Dec 102013
 

Mar hits back at Romualdez

Mar hits back at Romualdez. DILG Secretary Mar Roxas II reads a transcript of a meeting with Tacloban City Mayor Alfred Romualdez during a press conference in Camp Crame in Quezon City on Tuesday, December 10. He was belying Romualdez’s claim that Tacloban city received little to no help from the national government in the aftermath of Yolanda, and that Roxas tried to play politics with him. Asti Flores

Interior Secretary Mar Roxas said he was willing to take a lie detector test to prove he did not bring up clan politics with Tacloban Mayor Alfred Romualdez in the aftermath of Super Typhoon Yolanda.

“Ang importante dito ang katotohanan,” said a visibly irate Roxas in a “24 Oras” report Tuesday.  

On Monday, a teary-eyed Romualdez said in post-disaster assessment at the Senate that Roxas supposedly asked him in a meeting to cede control of the city to the DILG. The secretary also brought up clan politics during discussion, instead of immediately sending aid to the city.

Secretary Roxas said we should legalize everything… You have to remember: we have to be very careful because you are a Romualdez and the president is an Aquino,” Romualdez quoted Roxas.

This did not sit well with Roxas, who clarified that he merely brought up the Romualdez-Aquino clan to avoid politicizing the disaster.

“Ang ibig sabihin dun, kami ang national government. Dapat maingat kasi Romualdez siya. Baka mapulitika ito. Iniiwasan natin ang politika kaya nga [nagtataka] ako na bakit niya pinupulitika ngayon ito. Nag-ingat nga e,” Roxas said in an earlier “Unang Balita” report.

Romualdez is the nephew of Imelda Marcos, widow of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos. President Benigno Aquino III’s father, Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr., was assassinated on his return from exile in 1983 during the Marcos presidency.

Misconstrued, misunderstood

During the press conference, Roxas read from a transcript of his November 14 meeting with Romualdez that showed he merely pointed out the Romualdez-Aquino divide to avoid politicizing a possible take-over of the DILG in Tacloban.

“Ito ang quote: ‘You have to understand, we are talking very straight here, you are a Romualdez and the President is an Aquino, and we are being very careful in just taking over because we do not want anything to be misconstrued, misunderstood,'” Roxas read from the transcript.

Roxas also took a swipe at Romualdez, “Siguro tatanungin ko siya, nagpa-stress debriefing ka na ba? Baka tumino at luminaw ang paningin mo.”

“Nagsisimpatya ako sa kanya at baka may post-traumatic stress disorder siya, nagkakabaliktad ang kanyang memory, timeline, at kung anu-ano pa,” the secretary added.

Meanwhile, an edited video of the said meeting was posted online by a certain Josemari Gonzalez. It is unclear whether the person who posted the video is Romualdez’s father-in-law, former actor and polictician Jose Mari Gonzalez.

This is not the first time differences between Romualdez and Roxas over relief efforts in Tacloban has gone public.

Romualdez earlier said Roxas had asked him to write to President Aquino informing him of his inability to function as mayor in the aftermath of Yolanda. Romualdez said his lawyers discouraged him from writing the letter as it could be seen as a form of resignation.

Romualdez added that Roxas supposedly told him that the DILG should take over in Tacloban due to the ineffectivity of the local government.

“Mukhang pulitika na talaga ‘to eh. Ayoko isipin ‘yun eh, pero bakit ako lang? Bakit kami lang?” Romualdez had said.

Roxas denied the attempted DILG takeover, pointing out that the letter he asked from Romualdez was about imposing a curfew in Tacloban due to incidents of looting.

The secretary went on to warn those “spreading lies” to “better be careful” as the DILG has a mandate to act for a local government official rendered “ineffective” by a disaster.

“We bent over backwards to be sensitive and courteous and this is the response we get,” Roxas retorted. “Grabe talaga ang intrigahan.” Marc Jayson Cayabyab/DVM, GMA News

Nov 302013
 
Some LPG retailers have increased prices ahead of schedule

LPG prices to go up December. Workers arrange empty Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) tanks at a refilling warehouse in Quezon City on Thursday, November 28. LPG prices are expected to go up by P10 per kilo— more than P100 per 11kg tank—starting December due to high winter demand for LPG in other countries. Asti Flores Some retailers of liquified petroleum gas have reportedly raised prices a day before an expected price hike that will increase the average price of an 11-kilogram tank by P143. According to a report by GMA News reporter Micaela Papa aired on “24 Oras” Saturday evening, some retailers are now selling 11-kg. tanks of LPG for around P870 against prevailing prices of approximately P720 to P760 per tank. LPG retailer Grace Tabo said in the report that LPG refiller Republic Gas Corp. (Regasco) has already raised their prices. “Hindi naman nasusunod yung effective December 1 (ang increase). One week ago, nagtaas na sila. Halos araw-araw,” she said. Regasco owner Arnel Ty, who sits at the House of Representative for the LPG Marketers’ Association party-list, said the higher prices may have been caused by an artificial shortage. He said retailers got less than the usual number of LPG tanks because refillers did not get enough LPG from retailers. “Sa amin, tinaasan kami ng mas maaga, pero di naman namin ito maipasa ng ganoon kabilis. Kaya, normally po, ang mga dealer, nakikita nila na nagkakagipitan na sa produkto, nagtataas na po sila ng (presyo ng) kanilang mga produkto,” Read More …