Aug 142016
 
Pinoys abroad who didn’t vote face Comelec axe

FILIPINO citizens living abroad who registered but failed to vote in the last two national elections—in 2013 and this year—will be delisted from the overseas voter rolls. The Commission on Elections (Comelec) has formed a resident election registration board under its office for overseas voting (OFOV) to oversee the deactivation of the voters’ registration. “The OFOV, after verifying the voting history of each registered overseas voter, noted that there were voters who failed to vote in two consecutive elections, the 2013 and 2016 national elections,” the Comelec said. The formation of a resident election registration board (RERB) was provided for in a Comelec resolution promulgated on Aug. 11. Under the law, Filipino voters who fail to vote in two consecutive national elections shall have their registration records deactivated by the Comelec. The turnout for the 30-day overseas voting in last May’s elections was 406,780, much higher than the 112,310 turnout for the 2013 national elections. The RERB will be composed of a senior Comelec official as chair, with officials of the Department of Labor and Employment and of Foreign Affairs as members. The OFOV was granted authority to constitute additional RERBs to ensure that all registration records for deactivation are acted upon. The RERB will begin processing the deactivation with five summary hearings from Aug. 30 to Oct. 31. Julie M. Aurelio Latest Aquino admin last net satisfaction rating ‘very good’ 1 dead, 5 missing as flood hits MWSS tunnel in Quezon De Lima urges Duterte: Monitor hearings on extrajudicial Read More …

Aug 132016
 
Japan may ease hiring rules for PH caregivers

THE JAPANESE government is looking into the possibility of relaxing its restrictive hiring rules for Filipino health care workers who would attend to its greying population. Masato Ohtaka, deputy press secretary of the Japanese Foreign Ministry, confirmed that since his government opened the hiring of Filipino nurses and caregivers, the required number of health care workers had not been achieved. The hiring of Filipino workers, mainly nurses and caregivers is provided for under the Japan-Philippines Economic Partnership Agreement (Jpepa) signed by both countries in 2006 in Finland. The agreement, a first for the Philippines, was ratified by the Senate years after.“They are looking into that (relaxing hiring rules) … it depends on how much interest there is from the Filipino people and it depends on how successful our scheme is,” Ohtaka said in a recent briefing with reporters in a Manila hotel. 6-month training Japan requires Filipino applicants to undergo a six-month Preparatory Japanese Language Training (PJLT) and pass a Nihongo test to qualify for jobs. “Our current scheme is not easy, but we really do need some care workers from the Philippines and other countries,” Ohtaka said, adding: “ I will not be surprised if there will be tweaks here and there to allow [foreign] workers [to qualify].” Japan allows the entry of 500-600 Filipino nurses and caregivers every year but less than 10 percent of that number pass the requirements. The Department of Labor and Employment said there were 1,265 health workers hired since the accord was signed. Read More …

Aug 132016
 
Gov’t, MILF sit down in KL to hammer out peace plan

NEGOTIATING panels of the government and the secessionist Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) began yesterday a new round of talks in Kuala Lumpur to launch what they called the “implementation phase” of the peace process. Chief peace negotiator Jesus Dureza said this underscored the Duterte administration’s commitment to honor the Comprehensive Agreement on Bangsamoro (CAB) signed two years ago during the term of President Benigno Aquino III, and to develop it further into a more inclusive enabling law that can pass muster in Congress. An earlier draft of the Bangsamoro Basic Law was rejected by the previous Congress due to what lawmakers said were its many “unconstitutional” provisions. “This [meeting] is actually to launch the implementation stage of what we envisioned to be a Bangsamoro enabling law. It is to implement the CAB that was signed between the government and the MILF in 2014,” Dureza said last week. The meeting is expected to focus on the mechanism that would determine how a new Bangsamoro law would be crafted. It is also expected to tackle key provisions of the CAB that could already be implemented, such as the delivery of socioeconomic development programs in Mindanao. Under the Duterte administration’s peace road map, all Bangsamoro peace agreements, including those with the Moro National Liberation Front (1996), would be integrated into the new enabling law that will create a new Bangsamoro government unit, Dureza said. In attendance at the launch in Malaysia were members of Congress, including Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez, who was tasked Read More …

