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Family, friends bid farewell to Stephen Hawking

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GOODBYE. People applaud as Stephen Hawking's coffin is carried into the church by six porters from the Gonville and Caius College at the Church of St Mary the Great, in Cambridge on March 31, 2018. Photo by Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP

CAMBRIDGE, United Kingdom – Friends, family and colleagues of Stephen Hawking gathered on Saturday, March 31, to pay their respects at his private funeral in Cambridge, where the British science great spent most of his extraordinary life.

Hawking, who died on March 14 at the age of 76, was famously an atheist but his children Lucy, Robert and Tim chose St Mary the Great, the church of Cambridge's prestigious university, to say their farewell.

"Our father's life and work meant many things to many people, both religious and non-religious. So, the service will be both inclusive and traditional, reflecting the breadth and diversity of his life," they said.

Tributes poured in from around the world upon Hawking's death, from Queen Elizabeth II to NASA, reflecting his huge impact as a physicist and an inspiration, in his refusal to give up in the face of his crippling motor neurone disease.

The funeral service – being held a short distance from Gonville and Caius College where Hawking worked for more than 50 years – was only open to around 500 guests who knew him.

A private reception was to follow at Trinity College.

A wider audience will attend a thanksgiving service at Westminster Abbey in London on June 15, when Hawking's remains will be buried near the grave of another legendary scientist, Isaac Newton.

Actor Eddie Redmayne, who played Hawking in the 2014 biographical drama "The Theory of Everything", was to give a reading from the Bible, followed by a reading by Martin Rees, Britain's astronomer royal.

Eulogies were to be delivered by Robert Hawking, the physicist's eldest child, and Professor Fay Dowker, one of Hawking's former students. (Stephen Hawking's profile: A brief history of genius)

HAWKING'S FUNERAL. Jane Hawking (C), first wife of Stephen Hawking, arrives with her son Tim (center right) to attend the funeral of British scientist Stephen Hawking at the Church of St Mary the Great, in Cambridge on March 31, 2018. Photo by Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP

An arrangement of white lilies, to represent the universe, and another of white roses as the polar star were to be placed on Hawking's solid oak coffin.

The church bell was to toll 76 times, once for each year of Hawking's life, when his coffin arrives.

New photographs revealed 

Ahead of the funeral, Gonville and Caius College released new black and white photographs of Hawking taken in 1961 at a summer school for young astrophysicists at a castle in Sussex, southern England, when he was 19.

They showed him playing croquet and in a sailing dinghy, two years before he began experiencing the first symptoms of the motor neurone disease that would later leave him almost completely paralyzed.

Fellow students contacted by the college recalled his left-wing views and his mischievous sense of humor.

Hawking defied predictions that he would only live for a few years, although his rare condition – amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) – gradually robbed him of mobility.

He was confined to a wheelchair, almost completely paralyzed and unable to speak except through his trademark voice synthesizer.

But the illness did nothing to dull his mind, and Hawking became one of the world's best-known and most inspiring scientists, known for his brilliance and his wit.

His work focused on bringing together relativity – the nature of space and time – and quantum theory – how the smallest particles behave – to explain the creation of the Universe and how it is governed.

But he was also a global star – his 1988 book "A Brief History of Time" was an unlikely worldwide bestseller, and he appeared as himself in television shows from "The Simpsons" to "Star Trek: The Next Generation".

Born on January 8, 1942, Hawking died in his home in Cambridge.

After taking his undergraduate degree at the University of Oxford, he moved to Cambridge for his doctorate and stayed there for the rest of his career.

Hawking's family has asked 6 college porters, many of whom provided support for Hawking when he visited for dinners and other events, to carry his coffin. – Rappler.com


IN PHOTOS: Easter Vigil 2018 at the Manila Cathedral

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EASTER VIGIL. Catholics attend the Easter Vigil Mass at the Manila Cathedral on Holy Saturday, March 31, 2018. Photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

MANILA, Philippines – On the night of Holy Saturday, March 31, Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle led the Easter Vigil at the Manila Cathedral.

The Easter Vigil, considered the longest Mass of the year, is held on the eve of Easter Sunday to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. (WATCH: Cardinal Tagle's Masses for Holy Week 2018)

During the Easter Vigil, the fire used to light the Paschal candle – representing the risen Christ – is blessed. Adults and children may also receive baptism during the vigil.

In his homily on Saturday evening, Cardinal Tagle urged Filipinos to roll away "stones" to let the life of love and unity come out.

Photo by Maria Tan/Rappler

Photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

Photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

Photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

Photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

Photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

Photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

Photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

– Rappler.com

Cardinal Tagle on Easter 2018: Roll away 'stones' of sin

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EASTER VIGIL. Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle leads the Easter Vigil at the Manila Cathedral on March 31, 2018. Photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler

MANILA, Philippines – Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle urged Catholics to roll away "stones" of sin to uncover love, as when the rolling away of a stone 2,000 years ago revealed Christ's resurrection on the first Easter.

In his Easter Vigil Mass at the Manila Cathedral on Saturday, March 31, Tagle recounted the story of Mary Magdalene, Mary, the mother of James, and Salome, who went to Jesus' tomb to anoint his body, only to find his tomb unguarded and the stone rolled away. 

"The dead is no longer there. God has allowed the living to come out of the tomb," Tagle said. (WATCH: Cardinal Tagle's Masses for Holy Week 2018)

Tagle then mentioned the "stones" that Filipinos should "roll away" to live a good, faithful life.

"Mga kapatid, iyong bato ng kayabangan, alisin na para makalabas ang buhay ng kapagkumbabaan," Tagle said. (Brothers and sisters, the stone of pride, roll it away to let the life of humility come out.)

