Wednesday, October 28, 2009

PB probe on tax fee eyed

WHY pay taxes in a tax-free transaction?

At least five Cebu Provincial Board (PB) members want to know why their colleague, John Bolo, was quoted in a news report as saying he paid P50,000 to Provincial Treasurer Roy Sa-lubre, in relation to the Capitol’s purchase of the Balili resort property.

Bolo, however, told Sun.Star Cebu in a text message that he did not hand out P50,000, contrary to the report.


“I never gave any amount to anybody,” said Bolo.

Salubre, in a previous text message, also denied receiving any amount from Bolo. “Lain siguro iyang gitagaan (He may have given it to somebody else)?” the treasurer said.

PB Member Victor Maambong said he is willing to sponsor a resolution to reopen the board’s investigation on the Balili purchase, a deal that cost the Province about P99 million.

According to the me-morandum of agreement between Capitol and the heirs of Luis Balili, the taxes will be shouldered by the vendors. These include real property, estate, capital gains, documentary stamps and transfer taxes. The Balilis also committed to pay for the registration and transfer of titles, relocation of tenants and legal fees.

The Province is now trying to recover P38 million of what it paid, representing the part of the Tinaan, Naga land that turned out to be underwater or covered by mangroves.

But the executive branch still plans to reclaim part of the property, like the fishponds, using coal ash from power plants. A Korean company will pay the Capitol containment fees for the ash.

Apart from the PB, the ombudsman and the governor’s Balili Properties Review Committee also went over the transaction.

Member Joven Mondigo Jr., who heads the ad hoc committee that investigated the transaction, said the majority’s approval is needed for the probe to be reopened.

After less than two months, the PB recently decided to end its hearings on the Balili case.

The PB may, however, call for a special session so that Member Bolo and Salubre can shed light on the latest issue.

The matter reached PB Members Wilfredo Caminero, Agnes Magpale, Mondigo, Maambong and Calderon in China, where they joined the governor in a trip to promote
Cebu.

If Maambong’s proposed resolution will be approved, it will take a month to complete the PB’s final report on the land purchase.

Tomas says he’ll support Gwen for veep

GOV. Gwendolyn Garcia may well be Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmeña’s worst enemy at present, but she can expect to get his support if she decides to run for vice president.

“You ask me if I will support her? Yes, of course! Good riddance. You can have her, Philippines,” Osmeña told reporters yesterday.


Garcia is reportedly being considered to be Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro’s running mate, but her camp said she will not run for vice president and will seek reelection instead.

Told about the mayor’s latest taunt, Capitol consultant on information and revenue generation Rory Jon Sepulveda answered: “Thanks, but no thanks because she is not running for vice president. At least he will support her, but as usual, for a crooked reason.”

“If he will run for vice president for (Metro Manila Development Authority Chairman Bayani) Fernando, I will personally support him,” said Sepulveda. “But wala ma’y nikuha niya. If naa lang (But no one is asking Tomas to run).”

Also yesterday, One Cebu confirmed Toledo City Mayor Arlene Zambo has joined the party, turning her back on former senator John Henry “Sonny” Osmeña.

Rep. Pablo John Garcia (Cebu Province, 3rd district) said that Zambo and Toledo City Vice Mayor Rudy Espinosa, her father, are now with the local administration party.

Zambo could not be reached for comment.

Sonny Osmeña said the move did not surprise him, because Zambo has been friendly with the Garcias for a few years now.

Local alliances with national candidates remain fluid for now, but Mayor Osmeña said he hopes Sen. Francis “Chiz” Escudero will get together with Liberal Party standard-bearer Sen. Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III and Sen. Manuel “Mar” Roxas II.

“I like Chiz very much. As a matter of fact, I really like Chiz more than Noynoy. It’s only because Mar is there, and Noynoy is with him...that’s why I decided to support Noynoy.”

“I wish all these young blood people will get together, Chiz, Noynoy and Mar, because that’s what we need. Young blood and new politics, that’s what people are looking for,” said Osmeña.

“Junjun Davide is young blood, versus Tandang Sora,” Osmeña said.

The mayor said that Governor Garcia will have a graceful exit if she runs for vice president, because she “is in for a major upset in the province.”

He discussed the results of a local radio survey that asked Cebuanos whom they will support for governor. He said that City Councilor Hilario Davide III got 50 votes, Tourism Secretary Joseph Ace Durano got 42 and Garcia got three votes. (No other details were available on the survey.)

Davide’s resignation from the City Council takes effect tomorrow, but he has not decided yet if he will run for governor. His selection as Liberal Party chairman for Cebu prompted his resignation from the City.

“And if Junjun runs, you know what we will do? We’ll ask the Cebuanos to go out of their way to help Junjun,” the mayor said.

For their part, Congressman Garcia and Mayor Zambo formalized their alliance at the Toledo Arcade in a luncheon last Tuesday, witnessed by Provincial Board Member Ian Zambo and all the barangay captains of Toledo City.

At the beginning of the term, while Zambo and Governor Garcia started working together, the congressman was critical of the city mayor and questioned her sincerity.

“I just had to be convinced of her sincerity and she proved that in the past year, supporting the initiatives of the governor and upholding the programs,” Pablo John said.

Pablo John admitted, though, that it was also a political move.

Zambo has 22 barangay captains on her side, as opposed to One Cebu’s 16. Toledo City has the biggest voting population in the third district.
“I would be dishonest if I did not admit that this really strengthens One Cebu in Toledo City,” said Pablo John.

Sonny admitted the alliance is a loss to the opposition.

“I always gave them a free hand when it came to choosing candidates. Pablo John will demand to pick five councilors, which I never did,” said Sonny. (LCR/JGA)

Listing shutout

UNLESS they are patient, thousands of voters in Mandaue and Lapu-Lapu may not be registered by the Oct. 31 deadline, officials said.

Low-capacity data-capturing machines allow Commission on Elections (Comelec) personnel to accommodate only a limited number of applicants, most of whom are too impatient if asked to return the next day.


In Mandaue City, Atty. Anna Fleur Gujilde, the election officer, estimated that as many as 3,000 may not be accommodated after the deadline at the current pace. In Lapu-Lapu City, Atty. Ferdinand Gujilde said the office can only accommodate 600 of some 1,200 who report to their office daily.

Comelec Provincial Election Supervisor Lionel Marco Castillano declined to estimate how many applicants may end up not being registered in time for the May 2010 elections.

He said the registration figures can only be finalized once the lists are approved by the election registration board. This will take place from Nov. 16 to 20. Comelec will also release its quarterly progress report by that time.

Expecting a thick crowd of last-minute registrants until Saturday, Cebu City poll offices are planning registration procedures on the last day to make sure that all those who go will be accommodated.

The Comelec provincial office addressed the city poll offices’ problem on the shortage of registration forms by diverting the supply intended for Tudela town to Cebu City.

Lawyer Marchel Sarno, election officer for the north district, said some of the municipal election offices have not requested for additional forms yet, that is why they were able to use the forms intended for Tudela.

Despite the lack of forms, election offices in the city continued to be flooded by last-minute registrants up to 9 p.m. The past nights, some have been turned away and asked to return the next day.

To avoid any conflict with registrants on Saturday, the last day of registration, Sarno said he and his staff agreed to distribute forms to everyone who will be in line but can no longer be accommodated for registration.

They will be asked to write their names in a logbook and will be allowed to complete the registration process the following day.

Sarno said he will ask Castillano for additional guidelines on how they should go about the registration on the last day, to make sure that everyone will be able to list up.

As of yesterday, there was no advice from the Comelec Manila office on a possible extension of the registration period.

“Usually on the last day, iya-iya na man lang ug diskarte mga election officers (are left to their own devices) on how they will go about the registration and on how they will accommodate everyone, so this time mangayo tag clarification on what to do,” Sarno added.

In Mandaue’s case, some 12,000 to 15,000 additional voters are expected to register. However, the Comelec office can only process 700 applicants per day.

Former vice mayor Amadeo Seno Jr. recalled that during his time, a five percent increase was expected with every election. He said it was likely the registrants were bused in from the different barangays.

There is nothing wrong with the practice, as long as applicants follow the regular process of registration, the election officer said.

The local Comelec office expects an increase of 15,000 voters after the deadline. So far this month, the office already registered 8,400.

Since Oct. 26, Atty. Gujilde of the Mandaue office said, she expected 1,000 applicants daily but only 700 were entertained.

Most of the 300 are asked to return the next day to register, transfer or reactivate their status as voters, since there is no more time.

The city has three data-capturing machines and 20 personnel.

A Comelec worker who requested not to be named revealed that a data-capturing machine can only process 150 individuals a day and not more, as it might overheat.

Most applicants lose interest in registering after seeing the long line of applicants, the worker added.

In the May 2007 election, Mandaue had 144,061 voters; this went up to 154,468 voters five months later, during the barangay election.

As of September 2009, the figure had increased by about 20,000, at 174,458 registered voters.

In Lapu-Lapu City, Atty. Ferdinand Gujilde said he expected an increase of 20,000 voters from their May 2007 figure, which stood at 141,000.

Chiz quits NPC, still undecided

INSTEAD of confirming he will run for president in 2010, Sen. Francis “Chiz” Escudero surprised his supporters and allies when he announced yesterday his resignation from the Nationalist People’s Coalition (NPC).