Aug 132016
 
Keep eye out for entry of IS, Pinoys warned

THE BUREAU of Immigration (BI) has called on the public to keep an eye out for foreigners who may be in the country to indoctrinate Filipinos into Islamic State (IS), the international terrorist group behind the spate of deadly attacks in Europe and the Middle East. President Duterte had previously hinted that suspected IS members may have traveled to Mindanao, which has been plagued by decades of Muslim rebellion, to convince locals there to join their ranks. While the president did not offer proof, the statement remained a cause of worry for the Philippines, which has been trying to address the rebellion at home. BI spokesperson Tonette Mangrobang said the agency was coordinating with the police, military and other law enforcement agencies to carry out the President’s directive. Suspicious activities “We call on the public to provide the BI with any information regarding the suspicious activities of foreigners in their communities,” she said.Although the BI is not the lead agency on terrorism concerns, it is the primary agency concerned with the entry and exit of foreigners in the country. The BI issued the statement after Mr. Duterte made his comments and ordered the military to validate the presence of foreigners recruiting Filipinos in Mindanao to fight for IS. Teachers of doctrine In ordering the military to arrest the indoctrinators, the President said he was told that unarmed Caucasian and Arab-looking individuals had been teaching doctrine in Mindanao, taking advantage of the insurgency that has left parts of the south wallowing Read More …

Aug 132016
 
Mamasapano drove a wedge between Christians, Muslims in social media, says US report

THE BRUTAL deaths last year of 44 Special Action Force officers in the hands of Muslim rebels in the Mamasapano, in Mindanao, led to a degree of mistrust between Christians and Muslims as reflected in social media, according to a US Department of State report. In its 2015 International Religious Freedom Report, the state department cited the January 2015 incident as serving to boost anti-Muslim sentiment in the mostly Christian country. Apart from the slain officers, also killed in the clash were more than 20 Muslim rebels and civilians, as well as Zulkilfi bin Hir, alias Marwan, a foreign bomb-making expert who was the original target of the ill-fated operation. “Observers stated the controversy surrounding the Jan. 25, 2015, Mamasapano incident… caused distrust between Muslims and Christians to resurface in social media, online commentary and public statements,” the report said. The report is carried out every year by the state department’s Office of International Religious Freedom in about 199 countries. It is headed by Ambassador-at-Large David Saperstein. A video that found its way to the public showing one of the 44 being shot twice at close range “spread very quickly on social media,” although at the time it was circulated, the full context was not verified, it said. Its release, coupled with gory photos that came out after the attack “showed the increasing strain in relations between Muslims and Christians,” the report said. The report noted the observation of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility that press reporting on Read More …

Aug 132016
 
FVR, pals talk about fishing in shoal

FORMER President Fidel V. Ramos, Philippine special envoy to China, smiles for the cameras as he drops for push-ups to show his fitness at Camp Aguinaldo on Saturday. LYN RILLON Former President Fidel V. Ramos said Saturday he discussed with Chinese representatives the possibility of restoring “traditional fishing rights” in the disputed Scarborough Shoal (Panatag Shoal) and described the overall tone of the backdoor negotiations as “encouraging.” “We talked about fishing, for us to restore the status quo ante… before the conflict,” Ramos told a news briefing a day after his team returned home from meeting with their counterparts led by former Ambassadors Fu Ying, chair of the foreign committee of the National  People’s Congress, and Wu Shicun, who heads the National  Institute for South China Studies. The idea, Ramos said, was that “we restore the fishing rights according to the rights accorded by tradition,” which means that fishermen from the two countries, as well as from Vietnam, would be allowed in the shoal. President Duterte had dispatched Ramos to China following a UN-backed arbitration court’s ruling last month that invalidated China’s claim to most of the South China Sea, including waters the Philippines considers as part of its exclusive economic zone. Disregarded The ruling has been angrily rejected by China, which has called on the Philippines to also disregard the ruling. Manila has disregarded that suggestion. Ramos was joined by his senior advisers, former Interior Secretary Rafael Alunan and Chito Sta. Romana. Alunan said the “status quo ante” means Read More …

Aug 132016
 
Trump’s terrorist tag on PH sparks backlash

Republican presidential candidate Donald J. Trump’s recent assertion that the United States was letting in “animals” from “terrorist nations,” among them the Philippines, has provoked a strong backlash in Manila, making headlines and prompting Albay Rep. Joey Salceda to propose barring Trump from the country. Salceda last week filed a resolution seeking to “refuse Donald J. Trump entry into the Philippines” for the “wholesale labeling of Filipinos as coming from a ‘terrorist’ state.” READ: Trump lumps PH with terror states Salceda condemned Trump’s “ugliness of utterances, largely unprompted and undeserved,” even though Trump profited handsomely from licensing his name and brand to a real estate development in the Philippines. In seeking Trump’s exclusion from the Philippines, Salceda cited Bureau of Immigration rules that bar the entry of foreigners who “clearly generated impressions not conducive to public good and [have] shown disrespect or [made] offensive utterances to the Filipino people.” Salceda said Trump’s “unrepentantly negative, dysfunctionally nativist, aggressively adversarial attitude” toward Filipinos was dangerous, as he could win the US elections in November and lay down policies that could affect the interests of American citizens of Philippine descent. Filipinos represent the fourth-largest immigrant group in the United States, about 4.5 percent of the total immigrant population, according to the Migration Policy Institute, a nonprofit think tank based in Washington. The median income of Filipino households headed by an immigrant was $82,370 as of 2013, far above the $53,000 of US-born households, the institute says. “With his current stature as candidate of Read More …

