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IN PHOTOS: Robredo takes oath as new housing chief

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NEW HOUSING CHIEF. Vice President Leni Robredo takes her oath as the new chairperson of the HUDCC. Photo from the Office of the Vice President

MANILA, Philippines – President Rodrigo Duterte officially swore in Vice President Leni Robredo as his housing chief on Tuesday evening, July 12.

Duterte appointed Robredo to chair the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council (HUDCC) last Thursday, July 7, right after he was asked by a correspondent from state-run television network PTV4 what position he would give the Vice President.

Duterte made a phone call to Robredo to offer the position, which she readily accepted.

The Vice President attended a Cabinet meeting for the first time on Monday, July 11, where she was briefed on the administration's current plans, particularly the programs on curbing drugs.

Presidential Spokesperson Ernesto Abella said the Cabinet welcomed Robredo warmly on Monday.

The new HUDCC chairperson earlier said that she aims to resolve the 1.4 million backlog in housing by the end of her term.

In an economic forum on Tuesday, Robredo also urged business leaders to help the government establish "not just houses, but decent and affordable communities where our people will find jobs, where their children can safely go to school, attend church, run around and play safely."

Photo from the Office of the Vice President

Photo from the Office of the Vice President

Photo from the Office of the Vice President

Photo from the Office of the Vice President

– Rappler.com 


Pentagon chief praises 'courageous' Afghan security forces

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ASHTON CARTER. A handout picture released by Iraqi defence ministry shows Iraqi Defense Minister Khalid al-Obaidi (R) receiving US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter (L) at the headquarter of Iraqi defence ministry in Baghdad, Iraq, 11 July 2016. Photo by Iraqi Defense Ministry/EPA

KABUL, Afghanistan – US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter reiterated Washington's support for "courageous" Afghan security forces on Tuesday, July 12, days after the United States and NATO pledged to keep thousands of troops in the troubled country.

Carter spoke as President Ashraf Ghani welcomed the "environment of trust" between Washington and Kabul at a joint news conference in the Afghan capital.

"The Afghan security forces have demonstrated the motivation, the will and the resilience in the face of a persistent enemy," Carter said.

"I have confidence in the ability of the Afghan forces to provide for the stability and security that the Afghan people deserve and I commend them for fighting courageously last year during a tough fighting season."

The Pentagon chief's unannounced visit follows a renewed commitment to Afghanistan from NATO, which said over the weekend it would keep forces there until the end of 2017 at least.

Most are American, but around 40 countries have deployed troops there. Their official role is to train Afghan forces, which are now responsible for their country's security.

Despite a massive, nearly 15-year international effort to defeat the Taliban, the resurgent group controls large areas of Afghanistan and has vowed to keep fighting until foreign forces leave.

Both Carter and Ghani also addressed the role of Afghanistan's neighbor Pakistan, long accused by Kabul of sponsoring militants including the Taliban.

Taliban chief Mullah Akhtar Mansour was killed by a US drone in Pakistan earlier this year in a strike that Islamabad said violated its sovereignty.

But Carter, while stressing the US would work with Pakistan "wherever it can" on extremism, warned that Washington would "continue to target and strike terrorist leaders everywhere in the world where they might threaten Americans or our interests and our friends".

"Pakistan has a fundamental decision to make," added Ghani, who has loudly demanded in the past that Pakistan take action against the Taliban. "There is no difference between good terrorists and bad terrorists."

'Full transparency'

President Barack Obama, elected eight years ago on a pledge to end the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, has been unable to do so given the fragile security situations in both countries.

Last week he dialled back plans to cut US troop numbers in Afghanistan from 9,800 to 5,500 by the end of the year.

Instead, around 8,400 US troops will remain, providing training and air support to the Afghans.

Obama has also relaxed its rules of engagement, making it easier for US troops to target the Taliban -- a move the head of NATO forces in Afghanistan, General John Nicholson, said was in "recognition of the difficulties that we are facing".

Local forces took the lead in providing security in 2015, but are struggling to contain Taliban offensives and prevent attacks from the Islamic State (ISIS) group and Al-Qaeda.

More than 5,000 Afghan security forces were killed last year, and attacks continue. The Taliban claimed responsibility last month for a suicide attack that killed more than 30 Afghan police cadets in Kabul.

Further complicating matters is endemic corruption and allegations of rights abuses.

"Corruption is as dangerous as terrorism," Ghani said Tuesday, vowing to account for every penny "with full transparency".

