest income,” Ms. De Leon said in an ambush interview after the Senate hearing on the 2020 budget.

At the hearing on Wednesday, Department of Budget and Management (DBM) Assistant Secretary Rolando U. Toledo also said they will release the remaining P4 billion to complete the P10 billion RCEF funding for this year. Mr. Toledo said the release will depend on BTr, which will have to look at ”excess” government money.

Meanwhile, DBM Undersecretary Janet B. Abuel said they will continue to monitor the utilization rate of RCEF before releasing more. ”Let’s see with the agencies like PhilMech (Philippine Center for Postharvest Development and Mechanization) anong (what is the) status na before we add more release,” Ms. Abuel said. She noted that sometimes the challenge is agencies get “choked” by too much funds. — Beatrice M. Laforga

KAPA founder’s wife slapped with tax evasion charge

Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) logoTHE BUREAU of Internal Revenue (BIR) has filed a tax evasion case against Kapa Community Ministry International, Inc.’s (KAPA) corporate secretary, Reyna L. Apolinario, for undeclared income sources for taxable years 2017 and 2018. In a statement, BIR said the total income tax liability of Ms. Apolinario, wife of KAPA founder Joel Apolinario, for those two years is P168.2 million. This total includes surcharges and interests, broken down into: 2017 — ₱163.9 million; and 2018 — ₱4.3 million. BIR said Ms. Apolinario did not file an income tax return (ITR) from 2012-2015, but did so in 2016, declaring an income of ₱207 million. In 2017 and 2018, Ms. Apolinario declared incomes of ₱171.10 million and ₱12.06 million, respectively. By 2018, her declared beginning capital from audited financial statements climbed to P306.9m, pointing to undeclared sources of income of P307.7 million for taxable year 2017. This includes cash amounting to P140 million, luxury vehicles worth P27.60 million, heavy equipment totalling P65.7 million, real properties worth P45.1 million, and other assets paired with P9.18 million for taxable year 2018.

REYNA
Called ‘Madam Reyna’ by followers of the supposedly religious group, Ms. Apolinario owned nine vehicles under the name of REYNA in 2017 and 2018 that were not declared in her financial statements, BIR investigators said. Moreover, information from the bureau’s Integrated Tax System (ITS) showed that REYNA owns 13 businesses under her name, including retail-construction materials/garments/metals, gasoline stations and convenience stores, computer and printing services, quarry, convention center, fishing boat, bakeshop & refreshment, media & marketing network, and hotel. Ms. Apolinario along with her husband and several other KAPA officials are facing separate complaints filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the National Bureau of Investigation over their alleged involvement in the investment scam operated under KAPA. SEC has revoked KAPA’s registration.

TOP BELAGIO
In another case, BIR also filed a criminal complaint against Binondo-based wholesaler Top Belagio Super Sales Corporation, along with its president, Stanley C. Kho, and treasurer, Sherrie Ann R. Dael. They are charged for attempting to evade their annual income tax and quarterly value-added tax (VAT) as well as for failure to pay improperly accumulated earnings tax for 2016, amounting to a liability of P555.4 million in total. The wholesaler is facing violation of Sections 254 and 255, in relation to Sections 253 and 256 of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997 as investigations found that the amounts declared in their Annual Income Tax Return and Quarterly Value-Added Tax Returns are lower than actual sales. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

Nation at a Glance — (08/30/19)

News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.

Nation at a Glance — (08/30/19)

Making activists of them all

Instead of the extrajudicial killings and human rights violations that have surged in unprecedented numbers during their troubling watch, the minions of the Duterte regime are condemning activism as if it were a heinous crime whose perpetrators deserve the death penalty they so eagerly want to restore.

They’re not explicitly saying it, but anyone with at least a double-digit IQ can draw that conclusion not only from the statements of the boss of bosses himself and his capos in the executive branch and Congress, but even more clearly from what the police, the Armed Forces, and the paramilitaries under their command are doing. These self-proclaimed paragons of law and order are threatening, harassing, and even justifying the killing of environmental activists, the leaders and members of Lumad, workers’ and farmers’ groups, the lawyers of the poor, human rights defenders, and those journalists who are looking into and reporting government corruption and wrongdoing.