"Iyong bato ng greed o pagkaganid, alisin na nang makalabas na ang tunay na buhay ng sharing o pagbabahagi." (The stone of greed, roll it away to let the real life of sharing come out.)

"Iyong bato ng walang paggalang sa kapwa, alisin na para makalabas ang buhay ng pagdadamayan." (The stone of being disrespectful, roll it away to let the life of helping each other come out.)

"Iyong bato ng pagmamataas at pagtapak sa kapwa, alisin na nang makalabas ang bagong buhay ng pagmamahalan." (The stone of being arrogant and stepping on people, roll it away to let the new life of love come out.)

"Iyong bato ng hinanakit at paghihiganti, iurong na para makalabas na ang bagong buhay ng pagpapatawad." (The stone of resentment and revenge, roll it away to let the new life of forgiveness come out.)

Fearing an apparent resurgence of a "cold war" in international relations, Cardinal Tagle also urged people to let out "global warming" – that is, the warmth of love and communion.

If a person finds it hard to "roll away" these big stones, or if he or she wonders who can roll it down, Tagle said God "will roll the stone not to hurt us, but to let the life of Christ come out and be our life."

"Jesus is coming out of the tomb. Do not block his way. Go, meet him," added Tagle. "He is our life, He is our light. Do not be afraid. He is the rock of our salvation, and we do not need other rocks to block His coming."

Tagle ended his sermon with a question to the faithful: "Ano ang bato na kailangan kong ipaurong sa Diyos para makalabas ang buhay ni Kristo, maging buhay ko si Kristo?"

(What stone should I let God roll away to let the life of Christ come out, so that Christ can be my life?)

The Easter Vigil, seen as the longest Mass of the year, is held on Holy Saturday to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. The Paschal candle is lit at the start of the vigil, while converts can undergo baptism. – Rappler.com

Duterte's Easter Sunday message: Be humble, forgive

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EASTER SUNDAY. President Rodrigo Duterte calls on Filipinos to help the needy on easter Sunday. Malacañang file photo

MANILA, Philippines – President Rodrigo Duterte on Easter Sunday, April 1, encouraged Filipinos to be humble and to forgive.

"As we remember Christ's triumphs against death, may we nurture humility and forgiveness in our hearts as these will free us from the shackles of hatred and greed," the President said in his message.

He added: "For it is only by being selfless that we can truly say we are worthy of God's love."

Durerte also called on Filipinos to offer aid to the needy.

"Let us make this occasion more meaningful by offering aid to others, especially to those in need. Let us pray for the welfare and safety of our countrymen and for lasting peace in our nation so that we can all work together in harmony towards real change," he added.

The President's Easter Sunday message has the same tone as his Palm Sunday message, where he called on people to "help and uplift the downtrodden."

In 2017, Duterte's Easter Sunday message was more political, saying Filipinos "deserve salvation from social ills" such as drugs, criminality, and corruption.

Duterte spent the Holy Week break in Davao City, celebrating his 73rd birthday at home with his grandchildren.

Read the President's 2018 Easter Sunday message:

I join our brothers and sisters in the Christian faith in celebrating Easter Sunday.

Today we are called to thank the Lord for giving us His only Son to save the world from sin. It is also a time to glorify Jesus for His sacrifices so that we can live with renewed hope towards eternal salvation. 

As we remember Christ's triumphs against death, may we nurture humility and forgiveness in our hearts as these will free us from the shackles of hatred and greed. For it is only by being selfless that we can truly say we are worthy of God’s love.

Let us make this occasion more meaningful by offering aid to others, especially to those in need. Let us pray for the welfare and safety of our countrymen and for lasting peace in our nation so that we can all work together in harmony towards real change.

I wish everyone a solemn and joyous Easter Sunday.

Rappler.com

4 teen girl suicide bombers launch deadly attack in Nigeria

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KANO, Nigeria – Four teenage girl suicide bombers have killed two people in multiple attacks in northeast Nigeria, residents said Saturday, March 31, in the latest assault since the government announced it was in ceasefire talks with Boko Haram.

The suspected Boko Haram attack took place late Friday in the northeast Borno state capital of Maiduguri, the epicenter of the group's Islamist insurgency.

The girls, estimated to be between the ages of 13 and 18, attacked the Zawuya settlement on the outskirts of Maiduguri, killing two people, residents told Agence France-Presse.

"We lost two people, a woman and a boy, in two of the 4 suicide explosions," Zawuya resident Musa Haruna Isa said.

One of the bombers blew up while trying to scale a low mud wall outside a house that starting crumbling and detonated her explosive belt, killing the boy, Isa said.

"One of them exploded near an open-air mosque, injuring one person," he said, adding that another bomber "panicked from the explosions from her colleagues and squeezed the trigger in the open, killing only herself."

However, police said that just one person died in the attack.

"They (bombers) detonated the explosives killing themselves and one other person... 13 persons were injured and were taken to a hospital where they are responding to treatment," Maiduguri police said in a statement. 

The attack highlighted the challenge the government faces in reaching a ceasefire agreement with the fractionalized Boko Haram.

Last week, when more than 100 schoolgirls were returned to Dapchi after being kidnapped by the jihadist group, Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari said his government was offering amnesty to "repentant" jihadists. 

But senior security officials cautioned that reaching any agreement with the group will be difficult, as it is split into competing factions with different goals. 

The Islamic State-affiliated faction reportedly in talks with the government is led by Abu Mus'ab al-Barnawi and is known for attacks on military targets, while another faction led by Abubakar Shekau is notorious for suicide bombings killing civilians.  

