Sep 012014
 
Aquino on ice bucket challenge: I have a cold

President Benigno S. Aquino III seen here being greeted by Rev. Fr. Othello Bartolome, Our Lady of Piat parish priest, during his visit to the Our Lady of Piat Basilica Menore in Piat, Cagayan last August 18 says he has colds when asked to comment if he will take the Ice Bucket Challenge. (MNS Photo) MANILA (Mabuhay) – Pass. That was President Benigno Aquino III’s response when asked about the ice bucket challenge that has been trending on the Internet. “Huwag na muna nating pag-usapan dahil una kong ivo-volunteer (icha-challenge) si (Media Relations Undersecretary) Rey Marfil,” Aquino said in jest during an interview with Bombo Radyo on Thursday. The President added that he was also feeling a bit under the weather. “Lalo ngayon may sipon ako medyo… (Especially now I have a cold),” he said. His answer was no different from Presidential Spokesperson Edwin Lacierda’s response on Wednesday to a radio reporter. “May lagnat ako ngayon at may ubo (I have fever and cough),” he said laughing during a Palace press briefing. Lacierda, who kept coughing during the interview, said he would just donate money to the cause. The ice bucket challenge first became popular in the United States to help promote awareness of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Participants are filmed while having a bucket of ice water poured on them. They would then have to nominate others to do the same challenge. Those nominated should do the challenge within 24 hours or donate to the ALS Association. According to Read More …

Sep 012014
 
Court orders turnover of Marcos’ $42-M loot to gov’t

The Marcoses in their past “grandeur” when the late dictator Ferdinand Edralin Marcos was starting to rule the Philippines for 20 years. MANILA (Mabuhay) – The Sandiganbayan has ordered the turnover to the government of 42 million US dollars in the so-called “Arelma” account of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos. The anti-graft court’s Special Division issued a two-page writ of execution on the 18th of this month directing the transfer of the money from the Philippine National Bank to the Bureau of Treasury. The funds represent Marcos assets, originally amounting to 2 million dollars deposited with Merrill Lynch Securities in New York in 1972 in the name of Arelma Foundation. The order was based on a Supreme Court ruling dated March 12, 2014. In the ruling, the High Court junked the motion for reconsideration filed by Imelda Marcos, on behalf of the late President, and affirmed its April 25, 2012 decision which held that “[a]ll assets, properties, and funds belonging to Arelma, S.A., with an estimated aggregate amount of $3,369,975 as of 1983, plus all interests and all other income accrued thereon” be forfeited in favor of government when these assets are transferred to the possession of the Republic of the Philippines. The case stems from a petition for forfeiture filed by the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) with the Sandiganbayan on Dec. 17, 1991 involving $356 million ($658 million as of the April 2012 SC ruling), and two treasury notes worth $25 million and $5 million, allegedly illegally Read More …

Sep 012014
 
Prosecution: We have proof of Taiwanese fisherman's death

The prosecution panel in the homicide case against Coast Guard men implicated in the Balintang Channel shooting said they have proof that a Taiwanese fisherman was killed in the maritime incident last year. In an opposition it filed with the Batanes Regional Trial Court, the Department of Justice asked the judge to junk for lack of merit a motion to quash earler filed by seven Coast Guard men accused in the case seeking the case’s dismissal. In its motion to quash, the defense had insisted the case should be junked because no proof that homicide happened was ever presented by the prosecution in its complaint. But the Department of Justice maintained that the coastguardsmen failed to point out an “evident defect or a glaring failure to allege an essential non-evidentiary fact” when it asked the court to dismiss the homicide case. The DOJ called the motion to quash ” frivolous, groundless and dilatory.” “By selectively citing portion of Resolution dated December 20, 2013 and deliberately twisting their meaning and context, the counsel for the accused resorted to evidence aliunde [from outside, or not part of the original document] in assailing the information, which is prohibited,” said the prosecution. In its motion to quash information, the defense said the complainant did not even attach a death certificate or an autopsy report to prove Hong’s death. “The information does not charge an offense, since there is no one who was killed, i.e. there was no crime of homicide committed,” the defense added. Read More …

Sep 012014
 
3 to undergo inquest for improvised bombs at NAIA-3

NAIA tightens security amid suspected car bomb plot. Security personnel enforce tighter security measures at the NAIA Terminal 3 in Pasay City on Monday, September 1, after National Bureau of Investigation agents intercepted a vehicle carrying suspected improvised explosive devices. Four suspects were arrested and are now being investigated. Danny Pata At least three men will be presented to prosecutors on Tuesday over an alleged attempt to smuggle in an improvised bomb into the Ninoy Aquino International Airport early Monday, Prosecutor-General Claro Arellano has said. Arellano neither identified the three persons in interest nor specified the charges to be lodged against them during the inquest proceedings, radio dzBB’s Cecilia Villarosa reported Monday afternoon. This developed as officials of the National Bureau of Investigation met with President Benigno Aquino III over the incident. The NBI said it would provide further details in a press conference at 9 a.m. Tuesday. NBI agents have been reported to be questioning at least three men in connection with the supposed attempt to bring in a bomb to the NAIA. An initial report by GMA News stringer Ariel Fernandez indicated that four men were brought in for questioning after improvised explosive devices. Meanwhile, the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines said the alert level has been heightened in the country’s 40-plus airports nationwide, radio dzBB’s Sam Nielsen reported. n Cebu, GMA Cebu’s Gregy Magdadaro reported on GMA News TV’s Balita Pilipinas Ngayon that all passengers at check-in counters of the Mactan International Airport were asked to Read More …