It need hardly be said that activism is not a crime. It is quite simply the practice of using direct political action in opposing or supporting one side of an issue of common or sectoral concern. It emphasizes the use of protests, demonstrations, and other means of free expression in the public sphere where issues can be examined and debated, and some consensus arrived at so that the problems that bedevil societies can be resolved.

Contrary to what the uninformed and the manipulative partisans of civic and political indifference are saying in social media as well as print and broadcasting, activism is neither pointless nor a waste of time.

Activism helped make the graduated income tax, the eight-hour work day, and the women’s vote realities in Europe and the United States. In the Philippines, the role of activists — students, academics, women, journalists, human rights defenders, Church people — who risked their lives and fortunes in resisting fascist rule was immeasurable in bringing about the fall of the Marcos kleptocracy.

Earlier, in 1917, led by Carlos P. Romulo, who later became president of the United Nations General Assembly, student activists from the University of the Philippines (UP) protested the attack by a Manila newspaper on the UP president, and forced the newspaper to make a retraction.

In 1961, UP students led by Reynato Puno and Heherson Alvarez demonstrated in Congress to defend academic freedom and to protest the persecution of some UP professors by the House Committee on Anti-Filipino Activities (CAFA). The Committee was forced to halt its anti-UP witch-hunt.

Virtually all activists are under threat today precisely because activism does yield results. But it is student activists that the Duterte regime and its hucksters are explicitly reviling supposedly as a threat to this country. The truth is that it is a threat only to their abuse and misuse of the political power that the sovereign people have unfortunately delegated to them.

Their hostility is perfectly understandable. Student activists have been among the most consistent in demanding government accountability and are today calling for an end to the “drug war”-related killings and the political murders not only in Negros Oriental province but in other parts of the country as well. They’re also defending the academic freedom of their universities, and in general calling out the Duterte government for its corruption, misogyny, mendacity, brutality, violence, and its selling-out of the country to the economic, political, and strategic interests of imperialist China.

Philippine National Police (PNP) Director General Oscar Albayalde, the Department of Interior and Local Governments’ Secretary Eduardo Ano, neophyte senator Ronald “Bato” De la Rosa, and the usual suspects are blaming their professors for the rise of student activism, and demanding police and military intrusion into, among other institutions of higher learning, the University of the Philippines and the Polytechnic University of the Philippines.

They claim that the faculties of these universities are either indoctrinating their students into joining organizations that they say are recruiting young men and women into the New People’s Army (NPA) and/or the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), or are themselves NPA and CPP recruiters.

One thought immediately comes to mind in response to these outlandish allegations. Albayalde, Ano, De la Rosa and their accomplices apparently assume that universities are politically and ideologically homogenous. They are not.

Among the qualities that distinguish the true university from the diploma mills these gentlemen are familiar with is its diversity — in schools of thought, convictions, philosophies, and, yes, politics and ideology. Some faculty members even profess — although it is itself a political and ideological stance — neither politics nor ideology.

One event is particularly demonstrative of the diversity in UP. In the 1960s, what was in vogue in the Department of Philosophy of the then-UP College of Liberal Arts was logical positivism, not Marxism. But that didn’t stop some UP professors from urging CAFA to investigate the department because some of its professors were openly atheists and agnostics. Other faculty members of a more liberal bent opposed the CAFA investigation, which, among other absurdities, presented as evidence of a communist conspiracy the publication of a document on the Huk rebellion in a learned UP journal.

His leading the anti-CAFA demonstration did not prevent then-law student Reynato Puno from becoming Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Neither did it stop his classmate Heherson Alvarez from becoming a senator. And, lest anyone forget, the dictator Ferdinand Marcos was a UP alumnus. So is the former lawyer of alleged Maguindanao massacre mastermind Andal Ampatuan and of the rapist-double murderer Antonio Sanchez: Salvador Panelo, currently the Duterte legal counsel and mouthpiece who has become, to some UP College of Law professors, a daily source of embarrassment.

