Monday, December 31, 2012
Six hurt in Philippine bus bombings, police say no immediate suspects
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Monday, December 31, 2012
Live in Manila: The City’s Top Music Venues
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Monday, December 31, 2012
When director Tony Gilroy said he chose Manila to shoot The Bourne Legacy because “it felt so Bourne-ish,” he set off a teensy tempest when some objected to his description of the city as “colorful and ugly and gritty, raw and stinky and crowded.” If Gilroy were more laconic, he should’ve just said, “It’s so rock & roll,” and flashed two-fisted devil horns.
Indeed, all that color and grit roost just as comfortably in Manila’s music scene, where the most exciting musical acts cram into bars and clubs the size of a thimble and blast music that’s nuclear, original, unkempt and never boring.
Right here, we bring you music critic Eric Caruncho and RockMYX VJ Francis Reyes’ top seven bars and clubs in Manila with the best live music.
19 East Bar & Grill
Easily the live-music bar with the most space, best sound equipment, stage area, and parking. Pop shaman Ely Buendia — he of Eraserheads fame – agrees, describing 19 East in a blog post as “probably the best-sounding venue in the whole archipelago and a stone’s throw away from my place.” The lineup of performers can be eclectic, but it’s always top-notch. It ranges from mainstream pop to folk to jazz to R&B to the usual indie. If you need a break from the music, you can have your dinner and drinks al fresco in the Garden Bar, where food is mostly Filipino. Sample acts: Side A, Gloc 9, Urbandub, MYMP
Km. 19, East Service Road, Parañaque City
Open from Mondays to Saturdays from 5pm to 2:30pm
Tel: +63 2/ 837 6903
Url: 19east.com
Route 196
As teensy as SaGUIJO but with a quieter lounge area. Peso Movement, Francis Reyes’ band with former Rivermaya bassist Japs Sergio, plays here, as do indie darlings like Up Dharma Down, Ciudad, Drip and a welter of bands of every rock or alternative persuasion. Plus, the pizza is delicious.
196-A Katipunan Avenue Extension, Blue Ridge, Quezon City
Open from 6pm to 2am on Tuesday to Thursday, and extends till 3am on Fridays and Saturdays Tel: +632/ 439 1972
Url: www.facebook.com/pages/Route-196-Bar
For schedules, visit Route 196 Bar on Facebook
The Hydra (formerly Skarlet Jazz Kitchen)
This low-ceilinged club lined with banquettes and outdoor tables for smokers hosts a slew of…everything, including heavy metal, reggae and punk. But it also livens up with performers showcasing the many variations of jazz and the blues, from big band to fusion. Sample acts: AMP Big Band and Unleashed. There are also open mike blues nights here.
Scout Ybardolaza corner Timog, Quezon City
Open daily from 6pm to 3am
Tel: +63927/ 626 4006
Url: www.facebook.com/TheHydraBar
For schedules, visit The Hydra on Facebook
70s Bistro
One of the oldest live-music venues in the city, the popular 70s Bistro is hidden away in a suburban residential QC neighborhood. Beginning as a folk bar, 70s Bistro has seen legends on its stage from Joey Ayala to the Eraserheads and the Jerks. Veteran folk and rock bands hold court almost daily in this much-beloved bar. Parokya Ni Edgar, popular in the Philippines for their novelty songs, still plays here on Mondays and there are occasional specials such as Beatles Nights.
46 Anonas Street, Project 2, Quezon City
Open from Monday to Saturday from 7pm to 1:30am
Tel: +63927/ 214 0036, +63919/ 475 4136
Url: www.facebook.com/pages/70s-Bistro
For schedules visit 70s Bistro on Facebook
The Roadhouse Manila Bay
In September 2012, 35 bands signed up for the first Philippine Blues Competition, the eliminations of which were held at the Roadhouse. Who knew there were that many blues bands in the Philippines? It warms the cockles of rock roots fans. Roadhouse has an obvious biker theme, but the clientele is more than petrol heads. There’s a proper restaurant for sitting down and eating with friends even if you don’t care for the blues. It’s got good food, ice-cold beers and nightly performances from some of the best bands in Manila. Get warmed up with a bucket of beer and prawn crackers for P300. Unlimited draft beer is P350. Sample acts: Joe Bonamassa, Bleu Rascals, The Oktaves
SM By the Bay, Mall of Asia, Pasay City
Open daily from 5pm to 2am
Tel. +632/ 836 7632
Url: www.facebook.com/theroadhousemanilabay
For schedules visit The Roadhouse Manila Bay on Facebook
Malasimbo Arts Festival (Puerto Galera, Mindoro)
Not a music venue and not in Manila, but a three-day annual music and arts festival held every March at the foot of Mount Malasimbo near the beautiful beach town of Puerto Galera, Mindoro Island, Philippines. To get there, take the three-hour bus ride from Manila to the port of Batangas City and a 30- to 45-minute ferry ride to Puerto Galera. The performers are a mix of local artists and invited foreign guests. This year, the legendary Joe Bataan, who invented Afro-Latin funk in the 60s and eventually called it “salsoul,” was a guest performer at the music festival. There’s live music (pop, rock, ethnic), DJs, installation art and cultural workshops. Next year’s event is expected to attract some 6,000 people so preparations are underway to set up two stages 200 meters apart from each other. Usually, Malasimbo features a variety of bands and showcases new artists every year.
Tel: +63917/ 878 6609 (Olive D’Aboville)
Url: www.malasimbofestival.com
SaGUIJO
Indie band haven smack bang in the middle of Makati’s glitzy yuppiedom. It’s oh-so-tiny, but that’s all the better for an authentic Pinoy in-your-face live experience — and anyway, the crowd may spill into the street if it’s a really big night. This is the club to squeeze into for anything grunge, down home, experimental, and avant-garde. Anything goes, with independent groups appearing alongside more established artists, but what’s always a given is that the music will be top-notch. Sample acts: Radioactive Sago Project, Taken By Cars, Tarsius
7612 Guijo Street, San Antonio Village, Makati City
Open from Tuesday to Saturday at 6pm. Gigs start at 10pm
Tel: +632/ 897 8629
Url: www.saguijo.com ■
ABOUT OUR MUSIC VENUE CRITICS
Eric Caruncho is a staff writer of the Philippine Daily Inquirer. He is the author of Punks, Poets & Poseurs, an anthology of his articles on the Pinoy rock music scene of the late 80s and early 90s, a time of creative blossoming for artists like Joey Ayala and the Eraserheads.
Francis “Brew” Reyes plays guitar with Peso Movement, a new band formed by Japs Sergio of Rivermaya. He is also a VJ for the TV show RockMYX, a record producer, and a blogger for Yahoo! Philippines. Francis was a member of local rock band The Dawn for many years and worked as a DJ for the defunct seminal radio station NU107.
