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An ill-fated meeting with a presidential sister

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MANILA, Philippines – Mark Tolentino never expected his meeting in Taguig with the President's younger sister to put him under the national spotlight and at the mercy of the President's ire.

This was apparent as he publicly apologized to President Rodrigo Duterte after getting sacked for supposedly "dealing" with one of the chief executive's sisters in relation to the big-ticket Mindanao Railway Project.

Malacañang never bared the identity of the sister. But Tolentino admitted on Friday, May 25, that it was Jocellyn Duterte. The President has one other sister, the eldest of their brood, Eleanore.

Tolentino said he met Jocellyn in Bonifacio Global City around a month ago. He claimed it was a "courtesy call" by the presidential sister, which he accommodated because "how can you say 'no'?"

But most of the meeting, he insisted, was a lively exchange of notes on how their families were connected.

Tolentino hails from Cabadbaran, Agusan del Norte, the hometown of the President's mother, Soledad Roa Duterte. Nanay Soleng, as she was fondly called by Davaoeños, had sold copra to Tolentino's grandfather.

But Jocellyn also wanted to know how the Mindanao Railway Project was progressing. Tolentino said it was their shared dream for their home region to have its first modern railway.

But the transportation official had advised Jocellyn to write to Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade who called the shots on the project.

Jocellyn did end up writing to Tugade, mentioning Tolentino in her letter.

Tolentino said she even endorsed him as "Undersecretary for Mindanao Affairs," which would be a promotion for him.

Fast forward to the press conference he gave on May 18. Unwisely, Tolentino thought it would help his case to mention a member of the First Family's wish for the Mindanao Railway's speedy implementation.

This would impress upon "higher ups" causing the delay of the project that such foot-dragging would not be tolerated. 

But the move backfired.

Last January, Malacañang announced a directive from President Duterte to government officials and employees not to accommodate requests from any family member or relative of his in connection with any government deal or transaction.

'In good faith'

Even before their meeting, Tolentino and Jocellyn had already been communicating. Every now and then, the President's sister would call Tolentino, a lawyer, for help in understanding some legal matters. 

Tolentino said he's also had the chance to meet Bong Duterte, a brother of the President's.

However, all these interactions were personal in nature and had nothing to do with his government work, he said.

While the warning against accomodating Duterte's relatives is branded as part of the administration's efforts against corruption, Tolentino stressed that he is not corrupt.

Calling himself an "idealist", he said that everything he has done is out of concern for the timely completion of the Mindanao Railway.

"In good faith, gusto ko lang talaga matapos on time ang Mindanao Railway. Kasi 'yun lang ang ambisyon ng mga ordinaryong taga-Mindanao, lalo na sa Davao area, Davao region," he said.

(I just really want the Mindanao Railway to be finished on time. Because that is the ambition of ordinary Mindanaoans, especially in the Davao region.)

Tolentino resigned from his regional post with PDP-Laban, Duterte's political party, 4 months ago.

With his government post gone too, he said he will return to private law practice. He's done with public service for now. – Rappler.com


Floirendo pleads not guilty to graft, allowed to travel with Duterte

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TADECO DEAL. Davao del Norte 2nd District Representative Antonio Floirendo Jr pleads not guilty to one count of graft. Photo courtesy of Malacañang

MANILA, Philippines – Davao del Norte 2nd District Representative Antonio Floirendo Jr pleaded not guilty to one count of graft before the anti-graft court Sandiganbayan on Friday, May 25. This was over the alleged anomalous Tagum Agricultural Development Company (Tadeco) deal.

The court also approved Floirendo’s travel motion to be part of President Rodrigo Duterte’s delegation to South Korea. The President will visit South Korea from June 3 to 5 where he is set to meet with South Korean President Moon Jae In.

Floirendo is charged with graft for having financial interest in the government’s deal with Tadeco, a company his family owns. The Davao Penal Colony (Dapecol) leased 5,000 hectares of land to Tadeco to use for their banana plantation business. 

Floirendo's pre-trial will start at the Sandiganbayan 6th Division on August 15. The prosecution said they have lined up 18 witnesses, while Floirendo has 4.

This is an interesting dynamic in the relations surrounding Duterte. Floirendo is a close friend of the President, and was also Duterte’s top campaign financier.

The one who sued Floirendo is House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez, also a top ally of the President. Floirendo and Alvarez were longtime friends before this spat, allegedly a result of their quarrelling girlfriends.

Alvarez recently earned the ire of Duterte’s daughter, Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte Carpio, over the latter’s regional party Hugpong ng Pagbabago (HNP).

The last time that Floirendo and Duterte were together for a trip was in April when the President went to China to meet President Xi Jinping. – Rappler.com

DTI sees lower sales in IFEX 2018

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FRESH PRODUCE. A participant of the 12th International Food Exhibition (IFEX) cooks fresh, locally-produced vegetables for potential business partners to tase. Photo by Ralf Rivas

MANILA, Philippines— Food exhibitors are expected to generate some $150 million* or P7.8 billion in the 12th International Food Exhibition (IFEX) 2018. The figure is $34 million less than what was generated in 2017.

IFEX 2018 opened on Friday, May 25, at the World Trade Center in Pasay City with around 450 local and international food producers and will last until Sunday. The program is organized by the Center for International Trade Expositions and Missions (CITEM), the export promotion arm of DTI.

DTI Undersecretary Nora Terrado explained that there is a rationale behind the “conservative estimate.”

“If you will look at the floor today, you will see that most are developmental. You will see less of the large enterprises. this is the platform to introduce innovative products that are ready for export,” Terrado said.

Terrado also emphasized that many of the participants are first timers.

MINDANAO PAVILION. Products from Mindanao takes center stage in IFEX 2018. Photo by Ralf Rivas

The 3-day event featured a Mindanao Pavilion, highlighting the native flavors and in-demand products from southern island. Some of the products include Halal-certified products, seafood, and healthy food products.

Over to the Visayas Pavillion, piyaya, muscovado sugar, gourmet tuyo, and dried seafood took center stage. 

Meanwhile, the International Hall featured renowned firms from China, Thailand, Korea, Indonesia, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam, Russia, and Spain.

“My gut feel is that I think the difference will come from the local market. The sale from the local market there will be a lot more local orders from institutional buyers,” Terrado added.

FRESH FRUITS. A booth of the Department of Agriculture in IFEX 2018 showcases mangosteen, avocado, and durian. Photo by Ralf Rivas

She also pointed out that the target for 2017 was just $150 million as well, but the outcome exceeded expectations.

The high exhibitor and buyer turnout from previous editions have translated to export and local sales totaling to $365.6 million since 2014.

Top buyers came from the United States, Japan, Singapore, China, United Arab Emirates, South Korea, Malaysia, Australia, Taiwan, and Canada.

Seafood and marine products have been consistently the most in-demand, followed by fresh and processed food and vegetables, fine food and specialties, organic products, and confectionaries. 

To streamline export deals, the DTI-CITEM opened its “IFEX Connect” program, a customized platform for integrated business-to-business matching service to help buyers identify and screen potential business partners among the exhibitors.— Rappler.com

*$1 = P52.60

DSWD awards P1B Marawi contracts to suppliers with limited capacity

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RUINS. Residents allowed to visit their destroyed houses at the main battle area carry salvageable belongings they collected as they pas a destroyed building in Marawi City, in southern island of Mindanao on April 1, 2018. Photo by Ted Aljbe/AFP

MANILA, Philippines – The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) awarded over P1 billion worth of contracts for relief goods for families displaced by the Marawi siege to malls and store chains with “limited financing capacity.” 

In a report released this week, the Philippine Center of Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) said 9 companies got a total of P1.1 billion in contracts from the DSWD Field Office Region XII (DSWD-FO XII) in Soccsksargen.