The same diversity of views continues in UP today. The police and military’s use of the mistaken assumption that the UP faculty is politically and ideologically monolithic as the excuse for imposing their unwanted presence on UP campuses so they can, in their own words, “indoctrinate students” is thus not only patently absurd. It is also counter-productive of regime intentions.

Far from curbing activism, police and military intrusion is likely to make activists of even more students rather than less. The reasons are fairly obvious. Activists are made by the poverty, injustice, inequality, corruption, and violence that they see around them, and by the human responsibility of helping bring about a better world. But it’s not only what they’re seeing, experiencing, and learning, but also the inanities they are hearing from so-called “authorities” that is driving the more principled, the more knowledgeable, and those truly committed to the betterment of this unfortunate country and its people — their best and brightest sons and daughters — into activism.

Activists are not the creations of anyone, but of the need to protest and correct the injustice, poverty, incompetence and corruption that doom millions to short, brutish lives. That fact makes it unlikely for those of some intelligence to be the creatures and clones of the intellectually and morally bankrupt individuals responsible for the making of the offense to humanity and common decency that Philippine society and governance have become.

Exposure to the madness, brutality and sheer imbecility of the benighted creatures who’re driving this country into irremediable ruin is among the factors that’s convincing even more students, as it did during the Marcos Martial Law regime, that activism is what is needed in the making of the alternative State and society that are the only solutions to the horrors of the present. Police and military intrusion into the country’s better universities will hasten the process, and make activists of them all.

 

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

www.luisteodoro.com

The one who should not get away

On March 11, 1995, Filipinos young and old, heralded and applauded the decision of then Pasig City Judge Harriet Demetriou for issuing a GUILTY verdict against former Calauan Mayor Antonio Sanchez, for the crime of rape and murder of Eileen Sarmenta and the murder of Allan Gomez. It was a national catharsis of sorts, where all the anger, frustration, and pent up emotions of millions of people exploded. Not only was it about the crime committed but it was also about the triumph against the abuses of those wielding power. Sanchez was the epitome of how NOT to govern — goons, gold, guns, and obviously greed.

The country was shocked to learn from the authorities that this convicted mayor would be released on the basis of Republic Act 10592 which amended certain portions of the Revised Penal Code. After 26 years of well-deserved imprisonment, he resurfaced and revived the nightmare and pain of the victims’ families and all decent citizens as a whole.

Various interpretations of the Good Conduct Time Allowance (GTCA) law came about because this piece of legislation, which was signed in 2013, provided the fundamental basis for freeing Mayor Sanchez from the National Penitentiary. The said law was passed in recognition of the humane and rehabilitative principles of criminal justice which aims to facilitate the reintegration of detainees to society. Even the Supreme Court gave its stamp of approval to its retroactive application. With this development, the Bureau of Corrections processed the emancipation of more than 11,000 inmates.

Because of the violent reaction of various sectors — straddling the privileged and the poor, a rabid debate ensued between leaders of the different departments of the government. One side argues that Mayor Sanchez cannot be released because the exceptions of habitual delinquents, recidivists, and those charged with heinous crimes ONLY apply to those who have undergone imprisonment PRIOR to conviction. On the other hand, the Office of the President together with the Department of Justice and its agencies opine that Mayor Sanchez cannot avail of the law despite the fact that he has been convicted and is currently serving his sentence. Expectedly, a few senators aired their divergent views and added to the robust public discussions. Heinous crime, recidivism, and habitual delinquency as a rationale for the non-application of the law has been lost in translation. The tragedy of the multiple meanings of legal parlance resonates.

