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Martes, Abril 30, 2013

Don’t use minors in propaganda BY JUDY F. PARTLOW


Special investigator Jess Cañete of the Commission on Human Rights in Negros Oriental yesterday warned political candidates not to exploit minors in campaigning for the May 13 polls.

This was after a 14-year-old parking attendant said that he and his companion were paid P50 each last week to distribute a two-page document at the Dumaguete Public Market.

The boy said that on April 21, two men asked him and his companion to distribute three plastic bags of folded sheets of paper.

He said it took them half a day to do it and they went to the Marian Priests Center at the St. Catherine of Alexandria Cathedral compound later for the feeding activity conducted by the Franciscan sisters of the Diocese of Dumaguete. A volunteer saw the bundles of paper and called the attention of Sr. Maria, who told the boys to stop distributing them.

The document attacked incumbent Gov. Roel Degamo for his alleged sexual abuses of women, three of whom were named. The second page was a copy of a case filed against the governor for acts of lasciviousness when he was still a councilor of Siaton, Negros Oriental.

The case, raised by Degamo’s political opponents last year, was reported to have been dismissed already.

Cañete appealed to bets to stop using black propaganda to discredit their opponents and called the distribution of the document as a desperate act of a candidate.

Cañete said that, if there is enough identification and evidence against the perpetrators, he will make sure that they will be prosecuted.

He also said that exploiting minors for such practice is a violation of Republic Act 7610, or the Anti-Child Abuse Act.*JFP

Ensure giveaways are lead free, environmental group urged By Chito A. Chavez Published: April 30, 2013


Politicians and other concerned groups planning to give free school supplies were urged by an environment organization based in Quezon City to ensure that their donations are free from hazardous chemicals. 

Aileen Lucero Acting National Coordinator of EcoWaste Coalition suggested that local government units (LGU), non-government organizations (NGO) and private companies secure a formal certification that their donations like school bags to the city’s poor sector are free from lead which experts found to cause brain damage. 

 “We appeal to generous givers from the public and private sectors to offer bags that have undergone lead safety tests to ensure that their gifts would not expose the recipients to lead,” Lucero said. 

“The LGUs and other bag donors can demand a certification from their suppliers that their bags passed the limit for total lead content as analyzed by qualified government-accredited laboratories prior to procuring and giving away the items,” she added. 

By requiring the suppliers to issue the certification, Lucero said that this will ensure that the school supplies are safe and will not contribute to the schoolchildren’s exposure to lead and other dangerous chemicals. 

“As there are other chemicals aside from lead that may adversely affect children’s health, we also suggest that the bags be tested for other priority substances such as phthalates, which are commonly used as plasticizers in polyvinyl chloride (PVC) plastic,” she added.  

Phthalates are known endocrine disrupting chemicals.

Lucero’s appeal came in the aftermath of her group’s recent investigation that detected lead up to 5,752 parts per million (ppm) in 23 out of 25 kiddie backpacks, way above the 90 ppm limit in US for lead in paint and surface coatings.

Using an X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analyzer, EcoWaste researchers discovered excessive amounts of lead on the painted portions of some plastic backpacks, particularly on the designs, logos and the main materials of which the bags are made of.

The group said lead exposure can retard the development of a child’s developing central nervous system and permanently damage the brain even at low levels of exposure. 


Lucero said that the effects of chemical absorption are not immediately detected stressing that there are no obvious symptoms until the blood lead level is very high.

Health studies have shown that childhood lead exposure can result to a broad range of serious developmental and behavioral problems, including reading and learning disabilities, inattentiveness, hyperactivity and irritability, lower IQ and poor school performance.

Lead can enter a human body mainly through the inhalation or ingestion of lead particles or dust from chipping or flaking paints in homes, playgrounds and other facilities and other lead-containing products such as toys and other children’s articles.


In his letter to the EcoWaste Coalition in 2011, Health Secretary Enrique Ona said that “clinical toxicologists have indicated that there are no safe levels for lead exposure among children.”

“This fact make banning of substances containing lead an imperative,” Ona said. 

PHL suspends importation of live shrimps from Asian neighbors April 30, 2013 1:09pm


The Philippines has stopped the importation of live shrimps to prevent the spread of Early Mortality Syndrome (EMS)—now prevalent in neighboring countries—among local species, the the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) said Tuesday.