The top 3 suppliers cornered 13 supply contracts totalling P1.09 billion:

  • Tacurong Fitmart - 7 supply contracts worth P806.8 million
  • Ororama Supercenter - 3 supply contracts worth P158.8 million
  • Ace Centerpoint - 3 supply contracts worth P128.9 million

Data gathered by PCIJ showed the financial statements of these malls and store chains may not have been able to handle such projects. 

“The big mystery is why DSWD-FO XII awarded contracts in the hundreds of millions of pesos to malls and store chains with medium-size assets and little or limited financing capacity,” PCIJ said.

Other contracts were awarded to several suppliers listed in the following infographic:

Graphic by Philippine Center of Investigative Journalism

Under the terms of the contract, suppliers were to deliver hygiene kits, "family kits," kitchen kits, food packs, and other groceries purchased for displaced residents of Marawi City.

According to the report, the prices for these goods were as follows: P249 per malong, P795 per sleeping kit, P858 per Ramadhan pack, P1,800 per hygiene kit, and P2,325 per family kit.

Graphic by the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism

The contracts were awarded from June 5 to December 29, 2017, as “a shopping frenzy allowed the top three suppliers to alternately or simultaneously bag huge to mammoth contracts from DSWD-FO XII nearly month on month.”

Delays

Since the awarding of contracts in 2017, however, relief goods have yet to be fully delivered to families from Marawi City.

The PCIJ said suppliers were required to deliver the goods “within seven days” upon the receipt of notice to proceed, as stated in several of the contracts. The goods were to be delivered directly to evacuation centers and temporary shelter sites in Marawi city and other parts of Mindanao.

Despite this, officials from the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao – where Marawi City is located – have reported several delays, with the last distribution of relief goods at emergency centers taking place last March 2.

Meanwhile, DSWD-FO XII’s last distribution of goods for displaced Marawi residents, both home-based and at emergency centers, was on January 10.

The report noted the long distance between malls and Marawi City may have been a factor in the delay in the delivery of relief goods.

The farthest mall, Ace Ceterpoint, is based in Koronadal City, South Cotabato – a nearly-7-hour drive from Marawi City. Tacurong Fitmart, based in Sultan Kudarat, is over 6 hours away, while Ororama Supercenter is located about two and a half hours from Marawi City. – Rappler.com

Read the full PCIJ report here

One family, 4 countries – the dispossession of the Rohingya

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ONE FAMILY. In this photograph taken on April 7, 2018, Rohingya Muslim refugees (from left) Robi Alam, 16; Mohammad Hashim, 17; Mohammad Jaber, 18; and Abul Faiz, 12, pose for a photograph at their house in Kutupalong refugee camp in Bangladesh. Photo by Munir Uz Zaman/AFP

KUTUPALONG, Bangladesh – It takes a few moments to sift through the years of chaos and dislocation before Rohingya refugee Robi Alam settles on the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr, August 2012, as the last time he saw his seven brothers together in Myanmar.

"We were still a family then under one roof, in one country," the 16-year-old says, from his current home – a bamboo shack in a Bangladesh refugee camp.

By then Myanmar had already lurched into a dark new phase of an old conflict between their Muslim Rohingya minority and the Buddhist ethnic Rakhine.

Violence unravelled after the alleged rape and murder of a Buddhist woman by Rohingya men; neighbor turned on neighbor as villages across Rakhine state were set ablaze.

Still, where they could, Rohingya families celebrated Eid, the end of the fasting month of ramadan.

Robi recalls being carried on his older siblings' shoulders as they went door-to-door through the village of Yae Twin Kyun in Maungdaw district gorging on snacks.

Nearly six years on, the 8 brothers are now split across 4 countries: Bangladesh, India, the United States and Myanmar.

One is in a Myanmar jail, another has vanished on the treacherous trafficking route south – a painful family history that traces the key events in the dispossession of the Rohingya in Myanmar, and their dispersal overseas.

When the brothers were last united, in 2012, there were around 1.2 million Rohingya living in Rakhine state.

Now fewer than a third remain.

Myanmar, which denies the Rohingya citizenship, drove most of the minority out in October 2016 and August 2017 in army-led crackdowns that the United Nations has said may amount to "ethnic cleansing".

Separated from their four older brothers, the younger siblings - Robi, Jaber, 18, Hashim, 17, and Faiz, 12 – are starting new lives as refugees.

For now, home remains a 10-meter hut covered by a UN-branded tarpaulin in the Kutupalong camp, which the brothers share with 15 other relatives including their mother.

"We can't work here, it's a place we know nothing about," says Robi. "But how do we go back to Myanmar again?"

Mohammad Rashid 

The first of the brothers to flee Rakhine was Mohammad Rashid.

It was early 2013, and by then conditions described as "apartheid-like" by Amnesty International were biting hard, with Rohingya locked out from hospitals, schools and their own farms.

Worn down by the asphyxiating security controls, Rashid crossed the Naf River into Bangladesh, paying a broker $355 to take him to Malaysia, where menial jobs await Rohingya.

Robi shows a photo on his mobile phone of the 25-year-old on the day of his departure – staring confidently back, an arm slung around a cousin.

"We haven't heard from him since."

Rashid disappeared as a transnational trafficking network was at its peak, spinning a fortune carrying a desperate human cargo of Rohingya and Bangladeshi economic migrants south by sea.

They docked in Thailand, where gangs – including a powerful southern army general – corralled the migrants overland to Malaysia.

That escape route collapsed in May 2015, when shallow graves of migrants were found pitting the hills along the Thai-Malaysia border.

Authorities closed in on the traffickers, who abandoned migrant boats in the Andaman Sea, leaving starving and dehydrated passengers to drift south, hoping for rescue by Thai, Malaysian and Indonesian authorities.

No one knows exactly how many died in the migrant camps or at sea.

Abdur Rashid 

His older brother had disappeared, but Abdur Rashid chose the same escape route.

"I tried to stop him, I begged him," his mother Khadija Begum says.

"But he is stubborn. He said 'I will swim to Malaysia if I can't get a boat' and so he went."

His months-long odyssey, which began around early 2014, eventually led to resettlement in the United States, via detention in Thai immigration facilities.

"I wasn't scared. It was pre-destined," the 23-year-old told AFP from Colorado, where he is now learning English and working in a cake factory.

"After 10 days at sea we were near Thailand... we came to shore in smaller boats, 50-60 people on each, but when we landed Thai police, military and even journalists were there," he said.

Thailand does not accept refugees and so, after several months in immigration detention, the UNHCR secured the US move – but resettlement is open to only a tiny number of Rohingya refugees.

He moved in 2017 and, when he can, sends money to his brothers 8,000 miles away in the world's biggest refugee camp.

Abul Kashim 

Violence and repression have hit the Rohingya in waves since the late 1970s.

In 1982 Myanmar's ruling junta stripped the Muslim minority of citizenship, stirring up hatred towards the group and casting them as "Bengali" infiltrators to the Buddhist-majority country.

As such, life in Rakhine has always been hard, says Jaber, the oldest of the four brothers in the Kutupalong camp.

"But after the violence started in 2012, the "Moghs" (a pejorative word for ethnic Rakhine) gradually took everything."

Rohingya who strayed from their villages were frequently lynched or beaten, he says – allegations backed up by rights monitors.

One of the brothers, Abul Kashim, now 19, suffered a beating while fishing with friends.

A teenager at the time, he was jolted into leaving by the brutality of the attack, first for Bangladesh, then overland to join an uncle in India.

For now, he has a made a decent life – he is married and works as a mason in Haryana state.

But India has threatened to deport 40,000 of the minority.

"I miss my family," he told AFP, saying each phone call leaves a yearning to travel to Bangladesh.

"But I can't. I don't have any travel documents."

Hamid Hussein 

On October 9, 2016, Rakhine again went up in flames as a nascent Rohingya militant group – known now as the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) – raided border posts.

The army response was swift and unforgiving.

Tens of thousands of Rohingya were driven into Bangladesh, fleeing murders, rapes and mass arrests.