From a purely layman’s perspective, one cannot fathom how complicated and arduous our laws can be, and this one is a classic example. Without dissecting the differences between imprisonment before or after conviction, what constitutes a “heinous” crime has already been established. It is an offense which is clearly hateful, perverse, and atrocious, one that is repugnant to the standards of a humane and civilized society. Given the facts and evidence of the case and the decision rendered by the trial judge, the rape and murder of an innocent student, by not only the Mayor but his gang of hoodlums, is one that any parent or a human being would consider as extremely detestable. As such, the misery of the family and those closely watching this episode is even more intensified by the obvious lack of clarity in the GTCA law. The disagreements as to its intention and interpretation reflect a policy incoherence that should be resolved immediately. This incoherence is exploited by certain quarters who attribute fault to political administrations that either passed the law or interpreted it in a fashion that is perceived to be detrimental to public order and security.

The timely intervention of President Rodrigo Duterte has silenced the growing protests and assured the aggrieved public that the controversial Mayor must not be allowed to be granted his freedom.

The issue has reopened past wounds but is a way forward for our legislature to pass crisp, clear, and practical laws that must always guarantee the protection of our shared interests. And the outrage is a sign that we have still not lost the most basic values that we collectively cherish. One of which is the primacy of justice.

 

Ariel F. Nepomuceno is a management consultant on strategy and investment.

Never a good time for SOGIE

The problem with all the discussions surrounding the sexual orientation and gender identity legislative proposals are many. But it’s on the fundamental grounds that the flaws are truly significant.

One sees this in the opening portion, for example, of Senate Bill Nos. 159 and 689, defining the following terms:

“Gender Expression: refers to the outward manifestations of the cultural traits that enable a person to identify as male or female according to patterns that, at a particular moment in history, a given society defines as gender appropriate.”

“Gender Identity: refers to the personal sense of identity as characterized, among others, by manner of clothing, inclinations, and behavior in relation to masculine or feminine conventions. A person may have a male or female identity with the physiological characteristics of the opposite sex.”

The definitions are important because on them, along with the definition of “sexual orientation”, are practically built the entire structure of alleged “rights” that SBs 159/689 (or the “Anti-Discrimination” bill) are supposed to protect.

But one searches in vain for any factual or scientific data to back up the definitions. Or serve as sufficient rationale why additional legislation is even needed at all.

Instead, SBs 159/689 misleadingly refer to international law when no international law recognizes SOGIE “rights.”

Then SBs 159/689 rely on a five-year-old Pew survey finding “73% of adult Filipinos agree that homosexuality should be accepted by society.” But SB 689 fails to mention that “nearly two-thirds (65%) of Filipinos surveyed said homosexuality was immoral” (Thomson Reuters, 2014).

This proves that Filipinos, while correctly believing homosexuality should be tolerated, equally correctly don’t agree with it.

In the end, the SOGIE bills (House Bills 134 and 136 and Senate Bills 159 and 689) substantially base their “logic” on two UN studies without any objective factual data.

Pathetically, SOGIE’s foundations are thus revealed to be merely self-referential (e.g., Pew surveys), anecdotal, biased, or outrightly misleading.

Practically no effort was made to gather information from the relevant labor, educational, judicial, or police agencies.

And yet Filipinos are expected to acquiesce to the wholesale reengineering of Philippine society on this flimsiest of grounds?

Its congressional backers base their claim on gender being non-binary, like “a rainbow.” If true, can they at least be identified and enumerated?

How can the proposed laws protect something if even their authors don’t know what they are?

This is no way to make legislation.

The bills’ authors can’t identify the said genders because their proposed law is based on fantasy not fact.

The gender identities and expression aren’t based on biology. Nothing remotely scientific supports the claim of categorizing a gazillion genders mutable through time. Not our history or culture. Not race, which is biological as well.

What then? The only thing such “genders” are based on are the purely emotional and subjective belief of whoever claims it.

Yes, at most that’s all what SOGIE is: feelings, idea, a belief.

But as beliefs, such are already constitutionally and legislatively protected. So what reason could these additional legislation, these SOGIE bills, have?

Furthermore, not only are these proposed SOGIE laws completely unnecessary, they are also constitutionally infirm.

One may have the constitutional right to believe something and express that belief but legislation cannot be made to force you to agree to that belief or its expression. Others are also entitled to such innate constitutional rights.

What is provided for under the Constitution is the guarantee to be left alone to believe and speak as one wants, so long as such does not violate others’ rights.