BFAR Director Asis Perez said EMS is prevalent Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, China and Indonesia. “We are dealing with a disease unknown to us, all the more that measures must be undertaken,” he said.

An EMS infected shrimp usually dies within the first 30 days of its life, according to the bureau.

It also banned the entry of crabs and lobsters which can carry and transmit the disease. The bureau said it is also monitoring the spread of EMS in Singapore, Myanmar, Brunei and Cambodia.

“The Philippines remains EMS-free as of the moment and BFAR is exhausting all efforts to remain so,” Perez noted. While the the cause of EMS is still unknown, BFAR said infected samples exhibit slow growth, corkscrew swimming and pale coloration. 

With the suspension, BFAR has ordered Fish Health Officers, Quarantine Officers and the Law Enforcement Quick Response Team to monitor, control and implement surveillance protocols at airports and seaports in the country.

Perez noted the situation opens up opportunities for the Philippines to revive its shrimp export industry, saying the bureau is now consulting growers to establish long-term solutions to the problems now facing the industry.

Last month, Agriculture Secretary Processo Alcala said his department is preparing the shrimp industry to again eye the export market. Diseases caused by overcrowding spelled the near-demise of the industry several years ago.

Unsanitary practices in tiger shrimp farms forced many hatcheries to close down starting 1996.

Now the Agriculture Department is studying the potential of mangrove areas in Panay, Leyte, Negros, and Mindoro as strategic production sites, said Alcala.

Bureau of Agricultural Statistics (BAS) data showed tiger prawn output reached 48,196 metric tons (MT) in 2012 from 47,494 MT in 2011 and from 48,161 MT in 2010.

Production was valued at P1.89 billion in 2012 from P1.85 billion in 2011 and from P1.82 billion in 2010. — VS, GMA News

Over 13-K motorcycle-related injuries in the last qtr of 2012 –DOH Published: April 30, 2013


A total of 13,883 injury cases of motorcycle accidents for the last quarter of 2012 were reported by the Department of Health (DOH) on Monday.

According to the DOH, the data came from 86 participating government and private hospitals.

It was also disclosed that nine out of 10 dead-on-arrival (DOA) motorcycle riders were not wearing helmet at the time of accident, in the DOH’s Online National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (ONEISS)
“To reduce or avoid injuries, the DOH recommends the promotion of ‘safety first' mindset and attitude,” Health Secretary Enrique Ona said in a statement.
Ona noted that road safety is both a personal commitment and a shared responsibility of all road users. Everyone should do their share for an injury-free society.

More than half (59.8 percent) of the total reported injury cases occurred among the 20 to 59 years age group. Injuries among children aged 0 to 19 accounted for 34.7 percent of the total reported cases.

Among those injured, male to female ratio is almost 25:10. The DOH, however, noted that a 30:10 male to female ratio was observed at the 15 to 44 years age group. On the other hand, the 65 years old and above group had a 9:10 male to female ratio.
Central Luzon registered the highest (19.3 percent) reported injury occurrences, followed by the National Capital Region (14.8 percent), Cordillera Administrative Region (12.6 percent), Davao Region (11.7 percent), Cagayan Valley Region (10 percent), Northern Mindanao (6.6 percent), and Western Visayas (6.5 percent).

Majority (71.7 percent) of the total injury cases were unintentional or accidental, about 26.3 percent were intentional (due to violence), and 0.6 percent were self-inflicted injury cases.

For the last quarter of 2012, there were more injury cases reported on the month of October (39.2 percent), followed by November (39 percent), and December (21.1 percent).

The number one cause of reported injuries were transport/vehicular crash (32.1 percent), followed by assault/mauling (23 percent), fall (16.9 percent), and contact with sharp objects (13.2 percent).

Other reported causes of injuries were bites/stings (9.1 percent), burns (1.5 percent), gunshots (1.1 percent), chemicals (0.3 percent), and hanging and drowning at 0.1 percent each.

Most of the reported injuries occurred on the road (41.1 percent), home (26.3 percent), workplace (four percent), and school (2.2 percent).