Escudero, 40, pleaded for more time to think about his political plans, saying he has not yet decided whether or not to run for president in the May elections.

“Let that be the first test of leadership of any putative candidate,” he said in his press conference. “Nais ko pong ipabatid na ako ay nagpaalam at nagre-sign na sa NPC (I
wish to inform you that I have said goodbye and resigned from the NPC).”

Not even the party’s founder and chairman emeritus, Eduardo “Dan-ding” Cojuangco, knew about the decision beforehand, Escudero said. Cojuangco’s nephew, Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro, earlier left the party and is now the administration party’s presidential candidate.

Escudero said he did speak with the party’s chairman, former Isabela governor Faustino Dy, and that he remains on good terms with party officials.

The decision leaves Escudero with mostly volunteers for a campaign machinery if he does run for office. At his press conference were supporters like the Filipinos for
Peace, Justice and Progress Movement; Magdalo Para sa Pagbabago, Youth for Chiz, Friends of Chiz and Move my Chiz, Move.

Escudero has been an NPC member since 1998 when he first ran for Congress, representing the first district of Sorsogon.

He cited three reasons for leaving NPC: a presidential candidate must not belong to any party, a candidate must not be tied to his party, and he can perform his job better if he is his own man.

Sen. Loren Legarda, the NPC’s probable vice presidential candidate, said she respects Escudero’s decision and understands “the noble sentiments behind it.”

“I can only hope that more self-sacrificing and patriotic individuals will join me in this decisive battle for our people’s ultimate redemption from misery,” she said.

Pangasinan Rep. Mark Cojuangco, Danding’s son, said he was surprised by the decision as he expected Escudero to announce he is running for president.

Though his decision on his presidential bid remains on hold, Escudero said it is his desire to run for a higher public office to serve the country either as president or vice president.

“Hindi po ako heredero, hindi po ako bilyonaryo, kaya kailangang timbangin ko ang desisyon sa pagtakbo sa mga susunod na lingo (I am neither a rich family’s heir nor a billionaire, so I need to weigh this decision carefully in the next few weeks),” he said, in a thinly veiled reference to other presidential aspirants like Sen. Benigno Aquino III and Sen. Manuel Villar.

Just last Tuesday, Escudero’s political adviser Lito Banayo disputed speculations the senator will no longer be seeking the presidency in next year’s elections.

Legarda on Tuesday also admitted she has not been meeting with Escudero to discuss their expected tandem for the 2010 polls. (Sunnex)

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Out of rubble, a stuffed toy, loyal cat, poem, fotos, memories

LA TRINIDAD, BENGUET—The mud and debris that claimed hundreds of lives last week when the rains unleashed by Tropical Storm “Pepeng” (international codename: Parma) toppled mountainsides here and inundated towns in Pangasinan and La Union are now disgorging mementos and memories.

On Oct. 9, rescue workers dug out “Mister Men”—a banana-shaped stuffed toy that served as 5-year-old Kurt Guinaran’s pal and confidante.

The bodies of Kurt and his parents were found under a mountain of mud that buried their house in Sitio Eastern Buyagan in La Trinidad town.

Kurt’s grieving kin asked volunteer rescue workers to find Mister Men. When the toy was found, it was cleaned up and tucked in the boy’s arms, according to his grandaunt Erlinda Dulnuan.

It will be buried with him, she said.

A kilometer away in the community of Little Kibungan, where a landslide killed 73 people while they were sleeping, survivors and their relatives took heart in a teenager’s journal that was recovered from the debris.

Ruthify Valdez, a junior at Benguet National High School, left a poem along with her thoughts in the journal, which served as her class exercise in creative expression.

These were the last lines she wrote: “But once you’re up/ and back on track/ you will be a better one./ That’s the way of life,/ you just don’t live it/ you LEARN from it.”

Ruthify’s teacher Rachelle Basalong said she had lost three of her students.

“I don’t know how I can meet my class again. Many of them lost their homes and families,” she said.

Counseling services

In Baguio City, Rafael Valencia, president of the civic group 911 On Call, said rescue workers recovered the body of a barangay councilman from the rubble in East Bayan Park.

The councilman appeared snug and peaceful in bed when found. Under his feet lay his dead cat, which had stuck by him to the end.

Mementos like Mister Men and enduring images like the loyal pet often help survivors because these represent attachments to a relationship that was abruptly severed by tragedy, said Shirley Socalo, a social worker and coordinator of the Cordillera Parents Federation Inc.

The group has been conducting trauma counseling services for 130 children who survived a landslide at Barangay Kayan East in Tadian, Mountain Province, that killed 39 other residents.

The landslide occurred at 6 p.m. on Oct. 8, as families prepared to sit down to dinner.

How to explain

The mementos comfort the adults more than the children, but they also serve as a lifeline for children confronting tragedy for the first time, Socalo said.

On Monday, Kurt Guinaran’s younger brother, Ivan, asked his relatives about his missing family: “I miss my mama, papa and Kurt. Is my brother dead? Can I kiss him? ... If they are dead, who will buy Coke for me? Is Mister Men dead, too? I want to see them. I miss them all.”

Dulnuan, the boys’ grandaunt, said she and other kin did not know how they would explain to Ivan that his parents and brother were dead.

“I feel sorrow that four members of my family are dead, but it is sadder to learn that there are more families who died in the landslides,” she said.

Photo albums, books

In Pangasinan, Susan Yadao, a reporter and program host of Aksyon Radyo in Dagupan City, clutched at photo albums that surfaced as the floodwaters began to recede.

The albums contain pictures of her daughter Zharlene, a nurse, who was killed by unidentified assailants in July.

“My husband Noli had been looking at the photos, so the albums were in his workshop. I was not able to put them in a safe place before the waters rose,” Yadao recalled.

In the town of Rosales, happiness for Shirley Morden was discovering the little box that held a gold necklace in the mud.

The necklace is her only memento from a jewelry retail trade.

In Barangay Salay, Mangaldan, one of the hardest hit towns, grade school teacher Gerwillyn Moulic recovered school books she had not seen for decades.

Moulic, 23, spent hours trapped on her house’s roof during the flood.

When the books surfaced, she was reminded of a school achievement—earning first honors at Pangasinan Christian Education Center in Mangaldan.

During stress debriefing, children caught in the Kayan East landslide were asked what they lost in the tragedy, Socalo said.

What they said may provide psychologists and social workers insights on how well children can adjust to trauma, “because the children who no longer miss little [attachments] would be the first to move on from the calamity,” she said.

A 10-year-old boy admitted that when his father ordered them to flee their house as the landslide struck, his first instinct was to return to look for clothes. He ended up grabbing an umbrella before he ran to join his family.

“I asked him why he did not stop for his favorite toy. He said he wanted something he could use,” Socalo said.

Gratitude, guilt

Many children who shared their thoughts at the debriefing admitted feeling a jumble of fear, gratitude and guilt.

One of the Kayan East children said he ran away from his home “and did not anymore think about his mom and his papa,” Socalo said. “When he saw his little sister, he felt a little regret.”

Other children complained of nightmares.

The town of Tadian is still plagued by blackouts, Socalo said, adding:

“The children told me they pray a lot or allow their parents to tuck a bolo (big knife) under their pillow, like old folks, so the nightmares won’t occur.”

The tragedy has also hurt the heroes, and this requires children some time to process, Socalo said.

Kurt Guinaran’s rescuers, for example, also died.

Siegfried Ngoloban, Richard Balusdan and Rex Mang-oy, all firemen, died under an avalanche of mud and rocks while they were rescuing landslide victims. With reports from Frank Cimatu, Inquirer Northern Luzon

Laguna floods seen to last 4 to 5 months

MANILA, Philippines—It will take four to five months before floodwater could be drained from areas at the fringes of Laguna Lake inundated three weeks ago by Tropical Storm “Ondoy,” Laguna Lake Development Authority (LLDA) General Manager Edgardo Manda said Wednesday.

Testifying at a hearing of the Senate committee on climate change, Manda said that about 2.5 billion cubic meters of floodwater had to be taken out of Muntinlupa City, Taguig City and the towns of Pateros, Taytay and Sta. Cruz.

“It could take us four to five months before this volume of water can be taken out from the lake,” he said, adding that this could be done through the immediate dredging of the Napindan Channel.

Manda sought to explain the continued flooding in areas surrounding the Laguna Lake watershed that covers six provinces, 12 cities, 49 municipalities and 2,656 barangays, 187 of which are within the lakeshore. Around 12 million people live in the watershed.

Pasig River is the only outlet of Laguna Lake and that 100 streams drain into the lake, he said.

P10B needed to dredge river

During the rainy season, water in the lake usually increased by 0.8 meters every month, but for three months this year, lake water rose to some 2 meters or 0.67 per month.

With the onslaught of Ondoy (international codename: Ketsana), water level at the lake reached 1.2 meters.

As of Sept. 29 this year, the water level was at 13.82 meters elevation and if this trend continued, it may exceed the all-time record of 14.6 meters in 1919.

It would cost P10 billion to dredge Laguna Lake over five years and prevent its swelling, he said.

Illegal logging?