To ask for more rights over and above that of others to protect your own belief, ideas, and expression violates the neutrality that government is constitutionally required to do. It violates individual property rights as well.

You are in effect asking for a privilege not available to other beliefs, speech, or expression.

It may be argued that educational institutions, religion, and even media are given dispensation but note this is mostly only as to taxes. And such is neutrally available to all beliefs, religions, or expression. Nothing is taken away from, confiscated, forced, or makes a specific belief or thought superior to or treated with privilege over and above other beliefs, expression, or religion.

Incidentally, public toilets have been long segregated based on privacy, modesty, and safety. And definitely biology. One sees this in the design difference between the toilets for men and women. Beliefs cannot be a reasonable basis to segregate toilets. Certainly not such that would justify putting one specific belief over all others.

The SOGIE bills should be defeated for their utter non-conformity not only with our Constitution but also sheer common sense.

And conflict with many other laws, particularly those protecting women, children, labor/business/property, schools, the military, as well as penal and civil relations.

And the SOGIE bills become even more repugnant when read alongside the ill-advised Safe Spaces Act.

So again: No to SOGIE.

And again: There are no SOGIE rights, just human rights.

 

Jemy Gatdula is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constitutional philosophy and jurisprudence.

https://www.facebook.com/jigatdula/

Twitter @jemygatdula

The one, most important thing in public speaking

By Raju Mandhyan

IT DID not take me long to think about the answer when I was asked the question, “What is that one, most important thing about succeeding at public speaking?”

Well, first one must consider the obstacle — some people call it the fear of public speaking and naturally shy people call it nervousness. My choice of the word to represent this malady is anxiety. Most people, whether they are the front-liners or the head honchos of an organization, they are all anxious about having to face an audience.

So, before we go into how to manage it and succeed at the interaction let us consider the source of this anxiety and the cause of this malady.

In my opinion this anxiety is generated from two aspects, two sources. First, it is generated by the fact that the speaker thinks that the audience may be too good for her. That means, they may be too knowledgeable, way too intelligent, and way to classy for her. And, that they may perceive her wrongly and may judge her too harshly. The second source is that the speaker may feel that he is too classy, much too knowledgeable, and much too advanced for the audience he is to address.

Both these extremes, if I may say so, arise from a misplaced self-image, warped self-esteem, or the manifestation of a false ego. This internal misperception and an external behavior that makes an effort to put on a show create a discord, a dissonance, and a lack of congruence in the speaker. That lack of congruence is seen and sensed by the audience and thus, they too tune out. When they tune out, the speaker and his performance come crashing down too. This does not just happen on the speaking stage but also occurs on all leadership platforms. Scroll down the history of the world and you will see that leaders came crashing down when they did not say or do what they meant or meant to do what they had said they would.

How do you manage to survive and thrive through this?

As a speaker, just before you speak and throughout speaking you need to step out of your own skin and stay vulnerable. You need to stop focusing excessively upon how good you look or not, how well you speak or not, and how perfectly placed your content is for the event and the customer-audience. Your heart, your mind, and, sometimes, even your smartphone, need to just live and breathe in kindness and a deep desire for creating value for the audience. To make the customer king, while speaking, is to get out of your own way; get out of your own skin.

How is this done?

Considering that you have done all the homework you need to have done before the speaking event, you need to calm down. You need to let go of all concerns of not doing a good job. You need, also, let go of the entire negative and excessively brittle and moral self-talk. You need to deflate. You need to bring your attention to how you are breathing. To when your breathing stops sounding and feeling like you were pumping iron, or when you choke upon the sight of a dog that you are scared of. Your breathing needs to be even like that of a baby at sleep. It needs to go easy in, easy out and through the diaphragm. Rhythmic and calm, with your shoulders, eyes, and tongue as relaxed as possible.

The moment you deflate, ground yourself, and calm down then your attention will stop obsessing over yourself and move towards being present and conscious of your audience’s space, their current state, and then their learning needs. It is then that you can and will begin to shine as a speaker, a great communicator, and a leader that inspires and makes her world evolve beautifully. At this stage your interaction with your audience becomes a dance of love, of engagement, and co-creation.