The crackdown visited more tragedy on Robi Alam's family.

Their 60-year-old father Nagu Miah was arrested and, the family alleges, beaten to death in police custody.

Confined to their homes with food running scarce, the oldest brother Hamid Hussein, 28, defied a strict curfew and went fishing after his children complained of eating rice every day.

He was arrested by soldiers and taken to Buthidaung jail.

Soon after, soldiers swarmed their village, ordering Rohingya residents to sit hands on their heads in a field as they ransacked homes.

"Then they started to burn our homes, they raped some women and pushed them inside burning homes," says 17-year-old Mohammad Hashim, from Kutupalong camp.

"We could not stay any longer."

Over the next six weeks the extended family crept over to Bangladesh.

In August 2017, another 700,000 others began to join them after an even more ferocious army crackdown.

With their land taken and security still parlous, Robi and his family have little expectation of returning to Rakhine.

Instead they are preparing for long-term life as refugees.

And in their freshly trimmed haircuts, football shirts and fixation with mobile phones, there are even flickers of teenage normality in the most abnormal of circumstances.

But the fragmentation of their family is never far away.

Through the smudged memories of life in Rakhine, the youngest brother Abul Faiz recalls flecks of freedom -- playing football or fishing -- as a child in Rakhine.

"My older brothers would hug me, give me money for the shop," the watchful youngster adds in a near-whisper. 

"I miss them." – Rappler.com

 

Guevarra extends Sister Patricia Fox’s deadline to leave PH

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EXTENDED. DOJ allows Sr. Patricia Fox to stay until June 18. Photo by Maria Tan/Rappler

MANILA, Philippines - Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra extended the deadline for Australian nun Sister Patricia Fox to leave the Philippines, which was originally set on Friday, May 25.

Guevarra issued an order late afternoon Friday, or merely hours after Fox filed a petition for review before the Department of Justice (DOJ), where he said that the nun has until June 18 to leave the country.

By this, Guevarra effectively extended Fox’s stay. The main content of Guevarra’s order on Friday was to require the Bureau of Immigration (BI) to comment on Fox’s petition within 10 days. After the BI comment, Fox can file a reply within 5 days.

Fox’s missionary visa was forfeited over her alleged participation in political rallies.

Why the extension? Guevarra had a different computation of days with the BI.

On April 23, the BI forfeited Fox’s missionary visa and ordered her to leave the country within 30 days of receipt. That was May 25, according to the BI, which means Fox received the order on April 25.

However, Guevarra said that the 30-day count “was interrupted” when Fox filed a motion for reconsideration with the BI on April 30. That’s five days from receipt, which Guevarra said means five days less of the 30-day count.

On May 23, BI denied the motion and affirmed its order for Fox to leave.

“Upon denial of said Motion for Reconsideration, petitioner had a remaining period of 25 days from May 24, 2018, the date when she was served a copy of the order denying her motion for reconsideration, or until 18 June 2018 within which to leave the country,” Guevarra said.

Order to comment. In his order, Guevarra reiterated that the DOJ “exercises supervision and control over the BI.”

After both BI and Fox submit their comment and reply, Guevarra said the DOJ may also call for “clarificatory hearings.”

“The Office reserves the right to call such clarificatory hearings as may be necessary to arrive at a just resolution of this appeal,” Guevarra said.

Fox ran to the DOJ on Friday, appealing that the justice department reinstate her missionary visa. Fox said photos of her in rallies do not constitute clear grounds for visa cancelation stated on the Immigration Law.

The BI had previously said that Fox cannot defy the order by simply filing a petition at the DOJ. The BI said Fox would need a decision from the DOJ to stop the implementation of the order.

They added that if Fox doesn’t leave by Friday, May 25, she will be slapped with a new deportation complaint.

BI Spokesperson Dana Sandoval has not replied to Rappler’s request for comment on this new developlent as of writing time.

Fox is not considered deported yet. She may return to the country on a tourist visa, according to BI. – Rappler.com

Harvey Weinstein charged with rape, sex crimes by New York police

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GIVES UP. Harvey Weinstein turns himself in to the New York Police Department's First Precinct after he is served with criminal charges by the Manhattan District Attorney's office on May 25, 2018 in New York City. Photo by Kevin Hagen/Getty Images/AFP

NEW YORK, USA (UPDATED) – Disgraced Hollywood powerbroker Harvey Weinstein was arrested and charged Friday, May 25,  with rape and sex crimes on two women, nearly 8 months after his career imploded in a blaze of assault accusations that triggered the global #MeToo movement.

The former mogul – once the toast of Hollywood and whose films won scores of Oscars – is expected to appear before a Manhattan court later on Friday morning, where he is expected to plead not guilty.

The New York police department announced in a brief statement he was "arrested, processed and charged with rape, criminal sex act, sex abuse and sexual misconduct for incidents involving two separate women."

They mark the first criminal charges against the twice-married, shamed former titan faces criminal charges, despite being hit by a slew of civil lawsuits and reportedly being under federal investigation.

"The NYPD thanks these brave survivors for their courage to come forward and seek justice," the New York police department said in a statement.

The 66-year-old former studio boss walked into the downtown Manhattan police station shortly before 7:30 am wearing a white shirt, pale blue sweater and dark blazer before a mob of television cameras and photographers.

He stepped out of a black SUV, clutching several books – what appeared to be the Rodgers and Hammerstein biography "Something Wonderful," a book on director Elia Kazan and a black Moleskine-type notebook – and looking glum as he walked up the steps into the station.

Weinstein was understood to have had his mugshots and fingerprints taken at the station, close to his former Miramax office in Tribeca and the Manhattan townhouse he once shared with his estranged wife.

Bail package

As part of a bail package negotiated in advance, he will put up $1 million in cash and will agree to wear a monitoring device. His travel will be restricted and he will surrender his passport, The New York Times reported.

The Manhattan district attorney's office and police have been investigating Weinstein for months, coming under growing pressure from the Time's Up movement and Hollywood actresses to bring the disgraced producer to justice.

Lucia Evans, who said Weinstein forced her into oral sex in 2004, is thought to be at least one of the women whose cases triggered charges.

New York police have previously confirmed an active Weinstein investigation regarding Evans, who was an aspiring actress at the time, and a credible rape allegation after "Boardwalk Empire" actress Paz de la Huerta accused the former producer of raping her twice at her New York apartment in late 2010.

Ben Brafman, Weinstein's powerful defense attorney, has declined to comment on his client's planned surrender.

Weinstein's career went down in flames last October over sexual assault allegations following bombshell articles in The New York Times and New Yorker, which sparked a sexual harassment watershed across the United States.

More than 100 women have since accused Weinstein of crimes ranging from sexual harassment to assault and rape going back 40 years.

Salma Hayek, Gwyneth Paltrow and Angelina Jolie are among than two dozen actresses who say they were sexually harassed by the producer. A few, including Asia Argento and Rose McGowan, said they were raped.

The outpouring saw people around the world come forward with cases of sexual mistreatment, leading to resignations and sackings of powerful men across industries, and the disgrace of Oscar winner Kevin Spacey.

Stop, don't' 

Evans, now a marketing consultant, told The New Yorker that Weinstein approached her in a club in 2004 and that an assistant subsequently set up a daytime meeting at the Miramax office in Tribeca.

"He forced me to perform oral sex on him," she said. "I said, over and over, 'I don't want to do this, stop, don't,'" she added.

Weinstein has denied any non-consensual sex and has reportedly been in treatment for sex addiction.

His downfall has seen his Weinstein Company file for bankruptcy, his fashion designer wife, Georgina Chapman, leave him and sparked police investigations in London and Los Angeles.

But for all the media hoopla Friday, experts warn that any trial – let alone a criminal conviction – would still be a long way off.

Sexual assault cases, particularly those that allegedly happened years ago, are notoriously hard to prosecute and often lack substantive forensic evidence.