Manda presented pictures taken a day after Ondoy struck on Sept. 26 showing an aerial view of the heavily flooded San Mateo town in Rizal province from where the floodwater swept toward Metro Manila. One photograph shows mud and water rushing from the Sierra Madre mountain range.

Asked by Sen. Loren Legarda, the committee chair, whether the mud and water indicated illegal logging, Manda said this was possible.

The Manggahan floodway spilled 3,000 cubic meters per second of water coming from Marikina valley at the height of the storm and inundated Taytay, Cainta and certain parts of Pasig, Manda said.

He said the Pasig River was “constricted” and a canal had been illegally built going to Manggahan floodway, thus making it impossible for water to come out in Cainta.

Manda showed a picture of several houses built on outlets for floodwaters of the Manggahan floodway.

Squatters warned

He said the LLDA had urged illegal settlers to relocate from places like Lupang Arenda in Taguig—a reclaimed landfill—three months before Ondoy struck.

Some 5,000 shanties were inundated and their residents subsequently fled. Some squatters had been renting out their shanties, Manda said, recounting that one overseas worker had told him he was paying a monthly rent of P800 for his space.

Around 400,000 squatters were estimated to be in the lake area.

Illegal fish pens demolished

Pictures of fishpens around the lake that were destroyed also were presented.

Manda said that he had been ordering the demolition of illegal fish pens and that under his watch, 600 hectares of these structures were destroyed.

He said he would ask the Coast Guard to see to it that these pens are not reconstructed.

Pagasa warns of more rains, landslides, flash floods

MANILA, Philippines—A low-pressure area over Masbate is dumping rains over a large part of Luzon, including Metro Manila and the Visayas, prompting the weather office to advise residents to watch out for possible landslides and flash floods.

As of 5 p.m. Wednesday, the low-pressure area was spotted 230 kilometers west of Puerto Princesa in Palawan.

The low-pressure area, a weaker form of a tropical storm, is bringing rains over the metropolis, parts of Central Luzon, Southern Luzon and the Visayas, said Nathaniel Cruz, deputy administrator for operations of the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa).

But Cruz assured the public that the rains would not be as heavy as those brought by Tropical Storm “Ondoy” (international codename: Ketsana) on Sept. 26.

“Northern Luzon won’t be affected. But the Bicol Region and Southern Luzon, including Metro Manila, and the Visayas will have cloudy weather with rain showers and thunderstorms,” Cruz said.

He warned residents living in low-lying areas and those near mountain slopes against flash floods and landslides.

At least 10 domestic flights to and from four provinces were canceled Wednesday at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) due to bad weather.

In Albay province, classes in the primary and secondary levels were suspended Wednesday.

The suspension was announced by Gov. Joey Salceda as part of the province’s preventive measure, said Abundio Nuñez of the Albay Public Safety and Emergency Management Office (Apsemo).

Nuñez said the governor also declared a “code blue” or “heightened alert” in the landslide-prone town of Manito, where a Boys Scouts of the Philippines Jamboree, organized by the Albay Council, was being held.

Code blue means people should stay put in their houses. The boy scouts were advised not to travel back home to Legazpi and their respective places of origin.

Salceda’s advisory early Wednesday morning said “the organizers are hereby advised to limit activities on the camp site and control the movement of the pupils.”

“The Municipal Health Office (MHO) of Manito is placed under ‘code blue’ and together with the Provincial Health Office (PHO) are hereby instructed to provide teams on site with standby emergency vehicles,” the governor said.

He also instructed the Department of Education to make school buildings open as temporary safe shelters.

Some roads impassable

Some roads were impassable, particularly in front of the municipal hall of Camalig, due to rampaging knee-deep water carrying boulders.

The flood in Camalig has isolated the towns of the third district of Albay, preventing students, workers and travelers going to and from Legazpi City.

The Apasemo was also monitoring related flash floods in Maipon and Masarawag villages in Guinobatan town and the perennially flooded portion of Barangay Padang in Legazpi City, which also isolated the city of Tabaco and the rest of the first district of Albay.

Apsemo director Cedric Daep said the different rain gauges installed around Albay had recorded an average of 7.2 millimeters of rainfall during a 12-hour monitoring period. The peak was recorded at 68 mm from 2 a.m. to 9 a.m. Wednesday.

“There were even higher recorded rains in other parts of the province and that averaged 7.2 mm on our readings but we still have to compare it with the official findings of Pagasa,” Daep said.

The provincial engineering office fielded heavy equipment to allow light vehicles to pass through the Camalig area.

Motorcycles and small cars were able to traverse the flooded area at around 10:30 a.m. However, rains continued to pound the province even up to the late afternoon.

Outlook

In its weather bulletin, Pagasa said the low-pressure area was expected to bring occasional to frequent rains over Southern Luzon and the Visayas.

Pagasa said central and southern Luzon and the Visayas would experience cloudy skies with scattered rain showers and thunderstorms. These can become frequent rains over the Southern Tagalog provinces.

The rest of the country is expected to have mostly cloudy weather with rain showers and thunderstorms.

Puerto Princesa, Iloilo and Metro Cebu can expect frequent rains until Thursday, with conditions improving slightly into the weekend.

Legazpi City and Tacloban City can see cloudy skies with rain showers until Thursday, with conditions improving by Saturday.

Metro Manila, Tuguegarao, Laoag, Baguio, Olongapo, Tagaytay, Cagayan de Oro, Metro Davao and Zamboanga City can expect mostly cloudy weather with spots of rain showers until the weekend.

Canceled flights

The canceled flights were scheduled to go to and come from the airports in Tablas, Romblon; Busuanga, Palawan; Legazpi, Albay; and Naga, Camarines Sur, according to the Manila International Airport Authority.

First to be canceled were a Cebu Pacific flight, 5J-529, and a Philippine Airlines flight, PR-301, set to leave NAIA Terminal 3 for Busuanga, at 9:45 a.m. and 8:45 a.m. Consequently, their scheduled return flights, 5J-530 and PR-301, set to arrive in Manila at 12:05 p.m. and 11:15 a.m., were also canceled.

Two more Cebu Pacific flights, 5J-323 bound for Legazpi and 5J-519 bound for Naga, set to leave 12:05 p.m. and 1 p.m., were also canceled, together with their return flights, 5K-324 and 5J-520, set to arrive in Manila at 12:45 p.m. and 1 p.m.

Also canceled was a South East Asian Airlines flight, DG-313, which was to leave the old Manila Domestic Airport for Tablas at 11 a.m. The return flight, DG-314, which was supposed to arrive in Manila at 12:35 p.m., was also canceled. With a report from Jerome Aning

Pagasa warns of more rains, landslides, flash floods

MANILA, Philippines—A low-pressure area over Masbate is dumping rains over a large part of Luzon, including Metro Manila and the Visayas, prompting the weather office to advise residents to watch out for possible landslides and flash floods.

As of 5 p.m. Wednesday, the low-pressure area was spotted 230 kilometers west of Puerto Princesa in Palawan.

The low-pressure area, a weaker form of a tropical storm, is bringing rains over the metropolis, parts of Central Luzon, Southern Luzon and the Visayas, said Nathaniel Cruz, deputy administrator for operations of the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa).

But Cruz assured the public that the rains would not be as heavy as those brought by Tropical Storm “Ondoy” (international codename: Ketsana) on Sept. 26.

“Northern Luzon won’t be affected. But the Bicol Region and Southern Luzon, including Metro Manila, and the Visayas will have cloudy weather with rain showers and thunderstorms,” Cruz said.

He warned residents living in low-lying areas and those near mountain slopes against flash floods and landslides.

At least 10 domestic flights to and from four provinces were canceled Wednesday at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) due to bad weather.

In Albay province, classes in the primary and secondary levels were suspended Wednesday.

The suspension was announced by Gov. Joey Salceda as part of the province’s preventive measure, said Abundio Nuñez of the Albay Public Safety and Emergency Management Office (Apsemo).

Nuñez said the governor also declared a “code blue” or “heightened alert” in the landslide-prone town of Manito, where a Boys Scouts of the Philippines Jamboree, organized by the Albay Council, was being held.

Code blue means people should stay put in their houses. The boy scouts were advised not to travel back home to Legazpi and their respective places of origin.

Salceda’s advisory early Wednesday morning said “the organizers are hereby advised to limit activities on the camp site and control the movement of the pupils.”

“The Municipal Health Office (MHO) of Manito is placed under ‘code blue’ and together with the Provincial Health Office (PHO) are hereby instructed to provide teams on site with standby emergency vehicles,” the governor said.

He also instructed the Department of Education to make school buildings open as temporary safe shelters.

Some roads impassable

Some roads were impassable, particularly in front of the municipal hall of Camalig, due to rampaging knee-deep water carrying boulders.

The flood in Camalig has isolated the towns of the third district of Albay, preventing students, workers and travelers going to and from Legazpi City.

The Apasemo was also monitoring related flash floods in Maipon and Masarawag villages in Guinobatan town and the perennially flooded portion of Barangay Padang in Legazpi City, which also isolated the city of Tabaco and the rest of the first district of Albay.

Apsemo director Cedric Daep said the different rain gauges installed around Albay had recorded an average of 7.2 millimeters of rainfall during a 12-hour monitoring period. The peak was recorded at 68 mm from 2 a.m. to 9 a.m. Wednesday.