About 13,000 NATO troops, most of whom are American, are stationed in Afghanistan under Operation Resolute Support to train and assist Afghan security forces.

NATO has agreed about 12,000 will stay until at least 2017, though in reality local troops are likely to need foreign support and funding for years to come.

In return, NATO is demanding reforms of the Afghan security forces.

Carter's visit followed a brief trip to Baghdad on Monday, where he pledged hundreds of additional US troops to assist Iraqis fighting ISIS. – Rappler.com

Sanders endorses former rival Clinton for president

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CLINTON AND SANDERS. Democratic Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton (L) with former Democratic Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders as they appear together at an event at Portsmouth High School in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, USA, July 12, 2016. Photo by CJ Gunther/EPA

 

PORTSMOUTH, USA (3rd UPDATE) – After months of bitter campaigning, Bernie Sanders on Tuesday, July 12,  offered his long-awaited endorsement for Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton, saying he would work hard to help his former rival win the White House.

 

The joint appearance at a high school in Portsmouth, New Hampshire was the culmination of weeks of talks between the two campaigns aimed at unifying the party in preparation for taking on Republican Donald Trump in November.

 

"Secretary Clinton has won the Democratic nominating process, and I congratulate her for that," Sanders told a cheering crowd, with Clinton at his side.

 

"She will be the Democratic nominee for president and I intend to do everything I can to make certain she will be the next president of the United States."

 

"She must become our next president," Sanders emphasized, offering a litany of reasons why the 68-year-old former secretary of state is a better choice than the 70-year-old Manhattan real estate mogul.

 

"If anyone out there thinks that this election is not important, take a moment to think about the Supreme Court justices that Donald Trump will nominate, and what that means to civil liberties, equal rights and the future of our country," Sanders said.

 

The 74-year-old Sanders, a US senator from Vermont, waged a tougher-than-expected year-long battle against Clinton, but she clinched enough delegates to secure the nomination in early June.

 

Sanders, a feisty self-described democratic socialist, nevertheless had refused to concede defeat to his more moderate rival, although he had said he will vote for Clinton.

 

Sanders wants to ensure that his ideas are part of the party platform presented at the Democratic National Convention later this month in Philadelphia, when Clinton is formally nominated.

 

Party officials met over the weekend in Orlando, Florida to finalize the Democratic platform, which they described as the most ambitious and progressive in history.

 

The party reached agreement on language concerning climate change, health care and raising the minimum wage in America to $15 per hour. They reportedly failed, however, to reach common ground on the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade accord.

 

Trump ready to pick running mate?

Trump, who has proclaimed himself "the law and order candidate" amid rising gun violence, will campaign in Indiana later Tuesday.

 

His scheduled appearance with Governor Mike Pence is raising speculation that Trump could pick the state's chief executive as his running mate.

 

"I am the law and order candidate," the presumptive Republican nominee said Monday in Virginia Beach at an event with New Jersey Governor Chris Christie.

 

The declaration, reminiscent of remarks made by former president Richard Nixon in his 1968 campaign, came as Trump highlighted recent killings including the horrific shooting deaths of five Dallas police officers in a sniper-like ambush.

 

"The attack on our Dallas police is an attack on our country. Our whole nation is in mourning," Trump said, as he pledged to "fight" for law enforcement personnel and ensure they have Washington's full backing.

 

Trump and Clinton both halted their campaigning for a day after Thursday's Dallas police murders.

 

Christie, a potential vice presidential pick, joined Trump as reports swirled that the billionaire real estate tycoon will choose a running mate in the coming days.

 

Christie's experience running a populous state could be seen as critical for Trump, who has acknowledged his own lack of political and government expertise.

 

Indiana's Pence would bring executive experience as well, along with a perceived steady hand that could help counter the narrative that Trump is too incendiary and quick to provoke.

 

Pence made a tepid endorsement of Senator Ted Cruz but switched to Trump when Cruz dropped out.

 

"I'm prepared to make that case anywhere across Indiana and anywhere across this country that Donald Trump would want me to," he said. – Rappler.com

Quest to end AIDS epidemic at risk – UN

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AIDS EPIDEMIC. Michel Sidibe, executive director of the United Nations organization UNAIDS, presents the UNAIDS' new report on HIV prevention gaps during a press conference at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland on July 12, 2016. Photo by Salvatore Di Nolfi/EPA

GENEVA, Switzerland – Efforts to end the global AIDS pandemic by 2030 are lagging, the United Nations warned Tuesday, July 12, decrying rising numbers of new HIV infections among adults in many regions, with Russia especially hard-hit.

