By Julie M. Aurelio |Philippine Daily Inquirer 4:29 pm | Sunday, July 20th, 2014 INQUIRER FILE PHOTO MANILA, Philippines — The Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency arrested last week a Dutch national suspected of managing a drug den in Butuan City, along with seven of his “customers.” Robert Stoffelen, 51, was collared at a boarding house he ran in Barangay (village) Holy Redeemer in Butuan City on basis of a search warrant issued by a local court. PDEA director general Arturo Cacdac Jr. said the foreigner was suspected of using his boarding house as an illegal drugs den. Arrested with Stoffelen last Thursday at around 11:50 a.m. were his “customers” Sallie Villahermosa, 35; Rey Roco, 32; Alfie Semogan; Joseph Tucang; 21; Ryan Calub, 21; Renwek Pecasales, 2; and Susan Pugahan, 28; all residents of Butuan City. Cacdac said Stoffelen would be charged for maintaining a drug den, possessing illegal drugs and drug paraphernalia under Republic Act 9165 or the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002. The seven others would be charged separately for being drug den patrons under the same law, the PDEA official stressed. The PDEA Regional Office 13 Special Enforcement Team led by director Erwin Ogario and the Butuan City police searched Stoffelen’s boarding house on suspicion that it was being used by illegal drug users as a hideout and den. The operation was covered by a search warrant issued by Butuan City Regional Trial Court Branch 1 Judge Eduardo Casals. The seven Filipinos arrested were inside the drug Read More …
Associated Press 4:14 pm | Sunday, July 20th, 2014 In this Tuesday, July 15, 2014 photo, a Chinese man holds an umbrella while wading through a flooded street in Changsha in south China’s Hunan province. AP BEIJING — The strongest typhoon to hit southern China in four decades has killed 18 people, the government said Sunday, while in the Philippines the death toll from the storm’s earlier destruction rose to 94. Typhoon Rammasun killed nine people and left five missing after hitting Hainan island on Friday off China’s southern coast, the civil affairs ministry said in a statement. Nine others died later in the Guangxi region as the storm plowed into the mainland on its way north to Vietnam. The typhoon is the strongest to hit southern China in 41 years, according to the China Meteorological Administration. Wind speeds reached 216 kilometers (130 miles) per hour, with the storm knocking down power lines and damaging buildings, Xinhua said. Authorities in southern China ordered the highest level of alert and suspended hundreds of buses, trains and flights across the region. The typhoon had wreaked havoc earlier in the week in the northern Philippines, leaving 94 people dead. RELATED STORIES China girds for Typhoon Rammasun Lightning, floods leave 20 dead in rain-hit China Glenda death toll jumps to 94 Follow Us Other Stories: CA orders BI to deport British cannabis seed trader straight to UK Mandatory evacuation for Filipinos in Libya ordered ‘World’s worst airport’ spills its juices How to keep music Read More …
MANILA, Philippines — The Court of Appeals has ordered the Bureau of Immigration to proceed with the deportation of a British cannabis seed trader facing charges for money laundering and narcotics trafficking in Maine, United States. The appellate court’s Special 7th Division, however, directed that Gypsy Nirvana be deported straight to the United Kingdom and ordered the BI to make sure that his flight home would not stop in or pass through the US. The court, in an 11-page decision dated June 25 and released last week, denied Nirvana’s plea to stop his deportation, saying his lawyers should have first appealed to the justice secretary and the Office of the President before seeking judicial intervention. However, despite the validity of the deportation proceedings, the appeals justices said they took cognizance of Nirvana’s refusal to set foot on US soil for “fear of his life and/or safety.” “Expediency cannot justify a resort to procedural shortcuts. The end does not justify the means. A meritorious case cannot overshadow the condition that the means employed to pursue it must be in keeping with the rules,” the court said in the decision written by Justice Agnes Reyes-Carpio. The other division members, Justices Marie Gonzales-Sison and Priscilla Baltazar-Padilla, concurred in the ruling. The justices adopted what they called a “solomonic decision” by ordering the BI to book him on a flight straight to the UK, or on one that would not make a stopover in US territory. “[H]umanitarian consideration and due regard to the feelings Read More …
By Kristine Angeli Sabillo |INQUIRER.net 12:55 pm | Sunday, July 20th, 2014 In this image made from video by The Associated Press, smoke rises from the direction of Tripoli airport in Tripoli, Libya, Sunday, July 13, 2014. Rival militias battled Sunday for the control of the international airport in Libya’s capital, as gunfire and explosions echoed through the city and airlines canceled some international flights. AP MANILA, Philippines – The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) on Sunday ordered the mandatory evacuation of Filipinos in Libya as conflict in the country escalates. “Under Alert Level 4, the Philippine Government undertakes evacuation of about 13,000 Filipino nationals there as soon as possible while no Filipino national will be allowed to travel to Libya,” DFA said in a statement. It said the raising of the alert level was “in response to the extremely unstable political and security situation there.” Filipinos in the area were also asked to contact the Philippine Embassy in Tripoli for assistance and instructions on the evacuation. Libya has long been in wracked by unrest as rival groups vie for control, sparking fears of an all-out civil war. RELATED STORIES UN urges mass evacuation of thousands fleeing Libya Libya turmoil triggers evacuation scramble Follow Us Other Stories: ‘World’s worst airport’ spills its juices How to keep music playing when bodies have fallen Iglesia opens world’s largest indoor arena for centennial rites 2 women share a wound that never heals, disappears Recent Stories: Complete stories on our Digital Edition newsstand for Read More …
Ellen Adarna is the latest endorser of Bench Body.