Zawuya, a settlement of people displaced by Boko Haram mostly from Rann, a town on the remote northeast border with Cameroon, lies close to the Muna Garage area, home to some 40,000 internally displaced people. 

Both camps have been repeatedly targeted by Boko Haram attacks. – Rappler.com

Syria's army vows to finish off last Ghouta rebels

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EASTERN GHOUTA. Syrian government forces' infantry fighting vehicles (IFVs) and trucks drive past damaged buildings down a street in the Eastern Ghouta town of Hazzeh on the outskirts of the Syrian capital Damascus, on March 28, 2018, in the direction of the rebel-held town of Douma. Photo by Stringer/AFP

DAMASCUS, Syria – Syria's army on Saturday, March 31, promised to finish off rebels in a final holdout of the crumbling opposition bastion of Eastern Ghouta where talks on a possible evacuation deal have stalled.

The army said it would press "fighting in the area of Douma to rid it of terrorism," referring to rebels in a final pocket comprising the former bastion's main town.

The announcement came shortly after state media said a penultimate pocket of Eastern Ghouta was "empty of terrorism" after tens of thousands were bussed out of it under an evacuation deal. (READ: Biggest convoy yet evacuates Syria's ruined Ghouta)

Thousands more were also evacuated from a first pocket under a similar deal last week, but Russia-backed talks have stalled over a possible evacuation of fighters and civilians from Douma.

Jaish al-Islam, the rebel group that controls Douma, has refused to leave.

With the latest evacuations, Russia-backed regime forces have retaken 95 percent of Eastern Ghouta since launching a blistering assault on February 18, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says.

That assault has killed more than 1,600 civilians and seen tens of thousands more flee the fighting into regime-held areas, the Britain-based monitor says.

The evacuation deals have seen fighters and civilians driven to the northwestern province of Idlib, the last in Syria to be largely outside government control.

The regime retaking Eastern Ghouta would be a considerable victory in Syria's 7-year war, which has killed more than 350,000 people and displaced millions. – Rappler.com

U.S. blocks UN Security Council statement vs Gaza violence

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MOURNING. Palestinian relatives of Ibrahim Abu Shaer, who was killed a day earlier by Israeli forces when clashes erupted as tens of thousands as Gazans marched near the Israeli border with the enclave to mark Land Day, mourn during his funeral in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, on March 31, 2018. File photo by Said Khatib/AFP

UNITED NATIONS – The United States on Saturday, March 31 blocked a draft United Nations Security Council statement urging restraint and calling for an investigation of clashes on the Gaza-Israel border that left 16 dead, diplomats said.

Clashes erupted as tens of thousands of Gazans protested near the border on Friday, with Israeli forces using tear gas and live fire to force back smaller numbers of demonstrators who approached within a few hundred yards (meters) of the heavily fortified border fence.

In addition to the 16 Palestinians killed, more than 1,400 were wounded, 758 of them by live fire, with the remainder hurt by rubber bullets and tear gas inhalation, according to the Gazan health ministry.

Kuwait, which represents Arab countries on the council, presented the proposed statement, which called for an "independent and transparent investigation" of the violence. 

The draft council statement also expressed "grave concern at the situation at the border." (READ: Gazans bury their dead after bloodiest day in years)

And it reaffirmed "the right to peaceful protest" and expressed the council's "sorrow at the loss of innocent Palestinian lives."

The draft statement was circulated to the council on Friday, but on Saturday the United States raised objections and said it did not support its adoption, a Security Council diplomat told AFP. 

The US mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request from Agence France-Presse for comment. 

The proposed statement also called "for respect for international human rights law and international humanitarian law, including protection of civilians,"  according to the draft seen by AFP. 

Council members "called upon all sides to exercise restraint and prevent a further escalation," the draft said.  

The proposed statement stressed the need to promote peace between Israel and the Palestinians based on a two-state solution. – Rappler.com

Japanese women confront grim taboo by saying 'me too'

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WOMEN SPEAK OUT. In this picture taken on January 30, 2018, Japanese journalist Shiori Ito, who accused a television newsman of raping her in 2015, poses for a picture in Tokyo. Photo by Behrouz Mehri/AFP

TOKYO, Japan – When Rinko Nakajiri was first raped by a producer who seduced her with the promise of a record deal, the 17-year-old singer kept quiet, terrified about her career prospects.

Twenty years later, the Tokyo housewife has long since abandoned the music industry and is facing her demons, encouraged by the global #MeToo movement triggered by accusations of rape against movie mogul Harvey Weinstein.

Despite widespread allegations of misogyny and sexual violence from Hollywood to Hong Kong, however, there has been relatively little support for the campaign in Japan, where victims are often told to keep quiet.

"It's almost impossible to talk about it in Japan," Nakajiri told Agence France-Presse. "There's a terrible stigma about rape. People would rather you kept it bottled up."

"It happened in a recording studio late at night," added the mother of two, who says she quit music after three years of sexual abuse.

"And many times after that. I was afraid if I resisted or reported it, my career would be over."

In patriarchal Japan, where a culture of silence persists when it comes to sexual assault and harassment, raising the alarm comes at a price.

Journalist Shiori Ito refused to suffer in silence and went public last year.

The 28-year-old accused a television newsman with close ties to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of raping her after inviting her to dinner to discuss a job opportunity in 2015.

Ito was savaged online for daring to break her silence and even received death threats.

"The last thing I remembered was when I went to the bathroom at the sushi restaurant," said Ito, who suspects her alleged attacker, Noriyuki Yamaguchi, drugged her and claims police failed to test for substances.

"When I regained consciousness, in intense pain, I was in a hotel room and he was on top of me. I knew what had happened but I couldn't process it."