In a new report, UNAIDS cautioned that while new HIV infections had fallen dramatically in the past two decades, especially among children, the trend among adults has stalled and even risen in a number of places over the past 5 years.

"This situation scares me, and we need to act fast," UNAIDS chief Michel Sidibe told reporters in Geneva at the launch of the report.

"If we don't, the epidemic could once again take hold with huge human and financial losses," he warned.

The HIV epidemic has been in decline over the past decade, but there are still 36.7 million people worldwide living with HIV/AIDS, most of them in sub-Saharan Africa.

Great strides have especially been made globally towards preventing children from contracting HIV, with new infections among those under the age of 15 down 56% since 2010 and by 70% since 2000 to around 150,000 last year, the report showed.

Surging infections in Russia

But at the same time, some 1.9 million adults have contracted HIV globally every year for at least the past 5 years, according to Tuesday's "Prevention Gap" report.

Most regions saw a flat trend, with relatively small increases or declines, but the Eastern European-Central Asian region had shown a dramatic 57% increase in new annual infections among adults since 2010, the report said.

A full 80% of those new infections occurred in Russia, with another 10% found in Ukraine, it said, blaming "low coverage of prevention programs, in particular harm-reduction interventions among people who inject drugs."

Experts have complained that the Russian government's policy focuses on treatment while neglecting prevention drives such as sex education in schools.

Russia also bans methadone replacement therapy for drug addicts, which would allow users to avoid injections, eliminating the risk of contracting the virus from contaminated syringes.

Pointing out that more than half of all new infections in Russia were among people who inject drugs, Sidibe warned that "If you don't reach them you will not be able to control the epidemic."

If the epidemic is not controlled among the main risk groups it will become more generalized, he warned.

Globally, people who inject drugs and men who have sex with men are 24 times more likely to be infected with HIV than the general population, while sex workers are 10 times more likely, the report said.

"If you don't control the epidemic among those groups, because you have marginalized them, because you exclude them, because you criminalize them you will have infection moving into the general population," Sidibe said.

Girls, women at risk

UNAIDS also voiced deep concern over the situation in eastern and sub-Saharan Africa, which continues to account for the vast majority of cases.

While the region has seen new infections among adults fall 4% since 2010, Tuesday's report pointed to a stark gender inequality among those contracting the disease.

Three quarters of all new HIV infections among people aged 15-24 in the region occurred among adolescent girls and young women, the report found.

This was partly due to "extremely high levels of sexual abuse and violence against female children, including underage, child and forced marriage," it said, also stressing that girls and women often lack access to HIV services due to gender inequality and stigma.

Such difficulties in the fight against the HIV/AIDS epidemic are being compounded by dwindling funding by international donors, and generally not enough spending on prevention efforts.

"We have a 5-year window of opportunity. If we miss this window of 5 years, we will have a rebound in this epidemic, we will have resistance, and will not be able to control the epidemic and make sure we end it by 2030," Sidibe warned. – Rappler.com

Aquino: 'Monumental' ruling on PH-China victory for all

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DEFYING CHINA. Former President Benigno Aquino III in a file photo. Courtesy of Malacañang file photo

MANILA, Philippines – Former President Benigno Aquino III, whose administration filed the case against China before the UN-backed arbitral tribunal, said the historic ruling “is a victory for all” since it now allows countries to engage each other “within a context that espouses equality and amity.”

He said: "Without doubt, this long-running dispute is now closer to having a permanent solution."

In a statement a day after the UN-backed Permanent Court of Arbitration issued what he described as a "monumental decision" in favor of the Philippines in its maritime dispute with China over the West Philippine Sea, Aquino also asked Filipinos to take time to read the summary of the arbitral award “to gain a full understanding of the issues involved.”

The decision to bring China to court was a “game changer” but one that “was not an easy one to take,” Aquino said.

He added:  “I am, of course, quite elated particularly since all the points we had raised were affirmed.”

The former President said: “At this point, may I suggest that instead of viewing this decision as a victory of one party over another, the best way to look at this judgment is that it is a victory for all. I say this because the clarity rendered now establishes better conditions that enable countries to engage each other, bearing in mind their duties and rights within a context that espouses equality and amity.”

Aquino acknowledged the “pressures” that his administration had to put up with after it filed the case in 2013. “Yet, until the end, we stood our ground.” 

