Obama makes a toast at state dinner. US President Barack Obama offers a toast as he attends a State Dinner with President Benigno Aquino at Malacañang Palace in Manila, April 28, 2014. Obama said a new military pact signed with the Philippines on Monday granting a larger presence for US forces would bolster the Southeast Asian country’s maritime security, but was not aimed at countering China’s growing military might. REUTERS/Larry Downing After an agreement that will increase the presence of US troops in the Philippines was signed just hours before his arrival in the country, United States President Barack Obama on Monday said his country had an “iron-clad” commitment to defend the Filipino people. “You bring back that same strength and solidarity to our alliance. So let me say tonight, in behalf of the American people, we are honored and proud to call you an ally and a friend,” Obama said during a state dinner held at Rizal Hall in the Malacañang Palace, GMA News’ “24 Oras” reported. “Through our treaty alliance, the United States has an iron clad commitment to defend you, your security and your independence,” Obama said, referring to the 1951 mutual defense treaty between the two nations. On Monday morning, Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin and US Ambassador to the Philippines Philip Goldberg signed the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) in Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City after eight rounds of talks that started in August 2013. The EDCA, which falls within the scope of the Visiting Forces Agreement Read More …
Obama makes a toast at state dinner. US President Barack Obama offers a toast as he attends a State Dinner with President Benigno Aquino at Malacañang Palace in Manila, April 28, 2014. Obama said a new military pact signed with the Philippines on Monday granting a larger presence for US forces would bolster the Southeast Asian country’s maritime security, but was not aimed at countering China’s growing military might. REUTERS/Larry Downing President Benigno Aquino III on Monday night conferred the Order of Sikatuna with the rank of Raja — the highest Philippine diplomatic honor — to US President Barack Obama, who is in Manila for a two-day state visit. During his toast at the state dinner held in Obama’s honor, Aquino said he conferred the rank to the visiting US leader for his “leadership and policies that assisted the Philippines in times of natural disaster, for helping uphold stability and peace by means of the rule of law in Southeast Asia, and for working with us to fundamentally raise the defense capacity of our country.” Aquino said the Order of Sikatuna, the highest recognition of diplomatic merit in the Philippines since 1953, is conferred on “those who have fostered, and elevated, the bilateral partnership of our country with other nations.” The first US president to receive the distinction was Dwight Eisenhower in 1960. “Then, as now, may this conferment symbolize our nation’s esteem to the American people; and may it serve as a reminder of the mutual desire to always Read More …
Obama, Aquino hold joint press conference. US President Barack Obama answers a reporter’s question during a joint news conference with President Benigno Aquino III in Malacañang on Monday, April 28. Obama sat down for talks with Aquino during the last stop in his four-nation Asia tour hours after US and Philippine officials signed a new military pact granting a larger presence for American forces in the country. Reuters/Larry Downing President Benigno Aquino III on Monday defended his administration against criticisms that it is not addressing the high incidence of journalist killings in the country. During a joint press conference with US President Barack Obama during the latter’s state visit to the country, Aquino said his administration has set up an inter-agency committee to look into extrajudicial killings and forced disappearances, torture and other grave violations of right to life, liberty, and security of persons. He said 62 suspected cases of extrajudicial killings have been referred to the committee, but that of the number, only 10 met the criteria of what constitutes extrajudicial killing. And of the 10 cases, he said, only one happened during his administration. ‘An abundance of criticisms’ Aquino said it is not his administration’s “policy” to silence critics, even journalists. “All you have to do will be to turn on the TV, the radio or look at any newspaper to find an abundance of criticisms,” he said. But he said that even killings which happened before his term are being addressed by the current administration. He specifically Read More …