Almost all (99.5 percent) injury cases reached the hospital alive. Majority (85.4 percent) were discharged after being treated at the emergency room or out-patient department, while only about 9.6 percent were admitted for further treatment. (PNA)

Lunes, Abril 29, 2013

KC Concepcion linked to NBA player ABS-CBNnews.com


MANILA, Philippines -- After asking her French suitor, Pierre Emmanuel Plassart, for space, host-actress KC Concepcion is now linked to another foreigner, this time an NBA player.
Since Monday, "Kris TV" host Kris Aquino has been teasing Concepcion, a guest co-host on the morning talk show, about an unnamed basketball player.
On Tuesday, Aquino hinted that the man linked to Concepcion is a member of the Houston Rockets.
"Sinabi mo na ang Houston Rockets may laro today? Wala namang masama kung may laro sila. If they win, may chance pa silang tumuloy. Kung matalo, tanggal na, babu. So, darating na siya rito kung matalo," Aquino told Concepcion, drawing cheers from the studio audience.
Concepcion smiled and replied: "Ay, ano ba yan? Friends, friends. Fun fun lang."
Filipino netizens have been talking about Concepcion's connection with Houston Rockets player Chandler Parsons after the two were seen exchanging "tweets" on the microblogging site Twitter over the past months.

Car repair shop helper killed in brawl at woman’s house in QC By Jeannette I. Andrade Philippine Daily Inquirer


MANILA, Philippines — A neighborly visit to a woman’s house at an ungodly hour proved fatal on Sunday to a 27-year-old automobile repair shop helper who was stabbed dead in a brawl with three other male guests in Quezon City.
Howard Oliver Abina III, a resident of Salanap Compound, Sitio Mendez in Barangay (village) Baesa, was killed instantly while his 37-year-old companion and neighbor Danilo Corpuz was wounded in the melee but survived by bringing himself to the East Avenue Medical Center for treatment.
Corpuz, Quezon City police investigators said, had triggered the brawl with the three men who fled after the knife attack and have become subjects of a hunt.
Senior Police Officer 1 Cristituto Zaldarriaga, of the Quezon City Police District Criminal Investigation and Detection Unit (QCPD-CIDU), said that brawl happened at around 1:30 a.m., inside the house of a Shirley Oliveria at Salanap Compound, Sitio Mendez in Barangay Baesa.
Zaldarriaga said that when Abina and Corpuz arrived at Oliveria’s house, they found three other male guests already seated in the living room.
The case investigator said that Corpuz suddenly asked one of the men, “Why? Is there a problem?” which sparked an argument and subsequently a fist-fight between them. Abina tried to help his companion during the brawl but was stabbed in the right side of the chest by one of the men.
Abina died instantly while Corpuz, who was likewise stabbed, managed to bring himself to the nearest hospital and seek treatment.