Insults and threats

Ito likened questions by a nurse who treated her at hospital to an "interrogation" and worse was to follow as male police officers ordered her to re-enact her rape with a life-size doll.

"I had to lie down on the floor and they placed this doll on top of me and started moving it," Ito told AFP. "They were asking 'was it like this?' and taking photos. That was like a second rape."

The police, who had taken weeks to open a criminal investigation, told Ito they were going to arrest Yamaguchi, she said — before they suddenly backed off.

Ito has since filed a civil lawsuit against Yamaguchi, who denies any wrongdoing. 

"I received emails and messages calling me a slut, a prostitute," said Ito, who released a book about her ordeal and recently gave a news conference at United Nations headquarters in New York.

"There were also threats so I did fear for the lives of my family. I was scared. I couldn't go out."

Ito's case led to some discussion in Japan, but in a country where just four percent of rape victims go to the police, according to a 2015 government survey, only a handful of other women came forward.

"The #MeToo movement obviously hit some kind of tipping point for that to happen -- the Harvey Weinstein thing," said Sachi Nakajima, a domestic abuse survivor and founder of Resilience, a non-profit organisation to help victims of abuse.

"Shiori's case is causing a little bit of a ripple but it's not a tipping point. Nothing is happening, nobody is getting arrested, even in her case."

Nakajima blames Japan's century-old sex crime law, which parliament only last year amended to widen the definition of rape and increase prison sentences.

"It's like trying to move a mountain with a shovel," said the 54-year-old. "Rape law amended after 110 years? The pace is beyond glacial."

'Men feel entitled'

Justice ministry figures show that only a third of rape cases currently reach court and last year only 285 of the 1,678 people tried for sex crimes (17%) were sentenced to more than three years in prison.

Taxi driver Kazuyo Saito stopped working at night to reduce the risk of being assaulted.

"Male passengers who have just rolled out of a hostess bar sometimes try to carry on flirting in that vein," said the 42-year-old.

"They would ask for a quickie and I'd say 'I'm trying to work here, give me a break!' I just brushed it off."

Japan has one of the worst records in the world in terms of female political representation.

Women hold just over 10 percent of seats in the lower house of parliament, putting Japan joint 158rd among 193 countries — below Syria and Congo — in 2017, according Inter-Parliamentary Union data.

Nakajima believes Japanese women need to become empowered before attitudes towards sex crimes change.

"A lot of men feel like they're entitled to women's bodies," she said. "The definition of consent is so warped in Japan.

"If you walked into a police station to report a burglary, they don't say 'why weren't you home at that hour?' It's like 'you must have enticed him' or 'that's a short skirt!'

"We have to start looking at women's position in society because that explains a lot of the problems," she added.– Rappler.com


Building collapse kills 10 in central India

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ANOTHER COLLAPSE. India is infamous for its deadly building collapses that usually claim the lives of many people

NEW DELHI, India – Ten people have died after a car crashed into a dilapidated building in central India and brought down the near century-old structure, burying them beneath rubble, police said Sunday, April 1.

The freak accident in Indore on Saturday evening, March 31, is the latest building disaster in a country infamous for poor construction and safety standards.

The driver lost control of his vehicle and struck a pillar holding up the near 100-year-old structure, said police deputy inspector general Harinarayanchari Mishra.

"The impact was such that the entire building collapsed," he told AFP.

"Rescue workers pulled out 12 people from the rubble, 10 of them were already dead. The other two are being treated in hospital."

Images from the scene showed battered and bloodied corpses being pulled from twisted piles of brick and concrete. The rubble was being cleared with cranes and industrial equipment.

Building disasters are common in Indian cities where millions are forced to live in cramped, run-down properties due to spiraling real estate prices and a lack of proper housing. (READ: Building collapse in south India kills 8)

Activists say owners often cut corners on construction to save costs with little regard to safety.

Some 30 people perished in September last year when a 117-year-old apartment building collapsed in India's financial hub of Mumbai.

And in 2013, 60 people were killed when a residential block came crashing down in one of the country's worst housing disasters. – Rappler.com

AFP, PNP urged to scrap height requirement, no-tattoo rule

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TIME TO CHANGE RULES? President Rodrigo Duterte poses for a photo with AFP and PNP personnel during a visit to the Edwin Andrews Air Base in Sta Maria, Zamboanga City on March 10, 2018. Malacañang file photo

MANILA, Philippines – A lawmaker from the ruling PDP-Laban is calling on the country's police and military to scrap "archaic" requirements for aspiring members, including one that bans the recruitment of those with tattoos.

In a statement released on Sunday, April 1, Davao City 1st District Representative Karlo Nograles said it was "high time" for the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Philippine National Police (PNP) to scrap a rule that bars people with tattoos, and another that sets a minimum height requirement for applicants.

"For our military and police organizations to bar the entry of capable and well-meaning Filipinos in their ranks on the basis of tattoos is quite archaic, if only because tattoos are no longer taboo in this day and age. Thus, we call for the removal of this ban," said Nograles, chairman of the appropriations committee in the House of Representatives.

Under existing conventions, an aspiring soldier or police may be disqualified based on existing tattoos. The Philippine National Police Academy (PNPA) and the PNP, for instance, cite "tattoos or other brotherhood marks" as possible grounds for "medical disqualification."

Nograles said it was "unfair" for those with tattoos to be rejected based solely on the marks on their bodies.

"Like the nonsensical minimum height requirement of at least 5 feet for both the military and police service, the no-tattoo rule must be done away with for the simple reason that it is not a good measure of one's capabilities or heart on the battlefield," added Nograles, who's being floated as a senatorial bet in 2019.