Weinstein's lawyer Brafman is one of America's most celebrated criminal defense attorneys.

His past clients include former IMF boss Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who ultimately escaped criminal prosecution for alleged sexual assault in 2011.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, whose case against Strauss-Kahn fell apart, has been heavily criticized for failing to bring a criminal case against Weinstein for allegedly groping and harassing Italian model Ambra Battilana. – Rappler.com

 

Women can’t stand threats? Netizens tell Duterte to ‘go back to the last century’

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MANILA, Philippines – President Rodrigo Duterte is once again under fire for his demeaning remarks against women.

In a speech on Thursday, May 24, Duterte said that he believes in the "competence and capability" of women but that it does not apply to all aspects of life.

“I believe in the woman, the competence and capability, pero hindi lahat sa buhay dapat. Hindi ka, hindi, hindi. Dapat lang. It’s not appropriate,” the President said. (READ: Duterte: I believe in women's competence, but not in all aspects)

He said women "could not stand threats and intimidation."

Netizens were quick to protest Duterte's statements, saying the President should put an end to these kinds of sexist stereotyping of women.

{source}<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A President must be prim and proper too <a href="https://twitter.com/RRD_Davao?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@RRD_Davao</a> <br><br>Stop these sexist stereotyping. <a href="https://t.co/yOBDn4zFQz">https://t.co/yOBDn4zFQz</a></p>&mdash; KyahMJ (@UniQuintessence) <a href="https://twitter.com/UniQuintessence/status/999987943522496512?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2018</a></blockquote>

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">My mother is one of the strongest persons I know. My wife is my rock. My sisters are successful in their own right. I know my daughters are gonna grow up able to hold their own. You’re wrong, Mr. President. Women are competent, unwavering, and more courageous than you can ever be</p>&mdash; Barnaby Lo (@barnabychuck) <a href="https://twitter.com/barnabychuck/status/999875641343266816?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2018</a></blockquote>

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="tl" dir="ltr">I can’t imagine how it feels to be a woman in Duterte’s time. Walang linggong hindi niya minaliit o binastos ang kakayahan ng mga babae. Sa iba, nasisikmura niyong ganyan ang tingin sa inyo?</p>&mdash; CG (@christiangultz) <a href="https://twitter.com/christiangultz/status/999628530764824576?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 24, 2018</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">pacquiao - religious fundamentalism, homophobia, among others<br>sotto - anti-intellectualism, miseducation, among others<br>duterte - misogyny, toxic masculinity, among others<br><br>great. they embody everything wrong abt the philippine culture</p>&mdash; Anne (@anneedg) <a href="https://twitter.com/anneedg/status/999948995840491520?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2018</a></blockquote>
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Others pointed out that it's already 2018 and these types of sexist and misogynistic statements are not acceptable. (READ: [OPINION] Misogyny is bad for all Filipinos)

{source}<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">My ears are now tired just hearing these misogynist pronouncements. Gosh Digong it&#39;s 2018! <a href="https://t.co/GGJgcvbI4K">https://t.co/GGJgcvbI4K</a></p>&mdash; Phaura Reinz (@PhauraReinz) <a href="https://twitter.com/PhauraReinz/status/999867542070902784?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2018</a></blockquote>

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A message to the president. And his ilk who think misogyny is cool.<br><br>Dude, it&#39;s 2018, GET WITH THE PROGRAM <br><br>Check out the hashtags for more messages.<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/LalabanAko?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#LalabanAko</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BabaeAko?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#BabaeAko</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/LahingDakila?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#LahingDakila</a> <a href="https://t.co/OFZNsPblOG">pic.twitter.com/OFZNsPblOG</a></p>&mdash; Chai Fonacier (@rrrabidcat) <a href="https://twitter.com/rrrabidcat/status/999989751821172738?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>{/source}

Female netizens also tweeted using the hashtag #BabaeAko as they called for equality and reiterated that women should not be underestimated. This social media campaign is spearheaded by female activists who want to fight the President’s sexist and misogynistic remarks. (READ: #BabaeAko campaign: Filipino women fight back against Duterte's misogyny)

{source}<a class="twitter-grid" data-partner="tweetdeck" href="https://twitter.com/rapplerdotcom/timelines/1000001932944015361?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#BabaeAko</a> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>{/source}

Meanwhile, members of the World March of Women launched the #BabaeAko campaign at the Boy Scout Circle in Quezon City on Friday, May 25. 

{source}<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">MYSOGYNMY NI DUTERTE–TUTULAN, LABANAN, WAG PAYAGAN! As President Duterte sustain tirades against women, members of the World March of Women launch the <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BabaeAko?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#BabaeAko</a> campaign at the Boy Scout Circle in Quezon City on May 25, 2018. Photos by Angie de Silva/Rappler <a href="https://t.co/m4GQ52KgiB">pic.twitter.com/m4GQ52KgiB</a></p>&mdash; Rappler (@rapplerdotcom) <a href="https://twitter.com/rapplerdotcom/status/999987741176676352?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2018</a></blockquote>

<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>{/source}

Here are more reactions from Twitter users:

{source}<a class="twitter-timeline" data-partner="tweetdeck" href="https://twitter.com/rapplerdotcom/timelines/999988784681775107?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">Twitter reactions - Curated tweets by rapplerdotcom</a> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>{/source}

How do you feel about President Duterte's latest remark about women? Let us know in the comments below! – Rappler.com


More than 1,600 Chinese structures in South China Sea

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SUBI REEF. This photo shows the artificial island on Subi Reef in the West Philippine Sea as of December 7, 2017. Photo courtesy of CSIS/AMTI/DigitalGlobe

MANILA, Philippines – China has constructed more than 1,600 structures in the disputed South China Sea, and nearly half of these can be found in waters belonging to the Philippines. 

This is based on data exclusively reviewed and published by Reuters on Thursday, May 24. 

The data came from the non-profit group Earthrise Media, which analyzed satellite images by DigitalGlobe. The building counts spanned the years 2014 to 2017.

Basd on these data, nearly 800 of these Chinese structures can be found in the West Philippine Sea, the part of the South China Sea that belongs to the Philippines. In particular, the Chinese structures can be found on the artificial islands constructed on the following reefs:

  • Subi Reef, "now home to nearly 400 individual buildings," according to Reuters
  • Mischief Reef and Fiery Cross Reef, that "each house almost 190 buildings and structures"

China has constructed hundreds of other structures on the Paracel Islands, which the Philippines does not claim.

All in all, China has built 1,652 buildings in both the Spratly Islands, which the Philippines claims, and the Paracels.

"In total across both island chains, China has erected more structures than all other occupants combined," Reuters reported.

Here is Reuters' breakdown of the structures built by different claimants the South China Sea:

  • China - 1,652 buildings
  • Vietnam - 338 buildings
  • Philippines - 100 buildings
  • Taiwan - 37 buildings
  • Malaysia - 28 buildings

Reuters also noted the "shift of focus and massive expansion in the Spratlys" as of 2017.

Between 2014 and 2015, for example, there were 554 buildings in the Spratlys and 730 in the Paracels.

A few years later, there were already 1,350 buildings in the Spratlys and 805 in the Paracels.

"Most of this is due to China's island-building drive there," Reuters reported.

Capable of holding up to 2,400 troops

DigitalGlobe images "show neat rows of basketball courts, parade grounds, and a wide variety of buildings, some flanked by radar equipment," according to Reuters.

"Subi is the largest of China's seven man-made outposts in the Spratlys. The so-called 'Big Three' of Subi, Mischief and Fiery Cross reefs all share similar infrastructure – including emplacements for missiles, 3-km runways, extensive storage facilities, and a range of installations that can track satellites, foreign military activity and communications," the wire agency reported.

Analysts cited by Reuters, including Singapore-based Collin Koh, "said the facilities on Subi, Mischief, and Fiery Cross could each hold a regiment – between 1,500 to 2,400 troops."