“There were even higher recorded rains in other parts of the province and that averaged 7.2 mm on our readings but we still have to compare it with the official findings of Pagasa,” Daep said.

The provincial engineering office fielded heavy equipment to allow light vehicles to pass through the Camalig area.

Motorcycles and small cars were able to traverse the flooded area at around 10:30 a.m. However, rains continued to pound the province even up to the late afternoon.

Outlook

In its weather bulletin, Pagasa said the low-pressure area was expected to bring occasional to frequent rains over Southern Luzon and the Visayas.

Pagasa said central and southern Luzon and the Visayas would experience cloudy skies with scattered rain showers and thunderstorms. These can become frequent rains over the Southern Tagalog provinces.

The rest of the country is expected to have mostly cloudy weather with rain showers and thunderstorms.

Puerto Princesa, Iloilo and Metro Cebu can expect frequent rains until Thursday, with conditions improving slightly into the weekend.

Legazpi City and Tacloban City can see cloudy skies with rain showers until Thursday, with conditions improving by Saturday.

Metro Manila, Tuguegarao, Laoag, Baguio, Olongapo, Tagaytay, Cagayan de Oro, Metro Davao and Zamboanga City can expect mostly cloudy weather with spots of rain showers until the weekend.

Canceled flights

The canceled flights were scheduled to go to and come from the airports in Tablas, Romblon; Busuanga, Palawan; Legazpi, Albay; and Naga, Camarines Sur, according to the Manila International Airport Authority.

First to be canceled were a Cebu Pacific flight, 5J-529, and a Philippine Airlines flight, PR-301, set to leave NAIA Terminal 3 for Busuanga, at 9:45 a.m. and 8:45 a.m. Consequently, their scheduled return flights, 5J-530 and PR-301, set to arrive in Manila at 12:05 p.m. and 11:15 a.m., were also canceled.

Two more Cebu Pacific flights, 5J-323 bound for Legazpi and 5J-519 bound for Naga, set to leave 12:05 p.m. and 1 p.m., were also canceled, together with their return flights, 5K-324 and 5J-520, set to arrive in Manila at 12:45 p.m. and 1 p.m.

Also canceled was a South East Asian Airlines flight, DG-313, which was to leave the old Manila Domestic Airport for Tablas at 11 a.m. The return flight, DG-314, which was supposed to arrive in Manila at 12:35 p.m., was also canceled. With a report from Jerome Aning

Gov’t seeks MILF help to free priest

ZAMBOANGA CITY—Kidnapped Irish priest Fr. Michael Sinnott may be injured and has been turned over to a commander of the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) in Lanao del Norte by his captors, officials said Wednesday.

The government asked the MILF on Wednesday to help secure the freedom of the ailing Irish priest.

The 11,000-strong MILF pledged to work for the release of Sinnott, said rebel leader Mohagher Iqbal. It was a rare alliance between the rebels and the government, who clashed just months ago in violence that killed hundreds.

Chief Supt. Angelo Sunglao, Western Mindanao police chief, said Sinnott, 79, accompanied by his captors, arrived in Barangay Payong in Sultan Naga Dimaporo town early on Monday and was handed over to Latip Jamat, the leader of the 4th Brigade under the MILF’s 113th Base Command.

Sunglao said the priest was then moved to the MILF’s Camp Wilcom at the boundaries of Sultan Naga Dimaporo, Nunungan and Picong towns.

He said Pagadian Bishop Emmanuel Cabajar, whom the Provincial Crisis Management Committee had appointed as negotiator, was awaiting word from the kidnappers.

Maj. Gen. Ben Dolorfino, chief of the Western Mindanao Command (Wesmincom), confirmed Sunglao’s disclosure and added that Sinnott was seen with “blood on his head.”

“Probably he was hit on the head but he is alive, [according to] the information,” Dolorfino said.

But MILF civil-military affairs chief Eid Kabalu described Sunglao’s claim as “speculative and baseless” and “a figment of the imagination of police authorities.”

“It has always been that way in the past: When there’s a sensational case of kidnapping, the military and the police always link the abductors to us,” Kabalu told the Inquirer.

Insider’s info

Dolorfino said that based on military information, Sinnott and his kidnappers arrived in Payong at around 7 a.m. on Monday, or about 12 hours after the priest was forcibly taken from the Columban Society compound in Gatas, Pagadian City.

At around 11 a.m. on the same day, the group was seen moving toward Barangay Bauyan in a motorboat with blue and white stripes, Dolorfino said.

Late in the afternoon on Tuesday, Sinnott and his captors were again sighted moving toward the “tri-boundary” areas of Nunungan, Picong and Sultan Naga Dimaporo.

“The reports are that he’s still in the area,” Dolorfino said.

Asked how the military got the information, he said: “Let just say it’s insider’s [info].”

Dolorfino also told reporters at Camp Aguinaldo as much in a phone interview.

“The latest information we received is that they are still there up to now,” he said.

But Allan Molde, the spokesperson of Task Force Sinnott led by Zamboanga del Sur Gov. Aurora Cerilles, was surprised to hear of the categorical claim on Sinnott’s whereabouts.

Earlier, Molde told the Inquirer that the sea patrols constantly scouring the coasts of Zamboanga del Sur and Lanao del Norte had yielded negative results.

Kabalu said it was true Jamat was an MILF member in charge of a brigade of the separatists’ 113th Base Command led by Commander Aloy Al Ashree.

He said MILF chair Murad Ebrahim had directed Ashree to verify Sunglao’s claims but that there had been no word as of Wednesday afternoon.

Under the cessation of hostilities agreement between the government and the MILF, the latter is to help in rescue operations if a kidnap victim happens to be in MILF areas.

Kabalu said some people whom he did not name could only be implicating Jamat.

‘Usual irritants’

“It’s the second time that [these people] accused Jamat and his forces. The first was when [kidnapped Italian priest Fr. Giancarlo] Bossi was allegedly brought to his place, which turned out to be false. I am wondering what agenda these people are again trying to cook,” Kabalu said.

He also questioned the military’s detailed information: “If it is true, then why are they not moving in yet?”

Abdullah Dalidig, chair of the nongovernment Muslim Multisectoral Movement for Peace and Development, warned the military and police against rushing to judgment.

“Misplaced law enforcement aggressiveness may unduly create frictions with MILF ground forces,” Dalidig said.

He said instances like this were the usual “irritants” that could lead to armed clashes between government and separatist troops.

Dolorfino said the military “immediately deployed” troops upon receiving word on Sinnott’s location.

Containment operation

Dolorfino said soldiers were now stationed some five kilometers from the MILF’s Camp Wilcom: “[They have been] advised to conduct a containment operation. We are not going to fire; we are just going to secure the roads and highways.”

Dolorfino said the military wanted the government and MILF ceasefire committees to sort things out and rescue the priest.

“Since it’s now in the area of the MILF, we believe that the matter can be better solved by the [separatists] themselves. And we expect their full cooperation on this,” he said.

Armed Forces Chief of Staff Gen. Victor Ibrado has also directed government troops to give the MILF a chance to help in Sinnott’s rescue.

The AFP, as directed by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, declared a ceasefire with the MILF in July to pave the way for the resumption of peace negotiations.

The talks collapsed in August 2008 after the government backed out of an agreement expanding the Bangsamoro homeland, leading to renewed hostilities in central Mindanao.

Van and motorboat

Dolorfino and Sunglao said the leads that they had followed included the ownership of the van used in Sinnott’s abduction. The van, which was later torched by the kidnappers, was found near Pagadian.

“The vehicle was traced to a Basilan police officer. But it might have been [stolen] so it’s not fair to identify him,” Dolorfino said.

He said the getaway motorboat, which had also been recovered by authorities, was owned by Guingona Samal alias Inggo, a known pirate operating in the waters of Pagadian and Baganian Peninsula in Zamboanga del Sur.

“We expect that the kidnappers will communicate, maybe after they have settled down. Right now, no communication from their end has been received by authorities or the priest’s superior,” Dolorfino said.

‘Dangerous action’

On the phone with reporters in Camp Aguinaldo, Dolorfino said two Army brigades composed of some 3,000 troops had been mobilized to surround the areas where Sinnott was spotted to prevent the kidnappers from moving him to Basilan or Sulu—“a dangerous course of action,” according to the Wesmincom chief.

“[But] what complicates the matter is that these areas have a heavy presence of the MILF,” Dolorfino said, adding that the military was now transmitting vital information, including the chronology of the kidnapping, to the MILF through the committee on the cessation of hostilities.

“We believe that this can be best handled under the ambit of the agreement on the general cessation of hostilities,” he said.

Asked about the possible involvement of the MILF in Sinnott’s abduction, Dolorfino said: “We cannot discount the possibility because all organizations have bad eggs. Even the AFP has bad eggs.”

‘Some renegade members’

He said he believed that the MILF as an organization was not involved in the kidnapping, and that it was possible “some renegade members took Father Sinnott.”

In Ireland, Foreign Affairs spokesperson and Labor Party President Michael D. Higgins issued an emotional appeal for Sinnott’s release and asked the abductors to provide the priest, who recently underwent heart surgery, with medicine.