Trade, investment hopes spring in 2012
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Monday, December 31, 2012
Critical Action On Quinta-Hit Areas In Region 6 Urged
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Monday, December 31, 2012
Military declares SOMO vs Reds till Jan. 2
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Monday, December 31, 2012
Furniture store sees potential of Davao market
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Monday, December 31, 2012
53 Metro cops sanctioned over various offenses; 15 of them dismissed
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Monday, December 31, 2012
Don't buy pregnant dolls, DOH appeals
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Monday, December 31, 2012
Is the House of Representatives targeting to pass the Freedom of Information (FoI) bill next? This may be so after Speaker Feliciano “Sonny” Belmonte Jr. admitted seeing the controversial measure approved on second reading by January. “We will go through the process (and) we should be able to start it now. But it will probably (be) up for (approval on) second reading by January,” Belmonte said Thursday. The top House official made the statement after the Lower Congress approved the bill on responsible parenthood or RH bill on final reading with a 113-79 vote. “The FOI bill is due to be considered for sponsorship possibly as early as today. I know it’s already in the hands of the rules committee,” Belmonte explained. “And I don’t see any reason why it shouldn’t be sponsored already,” he noted. The FoI bill, which aims to provide the public access to documents or information for matters of public interest, only gained steam in the Lower Congress after a panel approved its report on the measure earlier this month. But Eastern Samar Rep. Ben Evardone, chairman of House Committee on Public Information, failed to sponsor the bill on Tuesday. The process would have opened the measure to public deliberations and amendment on the plenary, which is a requisite for approval on second reading. The legislation, on the other hand, breezed through the second reading and received no objections on third reading approval with a 17-0 vote in the Senate two weeks ago. Quezon Rep. Lorenzo “Erin” Tanada III confirmed there is still more time to accommodate the measure considering the nine session days remaining for January. “I think the focus by then will be the FOI so we'll see. I don’t see any problem as we saw how FOI moved in the Senate on its own without certification coming from the president,” Tanada said. “It would have great impact but I think there is enough political will since lawmakers know the importance of this measure. They will act. I hope they act,” he added. But Ifugao Rep. Teddy Baguilat, vice chair of House Committee on Public Information, doused cold water on Tanada’s optimism. “We have different dynamics here. Our interests are more parochial. For the Senators, they can’t afford to go against the FOI because it would paint a bad image for them, make them anti-transparency. Being holders of a national position, they need the media more,” Baguilat said. “As for the House members, they have different interest, different experiences with the media. Senators are more exposed to the more responsible media,” Baguilat insisted.
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Monday, December 31, 2012
RH bill now a law, Palace confirms
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Monday, December 31, 2012
Philippines braces for bloody New Year revelry
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Monday, December 31, 2012
The Philippines braced Sunday for its annual orgy of New Year's Eve merrymaking which every year leaves hundreds maimed by firecrackers or hit by bullets fired in the air by armed revellers.
A total of 171 people have been injured by fireworks since the Christmas weekend, one was poisoned eating them, while another was wounded by a stray bullet, Assistant Health Secretary Eric Tayag said in an updated toll.
President Benigno Aquino interrupted his holidays to meet emergency services officials about government preparations for mass casualties, fires and other potential mayhem from the often drunken revelry.
"The President called this meeting because he wanted to emphasise that he's quite serious about these things, that we need to learn and not ignore the law an hour before midnight on December 31," said Cabinet Secretary Rene Almendras.
Filipino families celebrate Christmas and New Year by buying and setting off large quantities of fireworks on their own, instead of watching public displays as in some other countries.
The government reported 454 firecracker-related injuries as 2012 was welcomed in. Many of those hurt were children or drunk adults, while some of those accused of indiscriminately firing their guns were soldiers and police officers.
The health department said more than 40 percent of the victims this year are children. It said some were being poisoned after eating the fireworks.
Manila police chiefs ceremonially taped the muzzles of the service firearms of the capital's 17,000 officers on Saturday and vowed to prosecute those caught firing in the air on New Year's Eve.
The police laboratory will test the weapons for gunpowder residue after the celebrations.
At the televised meeting Sunday, Aquino expressed concern at the sale of oversized firecrackers, and chastised officials for failing to shut down factories and retailers making and selling them.
"If you tossed that onto the road, would it damage the road as well?" he asked, halting a slide show on banned firecrackers including a giant 58-square-centimetre (nine-square-inch) one called "Goodbye Philippines".
Aquino was told that it would.
Individual fireworks containing not more than 0.2 grams (0.007 ounces) of explosive material are allowed by law. But police told the meeting they had seized illegal fireworks worth 11.9 million pesos ($290,000).
"Please direct the (local government units) to explain how such a store can be selling regulated items without the necessary permits," an apparently irritated Aquino said.
The president also urged the public to use social media to disclose abuses, including posting video clips of people firing off celebratory rounds.
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
80% Of Filipinos Trust President Aquino
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Wednesday, December 19, 2012
..MANILA, Philippines --- President Benigno S. Aquino III continues to enjoy high trust and approval ratings in the past three months, based on the Pulse Asia survey results released yesterday.
The nationwide survey found that eight in 10 Filipinos approve of President Aquino's performance (78 percent) and have trust in him (80 percent) in the last three months.
The survey held November 23-29 among 1,200 respondents showed that the President continues to enjoy "majority" approval and trust ratings.
Mr. Aquino registered 78 percent both on his performance and trust ratings last September.
Only 6 percent of Filipinos expressed appreciation for the work done by President Aquino in the past quarter, while 16 percent expressed uncertainty on the matter.
Majority of Filipinos across geographic areas in Metro Manila, rest of Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao (74 percent to 83 percent) also gave high approval ratings for the President.
Likewise, socio-economic classes ABC, D, and E (75 percent to 79 percent) are appreciative of the work done by President Aquino.
The President enjoyed the same overall approval score in September and November 2012, while changes in his overall indecision and disapproval ratings are marginal (-2 and +2 percentage points, respectively).
Presidential Spokesman Edwin Lacierda said Malacañang is thrilled about the overwhelming public support for President Aquino.
Pulse Asia said there are also no notable changes in the Presidential performance ratings in the different geographic areas and socio-economic groupings during this period.
Most Filipinos also trust President Aquino, which is translated in all geographic areas (78 percent to 85 percent) and socio-economic classes (79 percent to 83 percent).
Meanwhile, only 4 percent of Filipinos distrust the President while 16 percent cannot say if they trust or distrust him.
Filipinos' opinions regarding presidential trustworthiness remain basically unchanged between September and November 2012, with only marginal changes occurring in President Aquino's national trust and indecision scores (+2 and -2 percentage points, respectively).