Rappler is still trying to reach the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs for comment as of posting time. 

The Reuters report comes after Chinese state media said Chinese bombers have landed for the first time on an island in the South China Sea.

The DFA has chosen not to publicly condemn China over these bombers, saying it was not its policy to "publicize every action" it takes. 

President Rodrigo Duterte earlier stressed the need to remain "meek and humble" to receive the "mercy" of the likes of Chinese President Xi Jinping. 

Acting Chief Justice Antonio Carpio and former Philippine foreign secretary Albert del Rosario, however, urged the Philippine government to file a diplomatic protest over the Chinese bombers.  

"Failure to formally protest means the Philippines is acquiescing or consenting to the militarization, and worse, to the claim of China that all the islands, waters, and resources within the 9-dash line form part of Chinese territory," Carpio said. – Rappler.com

Trump says summit with North Korea could still go ahead

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CHANGES MIND. File photo show US President Donald Trump on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC. AFP PHOTO / SAUL LOEB

WASHINGTON, USA – US President Donald Trump, a day after his cancellation of a high-stakes summit with North Korea, said Friday, May 25, that the meeting with Kim Jong Un could still go ahead.

"We're going to see what happens," Trump told reporters at the White House, after welcoming Pyongyang's latest statement on the talks as "very good news."

"It could even be the 12th," he said in a reference to the original June 12 date set for the meeting in Singapore.

"We're talking to them now," Trump said of the North Koreans. "They very much want to do it. We'd like to do it. We'll see what happens."

North Korea, responding to Trump's abrupt cancellation of the meeting over "hostility" from Pyongyang, said Friday that it is willing to talk to the United States "at any time."

Trump welcomed the statement as "warm and productive."

"We will soon see where it will lead, hopefully to long and enduring prosperity and peace. Only time (and talent) will tell!" the US president said in a tweet.

In a letter to Kim, Trump said Thursday, May 24, he would not go ahead with the summit in Singapore, following what the White House called a "trail of broken promises" by the North.

Trump blamed "open hostility" from Kim's regime for his decision to call off the talks, and warned North Korea against committing any "foolish or reckless acts."

But Pyongyang's reaction to the sudden U-turn has so far been conciliatory.

First Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye Gwan called Trump's decision "unexpected" and "regrettable." But he left the door open for talks, saying officials were willing "to sit face-to-face at any time."

Just before Trump announced the cancellation of the meeting, North Korea declared it had "completely" dismantled its nuclear test site in the country's far northeast, in a carefully choreographed goodwill gesture ahead of the summit.

But the chances of success for the unprecedented face-to-face had recently been thrown into doubt as threats were traded by both sides.

'Shocking' 

The US summit cancellation blindsided treaty ally South Korea, which until now had brokered a remarkable detente between Washington and Pyongyang, with President Moon Jae-in calling the move "shocking and very regrettable."

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said however he respected and supported the US president's move.

China, Pyongyang's sole major ally, urged the two foes to "show goodwill," while UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called on the parties to keep talking, as did host Singapore, and Russia's President Vladimir Putin held out hope the talks would eventually take place.

Trump's announcement came a day after Pyongyang hardened its rhetoric, calling comments by Vice President Mike Pence "ignorant and stupid."

"Sadly, based on the tremendous anger and open hostility displayed in your most recent statement, I feel it is inappropriate, at this time, to have this long-planned meeting," read Trump's letter to Kim.

But he said talks could still go ahead "at a later date."

Politically, Trump had invested heavily in the success of the planned summit.

As the date drew nearer, however, the gulf in expectations between the two sides became apparent.

Washington has made it clear it wants to see the "complete, verifiable and irreversible denuclearization" of the North.

But Pyongyang has vowed it will never give up its nuclear deterrent until it feels safe from what it terms US aggression.

US aides stood up 

A senior White House official said Pyongyang had demonstrated a "profound lack of good faith" in the run-up to the summit – including standing up the White House's deputy chief of staff, who had travelled to Singapore for preparatory talks.

The White House viewed North Korea's objections to the latest US-South Korean joint military exercise – and its recent cancellation of a meeting with the South Koreans – as a breach of its commitments leading up to the summit.

It also was unhappy about the North's failure to allow international observers to verify the dismantling of the Punggye-ri test site, the staging ground for all 6 of its nuclear tests which was buried inside a mountain near the border with China.

But the North's Kim Kye Gwan countered that Pyongyang's angry statements were "just a backlash in response to harsh words from the US side that has been pushing for a unilateral denuclearization."

Both Pence and Trump's hawkish National Security Advisor John Bolton had raised the specter of Libyan leader Moamer Khadafi, who gave up atomic weapons only to die years later at the hands of US-backed rebels.

Experts warned that cancelling the meeting could have knock-on effects, especially among allies already rattled by Trump's unpredictability.

"In a contest of who can be the most erratic leader, President Trump beats Kim Jong Un hands-down," Joel Wit, founder of the respected 38 North website which monitors North Korea, wrote on Twitter.

"His unsteady hand has left everyone scratching their heads, including our ROK (South Korean) allies."

But others said Trump's willingness to walk away could extract further concessions from Pyongyang.

"North Korea will have to propose more detailed plans for denuclearization if it wants to talk in the future," said Go Myong-hyun, an analyst at the Asan Institute of Policy Studies. – Rappler.com

 

 

 

 

 

Putin says 'all is not lost' to save Iran nuclear deal

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HOPEFUL. File photo shows Russian President Vladimir Putin. File photo by AFP

SAINT PETERSBURG, Russia – Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday, May 25, said it was still possible to save the Iran nuclear deal signed in 2015, despite US President Donald Trump's decision to withdraw from the agreement.

"The US president is not closing the door on negotiations," Putin said at the Saint Petersburg Economic Forum. "I think that all is not yet lost," he added.

Earlier this month Trump controversially pulled the United States out of the landmark 2015 pact with Iran that placed limits on its nuclear program in return for easing economic sanctions.

Saving the deal provides a rare point of agreement between Moscow and European countries, which have seen relations tank in recent years over crises in Ukraine and Syria, as well as accusations of meddling in foreign elections and the poisoning of an ex-Russian spy in Britain.

Putin and French President Emmanuel Macron launched a joint defense of the Iranian nuclear deal on Monday but expressed differences on how to move forward as Trump weighs up whether to scrap it.

The Kremlin said Putin and Macron were both calling for "strict observance" of the hard-fought 2015 agreement after a phone call between the two leaders.

Macron's office however said that while the pair agreed on the need to "preserve the gains from the agreement", the French leader was also pushing for international talks on a potential wider deal.

Trump has derided the Iran deal as "insane" partly because its restrictions on Iran's nuclear activities begin expiring in 2025. – Rappler.com

 

 

Meghan's coat of arms pays tribute to California roots

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LONDON, United Kingdom (UPDATED) – Prince Harry's wife Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, received a new tailor-made official coat of arms on Friday, May 25, that pays homage to her Californian roots.

The crest has a blue background that "represents the Pacific Ocean off the California coast," Kensington Palace, the couple's residence, said in a statement.

Two golden rays on the shield "are symbolic of the sunshine of The Duchess's home state" and three quills "represent communication and the power of words".

"Beneath the shield on the grass sits a collection of golden poppies, California's state flower, and wintersweet, which grows at Kensington Palace," it said.

The coat of arms includes a songbird "with sings elevated as if flying and an open beak" – also a symbolic representation of the power of communication.

"The Duchess of Sussex took a great interest in the design," Thomas Woodcock, whose official title of "Garter King of Arms" represents the most senior role in British heraldry, said in the statement.

Meghan's tradition-defying wedding to Harry last Saturday, May 19, included elements of her African-American heritage and she walked part of the way up the aisle on her own in what was seen as a feminist statement.

In her biography on the royal family's website, Meghan emphasized her commitment to women's empowerment and stated: "I am proud to be a woman and a feminist".