Applicants to the military should be at least 5 feet tall to be considered. The standard is a little higher for police, who must be at least 1.67 meters (5.48 feet) tall for men and 1.57 meters (5.15 feet) tall for women.

Recently, Congress approved a measure that would increase the base pay of soldiers and police. This was among President Rodrigo Duterte's promises during the 2016 elections.– Rappler.com

Robredo on Easter: Unite amid threats to democracy

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EASTER SUNDAY. Filipino Catholics join the traditional Easter Salubong at Saint Peter Parish in Quezon City on Sunday, April 1, 2018. The Salubong reenacts the meeting of the risen Jesus and his mother, Mary, on the first Easter. Photo by Darren Langit/Rappler

MANILA, Philippines – Vice President Leni Robredo urged Filipinos to unite in the face of threats to democracy, as Christians on Easter Sunday, April 1, celebrate what she calls a feast of light conquering darkness.

"Sa panahon kung saan tila sinisiil ang demokrasya, sama-sama tayong tumindig at ipagtanggol ang karapatan ng bawat isa. Kapag tayo ay iisa, anumang Kalbaryo ay kaya nating malampasan," Robredo said in a statement. (At a time when democracy seems threatened, let us stand together and defend each other's rights. If we stay united, we can surpass any Calvary.)

"Ang tagumpay ng ating Panginoon laban sa kamatayan ay isang mahalagang paalala – na sa dulo ng lahat, mangingibabaw ang katotohanan, at ang mabuti ang siyang laging mananaig," she added. (The victory of our Lord against death is an important reminder – that at the end of it all, truth will prevail, and goodness will conquer anything.)

In their own Easter messages, critics of President Rodrigo Duterte earlier called for an end to the "present darkness" in the Philippines.

Wishing the country a meaningful Easter, Duterte meanwhile encouraged Filipinos to be humble and to forgive one another.

Read Robredo's full Easter message below:

Nakikiisa po ako sa sambayanang Pilipino sa pagdiriwang ng Pasko ng Muling Pagkabuhay!

Napakahalaga po ng pistang ito, sapagkat ating inaalala ang dakilang sakripisyo ng Panginoong Hesukristo para sa ating lahat. Sa Kanyang muling pagbangon, tayong lahat ay nabuong muli at naghilom.

Sa pagtatapos ng Kuweresma, patuloy po tayong mag-alay ng dasal para sa ating bayan. Alalahanin natin ang mga nag-alay ng kanilang buhay sa ngalan ng kapayapaan at kalayaan.

Isabuhay natin ang mga turo ni Hesukristo sa ating pang-araw-araw na buhay. Tulad ng Kanyang ipinakitang halimbawa, kalingain natin ang mga nakalimutan, nawawala, at napag-iwanan.

Lagi nating tandaan: ang tunay na pagbabago ng bayan ay nagsisimula sa pagbabago ng sarili. Pagbabago na nakaugat sa pakikinig at pagrespeto sa kapwa. Pagbabago na pinipili ang pagtulong at pag-unawa.

Sa Kanyang pag-aalay ng sarili, binago ni Hesus ang mukha ng mundo. Ipinakita niya na mas makapangyarihan ang pag-ibig kaysa kamatayan; na kayang basagin ng liwanag ang kadiliman; at may mas magandang bukas tayo na laging maaasahan.

Paghugutan natin ito ng lakas at inspirasyon upang ipagpatuloy ang ating mga gawain para sa bayan. Magsilbi tayong tanglaw ng pag-asa sa pinakamalalayo at pinakamahihirap na komunidad. Maglakad tayo kasama nila, at bigyang-boses ang naaapi at mahina.

Magkakaiba man ang ating pinanggagalingan, magkakasalungat man ang ating paniniwala – naniniwala ako na mas malakas pa rin ang puwersa na nagbibigkis sa atin kaysa sa puwersang humahati sa ating bayan.

Sa panahon kung saan tila sinisiil ang demokrasya, sama-sama tayong tumindig at ipagtanggol ang karapatan ng bawat isa. Kapag tayo ay iisa, anumang kalbaryo ay kaya nating malampasan.

Ang tagumpay ng ating Panginoon laban sa kamatayan ay isang mahalagang paalala – na sa dulo ng lahat, mangingibabaw ang katotohanan, at ang mabuti ang siyang laging mananaig.

Muli, isang makabuluhan at mapagpalang Pasko ng Pagkabuhay sa ating lahat!

– Rappler.com

WATCH: Pope Francis leads Easter Sunday Mass

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EASTER VIGIL. Pope Francis holds the Paschal candle during the Easter Vigil at St Peter's Basilica on March 31, 2018, at the Vatican. Photo by AFP

MANILA, Philippines – Pope Francis is leading the Easter Sunday Mass at the Vatican on Sunday, April 1, as Catholics celebrate their greatest feast: Jesus' resurrection from the dead.

The Pope's Easter Sunday Mass began at 4 pm, Manila time. Francis is set to deliver his traditional Urbi et Orbi (To the City and To the World) after the liturgy.

Watch this livestream from the Vatican's YouTube page. – Rappler.com

Veteran Russian governor resigns over mall fire

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JUSTICE. Several thousand opposition supporters gather in tribute to the victims of a Siberian shopping mall fire at Pushkinskaya Square in downtown Moscow on March 27, 2018. Photo by Mladen Antonov/AFP

MOSCOW, Russia – Aman Tuleyev, the longtime governor of Russia's Kemerovo region where a huge mall fire killed at least 64 people including 41 children last weekend, resigned on Sunday, April 1. 

Tuleyev, who had been at the helm of the key coal-mining region since 1997, said in a video address that he could no longer remain at his post with "such a heavy burden" and added that his resignation was "the only right choice".