“Anything visited upon him is visited upon everyone in Ireland. For this reason, our Parliament wants to send a message: that we want him released and to have immediate access to the medical support that he requires,” Higgins said in a statement.

Fr. Angel Calvo, a member of the Claretian Missionary Fathers and the president of Peace Advocates Zamboanga, called on civilian, police and military authorities to exert all efforts for Sinnott’s safe release.

“We also propose that an appropriate reward be given to any person who will help bring about his safe liberty,” Calvo said.

He said if it was true that Sinnott was with the MILF, “the proper way is to refer the case to the coordinating committee on the cessation of hostilities.” With reports from Ryan D. Rosauro, Inquirer Mindanao; Jocelyn R. Uy in Manila, Associated Press

Aquino tops SWS poll; Villar 2nd, Estrada 3rd, Escudero 4th

MANILA, Philippines—A majority of Filipino voters believe that opposition Sen. Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III should replace President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in 2010, results of a nationwide survey conducted by Social Weather Stations from Sept. 18 to 21 showed.

Sixty percent of 1,800 respondents mentioned Aquino after being asked: “Who do you think are good leaders who should succeed President Arroyo as President?” Respondents were allowed to give up to three names.

Sen. Manuel “Manny” Villar, who was in the lead in opinion polls before Aquino announced his candidacy, was second with 37 percent, up from 33 percent in June.

Former President Joseph “Erap” Estrada came in third at 18 percent (down from 25 percent), followed by Sen. Francis “Chiz” Escudero at 15 percent (down from 20 percent), and Sen. Manuel “Mar” Roxas II at 12 percent (down from 20 percent).

The survey had a margin of error of plus-or-minus 2.3 percentage points.

In 10 previous surveys, which asked the same question, Aquino, only son of the late President Cory Aquino and assassinated Sen. Benigno Aquino Jr., was not mentioned by respondents.

Aquino announced his plan to run for president on Sept. 9 amid the warm public sentiment for his mother who died on Aug. 1.

He topped a survey by the SWS in the vote-rich regions of Luzon early last month, winning the nod of an overwhelming 50 percent of respondents.

The survey, commissioned by private individuals and businessmen, was conducted on Sept. 5 and 6 among 1,200 respondents.

Huge declines for Noli, Loren

Vice President Noli de Castro and Sen. Loren Legarda both lost more than half of their supporters in the latest SWS survey, with the former getting 8 percent (down from 19 percent), and the latter receiving only 5 percent (down from 15 percent).

Support for Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. went up to 4 percent from 0.8 percent, while that for Sen. Panfilo Lacson fell from 7 percent to 2 percent.

Support for Makati Mayor Jejomar Binay also went down from 4 percent to 2 percent.

Bayani Fernando, Metropolitan Manila Development Authority chair, maintained his one percent, while those rooting for Bro. Eddie Villanueva rose from 0.8 to 1 percent.

Six percent of last month’s respondents could not give an answer, while 4 percent had no one to recommend.

Grateful

Aquino felt grateful that he topped the latest SWS survey.

“It humbles me to get such amount of support,” Aquino said, telling reporters that the survey showed that he was correct in “waging the people’s campaign.”

“But at the end of the day, I think … this is the expression of the people’s desire for substantive change in our country,” he said.

Aquino said the results should spur the Liberal Party to strive more to translate that support “into actuality.”

“Our platform, our solution is commensurate to the problems our countrymen are facing,” he said, adding that it was “imperative” that he and Roxas (his running mate) should work to change the government and society as a whole.

Villar confident

Adel Tamano, spokesperson of Villar’s Nacionalista Party (NP), said that despite the changes in the rankings in the survey, the party remained confident of its chances in the May 2010 national elections.

“This is part of the dynamics of a political campaign, and we expect more changes to happen in the run-up to the May 2010 elections, Tamano said in a statement.

He noted that when Villar expressed his intention to run for president, the NP standard-bearer ranked sixth in the surveys.

Tamano said Villar was able to improve his ratings through “sipag at tiyaga” (industry and patience).

The NP spokesperson said Villar would continue to work hard so that he could help put our country back on its feet.

Encouraging trajectory

Teodoro, the standard-bearer of the administration’s Lakas-Kampi-CMD coalition, was heartened by the rise in his rating.

“That’s very encouraging trajectory and elections are still many months away. The more people get to know who Gibo (Teodoro) really is and what he can do, we are confident this will continue to rise faster,” Teodoro’s spokesperson Nelson Victorino said in a text message to the Inquirer.

The deadline for filing candidacies is Nov. 30.

Estrada running again

Estrada, ousted in a popular uprising in 2001 and later convicted of graft, Wednesday said he would run again for president in next year’s elections.

“Yes, I will run,” Estrada, 72, told Agence France Presse, when asked to confirm press reports of his decision.

The formal announcement will be made at Sto. Niño church in Tondo, Manila, on Wednesday next week, Estrada said.

“I will not run for the presidency if I’m not sure I’ll win,” he said. Reports from Cyril L. Bonabente, Inquirer Research; Michael Lim Ubac, Christian V. Esguerra, Reuters and Agence France-Presse

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Family loses P3M to robbers

MANILA, Philippines--Armed men raided a businesswoman’s house in San Juan City on Monday, tied up the members of her household and took P3 million worth of valuables, including several guns belonging to her late husband, the police said.

The daring heist, which took only 20 minutes, happened at about 6:15 a.m. when eight men forced their way into the house of Maravilla Geslani, 62, a widow, at 221 F. Benitez corner Pasadena Streets.

Chief Supt. Benjardi Mantele, director of the Eastern Police District, said Geslani’s daughter, Nathalie Lao, 31, was about to leave the house with two companions, one of whom was carrying a gun, when their path was blocked by the suspects.

The robbers divested Lao’s companion of his firearm and herded all of them back inside the house.

They then tied up the victims, including Lao’s 5-year-old son, stay-in cook Henry Villanueva and three other house helpers.

Loot included several guns

Investigators said the armed men took several pieces of jewelry, electronic gadgets like cell phones and laptop computers, as well as several handguns of different calibers that belonged to Geslani’s late husband, retired Col. Conrado Munasque.

At that time, Geslani was in church. She learned about the robbery when she came home, her brother Manny told the Inquirer.

Senior Supt. Procopio Lipana, San Juan police chief, said his men were looking into leads to find the robbers.

“We have some personalities we’re tracking down who might be connected to the crime based on what the victims told the investigators,” Mantele said.

Lipana said the multimillion heist was the first in the neighborhood and even in the city in many months.


http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/metro/view/20091013-229914/Family-loses-P3M-to-robbers

Survey says incidence of hunger down

MANILA, Philippines—The proportion of families experiencing involuntary hunger at least once in the past three months has declined by 2.8 percentage points, or the equivalent of 500,000 families, according to a Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey.

However, the latest overall hunger rate was still higher than the average hunger rate over the past 11 years, SWS said.

The SWS 3rd Quarter 2009 survey, conducted from Sept. 18 to 21 and released Tuesday, found that hunger in the country had declined to 17.5 percent (or about 3.2 million families), from 20.3 percent (3.7 million families) in June.

The survey was conducted before Tropical Storms “Ondoy” (international codename: Ketsana) and “Pepeng” (Parma) ravaged Luzon.

“Hunger has consistently been in double-digits for over five years, since June 2004. The latest hunger figure is 5 percentage points above the 11-year average of 12.9 percent,” SWS said.

Questions

Survey questions about household hunger were directed to the household head, using the phrase “nakaranas ng gutom at wala kayong makain” (“experienced hunger, and did not have anything to eat”).

The decline by 2 percentage points in overall hunger resulted from a 1.5-point decline in moderate hunger, and a 1.3-point decline in severe hunger.

“Moderate hunger,” or those who experienced hunger “only once” or “a few times” in the last three months, went down from 16 percent (2.9 million families) in June to 14.5 percent (2.7 million families) in September.

The latest figure is 5 percentage points above the 11-year average moderate hunger of 9.5 percent.

“Severe hunger,” or those who suffered hunger “often” or “always” in the last three months, went down from 4.3 percent (about 790,000 families) in June to 3 percent (550,000 families) in September. The new figure is below the 11-year average severe hunger rate of 3.4 percent.

Except Metro Manila

Overall hunger declined in all areas, except Metro Manila.

It dropped by more than 10 percentage points in Mindanao, from 30 percent (about 1.3 million families) in June to 19.7 percent (800,000 families) in September.

It declined by 2 percentage points in the Visayas, from 21 percent (about 775,000 families) to 19 percent (700,000 families), and by almost 1 percentage point in the rest of Luzon, from 14.3 percent (1.2 million families) to 13.5 percent (1.1 million families).

In Metro Manila, however, hunger increased by more than 2 percentage points, from 22.3 percent (550,000 families) to 24.7 percent (600,000 families).

Moderate hunger declined in Mindanao by almost 9 percentage points, from 25.3 percent in the previous quarter to 16.7 percent.

In the Visayas, moderate hunger fell by almost 3 percentage points from 18.7 percent to 16.1 percent.

It rose by almost 4 percentage points in Metro Manila, from 15.3 percent to 19.0 percent, and by a point in the rest of Luzon, from 10.2 percent to 11.3 percent.