In the same survey period, the national administration registered "majority" overall approval ratings on eight out of 11 issues.
Pulse Asia said there were a few significant movements in the administration's performance ratings that took place between September and November 2012.
Sixty-seven percent of Filipinos approve of the work done by the Aquino administration with regard to fighting criminality.
It also scored high in fighting corruption (65 percent), enforcing the rule of law (64 percent), promoting peace (63 percent), protecting the environment (60 percent), defending the country's territorial integrity (57 percent), increasing the pay of workers (56 percent), and creating more jobs (55 percent).
In addition, Filipinos approve of the national administration's efforts to control population growth (47 percent) and reduce poverty (44 percent).
"Virtually the same approval and indecision ratings are recorded by the current dispensation on the issue of controlling inflation (40 percent versus 38 percent) - an issue considered as urgent by 51 percent of Filipinos," the pollster said.
Pulse Asia noted that between September and November 2012, the only significant improvements in the national administration's approval ratings are recorded on the issues of defending the country's territorial integrity (+9 percentage points) and stopping environmental degradation (+10 percentage points).
The other gains in approval are marginal in nature given the survey's overall error margin of +/- three percentage points.
The survey results found that Filipinos are most critical of the administration's initiatives to reduce poverty (20 percent), control inflation (22 percent), enforce the rule of law (7 percent), defend the country's territorial integrity (7 percent), promote peace (8 percent), and fight criminality (9 percent). (With a report from Genalyn D. Kabiling)
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Why the world can’t afford to end on 12-21-12 for Pinoys
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Wednesday, December 19, 2012
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They say the world will end this coming December 21, though the scientists say there is very little chance of that happening, which is great news for most of us, though maybe not for the preppers. It's not as if we need more reasons to wish the world won't end on 2012. After all, most of want more time to live our lives and be with our loved ones. But there are also so many more celebrations to take part in, titles to be defended, points to be proved, votes to be cast and counted, conclusions to be reached after that fated date. Here are some of the things we just cannot afford to miss, or very compelling reasons why many Pinoys simply can't allow the world to end this Friday. Christmas If the world ends on the 21st, then what of the gifts marked with our names, waiting patiently to be unwrapped under the tree? And surely Simbang Gabi patrons won’t allow the apocalypse to get in the way of their perfect morning mass attendance record—especially if they’re praying for something important. Anyway, there is enough hot bibingka and puto bumbong to last us ‘til New Year’s and beyond, and we cannot let that go to waste. The FIFA World Cup in 2014, and the Olympics in 2016 in Brazil Sports fans simply cannot miss the 2014 FIFA World Cup, which will see the Spanish national team defending their title in beautiful Brazil. The 2016 Summer Olympics is also happening in the South American country, which means that Filipino sports fans actually have a shot at watching the games live (if they start saving up for the expensive airfare now) because FYI, we don’t need a visa to enter Brazil.
Sayang naman
if the world ends and we can’t take advantage of that benefit! Game of Thrones season three / A Song of Ice and Fire book six The last episode of the second season of breakout series “Game of Thrones” unfolded in a series of cliffhangers: the vicious Tywin Lannister seizes control of the Iron Throne, while his son the Kingslayer and Incest Knight Jaime makes his way across the Seven Kingdoms as a hostage of Catelyn Stark. King in the North Robb Stark marries in secret while fighting a war, and the Khaleesi is poised to begin her long journey across the narrow sea to join the melee. Through all of this, an army of whitewalkers makes its way closer to the tenuous Wall that is the only thing protecting Westeros from an endless winter. The continuation will take place on 03-31-13 to be exact, and the wait is almost as painful as Ned Stark’s grisly fate. Meanwhile, fans of the books also have many questions that have yet to be answered. For instance, who is Jon Snow’s mother? Will the remaining Starks ever reunite again? Will Jaime keep his promise to Catelyn Stark? What will happen to Dany and her dragons? Will the war ever end, and will we finally be able to stop crying/gasping/screaming/cursing George R.R Martin for toying with our emotions so? Some of the answers to these questions stand to be answered with the sixth installment of the series, “The Winds of Winter,” though Mr. Martin continues to keep us on edge by dangling the book in our faces without even an estimate for a release date. Until that happens, doomsday will just have to wait. The birth of the royal baby The royal pregnancy and birth is too exciting to miss if the world would end on the 21st. There’s still Duchess Catherine’s maternity style to look forward to, and whether it’s a little prince or princess in there – or even twins – and who he or she will look like (either way, the baby’s sure to be a stunner). Also, the women of the worlds’ ovaries have yet to explode at the sight of uncle Prince Harry holding his new nephew or niece. FOI and RH Law The Reproductive Health Bill and Freedom of Information Bill have made great progress lately, with the RH bill getting approval from lawmakers and the FOI bill just awaiting a nod from the lower house. While both bills still have some ways to go before being signed by the President and finally taking effect, the possibility that they will be passed into law—as many Filipinos have long called for—is now greater than ever. If and when that moment comes, we have to be around to cheer it. Jessica Sanchez and more in the Philippines The well-loved “American Idol” alumna performed here for the show’s concert tour in September along with the rest of the “Idol” contestants (and winner Philip Phillips, of course). She’s coming again in February 2013, this time to sing in a show all her own, with fellow “Idol” graduate Colton Dixon as a special guest. It will be interesting to see how the talented Fil-Am will hold up on her own. Another big star heading our way is Korean pop star Psy, who will strut his stuff Gangnam-style in Manila also in February. After watching his video for the umpteenth time on YouTube, Pinoy fans will get the chance to see him perform his funny horse dance and more, probably with many celebrities following his lead. Meanwhile, Grammy award-winner Joss Stone and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Jimmy Cliff are also paying the country a visit. They're not playing in a regular concert but instead, they're headlining the country's annual hippie gathering, the Malasimbo Music and Arts Festival next year. Hearing Joss Stone and Jimmy Cliff play live along with around 3,000 interesting people on the foothills of a mountain in Puerto Galera is just too good for doomsday to cancel out. Halalan 2013 Filipino voters cannot pass up on this chance to exercise democracy and steer our country in a direction we actually want it to go. The elections next May will allow us to designate officials on the local level, including district members at the House of Representatives, governors, vice-governors, mayors, vice-mayors, city and municipal council members, and possibly 13 out of the 24 seats in Senate (we might just have to say goodbye to Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago as she fulfils her duty as a judge at the International Criminal Court). A strong Philippine economy It turns out that we Filipinos have more to lose than most should the world end this week, and that includes a richer future. According to a wealth report by Knight Frank and Citi Private Bank, the Philippines will have the sixth fastest-growing economy in the next 40 years, surpassing the annual gross domestic product (GDP) of Mongolia, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, and Egypt, and even European countries like Spain, France, Switzerland, and Germany, who were all projected to have the lowest GDP growth.