Build middle class, Senator Angara tells UP grads

By Cathy C. Yamsuan
Philippine Daily Inquirer


Like the ilustrados of the 1800s, the middle class is emerging as a potent force in the Philippines’ social transformation.
That’s the role outlined to the Class of 2013 by Sen. Edgardo Angara in an address on Sunday at the University of the Philippines general commencement exercises in Diliman, Quezon City.
The former president of the UP System told the graduates, who he said belonged mostly to this social group, that he expected them to moderate the elite’s “vested interest” as the country was entering a “demographic sweet spot” with more people of working age compared to children and dependent elderly in less than a decade.
Today’s middle class, like the ilustrados of the 1800s, “is our country’s greatest source of talent and potential,” Angara said.
“A strong middle class is the backbone of civil society … (it) is the voice of reason that moderates vested interests, the force of change that compels societies to invest in their own future,” said the outgoing senator.
But he also repeated warnings that the middle class might be a “vanishing” breed unless the gap between rich and poor was narrowed down.
The current crop of college graduates enters the real world just as the Philippines becomes part of an integrated Asean (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) Economic Community that merges its 10 members into a single market, said Angara, who served four terms in the Senate.
This bloc, he said, would serve as a production base that would promote the free flow of goods, services, investment, capital and labor.
The Asean community would also have a market of 600 million people and a collective gross domestic product of nearly $2 trillion, he added.
The senator said this regional economy would be “the ninth largest in the world—a force to reckon with in global political, economic, diplomatic and cultural competition.”
But while Filipinos will find it easier to find work in Singapore or Malaysia when the new setup begins in 2015, “so will Indonesians and Vietnamese,” he noted.
Still, the years 2015 to 2050 would coincide with the emergence of a “demographic sweet spot (with) a proportionally large working-age population and fewer children and the elderly dependent on every working Filipino,” Angara said.
He said that taking advantage of this situation would allow the Philippines “to finance our own growth from our people’s own savings, without having to levy new taxes or borrow from other nations’ savings. We can build schools and hospitals, roads and bridges from our own pockets—investments for the people, by the people.”
But Angara warned that the opportunity would “not be unique” to the region.
“From now until 2070, various countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean will also enter their individual demographic windows. This is the developing world’s chance—our chance—to catch up with the developed nations.”
So much depends on this generation of graduates expected to be at the helm by the time this golden age takes place, he said.
“Whether we indeed make that great leap forward—whether we indeed become more competitive in Asean and in the world—depends on whether we build and expand the likes of you, an enlightened middle class.”
Inequalities
Problem is, Angara said, individuals are born into “inequalities” that have “measurable impacts” that eventually determine their future.
Angara quoted the Human Development Report indicating that 15.2 percent of “individual potential is lost because of inequality in life expectancy at birth.”
“From inequality in education, the loss is 13.5 percent; and from inequality in income, the loss is 30 percent,” he added.
Another study, he said, “suggests that a Filipino family’s economic status—more than any other factor—determines, over 90 percent of the time, whether a child gets fair access to primary and secondary education.”
Angara said the situation could be addressed by promoting equal access to development opportunities, providing everyone the opportunity to develop and use talents and skills productively, and fostering broad-based growth that will not only lift people from poverty “but—more importantly—give them lives of meaning and dignity.”
He said the middle class “will, undoubtedly, grow significantly in numbers in coming decades.”
“Whether these new ilustrados will be aware of their identity and conscious of their social role is an entirely different matter,” he said.
Vanishing
Angara echoed warnings that “the Filipino middle class is vanishing.”
Global inequality has been rising for the past 30 years as proven by reports of elite groups in various countries getting richer and enjoying combined incomes equal to those of most other citizens.
In the Philippines, Angara said the wealth of the 40 richest families in 2012 “grew by an amount equivalent to 76.5 percent of the growth in our (gross domestic product). And there are very few of these wealthy families: They number less than one in every 100 of us.”
As the ranks of the Filipino poor reach 80 in every 100 families, Angara said three of the remaining 20 families considered as middle class slide down into poverty every year.
“The absolute number of the middle class may seem enormous, especially in developing Asia—1.9 billion as of 2008. But this number only serves to mask their vulnerability,” he pointed out.
“If you live just above the poverty threshold, a single stroke of fate—one accident, calamity, or crisis can send you falling through the cracks,” the senator warned.
Angara also noted that the middle class had been instrumental in leading protests around the world.
“I tell you these things not to dampen the celebratory mood you have every right to feel. However, I know your eyes are already open to the real world. You will not be deceived by facile encouragement,” he explained.
Angara said the National Statistical Office had defined measurements of the middle class as follows:
– Those with an annual family income of from P282,000 to P2.296 million.
– Families whose heads have a college degree.
– Those who own a house and lot.
– Those whose homes have strong roofing materials.
– Those who own an oven, an air-conditioning unit and a vehicle.

Biazon father and son security aides mar caucus with brawl

 By Jaymee T. Gamil
Philippine Daily Inquirer


MANILA, Philippines—A local Liberal Party campaign caucus in Muntinlupa City was marred on Friday night by a shooting incident triggered by an altercation among supposedly allied security aides.
Muntinlupa chief of police Senior Superintendent Roque de la Vega told the Inquirer that the shooting was triggered by a brawl between a group from the “advance security party” of reelectionist congressman Rodolfo Biazon, and one bodyguard of Biazon’s son, Customs Commissioner Ruffy Biazon.
The brawl broke out at the late-night gathering at the Soldiers Hills subdivision covered court in Barangay Putatan, even as the older Biazon was speaking onstage at around 10:10 p.m., De la Vega said.
The police chief said it was the younger Biazon’s close-in security detail, Cpl.  Nelson Lubrin of the Philippine Marines, who fired the shots.
Sustaining gunshot wounds were Nilo Marollano, his son Victor Marollano, and their friend Oscar Parahili, all residents of the barangay.
De la Vega, quoting Lubrin, said the fight began with the Marollanos picking on him, calling him “suplado” and jostling him. Fisticuffs broke out when Lubrin decided to hit back, but ended up being ganged up on by the three.
The marine claimed he saw that one of the three was about to hit him with a rock and it was at this point he drew his firearm and shot his antagonists.
The elder Marollano was wounded on the left arm and left side of the torso, his son was shot on the right upper arm, while Parahili was shot in  the belly.
The wounded were rushed to the Medical Center Muntinlupa, while Lubrin was turned over by his superiors to the city police.
The wounded were transferred to the Asian Hospital and Medical Center on Saturday for surgery. All were declared in stable condition as of noon Saturday, with Parahili already discharged but the Marollanos remaining confined, De la Vega said.
Though the incident was detailed on the city police blotter, no formal police complaint had been filed against Lubrin as of Saturday, De la Vega said.