That which works in public speaking, works in running fruitful meetings. That which works in public speaking, works in bringing the best out of others. That which works in public speaking, works in leading your world to a brighter tomorrow. This is the one, most important thing in most everything in life; being in the here and now and then taking the world into their future with humility and with compassion.

 

Raju Mandhyan is an author, coach and speaker.

www.mandhyan.com

The Earth will remember humans for the mess we left behind

By Faye Flam

SOME SCIENTISTS are trying to name our current geologic epoch after us — calling it the Anthropocene. That’s no brag, because most of the changes we’re making to our planet are embarrassing.

We’ve caused huge shifts in the plants and animals sharing the planet with us, driven many species to extinction, left a layer of radioactive fallout from exploding nuclear bombs, accidentally changed the composition of our atmosphere, and left a layer of plastic that will in all likelihood still be around in a million years.

Long after time and erosion have turned all our feats of art and engineering to dust, our mess will remain. Naming this era after ourselves is more of a confession. That acknowledgement is a first step toward strategies for minimizing our damaging influence.

A fascinating feature in Nature this month describes the search for what scientists call a golden spike — a marker somewhere on the planet displaying a clear, sharp signature of significant change that would mark the dawn of the Anthropocene. What makes the process interesting isn’t what they settle on as a starting point, but what it’s revealing about the way humans have become an earth-changing force, and how long human-wrought changes will persist. With that understanding could come strategies for minimizing our damaging influence.

These scientists are coming to favor atomic bomb blasts of the 1950s, which are leaving a long-lasting layer of isotopes in lake beds and deposits of ice. People have also considered the advent of widespread chicken farming, which leaves behind the bones of almost 60 billion birds each year.

There is a subjectivity to this process, said planetary scientist David Grinspoon, whose book Earth in Human Hands makes a case for the Anthropocene. A person exploring Earth 50 million years from now may not find any obvious signs that we were here, he said, but if they were trained archaeologists and did some digging, they would see that something extraordinary happened.

Naysayers argue that we don’t warrant our own geologic era because we are too short-lived a species. We’ve only been around 200,000 years, and for most of this time we did nothing to cause lasting change. It wasn’t until 50,000 years ago that people started to spread around the globe, leaving in our wake a wave of extinctions of the animals we liked to eat. And it was only in the last century — insignificant in geologic time — that we’ve really started adding new materials, such as plastics, to the geologic strata. Geologic time is long, and our existence short, at least so far.

But we can already know that our influence on the planet will last into geologic time. The nuclear remnants of our bomb blasts will last for hundreds of thousands of years, and so will traces of those mountains of plastic we’ve been throwing away, some of which is already forming a new kind of stone, dubbed plastiglomerate. Scientists estimate that human-generated changes in the chemistry and temperature of our oceans will persist for thousands of years after we learn how to stop burning fossil fuel.

In Greenland’s ice cap, layers dating back to the Roman era show contamination with industrial lead. Leaded gasoline from the 20th century will leave an even bigger layer that also includes cadmium, arsenic and chemical changes that took place when the ozone layer sprung a hole. (While the edges of the ice are melting fast, the cap itself, and buried traces of our pollution, could last another million years.)

Even more profound will be the change in the fossil record of life. The United Nations recently estimated that, globally, human activity is likely to cause a million species to go extinct. We don’t really know how many species exist now; biologists have cataloged about two million but estimate a total of around 10 million.

Another recent study showed that we’ve already radically changed the populations of living things — destroying 83% of all wild animals and half of wild plants. Currently, researchers estimate, 96% of mammals today are humans or livestock, and only 4% are wild animals.

To make the Anthropocene official, a committee called the “Anthropocene Working Group” will need to agree on a golden spike and create a proposal, which would eventually come up for approval from the International Union of Geological Sciences. But even without official sanction, the idea is catching on in the popular imagination.

