Nov 102014
 
A bad precedent: Why Binay snubbed Senate probe

The hot seat meant for Vice President Jejomar Binay remains unoccupied at the Senate session hall on Thursday, November 6. As the Senate Blue Ribbon committee awaits Binay’s arrival, it was reported that the vice president instead flew to Cebu for several meetings. He was expected to answer questions regarding the alleged overpriced Makati City Hall Building II constructed during his term as mayor.(MNS photo) MANILA (Mabuhay) – Vice President Jejomar Binay said he declined the invitation of the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee to attend a probe since it will set a bad precedent. Binay flew to Cebu Thursday morning. He was scheduled to visit Toledo City later. Other activities lined up for the vice president include a visit to a mining company and a meeting with a mayor in Cebu. In a letter to Blue Ribbon Committee chairman Senator Teofisto Guingona III, Binay said: “This will set a bad precedent, where the Vice President, the second highest official of the land, can be summoned to a hearing by some senators.” He said he initially wanted to go to the hearing but the behavior of Senators Alan Cayetano and Antonio Trillanes IV changed his mind. “You assured me in your letter that if I were to show up in the Senate, I will be accorded a fair hearing and I will be given the respect that befits my position as Vice President of the Republic.” “However, recent events, especially the behavior of Senators Trillanes and Cayetano, gave me reason to Read More …

Nov 102014
 
UNA dares Alan Cayetano to file raps vs. Tiangco, Bautista

Senator Teofisto Guingona, chairman of the Senate blue ribbon committee, shows his letter addressed to Sen. Aquilino ‘Koko’ Pimentel III informing him to decide on the jurisdictional challenge of Makati City Mayor Junjun Binay regarding the investigation on the alleged overpricing in the Makati City Hall Building II project.(MNS photo) MANILA (Mabuhay) – The two executives of the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA) booted out in the Senate Blue Ribbon Subcommittee’s hearing on October 30 called Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano “a coward” on Thursday and dared him to be “man enough” to file criminal charges against them if he thinks their interruption of the probe was a criminal offense. UNA interim president and Navotas Rep. Tobias “Toby” Tiangco said he and interim secretary general Atty. JV Bautista will not apologize to the subpanel for appearing unexpected during the October 30 hearing because they have been authorized by Vice President Jejomar Binay to speak on his behalf. “My challenge to Sen. Cayetano is for him to be man enough (magpakalalaki siya)! File a criminal offense against Atty. JV and me. We won’t apologize for our actions because we believe we didn’t do anything wrong. Don’t forgive us; we’re not asking for an apology,” Tiangco said. Addressing the tabloid reporters in the Senate conference room, Bautista said: “This would make a good headline for tomorrow: ‘Cayetano, a coward! ‘Be man enough!’ (Cayetano, duwag. Magpakalalaki  ka!)” Tiangco and Bautista held a press briefing in a Senate conference room after they were barred by the Read More …

Nov 102014
 
VAT refund issues hurting PHL competitiveness – business groups

A utility man cleans Santa Claus decors outside a commercial building along Boni Avenue in Mandaluyong City on Monday, November 3, in preparation for the coming Yuletide season. (MNS photo) MANILA (Mabuhay) – At least P15 billion in value-added tax (VAT) refund claims remain undisbursed and have been sitting in government coffers for years, a situation that has diminished Philippine competitiveness as a business destination, the Tax Management Association of the Philippines Inc. (TMAP) told reporters in a joint briefing. The situation has prompted business groups to call for more dialog with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) on the matter, saying the BIR’s inaction tax refunds could hurt the Philippine goal of attracting more foreign investments. “At the very least, we estimate it to be P15 billion as what government had provided under its national budget,” TMAP president Rina Lorena Manuel said during a joint press briefing of 20 business groups in Makati City. “But we believe the figure could be much higher, given it has accumulated if claims have been there for five, ten, over ten years for some,” Manuel noted. In the same briefing, Australian-New Zealand Chamber of Commerce Philippines (ANZCHAM) president and CEO John Casey said government’s denial in releasing the VAT claims will hurt Philippine competitiveness in the region. “Taxation is one of the components that attracts investments. That’s only one component. The Philippines has great advantages, but it also has disadvantages and competitors in the ASEAN region are ahead,” he noted. In the Philippines, Read More …

Nov 102014
 
US audience takes a glimpse of Filipino talents in ‘Blood Ransom’