Luke Jickain is also a member of the Pilipinas Aguilas flag football team.
HONEST WORK AND CRITICAL THINKING Mathematics teacher Joseph Ocol, who made a name for himself in the Philippines as an anticorruption crusader, now helps African-American students in west Chicago beat drugs and crime through a unique chess program. Already, some of his young players have won state- and US-wide medals. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO He was a marked man when he migrated to the United States 15 years ago. Joseph Ocol, once a top planning executive of the Clark Development Corp. (CDC), had been placed on the government’s Witness Protection Program for blowing the whistle on what appeared to be a multibillion-peso election fund-raising scam in the agency tasked to transform a former US military air base into an industrial complex and economic zone. For those who still remember, Ocol had recounted in Senate public hearings how representatives of the Bases Conversion and Development Authority and CDC delivered millions of pesos stashed in envelopes to the campaign manager of the then ruling Lakas-NUCD party ostensibly to fund the presidential campaign of Jose de Venecia in the 1998 elections. He claimed that those funds had come from contractors, who were forcibly milked by government officials, resulting in substandard infrastructure and cost escalations for what was then a big Centennial Exposition project. But after the hoopla of congressional hearings, it seemed the case—like many corruption and bribery cases in the Philippines—did not prosper and was soon forgotten. That left Ocol out of work. The witness program’s P4,000 monthly allowance could not sustain his family’s Read More …
The recently released August 2014 Visa Bulletin of the US Department of State reveals an unusual movement in the priority dates of certain petitions of US citizens. For the first time in many years, the priority dates for the first preference category (F1) petitions by US citizens on behalf of their adult single children are advancing faster than petitions by green card holders under the F2B category. What is accelerating the priority dates under the F1 category? Carlos was petitioned by his US citizen brother and arrived in the United States six years ago. It took 24 years before his brother’s petition under the fourth preference category (F4) became current. As a result of the lengthy process before the visa was actually issued, Carlos’ two children, Jed and Jon, aged out or passed the age of 21. Upon arrival in the United States, Carlos lost no time in filing a petition for his two adult sons. One of his adult sons, Jed, is a special child and Jon acts as his guardian. Carlos wishes to see Jed and Jon join him in the United States. Unfortunately, he was told that the waiting period for petitions on behalf of adult children takes at least 10 years. Automatically converted Carlos filed for naturalization to US citizenship after residing in the United States for more than five years. He sent a copy of his naturalization paper to the National Visa Center with the hope that Jed and Jon’s petitions would be processed faster. Read More …
Senator Teofisto Guingona III, chairman of the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee, poses questions to Janet Lim-Napoles, alleged pork barrel scam mastermind during the hearing on Thursday (Nov. 7, 2013) at the Senate building in Pasay City. (MNS photo) MANILA, (Mabuhay) – A Commission on Audit official on Thursday admitted not seeing documents to show that Senator Ramon Bong Revilla Jr and his staff directly received kickbacks from Janet Lim-Napoles, but maintained the senator’s actions endorsing NGOs were “irregular.” “No, we don’t have (but) he (Revilla) endorsed NABCOR as one of the implementing agencies. He endorsed the NGO to be a partner in the implementation of the project, and he assigned his legislative staff lawyer (Richard Cambe) as his representative,” Susan Garcia, COA assistant commissioner, told the Sandiganbayan First Division during Revilla’s bail hearing. She was the director of the COA Special Audit Office which conducted the audit on the Priority Development Assistance Fund when the scam was exposed. The other implementing agencies endorsed by Revilla were Technology Resource Center and National Livelihood and Development Corporation. The endorsed NGOs were Masaganang Ani Para sa Magsasaka Foundation Inc., Social Development Program for Farmers Development (SDPFFI), Agri & Economic Program for Farmers Foundation. During the hearing, Associate Justice Rodolfo Ponferrada asked Garcia if Revilla’s acts were wrong. The COA official replied that the NGOs should have been selected through a public bidding. “NGOs are not mentioned in the General Appropriations Act. It should be the implementing agencies who should implement the project,” Garcia Read More …
The University of the Philippines Alumni Association of Greater Los Angeles (UPAAGLA), led by its current President, Vicky Achacoso-Gancayco hosted a warm reception for the university’s 20th President Alfredo “Fred” Pascual at the Silverlake Medical Center Conference Hall on a Labor Day holiday weekend, last Saturday. The reception started with welcome remarks by emcee Maning Rivera, invocation by Bobby Canseco, followed by former Madrigal singer Annie Nepomuceno leading the crowd by singing the Star Spangled Banner and Lupang Hinirang. In her welcome remarks, UPAAGLA President Vicky Gancayco thanked everyone who came inspite of the long weekend, not only to give a warm welcome to UP’s 20th President Fred Pascual, but to network with co-UP alumni in providing a platform to enable the organization maintain its current mission of scholarship programs, where they most recently have awarded four (4) scholarships to students displaced by typhoon Yolanda in UP Visayas. Consul General Leo Herrera Lim, a UP alumnus himself, attended along with his wife Fides. Ambassador Ed Espiritu, also a UP alumnus attended the event with his wife. In his brief speech, ConGen Lim stressed the importance of us (the UP alumni group) to remain “connected” with our alma mater, the University of the Philippines, where we all “came from.” In his usual jovial spirit and a sense of humor, ConGen Lim pointed out that he was thankful for the presence of former Ambassador Ed Espiritu, who was his mentor when he was assigned in London and likewise, he thanked the presence of his lovely wife with the following quip :”behind every successful man is a woman named Fides.” Read More …