Gov’t readies nonwage benefits 70 job fairs to highlight Labor Day celebration

Tina G. Santos


The government would unveil “nonwage” benefits on Labor Day, Malacañang said Sunday, as it exhorted Filipinos to seize some 400,000 jobs in job fairs to be held Tuesday across the country.
President Aquino would meet with labor leaders in a breakfast dialogue on Tuesday in Malacañang, but the country’s workforce shouldn’t expect any announcement of wage benefits, deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte said.
“Well, the President is going to sit down with them in the usual dialogue with labor and to also help Secretary (Rosalinda) Baldoz appeal to the workers’ sector … to wait for the unveiling of the package. That’s nonwage benefits,” Valte said.
Valte said the public should withhold comment on the package until this is presented.
Before the Palace unveiled the package of nonwage benefits, Partido ng Manggagawa (PM) described the minimum pay in the country as “starvation wages.”
“The minimum wage cannot buy a working class family its daily bread. The Constitution mandates that a worker receive a living wage. Instead, the regional wage boards prescribed a libing (burial) wage,” PM secretary general Judy Miranda said in a statement sent to the Inquirer.
The group said its own study of the cost of living for a family of six in Metro Manila showed that it had already reached P1,217 a day.
“This estimate shows that the gap between the P456 minimum wage in (Metro Manila) and the present cost of living is a yawning P761, or 167 percent of the ordinary wage. Even if both parents work—which is the buy-one, take-one policy of the government—then their combined income will not be enough to feed the entire family,” Miranda said.
The group’s cost of living estimate did not provide for savings and social security, which in the government’s basket of goods and services constitute 10 percent of the cost of living.
Miranda said the study did not include items such as leisure and recreation, and the family budget for health excluded medical expenses.
“If we include such items, and we must in a more accurate survey, then the cost of living will significantly exceed P1,200 per day,” she said.
‘Hopelessly outdated’
She added that “the National Wages and Productivity Council’s cost of living estimate of P917 in 2008 is hopelessly outdated in light of this study and in the face of continuing inflation.”
The militant labor group Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU), which is usually not invited to the breakfast dialogue with the President, is gearing up for Labor Day protest rallies that would include the burning of Aquino’s effigy.
KMU chairman Elmer Labog said the President was condoning increases in power and water rates, in prices of oil and other basic goods, and the privatization of public hospitals.
Jobless growth
“The burden on the Filipino workers and urban poor is getting more and more unbearable because of Aquino’s subservience to the dictates of the United States and of his big capitalists cohorts,” Labog said.
Officials of the moderate Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) vowed to raise unmet labor issues and “jobless growth” on Tuesday’s pre-Labor Day breakfast with Aquino at the Heroes Hall.
“On top of the agenda is this so-called jobless growth. There has been a pronounced improvement in the economy but this growth does not translate to generate opportunities for employment,” TUCP secretary general Gerard Seno said in a statement.
In 2012, the country posted a 6.6-percent gross domestic product growth compared with Thailand’s 6.4 percent, Indonesia’s 6.2 percent, Malaysia’s 5.6 percent, Vietnam’s 5 percent and Singapore’s 1.2 percent.
But citing the National Statistics Office, the TUCP said there were 2.89 million unemployed Filipinos and 7.934 million underemployed Filipinos in January 2013.
The “all-time high” underemployment rate in six years was recorded in July 2012 at 8.55 million, it added.
Poverty incidence
Besides the big number of unemployed and underemployed, poverty incidence in the country has remained unchanged over the past six years despite economic growth.
Poverty incidence in the first semester of 2012 stood at 27.9 percent, “practically unchanged” from 28.6 percent in 2009 and 28.8 percent in 2006, the National Statistical Coordination Board announced on April 23.
The high poverty incidence showed that the benefits of economic growth were not trickling down to the poor.
Valte said that the last time she checked, the unemployment rate was going down. “We see that the trend is going down,” she said.
70 job fairs
As part of Labor Day celebrations, the Department of Labor and Employment would open 70 job fairs in the country’s 16 regions on Tuesday, she said.
“So there are over 400,000 jobs that will be available—both local and overseas job opportunities that will be available in the 70 job fairs. And we encourage everybody to go to those job fairs and see what these have in store for you,” she said.
The TUCP said that high on the agenda of Tuesday’s dialogue with the President were issues such as employment and job creation, contractualization, social protection, right to self-organization and collective bargaining, wage increase, tripartism and social dialogue, and labor dispute settlement.
In a paper submitted to the Tripartite Industry and Peace Council, the Associated Labor Unions-TUCP recommended that the administration:
– Prioritize the creation of “decent” and productive employment.
– Ensure approval of the security of tenure bill.
– Direct labor officials to review outsourcing policies in the banking sector and other industries.
– Set up a commission on industrial policy.
– Craft a clear industrial policy.
Mural, effigy
The KMU said it was preparing a mural and an effigy that would be showcased on May 1. The mural, measuring 15 by 24 feet, depicts Aquino dressed as a clown and hounded by workers, peasants, urban poor and other sectors while hanging on an airplane piloted by US President Barack Obama.
Created by painter and printmaker Orlando Castillo, former president of the Art Association of the Philippines and founding member of the Concerned Artists of the Philippines, the mural will be unveiled at a program in Liwasang Bonifacio in Manila.
Other artworks by various artists will be highlighted on Labor Day, according to Labog.
“They depict suffering and lies being inflicted on the Filipino workers by President Noynoy Aquino,” he added.
Labog said Castillo’s mural “also shows the growing anger of the Filipino people against Aquino’s antipoor policies, betrayal of the people, and puppetry to the US. Anger at Aquino’s propaganda stunts aimed at deceiving the public is intensifying.”
The 10-feet tall effigy being created by artists from UgatLahi Artist Collective depicts Aquino and Obama as two serpents around an electric post.
The concept was inspired by the symbol for universal healthcare, according to KMU.
The effigy would be burned at around 5 p.m. at the Chino Roces bridge (formerly Mendiola) in Manila to mark the closing of this year’s Labor Day protests.