President Vladimir Putin accepted his resignation, the Kremlin said.

The fire ravaged a mall in the industrial city of Kemerovo in western Siberia last Sunday, a tragedy that plunged Russia into shock. 

Some parents lost all their children, and the youngest victim was a two-year-old toddler.

Many people who lost relatives have said they died because of the inaction of firefighters and police lacking the necessary equipment and skills.

Tuleyev himself came under heavy criticism for failing to visit the scene of the tragedy in the first few days or meet with angry relatives.

Putin – who travelled to Kemerovo last Tuesday, March 27 – had initially refused to sack the 73-year-old governor despite rare protests in the city.

Tuleyev apologized to the president over the rally – where protesters also called for Putin's resignation – calling its organizers troublemakers.

Officials have said that multiple safety rules were violated, the fire alarm system was not working and staff did not follow correct emergency procedures. 

Sergei Tsivilyov, who has been Tuleyev's deputy since March, has been appointed acting governor, the Kremlin said.

The ailing Tuleyev had long been expected to leave the post.

The coal-mining Kemerovo region of around 2.7 million people has traditionally been considered one of Russia's most troubled regions and some have feared that Tuleyev's departure could spark a leadership crisis there.

Tuleyev, who first became governor in the era of president Boris Yeltsin in 1997, is one of Russia's longest-serving top officials.

He was credited with helping pacify the region which was beset by miners' strikes in the turbulent 1990s but had come to symbolise the worst excesses of authoritarianism in his later years, critics say.

Polls to elect a new governor will be held in September. – Rappler.com

Prominent Bangladesh lawyer disappears after Islamist trials

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DHAKA, Bangladesh –  A prominent Bangladeshi lawyer who fought the state's case in a high-profile murder trial against Islamist extremists has disappeared, police said Sunday, April 1, with grave fears for his safety.

Ratish Chandra Bhowmik, a respected prosecutor and champion of minority rights, has not been seen since he left his home in Rangpur early Friday morning, March 30.

His disappearance comes a fortnight after seven militants from the Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh were sentenced to death for murdering the caretaker of a Sufi shrine in November 2015.

Bhowmik led the case that saw nearly a dozen hardliners from the homegrown extremist group convicted for killing the caretaker because they considered him a heretic.

Lawyers in the northern Bangladeshi city have staged protests calling for information about their colleague.

"We are concerned and worried," said Abdul Malek, a lawyer who represented the state with Bhowmik in the trial against the militants.

Bhowmik, a Hindu and leading cultural activist, also lead the state's prosecution against five JMB extremists sentenced to death for the murder of 66-year-old Japanese farmer Hoshi Kunio in 2015.

Rangpur regional police chief Khandaker Golam Faruque told AFP that Bhowmik had refused the offer of an armed escort during the high-profile trials.

"There was no threat against him. His family filed a complaint about his disappearance on Friday night," Faruque said.

JMB regrouped after the execution of its founder and top leadership in 2007 and has been blamed for a wave of attacks on religious minorities, atheist bloggers and foreigners in recent years. 

In July 2016, suspected JMB militants stormed a Dhaka cafe and massacred 22 hostages, including 18 foreigners, in an assault claimed by the Islamic State group.

Bangladesh has been waging a campaign against JMB and other homegrown militant outfits in the wake of the attacks. 

Security forces have shot dead more than 70 alleged militants in a crackdown since the cafe assault.

Hundreds of suspected Islamists have also been arrested, and scores have been sentenced to death. – Rappler.com

Egypt says 6 jihadists, 2 soldiers killed in Sinai operation

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CAIRO, Egypt – Six jihadists and two Egyptian soldiers were killed last week during a sweeping operation against Islamic State group militants in the Sinai Peninsula, the army said on Sunday, April 1.

The army launched the campaign on February 9 after Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who this week won a second term, gave it a 3-month deadline to crush IS in the Sinai.

Army spokesman Tamer Rifai in a statement said the 6 jihadists were killed in an exchange of fire in the north of the Sinai, as the army launched a raid against a "very dangerous terrorist cell".

An officer and a soldier were also killed last week and two other troops wounded, he said.

During the same period the army arrested more than 500 "wanted criminals" and prevented 169 people of various nationalities from infiltrating across the western border with Libya, the military said.

Since the campaign was launched, more than 100 jihadists and at least 22 soldiers have been killed, according to official figures.

Sisi won a second term with 96.9% of valid votes during this week's presidential election, in which he faced only one candidate, state media reported on Friday.

The National Election Authority is scheduled to announce the full official result on Monday, April 2.

In November Sisi, a former army chief, issued an ultimatum to the army to crush the jihadists after suspected IS gunmen massacred more than 300 worshippers at a Sinai mosque associated with Sufi Muslim mystics.

Security forces have sought to quell attacks by an Egyptian jihadist group that later declared allegiance to ISIS since the military ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in 2013, following mass protests against him.

The group has killed hundreds of soldiers, policemen and civilians, mainly in its North Sinai stronghold but also elsewhere in Egypt.

The jihadists have also killed scores of Christians in church bombings and shootings. – Rappler.com


'Out of control' space lab to become celestial fireball on April 2 – China

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SPACE PROGRAM. Chinese technicians at the Jiuquan Space Center monitor the Shenzhou-9 spacecraft as it prepares to link with the Tiangong-1 module. File photo from AFP

BEIJING, China – A defunct space laboratory is set to become a celestial fireball as it reenters Earth's atmosphere in the next 24 hours, China's space authority said Sunday, April 1, hitting speeds of over 26,000 kilometers an hour before disintegrating.