By Pia Cabanela Let’s face it.  Young Filipino female talents back home are pin balled to doing two or more of a certain type of movie roles such as an aggravated mistress, the scorned wife, a damsel in distress or the adorable leading lady of an equally charming leading man. That is why I find Anne Curtis’  role in Francis De La Torre’s Blood Ransom just the whiff of fresh air I’ve been waiting for. Finally she is shedding tears for her own survival. Beyonce will be proud. In 2011, De La Torre made noise at the Newport Beach Film Festival with the movie, Subject: I Love You. It was an acclaimed film based on the virus of the same name which impacted millions of computers worldwide back in 2000. This time, he directs yet another film which can easily be construed as a love story to most but is only secondary to its dark plot. The story opens with Anne as a lost soul who is days away from becoming a vampire. Her character seemed meek up front as she struggles between morality and the inevitable. A damsel, nay in distress, she is kidnapped in exchange for ransom and is protected by a man she loves. European born actor Alexander Dreymon is her mortal lover and guardian, whom comes off as a modern day Romeo, but is blindly fighting a chance for a reciprocated love. “It was very risky to showcase Anne apart from the usual roles Filipinos are Read More …

Nov 102014
 
Typhoon ‘dance party’ cancelled after uproar

Akbayan party chairperson Risa Hontiveros Baraquel leads the send-off of volunteers on Monday to Tacloban City for typhoon Yolanda’s first-year commemoration. The volunteers served a year ago in Yolanda-affected areas. (MNS photo) MANILA (AFP) – Organizers of a dance party marking the anniversary of Super Typhoon Haiyan’s rampage through the central Philippines said Thursday they had called the event off after a storm of complaints. The event, scheduled for Friday in Tacloban, the area most devastated by Haiyan, was supposed to be a celebration of the city’s recovery and the resilience of its residents said lead organiser Calai Cinco. “We’ve already cancelled it. We’ve had some complaints. There were a lot of negative vibes on the Facebook page,” she told AFP. She said the event, with the slogan: “Party like it never happened: remember because it did,” was intended to raise money for victims of the storm. But some observers thought the party, as well as accompanying T-shirts being sold, made light of the tragedy on November 8 last year, when Haiyan sent huge storm surges deep inland, leaving 7,350 dead or missing and leaving millions more to survive in the ruins of their washed out homes. One T-shirt had the slogan: “Eat, Pray, Loot”, referring to the widespread looting that followed the typhoon while another said “I thought it was a tsunami but it was just a storm surge”. “Those statement shirts leave a bad taste in the mouth. Callous and insensitive,” one person commented on Facebook. “It saddened Read More …

Nov 102014
 
Trader Antonio Tiu mulls raps vs. Alan Peter Cayetano

Senator Teofisto Guingona III (right), chair of the Senate Blue Ribbon committee, listens as subcommittee members Senators Antonio Trillanes IV, Aquilino Pimentel III, and Alan Peter Cayetano discuss the measures to be taken after Vice President Jejomar Binay did not show up at the Senate probe on the alleged overpriced Makati City Hall Building II on Thursday, November 6. Binay is in Cebu for several meetings. (MNS photo) MANILA (Mabuhay) – Businessman Antonio Tiu on Wednesday said his legal team is now studying the possibility of filing charges against Senate Majority Leader Alan Peter Cayetano, over what the former claimed as defamatory words thrown by the lawmaker against him in the recent hearing of the Senate blue ribbon subcommittee. “Pinag-aaralan po ng ating mga abogado kung ano ang dapat gawin upang i-protekta ang interes ng aking kumpanya at ang aking pagkatao. So malalaman po natin sa darating na mga araw,” Tiu said at a press conference in Quezon City when asked if he was planning to file charges against Cayetano. At the same time, Tiu criticized Cayetano for allegedly making fun of the serious issue of kidnapping just to force him to waive bank secrecy and let the Senate scrutinize his bank accounts. “Hindi na nakontento si Senator Cayetano na maliitin ang pagkatao ko, nilagay niya pa sa panganib ang pamilya ko at ang buhay ko sa kanyang pagpilit saakin na isiwalat ang pera ko sa bangko. Sabi niya, hindi naman mapanganib na gawin ko ito dahil pwede naman akong Read More …

Nov 092014
 
Philippines’ typhoon orphans struggle with trauma a year on

BASEY, Samar — His head bent as he plays with the red laces of his tattered sneakers, 13-year-old Joshua Villanueva haltingly recounts how he lost both his parents and two younger sisters last November. Now living with elderly grandparents and a cousin who also lost a parent, Villanueva is one of dozens, possibly hundreds, of children orphaned by Typhoon Yolanda which killed or left missing some 7,000 people after ripping through the Philippines. Yolanda, the strongest storm on record to ever hit land, struck Villanueva’s coastal community with such ferocity on Nov. 8 last year that no trace remained of his former home. His family’s evacuation to a relative’s home on higher ground the night before the storm did not prevent the tragedy. “My father was holding me and my two sisters when a concrete block which was part of the wall hit his head,” said Villanueva, a small boy with spiky hair who looks younger than his age. The torrent of water separated the family. Villanueva said he survived by holding onto a coconut tree. The bodies of his father and sisters were found the next day. It took a month before his mother was found. “I was hoping she would still be alive because it took so long for her body to turn up,” Villanueva said, not looking up. UNICEF, the United Nations’ children agency, said Yolanda affected 5.9 million children, yet it is unclear how many have been orphaned. The Department for Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), Read More …