PH buying 2 brand-new warships

By Marlon Ramos

The Philippines is getting two brand-new frigates as part of the modernization program of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, Defense Undersecretary Fernando Manalo said on Monday.
He told reporters that the Department of National Defense (DND) had earmarked P18 billion for the purchase of the two vessels through a public bidding. He said a number of countries, including South Korea, Spain and Singapore, would participate in the bidding.
Manalo also disclosed that the DND had been negotiating for a government-to-government acquisition of 12 jet fighters from South Korea.
He said the DND had decided to scrap previous plans to acquire refurbished frigates since secondhand vessels would be more costly to maintain. He said the DND had allocated P9 billion for each frigate, or fast warship.
“The purchase of the frigates has been in the pipeline,” Manalo said.  “We are just waiting for the Navy to submit their ‘decision package.’ After that, we will review it and issue an acquisition decision memorandum signed by (Defense) Secretary Voltaire Gazmin,” he said.
Manalo said the process could take a week. “After that, we’ll schedule one or two prebid conferences.”
“We originally wanted to buy secondhand frigates but then we realized that it would be expensive in the long run if we are going to buy secondhand,” he added.
He noted that older ships required more maintenance repairs compared to new vessels. He said the DND had previously approved P6 billion for each refurbished frigate.
The Philippine Navy has only one battleship, the 48-year-old Hamilton-class cutter BRP Gregorio del Pilar, which the Philippines acquired from the United States in 2011.
A second warship, the BRP Ramon Alcaraz, would finally sail to the Philippines in June after undergoing repairs in Charleston, South Carolina.
The Navy earlier said the Alcaraz, a 45-year-old frigate, was expected to arrive this month.
The Hamilton-class cutter was acquired for P450 million by the AFP from the US Coast Guard on May 22, 2012, as part of the US government’s military assistance program for the Philippines.
In his State of the Nation Address last year, President Aquino announced that the Alcaraz would arrive from the United States in January 2013 as part of the much-needed AFP upgrade.
“We are not sending paper boats out to the sea. Now, our 36,000 kilometers of coastline will be patrolled by more modern ships,” the President then said, referring to the decades-old vessel, which the US Coast Guard decommissioned on March 30, 2012.
Formerly known as USCGC Dallas, the AFP’s second frigate was named after the late Commodore Ramon Alcaraz, a World War II hero who commanded the Q-boat Abra, which shot down three Japanese aircraft.
Like its sister ship, the Alcaraz was classified as a high-endurance cutter built in 1968.