The Tiangong-1 is expected to make an uncontrolled earthbound plunge on Monday, April 2, Beijing time, China Manned Space said in a statement, an estimate roughly in line with European Space Agency (ESA) projections.

The abandoned 8-ton craft is unlikely to cause any damage when it comes down, but its fiery disintegration will offer a "splendid" show akin to a meteor shower, Chinese authorities said previously.

The reentry window remains "highly variable" and the debris from the lab could land anywhere between the latitudes of 43 degrees north and 43 degrees south – from New Zealand to the American Midwest, the ESA said.

There is "no need for people to worry", the China Manned Space Engineering Office said earlier on its WeChat social media account.

Such falling spacecraft do "not crash into the Earth fiercely like in sci-fi movies, but turn into a splendid [meteor shower] and move across the beautiful starry sky as they race towards the Earth," it said.

Tiangong-1 – or "Heavenly Palace" – was placed in orbit in September 2011, an important step in China's efforts towards building its own space station.

The module – which was used to practice complicated manual and automatic docking techniques – was originally intended to be used for just two years, but ended up serving considerably longer.

It had been slated for a controlled reentry, but ceased functioning in March 2016. Space enthusiasts have been bracing for its fiery return since.

Out of control?

During its brief lifespan, it hosted Chinese astronauts on several occasions as they performed experiments and even taught a class that was broadcast into schools across the country.

Beijing began its manned spaceflight program in 1990 after buying Russian technology which enabled it to become the 3rd country to send humans into space following the former Soviet Union and the United States.

China sent another lab, Tiangong-2, into orbit in September 2016 as a stepping stone to its goal of having a crewed space station by 2022.

It also plans to send a manned mission to the moon in the future.

Chinese media has downplayed comments by the ESA and others that the country's engineers have lost control of the lab, with reports saying that the idea it is "out of control" is an invention of the foreign media.

On Chinese social media, commenters criticized the government's reluctance to own up to the situation.

"Can you or can't you report that you've lost control of the situation?" one commenter wrote on the Twitter-like Weibo.

"It's not unusual that something this complicated would have a mishap." – Rappler.com

Estrada PDAF puts gov't firm's ex-officials in hot water

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MANILA, Philippines – The Commission on Audit (COA) denied the petition of two former top officials of the Zamboanga del Norte Agricultural College Rubber Estate Corporation (ZREC), saying they were liable for the illegal transfer of P4.713 million from former senator Jinggoy Estrada's Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF).

In a decision released in March this year, the COA denied ZREC former president Salvador S. Salacup and treasurer Eduardo C. Nolasco's petition that sought relief from accountability over the transaction, which was eventually disallowed.

The two ZREC officials said they acted in good faith when they allowed the project to push through, and said they did not have control over the funds, since the authority comes from their Board of Directors. They added that they merely relied on the endorsement from the office of Estrada and assumed that it had undergone the scrutiny of their subordinates in ZREC.

But the COA said they could not merely pass on the blame to their staff since they were obliged to conduct their own assessment of the PDAF-funded project.

According to its decision, the P4.713 million was intended to be used for a program called "Increasing Farmers’ Productivity through the Conduct of Livelihood Training" for farmers in Lamitan, Basilan. The project was supposed to be implemented by Pangkabuhayan Foundation Inc. (PFI).

PFI managed to get over P201 million from the PDAFs of legislators from 2009 and 2010, according to an earlier COA report.

In the case of the Lamitan project, COA found that there were no supporting documents to prove that the project happened in the first place. The COA found, in particular, that the following were not submitted:

  • memorandum of agreement signed between the GOCC and the NGO; 
  • disclosure by the PFI of related business and structure of ownership; 
  • work and financial Plan; 
  • completed project proposal including objectives, target beneficiaries, feasibility studies, risk assessments and plans; 
  • sworn affidavit of NGO officials attesting that none of them is related to any government agency involved in the project; 
  • disbursement vouchers and other related financial papers; 
  • liquidation report on how the PDAF money was spent

Back in 2013, the COA issued a notice of suspension because of the lack of these documents. Salacup, Nolasco, and PFI were liable for the lack of documents. Over 4 months passed without the submission of documents, prompting COA to disallow the project and require the full refund of the funds.

Estrada was arrested, but later was allowed to post bail, over the alleged misuse of his PDAF. – Rappler.com

Russia deal to evacuate civilians from Ghouta main town

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SOLDIERS. Syrian government forces brandish their weapons while standing on an armoured personnel carrier after entering al-Shifoniya as they advance in the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta area on March 4, 2018. File photo by AFP

MOSCOW, Russia – Syria's regime moved closer Sunday, April 1, to fully retaking the rebel enclave of Eastern Ghouta after its Russian ally agreed with rebels to evacuate hundreds of civilians from a final pocket.

Tens of thousands people are thought to remain in the battered town of Douma, the last rebel holdout and their one-time bastion east of the capital Damascus.

Russia-backed regime forces have seized more than 95% of Eastern Ghouta in a 6-week air and ground blitz that has displaced tens of thousands from their homes.

People have fled the fighting into regime-held territory, while so far more than 45,000 fighters and civilians in total have been bussed out under evacuation deals.

"A partial agreement was reached to evacuate hundreds of civilians who wish to leave for Idlib", a northwestern province still largely outside regime control, a Britain-based war monitor said on Sunday.

In all, around 1,300 people would be evacuated from Douma under the deal, the head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights told Agence France-Presse, adding that talks on the fate of rebels who hold Douma were still underway.

"Negotiations were continuing for a full agreement, including concerning the Jaish al-Islam" rebel faction, Rami Abdel Rahman said.