He echoed what Paul Reichler, the Philippines' lead counsel in this case, said in reaction to the ruling, that it has strong implications for other coastal states. (READ: PH lawyer vs China: This is a victory for rule of law)

Under Aquino, the Philippine government on January 22, 2013 filed an arbitration case against China at the United Nations-backed PCA to settle the maritime dispute. The Philippines invited China to join the proceedings. (READ: Aquino: The president who brought China to court)

A month later, China rejected the move, saying Manila's claim is "legally infirm and carried unacceptable allegations against Beijing." (READ: Timeline: The Philippines-China maritime dispute)

Thank you

In his statement, Aquino also thanked select lawmakers and key members of his Cabinet and the executive department, as well as the Philippines' lawyer in the case, Reichler.

 

Below is the full statement of former President Aquino:

I reviewed the Press Release and Summary issued by the Permanent Court of Arbitration on the “South China Sea Arbitration” (The Republic of the Philippines v. The People’s Republic of China).

We want to thank the Permanent Court of Arbitration for their fair judgment, and we would also like to extend our gratitude for the clarity with which they presented their ruling.

Let us remember that the disputes in the Sea Known by Many Names have gone on for decades—from our perspective, stretching as far back as the 1970s. These conflicts have come about, primarily because of the differing opinions on each country’s rights and obligations. To this end, I would ask our countrymen and all people of goodwill to read the Press Release and Summary issued by the Tribunal, to gain a full understanding of the issues involved.

Let me emphasize: All countries that have made a comment on this issue, to our knowledge, have expressed adherence to international law. Indeed: International law has been made clearer with this monumental decision. This of course deals with the Philippines and China, clarifying each state’s rights and obligations; but as our lead counsel said, it also has very strong implications as far as other coastal states are concerned, with regard to UNCLOS.

At this point, may I suggest that instead of viewing this decision as a victory of one party over another, the best way to look at this judgment is that it is a victory for all. I say this because the clarity rendered now establishes better conditions that enable countries to engage each other, bearing in mind their duties and rights within a context that espouses equality and amity.

Might I say: The decision to pursue arbitration was not an easy one to make. Going into arbitration was called a game-changer. We foresaw and experienced the pressures in taking this route; yet until the end, we stood our ground.

In this course, we involved all branches of government. During the consultations, we had the Senate as represented by then-Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, and later on by Senator Franklin Drilon, as well as the House under the leadership of Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. Former Presidents Fidel V. Ramos and Joseph Estrada were unequivocal in their support. We also invited the Judiciary, which at that time, due to prudence on handling cases related to the matter, had to decline.

Allow me to reiterate my gratitude to all our countrymen and partners who have worked hard to defend our shared cause, specifically: then-Secretary of Foreign Affairs Albert del Rosario, former Executive Secretary Paquito N. Ochoa, Jr., former Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, former Justice Secretary Leila de Lima, former Solicitors-General Francis Jardeleza and Florin Hilbay, Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonio Carpio, former Chief Presidential Legal Counsel and now Associate Justice Benjamin Caguioa, Sandiganbayan Justice Sarah Fernandez, former Undersecretary Emmanuel Bautista and Deputy Executive Secretary Menardo Guevarra, former Assistant Secretary Henry Bensurto Jr. and former Undersecretary Abigail Valte. We also thank the lawyers and experts who assisted our team, as led by Paul Reichler of the Washington-based law firm Foley Hoag.

Let us bear in mind: Where there is conflict over claims and opinions, cooperation cannot exist. Now that the rules are even clearer, we can all move forward as a global community. Without doubt, this long-running dispute is now closer to having a permanent solution– Rappler.com

 

Fil-Ams celebrate Philippine victory in UN case over China

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VICTORY. Members of the Filipino community at a rally outside the United Nations in New York, July 12, 2016. Photo by Cristina DC Pastor / The FilAm

NEW YORK, USA – Dozens of Filipino-Americans celebrated the victory of the country over China in a bitter dispute caused by Beijing’s aggressive moves to control potentially rich fishing grounds and oil deposits in what Filipinos call the West Philippine Sea.

The estimated 50 demonstrators held up banners in front of the United Nations headquarters in New York on Tuesday, July 12, to denounce what they call Chinese bullying and proclaim that islets and coral reefs such as Scarborough Shoal, an outcrop that is a traditional fishing ground of Filipinos, belongs to the Philippines.