Philippine birth control fight not over: bishops
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Wednesday, December 19, 2012
..Philippine Catholic church leaders vowed Tuesday to overturn a birth control bill after lawmakers passed landmark legislation to make sex education and birth control more widely available.
The Senate and the House of Representatives approved the Reproductive Health (RH) Bill late Monday, putting it on course to be signed into law by President Benigno Aquino within a week, after its final wording has been decided.
Church leaders, however, pledged to continue their fight against the controversial bill, with an appeal to the Supreme Court and a campaign to oust its supporters in May's general election.
Bishop Gabriel Reyes said a group of Catholic lawyers was preparing to challenge the legality of the bill in the Supreme Court as soon as it is signed into law.
"We will support that petition... in the Supreme Court against the RH bill," said Reyes, head of the commission on family issues for the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines (CBCP).
He added that the Catholic church would also continue to urge the nation of 100 million people -- 80 percent of whom are Catholic -- to ignore the provisions of the bill once it passes into law.
"We will tell Catholics 'even if you are given free contraceptives, do not use them'," he told reporters.
Reyes said Tuesday that it would be left up to each individual bishop to decide whether to urge their dioceses to vote against legislators who supported the bill.
He laid the blame for the bill's passage at the feet of President Benigno Aquino, who he accused of using pressure and government funds to get the necessary votes in parliament.
"The struggle between the pro-RH and the anti-RH... was really the struggle of Malacanang (the presidential palace)," he said, warning that Aquino could become a "threat to democracy" with his domination of Congress.
CBCP secretary-general Monsignor Joselito Asis said that the RH bill was a "watershed" and would be followed by bills for the legalisation of divorce, abortion, same-sex marriage and euthanasia.
He stressed that if that were the case the church would fight against those laws too.
The church had effectively blocked the passage of birth control legislation for over a decade, cowing legislators and presidents by mounting huge protests and threatening to turn the public against them.
However the two houses of Congress, with the support of the Aquino administration, voted in favour of the bill after months of bitter debate, during which time some churchmen even threatened to have Aquino excommunicated.
Proponents of the bill said it was necessary to bring down maternal death rates, which are among the highest in the region, help poor women avoid getting pregnant and even slow the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.
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Saturday, December 8, 2012
Philippines finds elderly survivor after typhoon kills 332
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Saturday, December 08, 2012
Philippines puts off South China Sea talks due to scheduling problems
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Saturday, December 08, 2012
Philippine typhoon survivors 'loot' shops: Official
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Saturday, December 08, 2012
Thursday, December 6, 2012
ANALYSIS: Philippine economy: growth without joy
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Thursday, December 06, 2012
..Manila (Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN) - The 7.1 per cent Philippine economic growth in the third quarter "posted the fastest expansion" within the Asean (Association of Southeast Asian Nations), gloated Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Arsenio Balisacan.
He said that the year-to-date growth was already 6.5 per cent, prompting him to predict that the full-year growth would likely surpass the government's target of 7 to 8 per cent. "Next year we expect this momentum to continue," Balisacan said.
Don't celebrate too prematurely, Mr. Secretary. In a volatile economic climate, either global or domestic, nothing remains static and predictable.
In fact, some leading figures in private business are not carried away by the government's optimistic forecasts, given that the administration craves credit for being responsible for-or being the driver of-this unaccustomed surge, which appears to some hard-boiled businessmen as a one-off phenomenon, or a fluke.
For example, Aurelio Montinola III, president of the conservative and prudent Bank of the Philippine Islands, is somewhat sceptical. In a speech at the "Man of the Year" awards of the Management Association of the Philippines on Monday, he said that the 7.1-per cent growth made it likely that the pace of continued expansion at the upper end of the 5- to 6-per cent growth is attainable. "I think we have a very good chance to do 6 per cent this year, and the big bet is we can do another 6 per cent next year," he said. To sustain growth and make it inclusive, it is necessary to have an average 5- to 6-per cent growth every year for the next five or six years.
Questions were raised in business circles over whether the high-growth rate benefited only the middle and upper classes while bypassing the poor classes. A recent survey of the Social Weather Stations (SWS) in the third quarter found 31 per cent of the 1,200 respondents optimistic of an economic improvement, while 14 per cent were not. SWS interpreted this result as "very high" at the net score of +17. The survey was conducted last August, and its results were first published by the BusinessWorld newspaper.
According to SWS, net economic optimism was "very high" in seven out of the last 10 surveys, and the August survey results were up from May's "high" of +8. But there's a downside. Asked about the quality of their life over the past 12 months, 21 per cent of the respondents said it had improved, while 28 per cent said it had worsened, for a net score of -8 percentage points.
Net personal optimism dropped from +39 to +30 in Luzon areas outside the metropolis, from +37 to +36 in Metro Manila, and from +18 to +17 in the Visayas. It only increased in Mindanao from +20 to +22. By socioeconomic class, personal optimism decreased in classes ABC (from +34 to +32), class D (from +32 to +28) and class E (from +24 to +20). The Palace declined to comment on why personal optimism had dipped but said this should improve in the coming months, based on the third-quarter growth.
How economic growth translated into flow of benefits to reduce poverty is shown in a United Nations report for 2012. In its report on the growth outlook for Asia-Pacific, the Nations Economic and Social Survey of the region wrote on the Philippines. A summary of the May 2012 report follows:
Economic growth weakened due to declining exports and lower public spending, but in response to weak growth, a disbursement acceleration programme was announced in October 2011. In terms of foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows, the Philippines continued to lag behind other major economies in the subregion, receiving only US$1.3 billion in 2011, similar to the 2010 level.
The country faces many challenges, including a high share of non-wage earners and large infrastructure gaps. The share of workers earning wages and salaries, as opposed to the self-employed and unpaid family workers, also remains low. At the same time, income inequalities have led to a slower reduction of poverty and to higher rates of self-rated poverty. On government intervention in providing social subsidies to ameliorate poverty, an Inquirer research shows: As of June 2012, the Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) programme has reached out to a total of 3,014,586 families, more than the 2012 target of 3 million. Between January and February 2012, the programme reported a compliance rate of 95.89 per cent among mothers who visited the healthcare centres for checkups and immunisation for babies; 97.97 per cent among mothers who brought their children to healthcare centres for deworming; 95.15-per cent attendance rate in day care centres among children; and 96.40-per cent attendance rate for primary and secondary schoolchildren.
In May, SWS found that self-rated poverty dropped to an estimated 10.3 million Filipino households, or 51 per cent of the total households in the country. The figure declined from 11.1 million households, or 55 per cent.