Aug 132016
 
DFA to US: PH committed to rule of law, doesn’t condone killings

The Philippine government on Saturday assured the United States of its adherence to the rule of law and protection of rights amid the administration’s relentless war against drugs and criminality. Reacting to a statement by the US Embassy in Manila, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said the Philippines does not condone the spate of vigilante killings of drug suspects in the country. “The Philippine government is focused on its peace and order efforts, including the eradication of illicit drugs and its manufacture, distribution and use from our society. Nevertheless, while pursuing this objective, the Philippine government is committed to the rule of law, and the protection of human rights of all,” the DFA said in a statement. “Law enforcement officials are expected to abide by legal procedures and strict operational protocols. Alleged violations of these protocols will be investigated by the authorities and those who have broken the law will be prosecuted,” it added. The US Embassy in Manila on Friday expressed alarm over the rising death toll in the administration’s antidrug campaign. “We are concerned by reports regarding extrajudicial killings of individuals suspected to have been involved in drug activity in the Philippines,” it said. “We strongly urge the Philippines to ensure its law enforcement efforts are consistent with its human rights obligations.” The DFA said Philippine authorities have already been instructed to look into the unlawful killings and bring perpetrators to justice. As of Aug. 12, the Inquirer’s “Kill List” notes 601 drug-related deaths since June 30 Read More …

Aug 132016
 
MILF's Murad okay with MNLF's Misuari taking part in peace talks

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA — Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) Chairman Al Haj Murad Ebrahim on Saturday said the MILF has no problem with Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) Chairman Nur Misuari being part of the peace talks with the Philippine government. Murad made the statement during the start of the two-day meeting between the MILF and the Philippine government in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia to discuss the implementation of the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB). Murad noted that the inclusion of Misuari in the peace talks is part of the process of converging two peace agreements, especially as the MILF and the MNLF have a similar goal. “That is self-governance for the Bangsamoro,” Murad said.  The Duterte administration’s roadmap to peace emphasizes the convergence of the MILF’s CAB and the MNLF’s Final Peace Agreement signed in 1996 during the Ramos administration.  The administration committed to implement all signed agreements, including the CAB, signed in March 2014 during the Aquino administration. However, the CAB’s implementation through the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) was stalled due to the 2015 Mamasapano encounter which led Congress not to pass the BBL. Forty-four police officers from the elite Special Action Force (SAF) of the Philippine National Police died after an 11-hour firefight with members of the MILF and the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) in Mamasapano, Maguindanao in January 2015. Both the MNLF and the MILF trace their roots to the Mindanao Independence Movement founded in 1968. The MILF broke away from the MNLF in the Read More …

Aug 132016
 
Spotlight on PH in vulnerable nations’ fight vs climate change

The Philippines earned praises for its “exemplary performance” in leading the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF), an international partnership of developing countries that are highly vulnerable to global warming. Member states of the CVF lauded the Philippines for serving as head of the group of nations in the past 19 months, citing the country’s “exemplary performance” during the 21st Conference of Parties (COP21) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in France, December last year. READ: Aquino rallies 20 most vulnerable countries “The Philippines has set the bar very, very high. This forum has achieved a huge momentum and the Paris Agreement session, the COP21 has been exemplary to demonstrate what the Philippines and the CVF have achieved,” said Shiferaw Teklemariam Menbacho during the CVF Seminar Retreat in Tagaytay Friday. Menbacho is the Minister of Environment, Forestry and Climate Change of Ethiopia and the incoming CVF chair. The Philippines has been the CVF chair since January 2015 and is scheduled to turn over the position to Ethiopia at the end of the Climate Policy Forum at the Philippine Senate in Pasay City on Monday, August 15. “In taking forward the work of this important group, we will strive to continue to strengthen our impact. The lives and livelihoods of our people are at stake and we cannot gamble that away,” Menbacho added. Included in the CVF’s agenda is the campaign for to limit the threshold of global temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius, the recognition and accountability to Read More …