“We are here to celebrate the decision of the UN,” Loida Nicolas-Lewis said in a speech to the crowd taking shelter under a tree due to a broiling noonday sun. She wore a straw hat to shield her from the heat. “We have the rule of law.”

The demonstrators carried neatly written placards saying: “China, Abide by UN Tribunal’s Decision” or “West Philippine Sea Belongs to Filipinos.”

Lewis added in a post on her Facebook wall: "In the end, the UN Tribunal comes thru with a just and wise decision. Because UNCLOS [UN Convention on the Law of the Sea] is clear, 200 nautical miles from the shore belongs to the Country. In this case, it belongs to the Philippines. It is now up to the General Assembly of the United Nations to encourage a peaceful solution to this West Philippine Sea issue."

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In a sweeping ruling, the 5-man tribunal in the Hague said there is “no legal basis” for that 9-dash line where China claimed 90% of the South China Sea, ranging from near its southern Hainan Island down to parts of the oil-rich waters around the Natuna islands owned by Indonesia.

The decision was based on UNCLOS, which both China and the Philippines have signed and ratified.

“China had violated the Philippines’ sovereign rights in its exclusive economic zone by interfering with Philippine fishing and petroleum exploration,  constructing artificial islands and failing to prevent Chinese fishermen from fishing in the zone,” the comprehensive 497 page ruling declared.

Loida Nicolas-Lewis speaks during a rally of members of the Filipino community outside the UN in New York, July 12, 2016. Photo by Cristina DC Pastor / The FilAm

The tribunal said that fishermen from the Philippines and those from China had traditional fishing rights at Scarborough Shoal and that China had interfered with these rights in restricting access. The tribunal further held that Chinese law enforcement vessels had unlawfully created a serious risk of collision when they physically obstructed Philippine vessels.

The demonstrators who attended the rally were in a festive mood, although the heat of a summer sun, which pushed temperatures to 30 degrees Celsius, likely discouraged others from attending the rally.

Lewis congratulated former President Benigno Aquino III for filing the case and expressed confidence in President Rodrigo Duterte’s ability to handle the situation going forward.

“We are now extending the hand of friendship (to China). Let’s talk it over, not war. Let’s allow the UN to make the decision,” she said.

She suggested that the UN take over the artificial islands built by China and to use them in a manner they think is best for the countries in the region.

Lewis’ group has led demonstrations in the United States since 2011 to denounce what it calls Chinese bullying of smaller nations like the Philippines in the dispute over the region through whose waters pass trillions of dollars in trade from the Middle East to Japan and China.

She observed that the Philippines’ neighbors had all kept quiet when Manila filed the case, but most observers now believe they will benefit from the UN decision by filing their own cases against China.

“We have the right to fish, the right to exploit the resources but we can share it 60-40 according to the Philippine constitution,” she said. – Rappler.com

Rene Pastor is a journalist in the New York metropolitan area who writes about agriculture, politics and regional security. He was, for many years, a senior commodities journalist for Reuters. He founded the Southeast Asia Commodity Digest, which is an affiliate of Informa Economics research and consulting. He is known for his extensive knowledge of agriculture and the El Niño phenomenon and his views have been quoted in news reports. 

Manny Pacquiao denies plans to take Senate leave for boxing

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FROM CONGRESS TO SENATE. Manny Pacquiao got the 7th highest number of votes in the 2016 senatorial race at 16.05 million. File photo by Alecs Ongcal/Rappler

MANILA, Philippines – World boxing champion and newly-elected senator Manny Pacquiao on Wednesday, July 13, denied reports that he plans to take a leave from the Senate to focus on his next boxing match.

It was Top Rank CEO Bob Arum who told Boxingscene.com that Pacquiao is looking for another opponent for a possible comeback fight and is working with Senate President Franklin Drilon to figure out how he can go on a break to train.

"There is no truth to media reports that I'm planning to take a leave from my Senate duties just to fight again atop the ring," Pacquiao said in a statement.

The senator, however, remains open to the idea of juggling both boxing and government work. After all, he said, boxing is his "only means" of supporting his family and others in need.

"Boxing is my only means of livelihood to support my family and to help those who are in need," said the billionaire boxing champion.

"Politics, to me, is a vocation, not a means to eke out a living. I want to maintain that belief, I want to keep my dignity intact while in public service," he added. (READ: Pacquiao '50-50' on whether he'll remain retired)

Despite this, Pacquiao assured the public that he would not let boxing get in the way of his work at the Senate.