The effectiveness of the CCT is under review in a congressional oversight committee: to look into whether it is being used as a poverty alleviation measure or as an electoral vote-buying scheme for the 2013 mid-term elections. Sen. Franklin Drilon, chair of the committee and a leading member of President Aquino's Liberal Party, is scrutinising the 2013 national budget, which contains a proposal to fund the CCT with 45 billion pesos (US$1.1 billion). The programme distributes money to the poorest families in the country.
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Water treatment firm sets expansion in Davao
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Thursday, December 06, 2012
..A MANILA-based water treatment technology firm is eyeing Davao Region for its expansion next year, bringing their world-class technology to Dabawenyos.
Axel Ramos, brand manager of Aqualipure Water Systems and Equipment Inc., in an interview told Sun.Star Davao on Thursday, that Aqualipure is now looking for their official distributor for Davao Region as part of their expansion program in Mindanao.
Aqualipure, which follows a three-decade-old Japanese water treatment system technology ideal for industries and residences, was brought to the Philippines in early 2000.
Aside from Japanese technology, Aqualipure is also distributing top Korean water treatment products.
At present, Aqualipure has been very successful in Metro Manila and Metro Cebu with their official and exclusive distributors serving hundreds if not thousands of clients.
Aqualipure is one of the exhibitors in the three-day forum and exhibit organized by the Philippine Constructors Association Inc. (PCA) and the Davao Constructors Association Center Inc. (DCACI) that will run until tomorrow.
Among the 12 major products of Aqualipure, which ranges from water-treatment system to juice strainers, its best-seller is the Azumi Akaline Water Ionizer Package, Japan's leading water ionizer.
Azumi works by separating ordinary water into alkaline and acidic parts. Alkaline water is ideal for human consumption while acidic may be used for external purposes like washing wounds and other skin diseases and infections for a faster recovery, garden use as an alternative and natural form of pesticides, and other domestic purposes.
According to Ramos, alkaline water provides the needed mineral that one needs for daily consumption including calcium.
On top of this, a daily and regular consumption of alkaline water will reduce the risk of cancer and other preventable diseases especially those water-borne illnesses.
"With our drive here in Davao City, we wanted to share the technology and the health benefits of Aqualipure to Dabawenyos," Ramos said.
Among the products that Aquilipure is offering includes Woonging Coway Alkaline Water Ionizer, AOK Alkaline Water Filter, RepHresh Portable Alkaline Water Maker, Pro-aqua: Air-Room Cleaning System, Vakuft Air and Room Cleaning System, HSF Showerhead Filter and Inline Shower Filter, Nutraease 316 Titanium Alloy Steel Kitchenware, Ozone Multipurpose Sterilizer, Coway-Juicepresso Slow Juicer, among others.
Overpriced fertilizer, Ombudsman dismisses 3 Albay town officials
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Thursday, December 06, 2012
Typhoon kills at least 283, hundreds missing, in Philippines
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Thursday, December 06, 2012
NEW BATAAN, Philippines (Reuters) - Blocked roads and severed communications in the southern Philippines frustrated rescuers on Wednesday as teams searched for hundreds of people missing after the strongest typhoon this year killed at least 283 people.
Typhoon Bopha, with central winds of 120 kph (75 mph) and gusts of up to 150 kph (93 mph), battered beach resorts and dive spots on Palawan island on Wednesday but it was weakening as it moved west.
Hardest hit was the southern island of Mindanao, where Bopha made landfall on Tuesday. It triggered landslides and floods along the coast and in farming and mining towns inland.
Interior Minister Manuel Roxas said 300 people were missing.
"Entire families were washed away," Roxas, who inspected the disaster zone, told reporters.
Most affected areas were cut off by destroyed roads and collapsed bridges and army search-and-rescue teams were being flown in by helicopter.
Power was cut and communications were down.
According to tallies provided by the military and disaster agency officials, 283 people were killed.
Thousands of people were in shelters and officials appealed for food, water and clothing. Dozens of domestic flights were suspended on Wednesday.
The governor of the worst-hit province, Compostela Valley, in Mindanao said waves of water and mud came crashing down mountains and swept through schools, town halls and clinics where huddled residents had sought shelter.
The death toll in the province stood at 160. In nearby Davao Oriental province, where Bopha made landfall, 110 people were killed.
"The waters came so suddenly and unexpectedly, and the winds were so fierce," the Compostela Valley governor, Arthur Uy, told Reuters by telephone.
He said irrigation reservoirs on top of mountains had given way sending large volumes of water down to the valleys. Torrential rain often triggers landslides down slopes stripped of their forest cover.
Damage to agriculture and infrastructure in the province was extensive, Uy said.
STUNNED
Corn farmer Jerry Pampusa, 42, and his pregnant wife were marooned in their hut but survived.
"We were very scared," Pampusa said. "We felt we were on an island because there was water everywhere."
Another survivor, Francisco Alduisa, said dozens of women and children who had taken shelter in a village centre, had been swept away.
"We found some of the bodies about 10 km (6 miles) away," Alduisa told Reuters. The only building left standing in his village was the school.
Another survivor, Julius Julian Rebucas, said his mother and brother disappeared in a flash flood.
"I no longer have a family," a stunned Rebucas said.
An army commander said two dozen people had been pulled from the mud in one area and were being treated in hospital.
About 20 typhoons hit the Philippines every year, often causing death and destruction.
Almost exactly a year ago, Typhoon Washi killed 1,500 people in Mindanao. (Additional Reporting by Rosemarie Francisco and Manny Mogato; Editing by Robert Birsel
Kopi Talk Bird watching
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Thursday, December 06, 2012
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Birdwatching? More fun in PH!
Kim Arveen Patria
With hundreds of species found in unique habitats throughout the archipelago, birdwatching is more fun in the Philippines, the Tourism department said.
This, as it noted that the country has recently become "a magnet for birdwatchers" in the region.
"Birdwatching... is a thriving tourism product that has low environmental impact since serious (advance vs. casual or novice) birdwatchers are nature lovers," Tourism Secretary Ramon Jimenez said in a statement.
There are 600 species of birds in the Philippines, 200 of which are not found anywhere else in the world, the statement noted, quoting the World Bird Club of the Philippines (WBCP).
Birdwatching sites, however, should be properly developed and managed for the activiy to be "sustainable and reward," Jimenez said.
"Involvement of our local communities ensures that these habitats are well taken care of for the economic benefits that they will bring," Jimenez said.
To heighten awareness on the need to protect bird sanctuaries, the Tourism and Environment departments as well as WBCP are set to celebrate the 8th Philippine Bird Festival on Dec. 7 to 8 in Manila.