Sep 012014
 
PHL military chief wants UNDOF commander probed for ‘white flag’ order

AFP, Defense officials monitor ‘great escape’ . At Camp Aguinaldo on Saturday, August 30, Defense chief Voltaire Gazmin, Foreign Affairs Sec. Albert del Rosario, AFP chief of staff Gen. Gregorio Pio Catapang Jr., and other military officials monitor the situation of Filipino UN peacekeepers who were on a standoff with Syrian rebels at Golan Heights. All 75 Filipino peacekeepers are now safe after the last batch slipped away under cover of night from besieging Syrian rebels. AFP/AFP-PAO The Philippine military is seeking an investigation against the commander of the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF) for allegedly endangering the safety of the Filipino peacekeepers who figured in the Golan Heights standoff. According to Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) chief Gen. Gregorio Pio Catapang, Lt. Gen. Iqbal Singh Singha, an Indian national, ordered the Filipino peacekeepers to lay down their firearms to ensure the safety of the Fijian peacekeepers seized by Syrian rebels. “Under the Terms of Reference, it wasn’t mentioned there that we can be ordered to surrender our firearms,” Catapang said. “The UNDOF commander wanted to save the Fijians at the expense of the Filipinos.” He said aside from laying down their firearms, the Filipino troops were also ordered by Singha to “raise the white flag.” “He (Singha) said that if we were attacked, we should raise the white flag. I said no way. That means our soldiers will also be held hostage,” Catapang said. The Fijian peacekeepers — at least 44 of them — had been seized Read More …

Sep 012014
 
P1 billion in DAP funds to a senator? That’s far-fetched, says Abad

Budget Secretary Florencio “Butch” Abad on Monday described as “far-fetched” the opposition coalition’s claim that P1 billion from the disbursement acceleration program (DAP) was allocated to a senator. In a text message, Abad said the United Nationalist Alliance, particularly its secretary general, Navotas Rep. Tobias “Toby” Tiangco, should be held “responsible and accountable for their public statements.” “Does he [Tiangco] have any document to base that conclusion on?… We cannot react to a general allegation like that,” the budget chief said. He added that the Department of Budget and Management is still in the process of collating information on DAP funds allocated to lawmakers. “We are being careful about precisely attributing projects to legislators… We want this done as soon as we can,” Abad said. On Sunday, Tiangco pressed Abad to come up with a more detailed report on the DAP, including copies of all request letters from legislators. The UNA official said he received “information” that P1 billion from the DAP went to one senator, whom Tiangco did not identify. Certain acts under the DAP have been declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, including the pooling of savings before the end of a fiscal year. The high court’s ruling on the controversial spending mechanism was appealed by the executive branch. Abad is facing a plunder complaint before the Office of the Ombudsman for allegedly “systematically misappropriating” DAP funds. ‘Pure speculation’ Meanwhile, Senate President Franklin Drilon said Tiangco’s allegation is “pure speculation.” “I will not dignify these characters with a response. Read More …

Sep 012014
 
Senate minority missing suspended Enrile

The opposition in the Senate is feeling the absence of Senate Minority Leader Juan Ponce Enrile and his expertise in finance as the chamber examines the P2.6-trillion proposed national budget for 2015. Enrile is detained at the Philippine National Police General Hospital on charges of plunder and graft in connection with the multibillion-peso pork barrel scam.  The Senate leadership yesterday implemented the Sandiganbayan’s order suspending him for 90 days in connection with the plunder rap. “We are trying our best to do it.  Pinipilit naman namin na magampanan pa rin pero talagang medyo may kahirapan dahil dalawa sa amin ang wala and the knowledge of Manong Johnny (Enrile’s nickname) when it comes to the budget e kelangang kelangan para maging  maganda yung pagbasa namin sa mga policy,” Acting Senate Minority Leader Vicente Sotto III.said. Another member of the Senate minority, Senator Jinggoy Estrada, is also detained on similar plunder and graft charges also in connection with the alleged misuse of allocations under the Priority Development Assistance Fund.   Estrada is detained at the PNP Custodial Center.  The Senate has yet to receive the order from the Sandiganbayan as regards his own 90-day suspension. Sotto said the minority bloc was trying to make do with the situation as Enrile and Estrada’s detention has left the group with even less with only for members—Senators Gringo Honasan, Joseph Victor Ejercito, and Nancy Binay.    He said the bloc was  now devising a strategy on how it could effectively cover all the budget hearings. Read More …

Sep 012014
 
Ex-AFP chief Bautista, Dingdong Dantes sworn in to gov’t posts

President Benigno Aquino III on Monday swore in 38 government officials, including former Armed Forces chief Emmanuel Bautista and actor Dingdong Dantes. Bautista was officially inducted as an undersecretary under the Office of the President, primarily tasked to coordinate the Cabinet’s security, justice and peace cluster. The oath-taking came a month after Bautista retired from the military service. He relinquished the military leadership to General Gregorio Pio Catapang Jr. Actor Dingdong Dantes, meanwhile, has been appointed commissioner-at-large of the National Youth Commission (NYC). Dantes’  fiancée, actress Marian Rivera, accompanied the actor during the event. Aquino also administered the oath of office of five recently appointed undersecretaries. They were: – Former Navy chief Jose Luis Alano (Office of the Executive Secretary),– Donato Marcos (Department of Energy)– Jan Co Chua (Presidential Communications Operations Office),– Prudencio Reyes Jr. and Nora Terrado (Department of Trade and Industry). Former Navy chief Alexander Pama was meanwhile inducted as acting administrator of the Office of Civil Defense. —Andreo Calonzo/KBK, GMA News