In other parts of the bastion, Russia-brokered accords have already seen thousands of fighters and civilians climb onto buses and head north to Idlib.

More than 4,000 people left the devastated town of Harasta last week under a deal with the Ahrar al-Sham rebel group.

And more than 41,000 evacuated a southern pocket including the town of Arbin this week under another deal with the Faylaq al-Rahman opposition faction.

'No more homes'

But talks have dragged on in Douma, with Jaish al-Islam insisting it would not leave the town, the main one in Eastern Ghouta.

A civilian committee taking part in the negotiations with Russia on Saturday said a deal had been reached "to evacuate humanitarian cases to northern Syria".

It gave no further details nor did it say when the planned evacuations would start.

As talks have stalled for Douma, residents there have grown nervous about their fate.

"Of course I would rather leave. There are no more homes here, not a single place to settle," said Abu Rateb, 30.

"But I won't go to regime-held areas to join ranks with the Syrian army," he said, adding he would prefer to go to Idlib.

Haitham, 38, a media activist who did not give his surname, said he would rather stay in his hometown.

"To abandon your home is to abandon your soul," he said. 

"But if they give us the choice of dying or leaving, it will be another matter."

Reports of the planned evacuations come after Syria's army on Saturday vowed to finish off rebels in Douma, the main town in Eastern Ghouta.

A statement said the military would press on with "fighting in the area of Douma to rid it of terrorism", in reference to the rebels.

That announcement came after Syria's state news agency SANA reported the southern pocket of Eastern Ghouta was "empty of terrorism" as the last buses left it on Saturday afternoon, March 31.

The regime assault since February 18 has killed more than 1,600 civilians, the Observatory says, and devastated entire neighborhoods.

Tens of thousands of people have hit the roads, with their belongings stuffed into bags or carrying blankets, to flee out of the enclave into regime-held territory. – Rappler.com

Indian scientists lose contact with satellite

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LIFT OFF. Indian onlookers watch as the Indian Space Research Organization's GSAT-6A communications satellite launches on the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV-F08) from Sriharikota in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh on March 29, 2018. Photo by Arun Sankar/AFP

NEW DELHI, India – India's national space agency has lost contact with a satellite days after it was launched into orbit with much fanfare, authorities said Sunday, April 1.

The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) lost communication with the GSAT-6A satellite as it prepared to undertake its 3rd and final orbiting manoeuvre on Saturday, March 31.

"Efforts are underway to establish the link with the satellite," ISRO said in a statement.

The satellite – an indigenous model weighing more than 2,000 tonnes – was designed to improve communications for the armed forces.

It was launched from the southern state of Andhra Pradesh on Thursday.

The space programme is a source of much pride in India and an achievement that highlights its emergence as a rising power and major world economy.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi hailed the launch Thursday, saying he was "proud of @isro for taking the nation towards new heights and a brighter future".

The launch was seen as another feather in the cap for ISRO scientists, who won Asia's race to Mars in 2014 when an Indian spacecraft reached the Red Planet on a shoestring budget.

That feat burnished India's reputation as a reliable low-cost option for space exploration, with its $73 million price tag drastically undercutting NASA's Maven Mars $671-million mission.

In February last year India put a record 104 satellites into orbit from a single rocket, surpassing Russia which launched 39 satellites in one mission in June 2014.

But the Indian space programme has also been blighted by failures, most recently in August last year when a mission to launch a backup navigation satellite suffered a major technical glitch. – Rappler.com

Afghanistan to hold legislative elections after years of delays

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PEACEFUL. Afghan women cast their ballots at a local polling station in Kabul on April 5, 2014. File photo by Shah Marai/AFP

KABUL, Afghanistan – Afghanistan's legislative elections will be held on October 20, officials said Sunday, April 1, following 3 years of delays as the war-torn country grapples with a resurgent Taliban and political instability.

The polls were originally set to be held in 2015 following presidential elections the previous year, but were repeatedly pushed back due to security fears and logistical issues within the fragile unity government.

If held, candidates will contest the 249 seats in the National Assembly for five-year terms. The country will also hold regional elections in tandem in some 400 districts across Afghanistan – several of which are outside of Kabul's control.

"Holding elections is not an easy job in Afghanistan," said Abdul Badi Sayad, Afghanistan's election commission chief, adding that voters will be able to apply for registration cards in mid-April before candidates formally declare.

The polls come just months ahead of the presidential elections scheduled for April 2019.

However, western diplomats continue to express doubt over the government's ability to oversee the project amid heightened security threats countrywide. 

Following the announcement, the United Nations lauded the commission's move, but called for the inclusion of all Afghans in the process.

"The participation of all Afghans in the electoral process, not merely the elections themselves, is critical," said Tadamichi Yamamoto, the UN secretary-general's special representative for Afghanistan.

Questions continue to linger over how polling will be held in contested areas and if Afghans lacking identity cards and those displaced by conflict will be eligible to vote.

Taliban and Islamic State militants have been ramping up attacks in Kabul in recent months, piling pressure on the Afghan government, which is frequently scolded for its inability to protect civilians.

The Taliban has been resurgent since the withdrawal of US-led NATO combat troops in late 2014, seizing chunks of territory and blistering Afghanistan's beleaguered security forces.

Last month, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani extended an olive branch to the Taliban, suggesting that if they are prepared to negotiate they could be recognised as a political party with a legitimate role in Afghanistan's future.

The group replied with a muted response and has continued to launch attacks across the country.

In October, insurgents controlled or influenced nearly half of Afghanistan's districts -- double the percentage in 2015, the US government's office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction said in January.

Over the same period, the watchdog said, the number of districts under Afghan government control or influence fell to its lowest level since December 2015. – Rappler.com

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