"I want to make it clear – my priority is my legislative works. My next fight has not yet been discussed. Should there be any, I'll make sure it will not interfere with my Senate duties," he said.

"If ever I decide to fight again, rest assured, it will happen when Congress is on recess so there's no need for me to go on leave," the senator added.

To further prove his point, Pacquiao promised that the entire training for his future fights would be held in the country. This, he said, would ensure that he "can attend session even while on training camp."

The former Sarangani representative had the most number of absences in the House of Representatives. Right after winning in the May elections, he vowed to "do his best" to attend all sessions in the upper chamber.

"I owe it to the people," he said. – Rappler.com

Brexiteer Johnson in first Brussels talks since becoming FM

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British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson stands between a Union FLag and a European Union (EU) flag during a reception at the French Ambassador's residence in west London on July 14, 2016. Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP

BRUSSELS, Belgium – Britain's new foreign minister Boris Johnson was to meet with his European counterparts for the first time Monday, July 18, in what will likely be a fence-mending trip to Brussels for the outspoken politician who led the victorious Brexit campaign.

The gathering, which will kick off with a breakfast attended by US Secretary of State John Kerry, marks Johnson's first high-profile foray onto the diplomatic scene after his appointment last week by UK Prime Minister Theresa May stunned European capitals.

It will also be a homecoming of sorts for the eccentric former London mayor, who lived in the Belgian capital in the 1990s when he was the Daily Telegraph's EU correspondent, writing stories that whipped up euroskepticism.

Monday's talks are expected to focus on the fight against terrorism in the wake of the deadly Bastille Day truck attack in Nice and relations with Turkey after a failed military coup there.

The conflicts in Syria and Libya are likewise on the agenda.

But ministers will also be sizing up the diplomatic credentials of gaffe-prone Johnson, who is well-known for his quips mocking foreign leaders and who once famously compared the EU's ambitions for closer integration to those of Adolf Hitler.

While officials in Brussels have stressed they will welcome Johnson as they would any new foreign minister, there is little doubt that his prominent role in last month's vote for Britain to leave the bloc has ruffled feathers.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault even went so far as to say that Johnson "lied a lot" during the referendum campaign.

But the reception might not be altogether frosty, with Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto praising Britain's decision to appoint a man "with fresh ideas".

EU foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini was the first to welcome Johnson to Brussels, with the pair meeting informally "for an initial contact" late Sunday.

A Sunday evening (July 17) dinner that had been planned for all 28 EU foreign ministers was cancelled however.

Several countries opposed the dinner, saying that it amounted to "informal talks" with London before it had triggered the formal procedure for leaving the EU, according to an anonymous diplomat.

EU leaders are adamant they will not be drawn into negotiations until London has sounded the official starting gun.

Johnson's own influence in the Brexit process may be limited however as Prime Minister May has named leading Conservative eurosceptic David Davis as a special minister for Brexit.

In an inauspicious start to his first trip abroad as foreign secretary, the Brussels-bound plane Johnson was traveling in Sunday had to make an emergency landing near London due to a technical issue, delaying his meeting with Mogherini. – Rappler.com


South Sudan struggles to avert 'catastrophe'

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A picture taken on July 16, 2016 in Juba shows a row of numbered body bags with the remains of victims of the past days violence waiting to be collected by a South Sudanese team of the ICRC (International Red Cross Committee). Charles Atiki Lomodong/AFP

JUBA, South Sudan – Street sweepers in South Sudan's capital Juba have cleaned up the blood and bullet casings after gun battles at the presidential palace, but salvaging peace will be a far harder task, analysts warn.

A shaky ceasefire has held since fighting that raged in Juba last week, leaving hundreds dead and forcing thousands to flee their homes.

The country's peace agreement is in tatters, but diplomats balk at throwing it away entirely.

AU special envoy Alpha Oumar Konare has pleaded for the deal to be rebuilt, warning that the consequences of failure are dire.

"If we cannot stop, it will be a catastrophe," he said.

The violence, which dominated an African Union summit on Sunday, July 17, is the latest in a war that broke out in December 2013.

It has pitted soldiers loyal to President Salva Kiir against troops backing his long time rival Vice-President Riek Machar, who technically ended his rebellion to forge a unity government in April.

'Leaders have failed'

Hopes are low, however. After a string of failed peace deals, diplomats' faith in the two top men is at breaking point.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said the people "have been let down by their own leadership" and called for more sanctions on those blocking peace, an arms embargo, and to bolster the 12,000-strong UN peacekeeping force.