"The festival aims to promote birdwatching as a nature tourism activity and drum up support for conservation and restoration of Metro Manila's remaining wetlands," the statement said.
It particularly cited the Las Piñas-Parañaque Critical Habitat and Ecotourism Area, a 175-hectare protected habitat just off the Coastal Road leading to Cavite.
The event also hopes to draw attention to Manila Bay and its important role in bird's migratory route called the East Asian Flyway.
It is also seen to "encourage public participation in conservation and the creation of more public green spaces," the Tourism department said.
The festival will be held at the Rizal Park's Teodoro F. Valencia Circle and will be open to the public free of charge.
Featured during the two-day event are an exhibit of bird photos, displays on the biodiversity of Manila Bay, films and lectures, bird watching trips, and forums on ecotourism, birdlife management and aviation safety.
This, as it noted that the country has recently become "a magnet for birdwatchers" in the region.
"Birdwatching... is a thriving tourism product that has low environmental impact since serious (advance vs. casual or novice) birdwatchers are nature lovers," Tourism Secretary Ramon Jimenez said in a statement.
There are 600 species of birds in the Philippines, 200 of which are not found anywhere else in the world, the statement noted, quoting the World Bird Club of the Philippines (WBCP).
Birdwatching sites, however, should be properly developed and managed for the activiy to be "sustainable and reward," Jimenez said.
"Involvement of our local communities ensures that these habitats are well taken care of for the economic benefits that they will bring," Jimenez said.
To heighten awareness on the need to protect bird sanctuaries, the Tourism and Environment departments as well as WBCP are set to celebrate the 8th Philippine Bird Festival on Dec. 7 to 8 in Manila.
"The festival aims to promote birdwatching as a nature tourism activity and drum up support for conservation and restoration of Metro Manila's remaining wetlands," the statement said.
It particularly cited the Las Piñas-Parañaque Critical Habitat and Ecotourism Area, a 175-hectare protected habitat just off the Coastal Road leading to Cavite.
The event also hopes to draw attention to Manila Bay and its important role in bird's migratory route called the East Asian Flyway.
It is also seen to "encourage public participation in conservation and the creation of more public green spaces," the Tourism department said.
The festival will be held at the Rizal Park's Teodoro F. Valencia Circle and will be open to the public free of charge.
Featured during the two-day event are an exhibit of bird photos, displays on the biodiversity of Manila Bay, films and lectures, bird watching trips, and forums on ecotourism, birdlife management and aviation safety.
PH rises in 'corruption perception' rankings
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Thursday, December 06, 2012
..The government's efforts at curbing corruption seems to have borne fruit as the Philippines moved up a global ranking of countries based on perception on corruption.
The Philippines has been ranked 105th out of 176 countries in the "Corruption Perception Index" put out by anti-corruption coalition Transparency International.
This compares to its ranking of 129th out of 183 countries in the 2011 list.
The Philippines scored 34 out of 100 in the composite index, which is based on "a combination of surveys and assessments of corruption, collected by a variety of reputable institutions," the report said.
A score of zero means that a country is perceived as "highly corrupt" and 100 means it is perceived as "very clean."
Last year, the Philippines got a composite index score of 2.6 out of 10, where 0 means it is perceived as "highly corrupt and 10 as "very clean."
"Governments need to integrate anti-corruption actions into all aspects of decision-making," Transparency International said.
"They must prioritize better rules on lobbying and political financing, make public spending and contracting more transparent, and make public bodies more accountable," it added.
This, as it noted that corruption "translates into human suffering" and "generates popular anger."
Commenting on the report, Presidential Spokesperson Edwin Lacierda said the improvement is "an affirmation of the efforts to strengthen institutions, provide deterrents against corrupt practices, and hold accountable those who have used power for personal gain."
The administration of President Benigno Aquino III, however, "acknowledges that the anti-corruption drive remains a work in progress," Lacierda said.
"Transparency needs to be instituted across all government agencies, whether on the national or local level. There are still bumps that need to be evened out for the playing field to be truly leveled. In many cases, justice remains to be served," he added.
The Philippines shared the 105th spot with Algeria, Armenia, Bolivia, Gambia, Kosovo and Mali.
Among the nine Southeast Asian countries, the Philippines was the fifth perceived to be least corrupt.
Ranked higher than the Philippines were Singapore, which ranked 5th globally; Brunei (46th); Malaysia; (54th) and Thailand (88th).
The country, however, performed better than Indonesia (118th), Vietnam (123rd), Cambodia (157th), and Laos (160th).
Denmark, Finland and New Zealand are perceived to be the least corrupt countries this year, sharing the top spot in the ranking.
Rounding out the top 10, meanwhile, are Sweden, Singapore, Switzerland, Australia, Norway, Canada and the Netherlands.
At the bottom of the list are Somalia, North Korea, Afghanistan, Sudan, Myanmar, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Iraq, Venezuela, Haiti, Chad and Burundi.
..
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Typhoon Pablo is strongest storm to hit Mindanao in two decades
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Wednesday, December 05, 2012
With maximum sustained winds that reached 185 kph, Typhoon Pablo (Bopha) is the strongest storm to hit Mindanao in two decades, PAGASA said Tuesday.
“Base sa nakalap naming data, ang Typhoon Pablo ang pinakamalakas (na tumama sa Mindanao),” state weather forecaster Jori Loiz told GMA News Online. “Hindi pa namin naa-assess 'yung mga sumusunod sa lakas.”
He noted that very few tropical cycles hit Mindanao in a year.
“Non-comparable si Sendong dahil tropical storm lang siya,” he added.
Sendong, considered as one of the deadliest cyclones to enter the country in 12 years, hit Mindanao in December last year leaving 1,257 people dead and P1.6 billion damage in agriculture and properties.
Related story: Pablo slams PH south
He said they are now studying Pablo which he described as “very unusual.”
“Subject for further research is Pablo. Very unusual si Pablo sa formation. Inaalam namin kung bakit nagform at nag-intesify siya below five degrees latitude. Tinitingnan din namin kung ano ang nag-sustain sa kanya kasi nag- stationary then moved westward,” Loiz said.
He said a cyclone as strong as Pablo could uproot trees and destroy houses made of light materials.
PAGASA earlier said Typhoon Pablo may bring rainfall of 15 to 30 mm per hour (heavy to intense) within its 600-km diameter.
Pablo made landfall in Davao Oriental before 5 a.m. Tuesday packed with maximum sustained winds of 175 kph near the center and gustiness of up to 210 kph.
Despite Pablo's intensity, Loiz expects lower fatalities and damage to properties than that caused by Sendong.
“Kaya malaki ang pinsala noon e hindi handa ang tao, hindi aware. Isa pa, gabi tumama si Sendong, tulog ang mga tao nung biglang tumaas ang tubig,” he said.