“The latest moderate hunger rates are higher than their 11-year averages for all areas,” SWS said.

Severe hunger

Severe hunger declined by 2 percentage points in the rest of Luzon, from 4.2 percent in June to 2.2 percent in September, also by 2 percentage points in Mindanao, from 4.7 percent to 3.0 percent, and by more than a percentage point in Metro Manila, from 7.0 percent to 5.7 percent.

It rose by almost a percentage point in the Visayas, from 2.3 percent in the previous quarter to 2.9 percent.

“The new severe hunger rates are now lower than their 11-year averages for all areas except in Metro Manila, where the latest score of 5.7 percent is higher than its 11-year average of 3.4 percent,” SWS said.

The latest SWS survey was conducted using to face-to-face interviews of 1,800 adults divided into random samples of 300 each in Metro Manila and Mindanao, and 600 each in the rest of Luzon and the Visayas.

It had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.3 percentage points for national percentages, plus or minus 6 percentage points for Metro Manila and Mindanao, and plus or minus 4 percentage points for the rest of Luzon and the Visayas. Eliza Victoria, Inquirer Research


http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20091014-229946/Survey-says-incidence-of-hunger-down

Calamity diplomas? No way, says DepEd chief

Filed Under: Education, Pepeng, Ondoy, Disasters (general), Weather

MANILA, Philippines—“Ondoy” and “Pepeng” notwithstanding, no way are public school children getting “calamity diplomas.”

Education Secretary Jesli Lapus Tuesday turned down Sen. Francis Escudero’s suggestion that students in areas devastated by the recent storms be given passing marks for this grading period or semester.

Lapus said the Department of Education (DepEd) was not sold on the idea of issuing passing marks across the board because doing so might further hobble a public education system reeling from storm-damaged or -destroyed property worth P930.75 million.

“Maybe [Escudero] was misconstrued? [If we follow his suggestion], we compound our losses of lives and property further with a costly penalty to the education of our children,” said Lapus, who, like the senator, is a member of the Nationalist People’s Coalition.

“The students might pray for supertyphoons every year, and we might end up with calamity diplomas,” he added.

Education Undersecretary Vilma Labrador echoed Lapus’ position, saying: “We sympathize with the victims of the recent typhoons, including our students and teachers. The country has lost lives and resources. We can’t afford to lose further by giving up the needed learning of our youth.”

Labrador said school and local officials would resume all regular classes as soon as possible and were “looking for ways to make up for the missed class days.”

“The required minimum number of class days can be met,” she said.

Walk the extra mile

On the other hand, the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) is leaving it to tertiary schools to decide on the matter.

DepEd-National Capital Region Director Teresita Domalanta said teachers were willing to “walk the extra mile” and even “bend policies” just so the students in devastated areas would make the grade.

After all, under normal circumstances, “at most only one or two students” fail in an average class of 50 students in public schools, Domalanta said, adding:

“That’s because our teachers always try their best to give those students in danger of failure [every chance to pass], like remedial classes and other enrichment studies. Our teachers even visit them at home.

“So now, although many of our teachers are also victims of the [storms], they will do what they can to help students pass. We’ve already thought about this. Our teachers will walk the extra mile to visit them.”

Domalanta admitted that when classes resumed last week, student attendance was noticeably low in the devastated areas of Marikina, Pasig, Taguig, Navotas, Valenzuela and Muntinlupa.

“But this week, we’ve noticed that the numbers are improving,” she said.

According to Domalanta, the children seeking shelter in schools that are serving as evacuation centers may temporarily attend classes there.

“We’ll have separate records for that, and they can return to their original schools later,” she said.

Case-by-case basis

CHEd Executive Director Julito Vitriolo said the issue could be addressed on a case-by-case basis.

He said school officials could assess their students’ standing.

“If the grades of these students show that they have a chance of passing even if they fail their final exams, then maybe they can be exempted from their finals,” Vitriolo said.

“But if their grades show that there is no hope of passing even if they get a perfect grade in their finals, then that’s a different matter,” he said.


http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20091014-229945/Calamity-diplomas-No-way-says-DepEd-chief

Kidnapped priest seen thrice; military holds fire

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‘Pepeng’ death toll now 311, says NDCC

MANILA, Philippines—The death toll from “Pepeng” (international codename: Parma)—which entered the country as a typhoon and left it after 10 days as a tropical depression—has risen to 311, the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC) said Tuesday.

In its 5 a.m. report, the NDCC said 238 of the deaths occurred in the Cordillera Autonomous Region (CAR) and were largely caused by landslides.

The rest of the fatalities were reported as victims of drowning, with 64 in the Ilocos region, four in Central Luzon, one in Calabarzon and four in the Bicol region.

The number of those injured totaled 185—131 in CAR, 47 in the Ilocos, and seven in Cagayan Valley.

The number of missing persons stands at 48, the NDCC said.

The destruction wrought by Pepeng was estimated at P7.1 billion, with damage to agriculture rising to P6.02 billion (from Monday’s P4 billion) and damage to infrastructure at P1.1 billion.

President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has ordered all government agencies involved in disaster relief to sustain their operations, according to Lt. Col. Ernesto Torres, the NDCC spokesperson.

Torres said that at 10 a.m. Tuesday, a C-130 cargo plane left for Tuguegarao, Cagayan, carrying 500 sacks of rice, 5,000 food packs, 10,000 packs of used clothing, 5,000 blankets, 3,000 plastic mats, 3,000 water jugs, 2,000 towels, and 200 boxes of noodles to be distributed to the devastated areas in the region.

Headless but no longer nameless

LA TRINIDAD, BENGUET—If not for his fingerprints, Santiago Polsito would just be one of the unidentified and unclaimed bodies recovered from landslide-hit Little Kibungan in Barangay Puguis.

His body was one of the first recovered from the rubble on Oct. 9. But it was found headless, causing initial doubts among his kin as to its identity.

No one could remember the clothes he last wore, and there was neither wallet nor identification card on the corpse.

Polsito, 42, had a mole on the neck—the only distinguishing mark on his body, according to his family. But it could not be found because he was decapitated.

Members of the town’s health office posted at Puguis Elementary School, where the recovered bodies were first taken for recording purposes, expressed the belief that a wife would be in the best position to identify any peculiar marks on her husband.

They asked for Polsito’s wife to identify the body. But Polsito, a cab driver, was a bachelor.

It was the fingerprints that allowed a police team to establish that the corpse was indeed Polsito’s.

Second thoughts

At least 73 people died in the massive landslide that all but wiped out the mountainside community of Little Kibungan.

Relatives grieved over Polsito when what was thought to be his body was recovered along with those of his siblings Viola and Gen Clyde.

But according to his sister Divina, she began to have second thoughts when others claimed the body although they were also unsure of its identity.

Divina’s doubts were fueled by the fact that two of her other brothers, Darwin and Colado, were among the six missing persons that rescuers had been trying to find.

Polsito’s body was thus tagged as unidentified, and it lay unclaimed for three days.

Staff members of the La Trinidad health office, led by nurse Claire Pierce, went to the Puguis barangay hall and found that Polsito was a registered voter.

On Sunday, Pierce asked lawyer Bernoulli Binay-an, the town’s election officer, to open the Commission on Elections office at the town hall so they could check Polsito’s voter registration record.

The document showed that Polsito had a mole on the neck. It carried his fingerprints as well.

Print match

Because the mole could not be found, Pierce sought police assistance to identify the body.

Police Officer 2 Voltaire Aoay, a fingerprint examiner, took a sample of the corpse’s fingerprints, compared these with the ones on Polsito’s voter registration record—and found a match.

But Polsito’s kin were not fully convinced, Pierce recalled.

Divina suggested a DNA examination. Pierce told her it was a costly procedure and that the family would have to shell out P20,000.

“We told them that a fee would have to be paid because it would be conducted as a private case. Had a crime been involved, it would be different,” Pierce told the Inquirer.

On Sunday, the Polsitos met with police investigators.

Aoay took pains to explain to the family that fingerprint analysis was one of the most reliable and scientifically approved means of establishing a person’s identity.

“No two persons would have the same fingerprints,” he said, finally convincing the Polsitos.

Prayers from Arroyo

On a visit Tuesday to Puguis Elementary School, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo prayed for Polsito.

She condoled with the grieving families and then entered the classroom where Polsito’s body was lying.

No one told the President that the body in the closed coffin was headless.


http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20091014-229937/Headless-but-no-longer-nameless

All roads to Baguio now open but limited

Filed Under: Infrastructure, Pepeng, Flood, Landslide, Disasters (general), Government, Road Transport

DAGUPAN CITY—After clearing and blasting away debris, the government on Tuesday opened Marcos Highway and Naguilian Road to motorists to normalize the transport of goods to and from Baguio City.

Marcos Highway was opened at 7 a.m., said Public Works Secretary Hermogenes Ebdane Jr. in an interview at Dagupan West Central School here, where President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo presided over a meeting of her Cabinet. “But of course, there are portions where only one lane is passable.”

At 2:30 a.m. Tuesday, the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) blasted boulders that blocked portions of Naguilian Road (Quirino Highway) near the border of the provinces of Benguet and La Union on the way to the mountain resort, officials said.