Meghan Markle was born in Los Angeles on August 4, 1981 and attended Hollywood's Immaculate Heart High School before studying at Northwestern University and launching her film career. – Rappler.com

 

Ireland set to repeal abortion ban by a landslide

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REFERENDUM. A voter arrives at St Annes school, in South Dublin, Ireland on May 25, 2018, during the Irish referendum on liberalizing the abortion law. Photo by Paul Faith/Rappler

DUBLIN, Ireland (UPDATED) – Ireland was set to liberalize some of Europe's strictest abortion laws in a landslide referendum vote in this mainly Catholic country that Prime Minister Leo Varadkar called on Saturday, May 26, the "culmination of a quiet revolution".

The proposal to repeal the constitutional ban on terminations was predicted to win by around a two-thirds majority, according to partial counts reported so far.

In Galway East, the first of 40 constituencies to declare a result, the vote was 60 percent in favor.

An exit poll of 4,000 voters for The Irish Times newspaper put the pro-choice camp ahead by 68 percent to 32 percent, while a second survey of 3,800 voters by national broadcaster RTE put the margin at 69 percent to 31 percent.

"What we've seen today is the culmination of a quiet revolution that has been taking place in Ireland for the past 10 or 20 years," Varadkar told RTE.

"The people have said that we want a modern constitution for a modern country, that we trust women and that we respect them to make the right decisions and the right choices about their own healthcare."

Varadkar said he planned for a new law to allow abortions to be in place by the end of the year and Health Minister Simon Harris told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that the cabinet would meet on Tuesday to approve the drafting of legislation.

The result looks set to be another hammer blow to the Roman Catholic Church's authority in Ireland, coming 3 years after referendum voters backed legalizing same-sex marriage by 62 percent.

Varadkar, Ireland's first gay prime minister, came to power last year in what was seen as another major milestone for diversity in Ireland.

The Church's influence has waned in recent years following a series of child sex abuse scandals.

The referendum comes 3 months before a visit by Pope Francis for the World Meeting of Families.

The Irish Times survey suggested women voted by 70 percent in favor of the proposal and men by 65 percent.

People over 65 voted 60 percent against repealing the current legislation, which only allows terminations in cases where the mother's life is in danger. (READ: Ireland votes to allow abortion in certain cases)

However, all other age groups backed the proposal, with support at 87 percent among the youngest voters, aged 18 to 24.

Counting under way

Counting was under way at 26 count centers, with the 40 constituencies to declare individual results before the full final declaration at Dublin Castle. Around 3.5 million people had the chance to vote.

With counting ongoing before the first constituency declaration, the official Together for Yes campaign to repeal the abortion ban said they had passed more than a million votes, and were running at 68 percent support.

Varadkar's government has proposed that if the amendment is repealed, abortion will be allowed in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy and between 12 and 24 weeks in exceptional circumstances.

In Dublin, many voters welcomed the expected overwhelming result.

Catherine Claffey, 53, a flower seller on the capital's main Grafton Street shopping thoroughfare, said: "We've pulled ourselves out of the dark ages. We're not a backward country any more, the way the church would have had us thinking."

John Kelly, 62, said: "I'm actually very proud of it."

Dropping the 8th amendment 

The anti-abortion campaign, which wanted to keep the Irish constitution's eighth amendment, seemed prepared to accept a heavy defeat but vowed to stand firm.

"Abortion on demand would deal Ireland a tragic blow but the pro-life movement will rise to any challenge it faces," said prominent anti-abortion campaigner Cora Sherlock.

Abortion is still banned in some 20 countries worldwide, while others have highly restrictive laws in place. In the European Union, predominantly Catholic Malta is the only country with a total ban.

Ireland's eighth amendment recognizes the "right to life of the unborn" with an "equal right to life of the mother".

The amendment was introduced after a 1983 referendum that approved a constitutional ban on abortion.

Anyone terminating a pregnancy in Ireland currently faces up to 14 years in jail.

The law was tweaked in 2013 to allow terminations if the mother's life is at risk.

The ban has led to thousands of women travelling each year to neighboring Britain, where terminations are legal, or increasingly turning to abortion pills sold online.

Since 1983, around 170,000 Irish women have gone abroad for terminations.

Art director Aoife Murray, 27, who voted in Dublin, said the exit poll left her in tears of relief.

"It's mad that there would have been people flying in to vote and a number of women in that airport waiting to leave to go and have an abortion," she told AFP.

Naomi Long, leader of the Alliance Party in neighboring Northern Ireland, said "eyes will now turn" north of the border, where abortion and same-sex marriage remain illegal, unlike the rest of the United Kingdom. – Rappler.com

Colombia to become first Latin American NATO 'global partner'

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TRUTH COMMISSION. Colombian President, Juan Manuel Santos Calderon speaks during the 72nd High-level Meeting on Peacebuilding and Sustaining Peace at United Nations Headquarters in New York, on April 24, 2018. Photo by Hector Retamal/AFP

BOGOTA, Colombia – Colombia will next week formally become North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) first Latin American "global partner," President Juan Manuel Santos announced Friday, May 25.

Santos, who won the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to end a half-century of armed conflict with the former rebel movement FARC, said the move would improve Colombia's image on the world stage.

"We will formalize in Brussels next week – and this is very important – Colombia's entry into NATO in the category of global partner. We will be the only country in Latin America with this privilege," the president said in a televised address.

In addition to Colombia, NATO lists Afghanistan, Australia, Iraq, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Mongolia, New Zealand and Pakistan as "partners across the globe" or simply "global partners."

Each country "has developed an Individual Partnership Cooperation Program" with the 29-country US-led alliance, with many contributing actively to NATO missions.

Colombia and NATO reached a partnership deal in May 2017 following the conclusion of the peace accord with FARC, now a political party. 

According to NATO's website areas of cooperation include cyber security, maritime security, terrorism and its links to organized crime, as well as building the capacities and capabilities of the Colombian armed forces.– Rappler.com

Group of mostly Duterte allies will pick Marawi contractor – PCIJ

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RAVAGED CITY. Residents of Barangay Daguguban and Barangay Tulali, Marawi City, visit their homes for the first time on April 7, 2018. File photo by Martin San Diego/Rappler

MANILA, Philippines— At least 7 people, 4 of whom are political allies of President Rodrigo Duterte, will decide which business entities will win the P17.2-billion contract for the rehabilitation of ground zero in Marawi City, according to a report by the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ).

The report said majority of selection committee members lack experience "in evaluating public contracts on technical and financial merits," yet will pass judgment on the deal for the "most affected areas" or MAA. (LIST: Tasks for China consortium in P17.2-B Marawi contract)

The small committee will decide the fate of the deal without the "usual rigorous rules that should apply to public contracts worth P1 billion or more."

The committee's co-chairperson, National Housing Authority (NHA) general manager Marcelino Escalada Jr, acknowledged the selection committee's gap in experience and expertise.

He also admitted that they do not have persons adept in mechanical and electrical work because most of their personnel are architects and civil engineers.

Escalada, however, gave the assurance that he is aided by a pool of consultants, and they "will stay with the team in Marawi."

"The technical team can check roads… We made a pool of consultants and 4 were identified — one mechanical, one civil, one electrical, and one business consultant. That is the gap of the competency of NHA," Escalada said.

Committee members

Their committee is chaired by Falconi Millar, secretary general of the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council  (HUDCC). Millar is a lawyer and a certified public accountant who had not served in public office before being appointed to the HUDCC.

Millar's co-chairperson, Escalada, was appointed to the NHA only in 2016, but had worked closely with the President since 1995, according to the PCIJ. Prior to this post, he was Davao City's administrator and served as head of the City Planning and Development Office.

"Escalada will be the person in charge of the main signatory to the joint venture agreement that will be approved and signed with the winning developer in Marawi's MAA," the PCIJ report said.

Paola Alvarez, Department of Finance (DOF) assistant secretary for communications and special concerns, joins the team as a member. She is a lawyer and daughter of House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez.