“Ngayon, nag-warning kami one week before pa. Handa na ang mga tao. Isa pa, kung tatama siya sa Cagayan River, wala na halos mga bahay dun,” Loiz added.
At least 7,011 Mindanao residents or 1,303 families from Regions 10, 11 and 13 were evacuated hours before Pablo made landfall. Forced evacuations were also carried out in Lingig and Hinatuan late Monday.
Two fatalities
Related story: 40,000 evacuated as typhoon hits
Meanwhile, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said at least two residents in Mindanao were reported dead due to bad weather conditions brought by Pablo.
NDRRMC head Benito Ramos said they received reports that the latest fatality was killed after being crushed by a falling tree.
"May nakamotor, nadaganan ng kahoy habang nakamotor sa kalsada (sa) Misamis Oriental," he said in an interview on dzBB radio.
He said the initial reports reaching him identified the fatality as Jigger Gumunit, 30.
A 50-year-old woman in Manay town in Davao Oriental, meanwhile, was killed after a coconut tree fell on her.
Ramos also said a landslide was reported in New Bataan in Compostela Valley but there was no initial report of casualties.
Also, he said power remained knocked out in Davao Oriental and Surigao del Sur.
Elsewhere in Mindanao, the power outage caused by Typhoon Pablo prompted residents in Cagayan de Oro City to flock to hotels.
Many of the relatively well-off checked in at hotels even as there was no timetable on when power would be restored, radio dzBB reported.
Some malls in the city were open but had few visitors for the day, the report added.
Power was knocked out in parts of Mindanao on Monday night, and in other parts of the island before dawn Tuesday.
Loiz said Pablo is expected to be outside the Philippine area of responsibility Friday as it moves slower at 20 kph.
“Bumagal siya. Kanina 20 kph na lang kaya made-delay ang paglabas pero 'yun ay kung hindi magbabago ang kanyang bilis at direksyon,” he said.
Earlier in the day, Pablo was moving at 26 kph and is expected to be 180 km southwest of Roxas City by Wednesday morning.
He added that Metro Manila should expect rains Wednesday night still due to Pablo. —KG, GMA News
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Typhoon Bopha smashes into Philippines
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Tuesday, December 04, 2012
Typhoon Bopha smashed into the southern Philippines Tuesday, uprooting trees and bringing drenching rains as more than 40,000 people crammed into shelters to escape the storm's onslaught.
Bopha -- packing gusts of up to 210 kilometres (130 miles) an hour -- made landfall on Mindanao's east coast at dawn, raking across the island of 10 million people.
It uprooted trees and blew off roofs made of light materials, according to residents and AFP reporters on the ground, with cities plunged into darkness after authorities cut power supplies.
There were no immediate reports of casualties or serious damage but the island was in lockdown, with residents of coastal and flood-prone areas moving into shelters as floods hit some areas.
Aviation and shipping were suspended, with 80 flights grounded and thousands of ferry passengers stranded as the coastguard ordered vessels to stay in port, the civil defence office said.
More than 41,000 people had moved into nearly 1,000 government shelters across the island by early Tuesday, it said in its latest bulletin.
Large parts of Mindanao were without power after supplies were shut down to cut the risk of fires and electrocutions, according to Liza Mazo, regional civil defence official.
"Power was lost before dawn. There were reports of powerful winds, high waves and possible storm surge threatening some coastal areas," she said.
"We are hoping and praying that there will be no casualties."
People living in the storm-hit area braced for the worst of the typhoon, the strongest cyclone to hit the Philippines this year.
"We have taken our pigs and chickens inside our house because their shed might be destroyed," 46-year-old shopkeeper Marianita Villamor of San Fermin town on Mindanao's east coast told AFP by telephone.
"The winds were howling and I could hear the trees falling to the ground since early this morning."
Villamor said her relatives who lived in a nearby coastal area had joined hundreds of other families who moved into temporary shelters including schools and other government buildings late Monday.
"I have not heard from then since because (mobile phone) signals have been on and off," she said. "I hope they are dry and safe."
The commercial centre of Cagayan de Oro, one of Mindanao's largest cities, was hit by flooding as rivers overflowed following heavy rain.
Schools were shut in Mindanao and across large areas of the central Philippines.
President Benigno Aquino led calls for evacuations on Monday, saying: "(Bopha's) destructive potential is no laughing matter. It is expected to be the strongest typhoon to hit our country in 2012."
The Philippines is battered by about 20 typhoons a year, some of them destructive. Bopha is the sixteenth so far this year.
In August, nearly 100 people were killed and more than a million were displaced by heavy flooding caused by a series of storms.
Nineteen typhoons struck the country last year, of which 10 were destructive, leading to more than 1,500 deaths and affecting nearly 10 percent of the total population, according to the government
5 carjacking suspects, hostage killed in shootout with cops
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Tuesday, December 04, 2012
CAMP OLIVAS, Pampanga , Philippines– Five suspected carjackers, including a woman, were killed in an alleged shootout with policemen in Danzo, Gerona, Tarlac, early Sunday.
Senior Superintendent Alfred Corpus said the slain suspects, who allegedly murdered the owner of the vehicle they stole in Baguio City on Saturday, have yet to be identified.
Superintendent Ponciano Zafra, Gerona police chief, said police are still investigating the affiliation of the suspects, who are believed to be natives of Kalinga and operating in the Cordilleras.
Police learned that the slain suspects came last Saturday from Baguio City, where they stole a Toyota Innova (NDO-933) driven by Roldan Ymson, 67. The suspects took Ymson as hostage and fled using the stolen vehicle.
Zafra said the Baguio City police received the report of the carjacking at 1:30 a.m. Sunday and immediately sent out an alarm to other police units.
At 4 a.m., police monitored the presence of suspicious-looking men who forced open the gates of a farm in Barangay Danzo, Gerona.
But instead of yielding, the suspects shot at a police team sent to the area to verify the report, triggering a brief exchange of gunfire.
Police recovered from the slain suspects two .45 caliber pistols, two .38 caliber revolvers and a fragmentation grenade, which one of the slain suspects tried to detonate before he was shot dead.
The body of Ymson was found hogtied with gunshot wounds in the chest in Pozzorubio, Pangasinan yesterday morning. - By Ric Sapnu and Cecille Suerte Felipe
Kopi Talk Preparing for disaster
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Tuesday, December 04, 2012
A super typhoon is expected this week, hitting Mindanao and the Visayas and then approaching Luzon and Metro Manila. Weather forecasters have issued sufficient warning, and it is now up to authorities to prepare for typhoon “Bopha,” renamed “Pablo” as it enters the Philippine area of responsibility.