Obama in Malacañang. President Benigno Aquino III welcomes US President Barack Obama at Malacañang on Monday, April 28. Gil Nartea “At the end of the day, we are not a threat, militarily, to any country.” This was President Benigno Aquino III’s admission before US President Barack Obama, the leader of the country’s oldest treaty ally and most powerful country in the world. Aquino said that the Phlippines does not even have a single fighter aircraft in its inventory and it has a 36,000-kilometer coastline to worry about. “We do have concerns about poaching [in] our waters and preserving the environment and even protecting endangered species. So I think no country should begrudge us our rights to be able to attend to our concerns and our needs,” he said. The Philippines has sought international arbitration over China’s “nine-dash-line” claims to about 90 percent of the South China Sea, an important shipping route that is believed to be rich in energy resources. Apart from the Philippines, Beijing’s territorial claims overlap with that of Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan. Just hours before Obama arrived in Manila on Monday, US and Philippine officials signed an agreement that will increase the presence of US troops in the country. Aquino, however, said China “shouldn’t be concerned about this agreement.” He said they only seek to train Filipino troops, especially in disaster relief operations. “The training will not just train our people on how to operate… particular aircraft, but more importantly even help the Office of Civil Read More …
Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno, in her commencement speech to the University of the Philippines-Diliman’s graduating class of 2014, on Sunday urged the fresh graduates to use their youthful energies to create a just and free country, clear of corruption. “Nasa inyong mga kamay ang pagkakataon, oras, katawan at lakas. Higit sa lahat nasa inyo ang mga boses na sisigaw na ‘tama na, tama na ang katiwalian, tama na ang lamangan, tama na ang kasuwapangan.’ Panahon na para ang katarungan ang manaig,” Sereno said in her speech. Sereno, the first female to head the judiciary, was the guest of honor in the state university’s 103rd commencement exercises. In her speech, Sereno referenced the controversial multi-billion pork barrel scam and the personalities involved, noting how the electorate was barely holding their politicians accountable for their misdeeds. “Alam po ng lahat na ang mga mansyon ng mga matataas na mga opisyales ay hindi po nila kayang ipagawa sa lehitimong kita, lalo na po’t maraming mga kerida o pamilya. Ngunit kakaunti lamang po ang makapagtataas ng boses sa garapalang buhay na magara,” Sereno said. “Noon, impossible malaman magkano o gaano kalaki ang pandarambong sa kaban ng bayan. Iba na po ang ihip ng hangin ngayon,” she added. But despite Sereno’s perception of the public’s reaction, the misuse of the Priority Development Assistance Fund became a hot topic in July of 2013 after bogus NGOs were reported to have been used by lawmakers as conduits for “pork barrel” kickbacks, amounting to billions of pesos. Read More …
WASHINGTON – A new 10-year security pact between the United States and the Philippines could lead to modest increases in U.S. weapons sales in coming years, especially for maritime surveillance equipment, analysts said on Sunday. The agreement, to be signed on Monday, establishes a framework for an increased U.S. military presence in the Philippines and is part of a “rebalancing” of U.S. resources toward the fast-growing Asia-Pacific region. The deal comes 23 years after the Philippine Senate voted to evict the U.S. military from bases there, ending 94 years of American military presence in the Asian nation. Virginia-based defense analyst Loren Thompson noted that the deal came as China increasingly encroaches on maritime areas claimed by Manila in the South China Sea, even as a long-running Muslim insurgency in the southern Philippines is abating. “What Manila needs most in the way of military technology is weapons that can help enforce its claim to areas in the South China Sea,” Thompson said. That could include P-8A maritime patrol aircraft built by Boeing Co, which have already been sold to India, conventional munitions such as the Standard Missile-3 built by Raytheon Co and small warships built by Lockheed Martin Corp or Australia’s Austal, he said. A renewal of counter-insurgency operations would probably move helicopters up the list of acquisition priorities, particularly UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters built by Sikorsky Aircraft, a unit of United Technologies Corp. U.S. industry executives said they were keeping a close eye on the situation in the Philippines, but Read More …