Another member of the committee is Emil Sadain, Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) undersecretary for unified project management operations and technical services. The report noted that Sadain "has the most experience of the 7 committee members, having started his public service career in 1986 in what was then the Ministry of Public Works and Highways."

The report also said that Sadain replaced Tingagun Ampaso Umpa, former DPWH assistant secretary for ARMM in the committee. Umpa was axed due to corruption allegations.

Other members of the committee are Department of Environment and Natural Resources assistant secretary for field operations Michelle Angelica Go, NHA deputy secretary Avelino Tolentino III, and NHA head of operations Victor Balba.

"The selection committee also includes one non-voting member from the Public Private Partnership Center and one observer each from the City of Marawi and Commission on Audit," the report said.

Questions hounding agencies involved

Overseeing the selection committee is Task Force Bangon Marawi Chair and Housing Secretary Eduardo del Rosario. He is a retired army general and was an undersecretary of the Department of National Defense during the term of former President Benigno Aquino III. (WATCH: Rappler Talk: HUDCC's Del Rosario on Marawi rehab, housing backlog, Kadamay)

The report said that "infrastructure and development projects as huge and as complex as those being planned for Marawi are not a strong suit" of the agencies tasked to select the business entities.

A former senior DPWH official said that "NHA is a housing production agency," and questioned the capacity of the involved agencies.

"Ano plano nila sa site development issues? May electric coop, water district diyan for sure. Sino mag-o-organize niyan, ang laki ng project," the PCIJ source said. (What are their plans for site-development issues? Who will organize all that? It's such a huge project.)

However, a public procurement expert interviewed by PCIJ warned that "getting technical experts from development partners…is typical in any big-ticket projects of the government. The question here, however, is how involved they are."

Another contentious feature of the ground zero rehabilitation is the exemption of the private contractors from the scrutiny of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA). (READ: Marawi rehabilitation won't repeat Typhoon Yolanda mistakes – NEDA)

In fact, the report emphasized that NEDA "purposely requested to be excluded from the selection committee."

NEDA said their presence in the committee would be "inappropriate" as they "would not be following NEDA guidelines (but) NHA guidelines" anyway. — Rappler.com

Read the full PCIJ report here.


Shining a spotlight on Pinay scientists

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MANILA, Philippines – Perhaps everyone is familiar with Fe del Mundo, the National Scientist. In textbooks, she was portrayed as the inventor of a make-shift incubator out of bamboo.

Del Mundo was a woman of many firsts – the first woman admitted in the Harvard Medical School, the pediatrician who founded the Philippines' first pediatric hospital, and the first female National Scientist of the Philippines.

She was also recognized for her pioneering studies on infectious diseases in the Philippines, including dengue, which was still little known in the country during her time.

Del Mundo was a doctor, a beloved nurturer to children, and a scientist. More importantly, she was a Filipina role model. 

Aside from Del Mundo, other notable Filipina scientists include Gemma Narisma, a climate scientist from the Manila Observatory; Maricor Soriano, a physicist who develops low-cost technology for different purposes; Reina Reyes, the "Filipina who proved Einstein right"Maria Corazon de Ungria, one who helps the wrongly accused through DNA tests; and Lucille Abad, one who developed a plant grower using seaweed.

The women-powered Philippines

Their achievements are proof that women scientists thrive in the Philippines.

In fact, the Philippines leads in Asia in closing the gender gap, according to the World Economic Forum's 2017 Global Gender Gap report. Globally, the country ranks 10th out of 144 countries, with 79% of the overall gender gap closed.

"On the onset, this might be a good ranking for the Philippines," Maria Karisma Bea Agarao, national program coordinator of UNESCO Jakarta's office in the Philippines, said in a press event.

Agarao said the report highlights how the country still fell short in terms of what men have accomplished in the fields of economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment.

"[But] what we want to do is to focus on removing those barriers for us to achieve gender parity," she added.

While the country fell 3 notches from 2016, it continues to fare well in various economic opportunities categories like women handling managerial and executive positions, and labor force participation.

Wanted: Pinay scientists

The Philippines is among the few countries in Asia that have achieved gender parity in the field of science and engineering.

At least half of scientists in the Philippines are, in fact, females. Specifically, as of 2013, women are on par with men in the fields of natural sciences and agricultural sciences.

However, the gender parity we have achieved may be in danger as the number of women enrolling in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) courses has been declining.

For academic year 2016-2017 alone, the Commission on Higher Education recorded that only 4 out of 10 STEM enrollees are females – a number lower than in previous years.

As a whole, the country's science sector still faces a number of challenges. A UNESCO report showed that the country only has 189 researchers for every one million Filipinos – lower than the UNESCO standard of 380 researchers for every one million people.

Other challenges include low investment in higher education, low rate of scientific publications, and weak infrastructure for research and development. (READ: 5 things to make PH a better place for scientists)

At the forefront of Pinay scientists

Eight years ago, a Filipina biochemist made us proud when she became the first Filipino and first Asian L'Oréal-UNESCO Awards For Women in Science (FWIS) Global Laureate.

Launched about 20 years ago, the FWIS seeks to recognize outstanding contributions of female scientists worldwide.

The FWIS Global Laureate award is a fitting recognition for the impact of Lourdes Cruz's 40 years of research on cone snails and certain chemicals these snails produce that serve as painkillers, as well as other biopharmaceutical products.

Cruz, now 76, is one of the 4 remaining living female National Scientists of the Philippines, together with geneticist Dolores Ramirez, entomologist Clare Baltazar, and demographer Mercedes Concepcion.

Cruz still actively participates in numerous research. In 2017, she was ranked as the top cited scientist from the University of the Philippines. She has also been promoting science communication to empower indigenous communities, especially the Aetas in Bataan.

After Cruz won the FWIS Global Laureate title in 2010, the L'Oréal Foundation decided to launch the fellowship program in the Philippines, said Carmel Valencia, corporate communications manager at L'Oréal Philippines.

The Filipinas who have been recognized as FWIS fellows include De Ungria, marine scientist Aletta Yñiguez, oceanographer Laura David, and marine biologist Cecilia Conaco.

Valencia said that L'Oréal and UNESCO seek to empower more women scientists to follow the footsteps led by Cruz and the other former FWIS fellows, adding that their program intends to show how "the creativity, the passion, and the intelligence of women deserves to have that equal contribution to be able to solve one of humanity's greatest challenges."

On June 5, 2018, L'Oréal-UNESCO Awards For Women in Science will award one Filipina scientist. She is set to receive a fellowship grant worth P400,000 ($7,602)*. – Rappler.com

Female scientists image via Shutterstock

*US$1 = P52.62

Remember the Marawi evacuees who tied the knot? They're pregnant!

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LANAO DEL NORTE, Philippines – This is a call to the wedding sponsors of the Marawi evacuees who fell in love and tied the knot in a big wedding at a tent city in September 2017.

The couple is pregnant!

Jomar Saumay and wife Norinsha are expecting in June. The shy couple agreed to sit down with Rappler for an interview on Thursday, May 24.

Jomar said he wants a girl. Norinsha laughed because she wants a boy. The husband smiled, looked her wife in the eyes, and caressed her baby bump. They couldn't be more in love with each other.

It's a love story forged at the height of battles between government forces and armed groups that sought to establish an Islamic caliphate in Marawi City in 2017. Jomar made life easier for Norinsha at the tent city, such as making sure her tent is fixed when it needed fixing. (READ: The war in Marawi: 153 days and more)

PREGNANT! Marawi tent dwellers Jomar Saumay and wife Norinsha are 8 months pregnant and expecting in June. Photo by Bobby Lagsa/Rappler

The government offered to pay for the wedding feast in September that year, 4 months into the war, hoping that the music and the celebration would lift the spirits of the community as they yearned to go back to their homes.