Back in the 20th century, when I wrote about the predictions that greenhouse gases were warming the globe, people accused me of being arrogant for even thinking human beings could affect this vast planet. But the Earth is not, as long believed, too vast to be changed by humans, and with a population of 7 billion and climbing, we are not too small to leave an indelible mark.

 

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Spotlight: Common Myths and Facts about Head and Neck Cancer

Dr. Ang Peng Tiam, medical director and senior consultant specializing in Medical Oncology at Parkway Cancer Centre in Singapore, talks about the common myths and facts about head and neck cancers that may include voice box, throat, tongue palate, cheeks, floor of mouth and lips. He also discusses the symptoms of these cancers, as well as the different treatment options to manage them.

Running your business the Alibaba Way, with Steve Sy

 

1. Capitalize on the digital economy. (1:57-2:46)
E-commerce, finance, logistics, and big data: These are the pillars of the digital economy. Companies with a presence in each pillar have a special advantage, which can be said for Alibaba. Their journey to this stage was gradual and organic.

“When Jack Ma started, he started with the platform of Alibaba, Taobao, then T-mall. That’s the e-commerce [part],” said Sy. “Then because of that, they need to have [a] good payments [system], so he was building his digital ecosystem… then they have a smart logistics network… and last but not the least, they have cloud computing, which is big data.”

Sy recommends starting a business on these services given that it’s still largely untapped in the country.

“Right now, we’re just starting to digitize here in the Philippines. For most of us business owners, these are the industries that you can be a part of because it’s going to grow, and grow fast,” he said.

2. Don’t create a network, build one… (3:55-4:40)
When expanding across different industries, it can get tempting to create your own brand in order to monopolize the profit. Instead, make partnerships to add value to your services.

Consider Cainiao, Alibaba’s logistics network that comprises 70 percent of China’s market share. “Rather than competing with different logistics companies… they have an AI platform wherein if you’re part of that network, your truck can pick something up on the way back from a delivery. And they were able to reduce their [shipping] cost to P15 anywhere in China,” said Sy.

Making your business model more inclusive improves not only your business but the ecosystem around you.

“That’s the beauty of Jack Ma’s inclusivity mindset. He wants to make business easier for each and every individual.”

3. … and see your revenues increase. (7:33-8:01)
While strong services are surely the goal of every startup, you may be worried about the investment you’ll have to put in for it. If we are to base it on how Alibaba organized their network, it’s actually more profitable in the long run, creating what they call the network externality effect.

When a company increases its number of business units, it creates an increase in connections. Building such a support system lessens cost the more areas are covered, generating higher revenue.

“[Alibaba] has Ant Financial that supports their Taobao and TMall. They have Cainiao Network that supports Taobao, TMall, and Ant Financial,” said Sy. “And [Alibaba has] more than a thousand business units. So they keep on growing. That’s why they’re one of the biggest companies.”

4. A startup is only as strong as its people. (11:53-12:28)
This kind of support is just as important within a business. The core of a startup may be its strategy, and it may be led by its mission, vision, and values, but organization capability and performance management are necessary to implement them.

Sy uses the Bible story of Luke Chapter 5 as an example. “Sometimes we think, ‘We’ve been grinding our startup for so long, I won’t get any more fish.’ But remember: you need to have a bigger net and a stronger, bigger boat. Meaning we need to have bigger capabilities and performance or better systems. So that when you scale, [you’ll] be able to catch all the fish.”

5. Always remember why you exist. (8:47-9:01)
To further motivate one’s employees, it’s crucial to remind them why your company exists in the first place. This gives them tao, a Chinese concept that translates to path or guide.

“How does it motivate you, your employees, and your partners? So it’s a very key ingredient knowing your mission,” said Sy. “When you know your mission, you won’t be so quickly discouraged. Because you know why you exist.”

Those interested in applying for the Alibaba eFounders Program can find more information at this link. The upcoming program class will take place from Dec 2 to 12. The deadline for applications is on Oct 7.