Last year at around this time, storm “Sendong” struck Mindanao, with rampaging floods leaving nearly 1,300 dead, mostly in the cities of Iligan and Cagayan de Oro. Many of those killed were washed away in their riverside homes by massive logs that rolled down from nearby mountains. Those who cut down the trees have not been brought to justice.
Yesterday, authorities announced that security and relief teams were on standby for Pablo. Iligan and Cagayan de Oro will probably be better prepared than other cities this time. Their tragic experience last year should compel other cities and towns to improve preparedness not only for Pablo but also for the many typhoons and torrential monsoon rains that hit the country every year.
Improving disaster preparedness is important especially because the Philippines has been identified by the World Bank as one of the countries where cities are most vulnerable to climate change. The WB study noted that unless addressed, climate change could lead to rising sea levels and extreme weather conditions. This could aggravate flooding in Metro Manila, which even without climate change is known to be gradually sinking into the sea. Metro Manila has started experiencing weather disturbances that used to be rare in this country, such as the storm surge from Manila Bay.
Since powerful typhoons such as Milenyo, Ondoy and Pepeng struck, the nation has improved its storm and rainfall tracking capability. This will have to be accompanied by improved responses to disasters, including effective flood warning systems and the provision of decent evacuation sites. With warnings issued on typhoon Pablo, there is no excuse for those along its path to be ill-prepared
PAL, Air Philippines cancels flights due to Pablo
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Tuesday, December 04, 2012
Philippine Airlines and Air Philippines Express have announced that they canceled several Tuesday flights due to Typhoon Pablo. PAL said in a Monday night news release that they canceled two domestic flights to Davao from Manila. The airline also said that it is upgrading the aircraft of two subsequent flights to Davao to accommodate passengers of the canceled flights. The airline did not disclose the flight numbers of the canceled trips nor of the subsequent flights. Pending succeeding weather bulletins, all other PAL flights will remain normal. Meanwhile, AirPhil Express, PAL’s sister company, is cancelling a total of 35 flights including a flight going to Hong Kong from Cebu. The canceled AirPhil Express flights originating from Manila are those bound for: Caticlan (all 10 flights scheduled for Dec. 4), Cagayan de Oro (3 flights), Dumaguete (2 flights), and one flight each to Ozamiz, Butuan, Cotabato, Dipolog and Surigao. The canceled AirPhil Express flights originating from Cebu are those bound for: Butuan, Cagayan de Oro, Davao, General Santos, Iloilo, Kalibo, Legazpi, Ozamiz, Pagadian, Puerto Princesa, Surigao, Tacloban and Zamboanga. Also canceled are the Caticlan-Cebu and Cebu-Hong Kong flights. Affected passengers of PAL and AirPhil Express are advised to call the respective airlines for rebooking assistance – 855-8888 for PAL, 855-9000 for AirPhil Express. PAL and AirPhil Express will issue subsequent flight advisories to update passengers. — DVM
Victim's mom blames drugs for Caloocan twin murders
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Tuesday, December 04, 2012
MANILA, Philippines - The mother of a nine-year-old girl, murdered by their neighbor along with her 15-year-old cousin last week in Caloocan City, said yesterday she blames illegal drugs for the crime.
Analyn Coronado, 41, said her family and that of Gilbert Fulloso, 25, nicknamed Berto, were “good neighbors.” Fulloso admitted killing Analyn’s daughter Joanna Marie Coronado and niece Diana Rose Liza.
“Berto and Diana were friends. They were neighbors for more than two years but the night of the murder Berto was seen drinking and may be he was high on drugs, It’s the drugs,” Analyn said.
“Every time my sister left their house, she would request Aling Leonor (Fulloso’s mother) to watch over Diana,” she added.
She said that before her younger sister, Aiza Morado, went home to Iloilo to attend the burial of her husband, she went to Fulloso’s mother, telling her to look after Liza while she was away.
Related story: Suspect in Caloocan twin slays charged
Diana was living with Morado at a rented house adjacent to that of the suspect in Barangay 12, Caloocan City when she was murdered on Nov. 25 with Joanna, kept her company while their aunt was away. Joanna’s house is located two blocks away from that of Dianna.
Fulloso admitted killing the girls, claiming he was not in his right mind because he was very drunk and high on marijuana.
He said that he only happened to pass by the girls’ house and saw the door was open. He said he went into the house to tell them the door was open but the girls became hysterical upon seeing him. He said he grabbed a knife from the kitchen and stabbed the girls to stop them from shouting.
Fulloso escaped to Albay after the incident but was arrested four days later
'Pablo' gains speed; high warning signal up
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Tuesday, December 04, 2012
More areas in Mindanao have been placed under public storm warning signal #3 as feared super typhoon "Pablo" (international codename "Bopha") gains speed and continues to move toward land.
Storm signals #1 and #2 have also been hoisted over other parts of the island, as well as several areas in Luzon and the Visayas.
"Typhoon 'Pablo' has maintained its strength and is now threatening Davao Oriental-Surigao Del Sur Area.," the state weather bureau Pagasa said in its 5 p.m. update Monday.
Pablo was spotted 390 kilometers southeast of Hinatuan, Surigao del Sur 10 a.m. Monday, with maximum sustained winds of 175 kilometers per hour (kph) and gustiness of up to 210 kph, Pagasa added.
It is now moving west at a speed of 26 kph, faster than its previous speed of 24 kph.
The typhoon is expected to make landfall Tuesday and leave the Philippine area of responsibility Thursday.
Public storm warning signal #3 has been raised over the Mindanao areas of:
-Surigao del Norte
-Siargao
-Surigao del Sur
-Dinagat Province
-Agusan del Norte
-Agusan del Sur
-Misamis Oriental
-Bukidnon
-Davao Oriental
-Compostela Valley
-Davao del Norte
-Samal Island
Under signal #2, meanwhile are the the areas of:
-Southern Leyte
-Bohol
-Southern Cebu
-Negros Oriental
-Siquijor
-Misamis Occidental
-Lanao del Norte
-Lanao del Sur
-North Cotabato
-Zamboanga del Norte
The following areas are under signal #1:
-Northern Palawan
-Calamian Group Of Islands
-Cuyo Island
-Eastern Samar
-Western Samar
-Leyte
-Biliran
-Aklan
-Capiz
-Antique
-Iloilo
-Guimaras
-Negros Occidental
-Rest of Cebu
-Camotes Island
-Zamboanga del Sur
-Maguindanao
-Sultan Kudarat
-Sarangani
-South Cotabato
"Residents living in low lying and mountainous areas under public storm warning signal are alerted against possible flashfloods and landslides," Pagasa said.
Those living in coastal areas under public storm warning signal #3 and #2 have also been alerted against big waves or storm surges generated by Pablo.
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