Troops told to pursue talks with communist rebels

MANILA, Philippines - Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin is encouraging military field units to hold localized negotiations with rebels as the peace talks between the national government and the communists remain stalled.
Gazmin said such move could help the military officials attain peace in their respective areas.

“We encourage the military (to hold localized talks) so that there will be peace in their areas of responsibility,” the defense chief said in a press conference Monday.

“If you are going to wait (for the impasse in the national level to be resolved), it will take long before the instruction is relayed (to the ground),” he added.
Gazmin said the supposed differences between the communist leaders in Netherlands and local commanders also delay the relaying of policies in the field.

“If you are a commander and you want peace, you should talk to them (rebels),” he said.
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“Some of them (rebels) are tired (of fighting) and they can see the benefits of peace,” he said.

The peace talks between the government and the communists hit an impasse due to differences over jailed insurgents facing criminal cases.
The National Democratic Front (NDF), which represents the rebels in the talks, insists that its jailed leaders be freed since they are covered by immunity guarantees.

The government, however, refused to do so, saying the NDF has no means to prove that the jailed rebels are indeed peace consultants who should be immune from arrests.

Last week, government chief negotiator Alexander Padilla said they are considering a “new approach” to peacefully resolve the conflict with the communists.

Some sectors believe Padilla practically gave up on the peace talks with the NDF when he made the statement.

“We cannot wait forever for the other side if they continually refuse to go back to the negotiating table without preconditions. The government will be taking a new approach to pursue peace,” Padilla said in a statement.
“We have always been open to resume formal negotiations with them, but they keep on insisting on preconditions, such as the release of their detained consultants,” he added.

Padilla said the communists had also demanded that the government abolish its peace and development programs like the conditional cash transfer and Pamana, which aims to promote prosperity in conflict areas.
“These demands are just preposterous. We don’t want to engage in a negotiation where the other party is clearly fooling us,” Padilla said.
Despite the impasse, Gazmin said they still prefer peaceful means to resolve the conflict with the communists.

“We are all Filipinos and it’s about time we sit down and talk so that we save more lives,” he said. – Alexis Romero with C. M.

(philstar.com)

Binay 'puzzled' by dip in survey

By JC Bello Ruiz
Published: April 29, 2013

Though "puzzled" by "divergent" results of surveys on his net satisfaction ratings, the Office of the Vice President (OVP) on Monday said that Vice President Jejomar C. Binay "remains grateful for his high approval ratings and that his work will continue regardless of survey results."


In a statement, Binay's spokesman, Joey Salgado noted that while the latest Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey showed that the net satisfaction ratings of the Vice President were lower than his December 2012 ratings, another survey done by Pulse Asia which covered almost the same survey period, showed different results.
"What is puzzling is that the SWS survey period overlapped with Pulse Asia but produced divergent results. While SWS showed a decline, the Pulse Asia survey showed an increase of 6 points in the Vice President’s performance and trust rating," Salgado said.



The latest SWS survey covering the March 19-22 survey period, found that the net satisfaction ratings of Binay, Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr., and Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno were lower than their December 2012 ratings.



Seventy-five percent of Filipinos expressed satisfaction in Binay’s work, while 13 percent said otherwise, bringing his net rating to ‘very good’ +62, down from ‘excellent’ +70 (79 percent satisfied, 9 percent dissatisfied) in December 2012.
However, SWS noted that Binay’s rating is still higher than President Benigno S. Aquino III’s +59 (74 percent satisfied, 15 percent dissatisfied).



Meanwhile, the Pulse Asia survey released early April found that Binay and Aquino received the highest trust ratings of 75 percent and 72 percent, respectively.
Likewise, the same nationwide survey conducted from March 16-20 showed that both officials enjoyed majority approval ratings for their work in the past month (76 percent and 72 percent, respectively).



Nonetheless, Salgado said Binay "remains grateful for his high approval ratings."
"Since 2012, the Vice President’s ratings ranged from very good to excellent. His work will continue regardless of survey results," he said.