Another route to Baguio— Kennon Road—was reopened at midnight Sunday, but still on a limited scale, with outbound traffic allowed from 6 a.m. to noon, and inbound vehicles from noon to 6 p.m.

“This could be normalized in a week’s time,” Ebdane said.

Tropical Strom “Pepeng” (international codename: Parma) pummeled northern Luzon for over a week, triggering heavy flooding and landslides and isolating Baguio, Benguet and other areas of the Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR).

Road to Burgos

The Office of Civil Defense said the death toll from Pepeng reached 259 as of Tuesday, including 146 who perished in landslides that hit the communities of Little Kibungan and Buyagan in La Trinidad and other Benguet towns.

During the meeting of the Cabinet and National Disaster Coordinating Council at the public school, Ms Arroyo also ordered the clearing within three days of Halsema Highway, which connects Baguio with the Mountain Province and the rest of the provinces in the CAR.

“Kennon Road is already open. We have to open Halsema Highway so that northern Benguet, Mountain Province are accessible,” she said. “I think there’s a town in La Union, Burgos? It’s isolated. So we have to clear the road to Burgos.”

Forced evacuation

Ms Arroyo also reminded the Regional Disaster Coordinating Council to implement “forced evacuation” in flooded areas in view of the rising cases of water-borne diseases.

Health Secretary Francisco Duque reported that government hospitals were “full of cases of leptospirosis,” a water-borne disease that can cause death.

“Leptospirosis is the main challenge to us. In the last two weeks, it rose by 175 percent, and our hospitals are full of leptospirosis cases,” he said.

In communities and evacuation centers, 50 percent of the recorded ailments had to do with acute respiratory tract infection; 20 percent, skin infection; 18 percent, diarrhea; 10 percent febrile illness, and influenza-like illness, 1 percent, he said.

After the relief operations, Ms Arroyo said that police should be deployed to subdivisions to watch over homes of calamity victims.

“The people don’t want to leave their endangered homes because they’re afraid of looters. You have to have police guarding communities. They might be better used to guarding the community so the people can leave. We have so many volunteers. We need police to guard houses,” she said.

Choppers to be used

In La Trinidad, Benguet, Trade Secretary Peter Favila said the government was giving priority to the delivery of goods and basic needs to the Cordillera area to avoid food shortages. He said Philippine Air Force helicopters will be used to ferry supplies to isolated towns. US Chinook helicopters were also on stand by to assist.

“Our top priority now is to bring food and supplies here the soonest should Halsema Highway remain closed,” Favila told the Inquirer.

Favila accompanied Ms Arroyo at Puguis Elementary School here where she condoled with the families of victims of a landslide that buried Little Kibungan, a community in Barangay Puguis.

Ms Arroyo gave P10,000 each to 26 families as financial assistance.

The Department of Social Welfare and Development said a total of P500,000 was donated. She also led the distribution of 804 packs of blanket, 500 food packs and 170 water jugs to storm victims. With reports from Delmar Cariño, Vincent Cabreza and Desiree Caluza, Inquirer Northern Luzon


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Arroyo forms body to run rehab; MVP is chair

DAGUPAN CITY—Faced with the enormous task of having to pump out floodwaters and rebuild roads and bridges, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has formed a body to do a postmortem on Tropical Storms “Ondoy” and “Pepeng” and seek aid to rehabilitate the country.

The Special National Public-Private Sector Reconstruction Commission will also undertake a rehabilitation plan for wrecked infrastructure, Ms Arroyo said.

“This is going to be chaired by a business leader and Manny V. Pangilinan (MVP) has agreed to chair this commission,” she said at a meeting of the National Disaster Coordinating Council and the Cabinet at the Dagupan West Central School.

The commission will be co-chaired by Finance Secretary Margarito Teves and Cebu Archbishop Ricardo Cardinal Vidal, the President said.

Ms Arroyo announced that she had signed an executive order creating the commission to undertake a study of the causes, costs and actions needed to be taken in the wake of Ondoy, Pepeng and last year’s Typhoon “Frank.”

The commission’s other main task is to seek fresh aid to fund the reconstruction of roads, bridges and expressways damaged by flooding and landslides, she said.

“We want to raise more grants rather than more loans because we still don’t have a good debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio,” she said.

Close to P30 billion

After Ondoy dumped rain that inundated Metro Manila and nearby provinces, Pepeng (international codename: Parma), which first entered the country as a typhoon and exited after making landfall for the third time as a depression, pummeled northern Luzon, triggering massive flooding and landslides.

The two weather disturbances left more than 600 people dead, and damage to infrastructure and agriculture estimated at close to P30 billion, according to the Office of Civil Defense.

The government has come under a storm of criticism over its slow and inadequate response to Ondoy, and has been asked to do a postmortem on the shortcomings of its rescue operations.

Pledging session

The commission is also tasked with prioritizing programs and their implementation, serving as a clearing house for international assistance, and requesting the United Nations and the World Bank to coordinate an international pledging session, according to Ms Arroyo.

The National Economic and Development Authority and Office of Civil Defense will serve as its secretariat, she added.

Salceda proposal

It was Albay Gov. Joey Salceda, an economic adviser to Ms Arroyo, who proposed the creation of the commission.

“Given the impact of the global crisis on our fiscal capacity versus the magnitude of calamity impact, the Philippines should seek fresh aid amounting to $1 billion to fund reconstruction,” Salceda said.

He said the special commission would operate like the Coordinating Council for the Philippine Assistance Plan (CCPAP) first headed by businessman Roberto Villanueva of AG&P Inc.

The CCPAP has since evolved into the Coordinating Council for Private Sector Participation, which operates the Build Operate Transfer Center under the Department of Trade and Industry.

Acting Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Augusto B. Santos agreed that the government should consult with urban planners, and “enforce their advice so that the spillways of Metro Manila and other cities are protected from clogging.”

Exemption from election ban

Teves, for his part, asked the Department of Justice if it were possible to exempt foreign aid meant for rehabilitation projects from the election ban so as to accelerate the completion of the projects.

“Can we kindly check with (Justice Secretary) Agnes Devanadera in the law whether we can allow the fund we receive from the donor community to fund rehabilitation to be exempted from the election ban?” he said at the meeting.

Teves later told reporters that if there was a legal basis for the exemption, at least “we can anticipate if these questions are raised by the potential donors. If not, we can go through the normal process.”

Draining floodwaters

After relief and rehabilitation operations, the next tough task for the government would be draining the weeks-long floodwaters in some areas in Metro Manila, Rizal, Laguna and other provinces.

“How do we drain all the floods not only in the NCR (National Capital Region) but also in Region 1?” the President asked at the meeting. “I don’t know what’s the solution to the Laguna Lake. It has been drained but the water is still there.”

Public Works Secretary Hermogenes Ebdane Jr. reported that a dike along the Manggahan Floodway, measuring 120 meters long and 5 meters high, had been completed despite an initial opposition from 14 families of informal settlers.

Informal settlers living along the waterway have been blamed for its clogging. The waterway drains into the Laguna Lake.

1977 master plan

Ms Arroyo then recalled that architect Felino “Jun” Palafox had mentioned the 1977 master plan for the metropolis.

“Jun Palafox raised to us that during Marcos’ time there was a master plan for the NCR in 1977. Let’s look at it, and start from there,” she said, stressing that the architect would be invited as a speaker at the next meeting.

Ms Arroyo told Chair Bayani Fernando of the Metro Manila Development Authority that she was counting on him to drain the floodwaters in the metropolis. With a report from Rey M. Nasol, Inquirer Southern Luzon


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Monday, October 12, 2009

Power firm: Blackouts to end soon

MANILA, Philippines—The power supply in Metro Manila and Rizal province is expected to return to normal as soon as the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) completes repairs on a third transformer at its Dolores substation in Taytay, Rizal.

The NGCP has restored two of the substation’s four transformers, each capable of delivering up to 150 megawatts to power distributor Manila Electric Co. (Meralco).

Both transformers now carry power from NGCP’s San Jose-Dolores and Malaya-Dolores 230-kilovolt lines to Meralco’s 115-kV lines. To balance the demand and supply of electricity in Metro Manila, part of the load of the Dolores substation has been shifted to the Zapote, Balintawak and Araneta substations.

NGCP, operator of the country’s so-called electricity superhighway, said the repair of two of the four 300-megavolt ampere transformers in the Dolores substation could ease the blackouts Metro Manila residents had been experiencing since Wednesday night.

With a forecast demand of 6,020 MW and available generation capacity of 7,640 MW in the Luzon grid, there were no brownouts expected Monday in Metro Manila.

Some areas of Metro Manila and Rizal were hit by power failure just before 9 p.m. Wednesday last week after one of the transformers in the Dolores substation caught fire. Amy R. Remo


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GK heroes leave no one behind during calamity

MANILA, Philippines—“Walang iwanan (leave no one behind).”

With this mantra, thousands of Gawad Kalinga (GK) volunteers, coordinators and donors paid tribute on Saturday to those who lent a helping hand to GK’s relief operations for victims of Tropical Storm “Ondoy” (international codename: Ketsana).