It is a message echoed by veteran journalist Alfred Taban, arrested on Saturday, July 16, after he wrote in an editorial in the Juba Monitor that the leaders had "completely failed".

Academic Alex de Waal has warned he fears the political system may be "too deformed to be reformed".

For now, the grossly impoverished nation "can only function either with a well-financed big man or a ruthless enforcer at the top", de Waal said in a recent article.

But with the government both nearly bankrupt and unable to impose order, neither option works, he said.

"The country is too diverse and its communities too well armed for an old-style dictatorship to be possible, even if it were a morally acceptable option," he added.

But for those trying to stop South Sudan from collapsing entirely, even a flawed peace deal is better than none at all.

"For internationals to dismiss the agreement as irrelevant or unsalvageable at this stage would only play into the hands of those hardliners that seek continued military confrontation," said former ceasefire monitor Aly Verjee.

Machar has been in hiding since the July 8 battles at the presidential palace, and the country will remain in limbo until new political and military deals are struck.

His men were forced to flee as tanks and helicopter gunships pounded their positions with overwhelming firepower.

It remains unclear what force he can still command, and his authority over his generals and troops is also in question.

Casie Copeland, of the International Crisis Group, said it was the best peace that could be made at the time, preventing an escalation of the conflict.

"It halted the fighting, created a framework for reform, transitional justice and elections and prevented regional powers being further sucked into South Sudan's war," Copeland said.

The situation is dire. Over a third of South Sudan's population are expected to face severe food shortages over the coming months, and there is a real risk of what the UN has termed a "hunger catastrophe".

The economy is in ruins with runaway inflation and people are suffering.

'No future here'

The peace deal was based on buying loyalty with power and cash, two critical elements never delivered.

Kiir undermined the fundamental power-sharing pillar of the deal by nearly tripling regional states, while oil cash that bought support and once provided some 98 percent of government revenues has gone.

Production was cut due to fighting, while a global slump in prices meant that what landlocked Juba earned for its crude about equalled its pipeline export payments to Khartoum.

It is doubtful at best if the rivals could even claw back the peace deal to the status quo - but critics say that placing two rival armies in the same city without integration was always a recipe for disaster.

"It placed the security of the capital city Juba jointly in the hands of the two deeply hostile forces," said de Waal, who has spent years involved in peace negotiations in Sudan and South Sudan, saying Juba was "arm twisted" by the international community to agree.

For now, more peacekeepers and the threat of sanctions seem the international community's main options.

But more peacekeepers may not make the UN mission any more effective.

The UN has been widely criticized for failing to intervene, instead hunkering down inside its bases, where over half of the peacekeepers are tied up guarding 160,000 civilians sheltering behind razor wire.

"We can't continue like this for ever," said vegetable seller Rebekah Joseph, a mother-of-three who fled the fighting for shelter in a church in Juba.

"I'm going home to my village when it is safe, for there seems no future here, because nothing ever changes," she said. – Rappler.com

Lawmakers push for national ID system to reduce red tape

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MANILA, Philippines – At least 3 lawmakers are re-introducing bills seeking to establish a national identification (ID) system for all Filipinos here and abroad.

Outgoing House Speaker and Quezon City 4th District Representative Feliciano Belmonte Jr authored House Bill (HB) Number 12 or the Filipino Identification System Act. AKO Bicol Representatives Rodel Bacobe and Christopher Co also co-authored a bill with the same title, HB Number 523.          

Bills creating a national ID system were filed in the previous 16th Congress. The House of Representatives passed them but they were stuck at the Senate until the end of the session.

The Philippines is one of only 9 countries in the world without a national identification system, according to Belmonte. Under his proposal, the Filipino Identification System will consolidate all government-issued ID systems into one to "improve government services and limit red tape in government transactions."

“The national identification card will lower costs, streamline transactions, and provide ease and convenience,” Belmonte said.

Both bills would require all Filipinos residing anywhere in the world to register their personal information into the central system to be managed by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA).

A registered Filipino will be issued a non-transferable Filipino ID card with a number that shall be valid for life.

Filipinos residing or working overseas are to register for their IDs at the nearest Philippine Embassy or consular office in the country where they are staying.

Based on the two House bills, the Filipino ID card would be honored in transactions concerning a person's identity, marital status, birth, and other personal circumstances. 

The ID may also be used for applications for passport, driver's license, Social Security System (SSS), Government Service Insurance System (GSIS), PhilHealth, Home Development Mutual Fund (Pag-IBIG), and the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI).