A year after the siege erupted in Marawi, Jomar and Norinsha are among 40 out of original 100 families who continue to live in a tent city in nearby town of Pantar.

"Dapat may electric fan kasi mainit talaga (We should have an electric fan because it's really very hot here)," Norinsha said, smiling, when Rappler teased her to send a message to government officials who attended their wedding last year.

The summer heat hasn't made Norinsha's pregnancy easy. It's not making the days easy for the rest of the evacuees used to the cooler climate in nearby Marawi City.

MARANAO WEDDING. Marawi evacuee Norinsa Basher was wed to her crush Jomar Saumay at the Tent City in Pantar town in September 2017. File photo by Adrian Portugal/Rappler

The evacuees couldn't find jobs in the new place but they get by with groceries and supplies regularly supplied by the government. They are getting various training from the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority, too, to increase their chances to get jobs.

Time has worn down the tents. There are tears and holes here and there that the evacuees have patched with all sorts of adhesive.

Some residents like Jamerah Abdullah are feeling jealous of former neighbors who have returned to their homes outside the former battle area in Marawi and others who were given temporary shelters in barangay Sagonsongan.

Rohma Omar, a government employee managing the tent city, said the tent dwellers will likely leave the tents soon for temporary structures, possibly in the lot across the street. But she said many of them are aching to go back to Marawi.

Jomar is making his own plans for his family. He intends to find themselves a new home after Norinsha delivers their baby next month.

 WEDDING SPONSORS. The Department of National Defense and the Armed Forces of the Philippines hosted festivities during the wedding of Jomar and Norinsha Saumay in September 2017. File photo by Adrian Portugal/Rappler

"Gusto ko maging maganda buhay namin. Puwede ako mag-business gaya ng magtinda ng isda (I want a good life for my family. I can have my own business. I could sell fish)," said Jomar, who didn't finish college.

"Sa malayo. Sa ibang lugar na kasi walang hanapbuhay saMarawi. Pagkapanganak ko, malaking gasto sa bata (Somewhere far away. We can’t go back in Marawi, where there are no jobs. We need money after I give birth for the baby's needs)," said Norinsha.

The future is uncertain. But whatever happens, all Norinsha wants is for her family to stay together.

"Marami akong pangarap. Hindi maubos 'yan eh. Ang pinaka-importante, buo ang pamilya ko. Kung may trabaho, maganda 'yun (We don't run out of dreams. The most important this is we stay together. If we have jobs, too, that will be really good)," she said. – Rappler.com

Top photo: TENT CITY. Jomar and Norinsha Saumay are among 40 families who continue to live in tents in Pantar town in Lanao del Sur. Photo by Carmela Fonbuena/Rappler   

2 Filipina nurses killed in Australia car crash – DFA

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MANILA, Philippines – The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) confirmed that two Filipino nurses were killed in a car accident in Australia while they were on their way to an El Shaddai anniversary event.  

"Our thoughts and prayers go to the loved ones of two of our own who lost their lives in this tragedy. We join the Filipino community in praying for the quick recovery of those injured," said Foreign Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano in a statement Saturday, May 26.

Philippine Ambassador to Australia Minda Cruz had relayed to Cayetano her initial report on the car crash.

According to Cruz, the Filipino nurses were riding a Dodge Journey on Friday, May 25, to attend an El Shaddai anniversary event in Melbourne.

Their car collided with a Toyota Land Cruiser being driven by a 65-year-old man along a highway in Wallaroo, killing the two nurses and injuring the other passengers. 

Cruz added that "the pharmacist-husband, 3 children, and a relative of one of the fatalities were injured in the car crash."

Authorities are currently investigating the accident. – Rappler.com

U.S. warns Syria of 'firm' action over southern offensive

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REBEL. Smoke rises from buildings in a rebel-held neighbourhood of Daraa in southern Syria following reported shelling by the regime on May 22, 2018. Photo by Mohamad Abazeed/AFP

WASHINGTON DC, USA – The United States has warned Damascus it will take "firm" action if the regime of Bashar al-Assad violates a ceasefire deal, after Syrian aircraft dropped leaflets on a southern province ahead of an expected offensive.

Residents of Daraa told Agence France-Presse (AFP) on Friday, May 25 that several different leaflets were scattered across the province, which has borders with Israel and Jordan and is expected to be among the next targets in the resurgent regime's reconquest.

One of them, seen by a journalist contributing to AFP in the city of Daraa, includes a picture showing lined up bodies, presumably of anti-government fighters.

"This is the inevitable fate of anyone who insists on carrying arms," reads the leaflet. (READ: U.S.-led strike hits regime positions in east Syria – state media)

The US State Department issued a statement late Friday saying it was "concerned" by the reports and that the area in question was within the boundaries of a de-escalation zone it had negotiated with Russia and Jordan last year.

"We also caution the Syrian regime against any actions that risk broadening the conflict or jeopardize the ceasefire," said spokeswoman Heather Nauert, adding that the ceasefire had been re-affirmed by President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin at a meeting in Vietnam in November.

"As a guarantor of this de-escalation area with Russia and Jordan, the United States will take firm and appropriate measures in response to Assad regime violations," she added.

Syrian regime and allied forces on Monday, May 21 retook the Yarmuk area in southern Damascus, giving President Bashar al-Assad full control of the capital and its surroundings for the first time since 2012. (READ: TIMELINE: The Syria unrest)

Daraa's location makes any broad operation there very sensitive, with Israel suspecting Damascus' Iranian allies of seeking to establish a military footprint closer to its borders.

Government and allied forces control about 30 percent of Daraa, the rest of which is held by various factions, including a small contingent of fighters from the Islamic State jihadist group.– Rappler.com

Boracay may open in less than 6 months – DENR chief

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EXCAVATED. Trainees from the 3rd Infrantry Division of the Philippine Army excavate illegal sewerage pipes in Boracay Island on May 25, 2018. Photo from DENR

MANILA, Philippines – Exactly a month after the island was closed to tourists, Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu said on Saturday, May 26, that top tourist destination Boracay may open in less than 6 months.

Referring to the erring establishments, Cimatu said, "We are almost sure na wala nang iba. (We are almost sure that there's nothing else.) I was very happy yesterday that the military was able to find the culprit."

"Good news, baka mauna pa tayo (we might be done earlier)," he told Communications Assistant Secretary Kris Ablan in an interview.

This comes after 100 trainees from the 3rd Infantry Division of the Philippine Army on Friday, May 25, helped the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) in excavating illegal pipes along the 4.5-kilometer White Sand Beach.

The activity led them to discover 16 establishments that had installed their own pipes, which flush wastes directly under the beachfront.

Cimatu earlier said that the rehabilitation efforts might have to extend beyond 6 months. 

A team from the Mines and Geosciences Bureau conducted a survey along the White Sand Beach using a ground penetrating radar. It discovered 43 sites where illegal pipes have been buried.

But with the help of the military, Cimatu said the excavation of pipes was fast-tracked.

"If we were not able to do this, it would have been a problem. Good thing that it was solved," Cimatu said in a mix of English and Filipino.

Investigating the establishments

Cimatu said that an investigation on the establishments will be done.

"We are still validating but the big hotels are defiant. The DENR Central Office's Pollution Adjudication Board will handle this," he said.

The environment secretary said that the establishments will have to face the consequences, should the Board sanction them.

The penalties range from P10,000 to P200,000 per day.

President Rodrigo Duterte ordered the closure of Boracay Island for 6-months starting April 26 because of environmental problems. A pipe in Bulabog Beach used to release wastewater straight to the sea, which led to the President calling the island a "cesspool."

Establishments and households not connected to sewerage treatment plants triggered the increase of water pollution to extreme levels, especially during summer months because of the large number of people who flock to the world-famous island resort. (WATCH: How green can Boracay get?)

Improving Boracay's sewerage system is among the government's rehabilitation priorities. (READ: CHEAT SHEET: What to expect from Boracay closure– Rappler.com

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