Connected Women Shortlisted for ITU Telecom World Awards – SME Category in Budapest

Connected Women, a technology-driven social impact startup, has been shortlisted for the ITU Telecom World Awards – SME category at the International Telecommunications Union’s Telecom World 2019 exhibition, known as ITU Telecom World 2019 to be held on Sept. 9-12 in Budapest, Hungary’s capital.

Just earlier this year, the startup has been lauded as a Champion for e-Employment at the UN World Summit on the Information Society in Geneva. As an advocate of Gender Equality and Decent Work and Economic Growth, the 5th and 8th United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, Connected Women matches entrepreneurs (all genders) and businesses from all over the world with Filipino women looking for remote work through a tech platform which utilizes a unique proprietary algorithm to ensure a precise match. Through the Connected Women website, job seekers can apply for virtual work while entrepreneurs gain access to high-quality, affordable talent. This social enterprise also provides digital skills enhancement, continued education and training for the community while promoting tech adoption, inclusive innovation and the future of work.

Thought leaders from public and private sectors, experts in ICT, regulatory bodies, representatives of international organizations & academic institutions from across the world will deliver speeches in the conference.

Outstanding participants will receive awards in different categories, including Global SME Awards, Global Industry Awards, Government Award, Host Country SME Award and Recognition of Excellence Certificate.

ITU Telecom World 2019 is a non-profit UN-level platform that aims to accelerate ICT innovation for social and economic development by exhibiting solutions and sharing knowledge. It brings together governments, corporations and Tech SMEs, along with leaders from the public and private sectors, emerging and developed markets, as well as from across the ICT ecosystem.

According to ITU’s event website, ministers, regulators, international industry associations, major industry players, entrepreneurs, operators, vendors, service providers, content developers, media, consultants, industry visionaries and leading academics in the ICT sector are among the global audience of ITU Telecom World.

Malolos-Clark rail auction draws 11 firms

By Denise A. Valdez
Reporter

THE AUCTION for the contract to build the Malolos-Clark segment of the North South Commuter Railway (NSCR) Project attracted “a record-high number” of bidders, the Department of Transportation (DoTr) said on Wednesday.

In a statement, the department said nine foreign and two local firms — most of which formed joint ventures — are vying for three contract packages of the railway project, also called Philippine National Railway (PNR) Clark Phase 2. Their proposals were opened on Tuesday.

The foreign firms are Spain’s Acciona S.A.; South Korea’s Daelim Industrial Co. Ltd., Dong Ah Construction Industrial Co. Ltd. and Hyundai Engineering & Construction Co. Ltd.; Thailand’s Italian-Thai Development Public Company Ltd.; Japan’s Sumitomo Mitsui Construction Corp.; as well as Indonesia’s PT Pembangunan Perumahan [PP], PT Waskita Karya Tbk and PT Wijaya Karya Tbk [Wika].

The local firms were EEI Corp. and Megawide Construction Corp.

PNR General Manager Junn B. Magno said the agency started yesterday evaluation of the bids that were submitted on Tuesday. “It will take probably another five to six weeks to conclude evaluation,” he said in a text message.

Three contract packages are covered by the auction: Package 1 for a 17-kilometer segment including Calumpit and Apalit stations, Package 2 for a 16 km stretch including San Fernando station and Package 3 for a 12 km section including Angeles and Clark stations.

The P283.8-billion Malolos-Clark railway of the P777.55-billion NSCR Project is funded by the Asian Development Bank (ADB), and therefore limits auction participants to ADB’s 68 member countries that include 19 outside Asia.

Mr. Magno said it could be the participants’ “biggest rail project in Southeast Asia if they ever got one package.”

The 53-km Malolos-Clark railway forms part of the 147-km NSCR project that is also composed of the 56-km Calamba-Tutuban and the 38-km Tutuban-Malolos lines.

Covered by the Malolos-Clark segment is the express railway service of NSCR that will link the train to Clark International Airport. Bids for this 8-kilometer track and the Clark depot are expected in October.

The government expects the Malolos-Clark railway, or PNR Clark Phase 2 that is scheduled to open in 2023, to reduce travel time between Clark airport and Makati Central Business District to 55 minutes from up to three hours currently.