Devotees in Kidapawan City flock to Blessed John Paul II statue. Catholic devotees on Sunday, April 27, 2014, flock to a statue of Blessed John Paul II at the Jesus the Good Shepherd Parish in Barangay Amas, Kidapawan City in Cotabato, hours before the canonization rites in Vatican City for the late pontiff. Williamor A. Magbanua Thousands of Filipinos joined in the celebration of the canonization of Saints John Paul II and John XXIII on Sunday. According to GMA reporter Sandra Aguinaldo, who covered the celebration of the canonization at the Araneta Coliseum in Cubao on Sunday afternoon, Quezon City might as well have been Vatican City. People from all walks of life packed the coliseum, “24 Oras” reported. Multiple big screens were set up in the coliseum so the audience could witness the historic event. After watching the live feed of the canonization rites in the Vatican, a procession of the relics of Saints John Paul II and John XXII followed. Manila Archbishop Cardinal Luis Tagle then celebrated a Holy Mass. In his homily, the cardinal opined that everyone could be as holy as the two new saints. “I have to convince myself, these faces are faces of people that can be holy…called by God,” he said. “Kahit ganyan ang mga mukha natin,” he quipped. Tagle turned emotional as he recalled how he, who used to sleep in class in his younger years, was called by God and now serves as a cardinal. Apart from the canonizations, the Catholic Read More …
KUALA LUMPUR – A new security pact between the United States and the Philippines to be signed as President Barack Obama arrives in the southeast Asian nation on Monday is aimed at establishing greater stability in the region, not as a counter to Chinese assertiveness, US officials said on Sunday. The accord allows for enhanced “rotational presence” of US forces in the country – but not a return of US military bases. It will allow US forces to train and conduct exercises with Philippine forces for maritime security, disaster assistance and humanitarian aid, White House officials told reporters at a briefing. Officials accompanying Obama on a visit to Malaysia cited disaster response after last year’s Typhoon Yolanda as the kind of cooperation the pact would facilitate. “We’re not doing this because of China,” Evan Medeiros, Obama’s top Asia advisor, said when asked if the pact is meant as deterrent to China. — Reuters
The Philippines will express its thanks to Taiwan for its aid to victims of Typhoon Yolanda during the Philippine Independence Day celebration there on June 12. Philippine resident representative Antonio Basilio said the Philippine government will particularly thank the Taiwanese people for helping with relief and reconstruction efforts. Basilio, in an interview with Taiwan’s Central News Agency, also said the Manila Economic and Cultural Office (MECO) will send letters of gratitude to the Taiwanese government and non-government organizations for relief assistance. The CNA report also quoted him as saying the MECO plans to make announcements in local newspapers to express gratitude for Taiwan’s post-disaster assistance. It said public and private donors in Taiwan gave more than N$300 million (US$10.13 million) in supplies and other aid for Yolanda’s victims. Taiwanese individuals and businesses then gave another NT$22.38 million, while a Taiwanese Navy vessel delivered 530 metric tons of supplies to the Philippines and Taiwan military transport planes carried 150 metric tons of supplies. Last year, MECO canceled the Philippines’ national day celebration in Taiwan following the May 9 shooting death of a Taiwanese fisherman by members of the Philippine Coast Guard. — Joel Locsin/JDS, GMA News
Alleged pork scam mastermind Janet Lim-Napoles may stay at government-run Ospital ng Makati for three more weeks after an operation to remove her ovaries and uterus. Napoles’ legal counsel Faye Isaguirre-Singson on Sunday said her client will be at the hospital for three more weeks “at the minimum” to recuperate. “Kumikirot [sa ngayon] ‘yung sugat, ‘yung tahi tapos namamanhid ‘yung paligid ng sugat,” she said. “The doctors said that she needs a check up once a week for three weeks, so she may stay there for three weeks at the minimum,” she said. She said, however, that “it is still subject to other physical conditions that she may have.” Isaguirre-Singson said Napoles is “okay”, but that her wound from the operation hurts when making slight movements. Meanwhile, Bruce Rivera, another Napoles lawyer, said her release from the hospital will depend on her doctors. Napoles went through a total hysterectomy on April 23 after cysts were found in her uterus. The Makati court that gave her permission to undergo surgery said the detained businesswoman will have to pay her own medical bills. Napoles has been tagged in media reports as the pork barrel scam queen as she allegedly funneled lawmakers’ Priority Development Assistance Fund, commonly referred to as pork barrel, to ‘ghost’ projects using her bogus non-government organizations. Napoles, together with Senators Juan Ponce Enrile, Jinggoy Estrada and Bong Revilla, is facing plunder raps at the Office of the Ombudsman in connection with the pork barrel scam. Before her operation, Napoles Read More …