And with northern and Central Luzon still reeling from the devastation of Typhoon “Pepeng” (international codename: Parma), GK founder Tony Meloto and executive director Luis Oquiñena vowed to continue giving aid to flood victims in Zambales and Baguio City, among other places still submerged in floodwaters.

Gawad Kalinga, which means “to give care,” is dedicated to helping poor families build their own homes. Founded by the Catholic group Couples for Christ in 1995, it presents a community development model fueled by volunteers in the spirit of “bayanihan (cooperation).”

The message of hope amid the sea of destruction, death and despair that submerged Luzon over the past two weeks was the theme of “GK Expo 2009” held at Fort Bonifacio in Taguig City.

“We will rise from the floodwaters because we are here to help one another,” said Meloto to the GK volunteers.

This year’s expo is the sixth held by the movement to pay tribute to volunteers and donors from all walks of life—the military, former slum dwellers now “homeowners,” donor companies, legislators and Metro Manila mayors.

In 2003, “GK777,” the vision of building 700,000 homes in 7,000 communities in seven years was launched at the first GK Expo.

The late former President Corazon Aquino declared that “GK is People Power.”

At Monday’s expo, Meloto said many ordinary folk from GK communities emerged as heroes in the recent calamity.

“Those who received help were the ones who willingly helped their neighbors,” he said, adding that 95 residents of GK communities in Napindan, Marikina, helped about 10,000 distressed families in nearby areas.

“We are quietly inspiring one another to help,” he said.

Vice President Noli de Castro added his voice to the ardent call for volunteerism.

“Ano man ang mangyari, walang iwanan (Whatever happens, leave no one behind),” De Castro said.

He paid tribute to the ordinary people who perished while helping their neighbors at the height of “Ondoy’s” onslaught.

In his remarks, Oquiñena said the “bigger tragedy” was not Ondoy or Pepeng, but the abject poverty in the country.

“Many are still living in the slums, homeless, landless,” he said.

Oquiñena reiterated GK’s vision to end poverty for five million Filipinos in 15 years.

“We will raise the bar from relief to clean-up to rescue,” he said, explaining that rescue meant “relocating people from danger zones” instead of allowing them to return to their dilapidated homes to “sit and wait for the next disaster.”

From Oct. 25, GK will feed 1,200 children from flooded areas twice a day until Christmas Day, he said.


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Metro looks south for veggie supplies

MANILA, Philippines—The Department of Agriculture (DA) is scrambling to secure vegetable products from the Visayas and Mindanao to supply Metro Manila’s needs as heavy damage to roads and bridges in the wake of the recent storms has severely constricted the delivery of produce from Central and northern Luzon.

Agriculture Secretary Arthur Yap told reporters that upland vegetables grown in Benguet, the Cordillera and Mountain Province could not reach Metro Manila because landslides and floods had made major roads virtually impassable.

He also noted that lowland vegetable producers in Bulacan, Nueva Ecija, Laguna and Cavite had also been hit hard by the storms and floods.

Together, the areas supply about 70 percent of Metro Manila’s vegetable needs.

As a result of the delivery problems, the prices of vegetables have dramatically risen, sometimes by as much as five times.

In its effort to replenish Metro Manila’s supply, the DA has contracted 45 metric tons (MT) of vegetable deliveries from the Visayas and Mindanao.

“Prices are good in Metro Manila so suppliers outside of the area are encouraged to deliver here,” Yap said.

DA-accredited suppliers in Cagayan de Oro and Bukidnon belonging to the North Mindanao Vegetable Association would be delivering 10 MT of vegetable within two days, Yap said.

Producers in Davao City and Davao del Sur are shipping 10 MT, those in General Santos City and South Cotabato, 5 MT and suppliers in Cebu, 5 MT. Yap said producers in Quezon province would deliver 15 MT.

Aside from the 45 MT of vegetables expected to be delivered within the week, Yap said, suppliers in Nueva Vizcaya had also committed to make available an additional 30 MT of vegetables every day.

However, Yap warned, vegetables from the Visayas and Mindanao might cost slightly higher due to shipping costs.

“We know that this is not a normal situation. There really is difficulty in getting the deliveries, so whoever has the supply can command good prices. But the prices should not be unreasonably high,” Yap said.

He also said that the DA “is not ready to recommend a price ceiling.”

Despite the supply constraints, Yap said, the government was not yet importing vegetables.

“We have not implemented anything on importation because we can still pull stocks from other local sources,” Yap said.

He said deliveries could return to normal in one to two weeks.


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Devotees find favorite Marian images on exhibit

MANILA, Philippines—From a septuagenarian who believes she was miraculously given a new lease on life to a preschooler who could barely say “Mama Mary,” Filipinos of different backgrounds and ages sought out their favorite image of the Blessed Virgin Mary at an exhibit organized by Radio Veritas.

Luz Deveraturda, 73, wept as she came across a life-size image of the Our Lady of Piat, one of the 200 Marian images presented at the 4th Grand Marian Exhibit ongoing at the SM Mall of Asia in Pasay City.

“Wow, I finally found you,” she quipped in Filipino.

A Marian devotee, Deveraturda said that for many years, she had been wanting to organize a pilgrimage to the shrine of the miraculous icon near Tuguegarao City in Cagayan province.

“She answered all my prayers. I was able to change my life for the better. I am so grateful, I could cry,” she said in Filipino.

Calvin Froyalde, 21, like many others who went inside the exhibit area, took pictures of several of the Marian images. He said he would print these pictures and put them on his home altar.

He was, however, looking for a particular image of the Virgin Mary in white and blue that he saw in a dream last week. Froyalde said he did not see her face but he was sure it was “Mama Mary.”

“I had not been attending Mass,” he said in Filipino.

Asked how long it has been since he heard Mass, he answered: “Months.”

Even a child knows

Only 3 years old, Princess Margareth Verga knows the mother of Jesus Christ like she knows her parents.

While other parents had to take their young children’s hand to touch the images, Princess, while carried by her father, reached out on her own to touch each and every image of the Virgin Mary, and made a rudimentary sign of the cross.

Asked why she was touching the icons, she mumbled in Filipino: “Because I pray. That’s Mama Mary.”

Princess knows Mary and Jesus because they take her along when they hear Mass, her mother said.

Popular exhibit

Radio Veritas, for the fourth year, has gathered images of the Blessed Virgin Mary from parishes and personal collections for a public showing.

There is a simple explanation why the exhibit remains vast, varied and popular. The Catholic Church teaches the faithful to ask for Mary’s intercession in their prayers to God.

There are huge, elaborate images such as Our Lady of Sto. Rosario De Macarena made out of a metal plate that took five men to install, to the life-size Pieta, to the one-foot tall Our Lady of Caysasay.

The image of the Our Lady of Caysasay of Batangas was lent by Manila Archbishop Gaudencio Cardinal Rosales who reportedly considers it his personal patron.

Other well-known Marian images are the Our Lady of Manaoag, Our Lady of Peñafrancia, Our Lady of Fatima, Our Lady of Lourdes and Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal.

Our Lady of Veritas

There are unique figures, such as Bambina Maria, an image of a baby Mary in swaddling clothes and La Niña Maria, an image of a child Mary.

There is an unorthodox image of Our Lady of the Milk and Good Birth (Nuestra Señora de la Leche y buen Parto), which has Mary breastfeeding the infant Jesus.

“Mahal na Birheng Biglang Awa,” the only Filipino-titled image, is a life-size representation of the Nuestra Señora Reina de la Islas Filipinas (Our Lady Queen of the Philippine Islands).

Hard to miss is Our Lady of Veritas (Truth) that is positioned at the entrance of the exhibit area, as if beckoning the faithful to come and pray.

If your heart is calm

She is the patron saint of the followers (Kapanalig) of Radio Veritas, according to Sr. Gemma Dela Cruz.

“Unlike the other images here, the Our Lady of Veritas’ mouth is slightly open, as if [she’s] talking to us. If your heart is calm, she will reveal things to you,” she said.

In this image, Mary is not holding the Baby Jesus. Instead, her palms are up. “Her hands are not holding Jesus because she already gave Him to us,” Dela Cruz said.

Something about Mary

For some people, there are never enough images of Mary.

Dela Cruz said many were looking for Our Lady of Remedios so they could pray to God through Mary.

“The sick come here and look for Our Lady of Remedios that stands for ‘remedies,’” she said.

Others were looking for Our Lady of Guadalupe, another famous icon from a Marian apparition.

Since the exhibit opened last Oct. 8, every day, about 1,000 people come in, De la Cruz said. The number would double during the weekends.

“Mama Mary attracts a lot of people. She’s the patroness of Filipinos. We’re the only people who call her Mama. She really is our mother,” she said.

Giving hope

For this year’s exhibit, Fr. Anton Pascual, president of Radio Veritas, said organizers hoped the Marian images would not only inspire the faithful to follow the example of Mary but also move them to share whatever they have to help the victims of Tropical Storm “Ondoy.”

“We hope to get support for the victims of Ondoy,” said Pascual, who also heads Caritas Manila, the charity arm of the Archdiocese of Manila.

Also included in the exhibit are 20 Marian and Mother and Child paintings of inmates of the New Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa City who are all serving life sentences.

The Grand Marian Exhibit on the second floor of the SM Mall of Asia runs until Wednesday, Oct. 14.


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