The Filipino ID card may also be used to identify voters, schools, and employees, as well as to avail of senior citizens' benefits. It may also be used for court, prosecutor, and police clearances, and in banking and financial institutions. 

Batocabe and Co said the current Unified Multi-purpose ID card for GSIS, SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG members serves as an "excellent" case study for their proposed Filipino ID card. 

“Once enacted into law, all citizens, not only government employees and SSS members but the self-employed, the unemployed, minors, and Filipinos working abroad will be under the coverage of the National ID system,” Batocabe added.

If passed into law, the Filipino Identification System Act would make the following offenses punishable:

  • Falsifying information in applying for the issuance of a Filipino ID card or procures through fraud
  • Utilizing the card in an unlawful manner
  • Any person or establishment refusing to recognize the Filipino ID card of a member
  • Any public official or employee conniving in the application or issuance of an unauthorized Filipino ID card

Violators shall be punished with a fine of not less than P50,000 but not more P500,000, or an imprisonment of not less than 6 months but not more than two years or both. 

Government officials and employees who commit these offenses will be perpetually disqualified from government. – Rappler.com

Briones: Schools must teach 'real life stories' on dangers of drugs

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WAR ON DRUGS. The education department is looking at a different approach when it comes to teaching the 'dangers of drugs'. File photos by Ben Nabong and Rhaydz Barcia/Rappler

MANILA, Philippines – The education department wants schools to go beyond textbooks in teaching the dangers of drug abuse in the country.

"Lagyan natin ng reality framework itong pagturo natin ng composition ng drugs. Ang aking iniisip, real life stories: Naloloka sa drugs, nare-rehabilitate, so ngayon maayos na buhay," Education Secretary Leonor Briones said in a DZMM interview on Monday, July 18.

(Let's put a reality framework in the way we teach the composition of drugs. What's in my mind is real life stories: Those whose lives were destroyed because of drugs, when they undergo rehabilitation, their lives get better.)

While Briones said it is important that the school curriculum already warns against drug use, she believes students could better understand if they see real life stories of the effects of drug addiction through films, plays, and dramas.

To make this happen, teachers will also have to be trained, she added.

"Kailangan capacitated teachers para sa pagturo nila may mas puso, kaluluwa 'yung kanilang pagturo sa mga bata. Kasi kung idaan natin sa leksyon, sa libro, sa workbook…. Nasa curriculum na 'yan," Briones explained.

(We have to capacitate our teachers so that they teach our students with heart and soul. We can't just use lectures, books, workbooks…. That's already in the curriculum.)

In 2013, a study showed that the most substantial decline in vices among Filipino youth and young adults was found in drug use. (READ: Music, drugs, and alcohol: Do young Filipinos party to get high?)

The Duterte administration has intensified its crackdown on drugs in the country, with a campaign that has seen hundreds of alleged drug suspects killed in police operations and the surrender of over 60,000 alleged drug addicts. (READ: Rising number of users seeking drug rehab is a 'happy problem' but...)

How do drugs reach schools?

"Sa mga bundok-bundok, mga lugar na ang layo-layo na talaga, ang nagdadala daw ng drugs naman ay 'yung mga habal-habal drivers…. Maraming mga paraan, 'yung iba naman dine-deliver mismo sa gate ng eskwelahan," Briones explained.

(In mountains and in far-flung areas, motorcycle drivers bring the drugs… There are many ways, some deliver even at the school gates.)

She said that drug testing in schools will not be mandatory, and will only be conducted through random sampling. The testing will be based on existing regulations, and will only be allowed with the parents' consent.

"We have to be very careful with the way we treat the child, because this might be a traumatic experience, they might think they are suspected of something…. These are minors, [they] need parental consent," she added in a mix of English and Filipino.

Briones said they're still weighing how to approach drug testing among teachers and school officials.

For now, it will also be done through random sampling, and if the drug problem turns out to be "serious", the department will consider expanding the coverage of the program.

Malacañang has already welcomed calls for all government employees to undergo mandatory drug testing as a "powerful symbolic act" that would "show that the people working in government are good people and they are people worthy of our trust." (READ: Learning from Davao: Health chief eyes community-based drug rehab) – Rappler.com

SpaceX propels cargo to space station, lands rocket

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MIAMI, USA (3rd UPDATE) – A SpaceX rocket blasted off Monday, July 18, toward the International Space Station, carrying a load of supplies including a docking adapter that future spaceships will use to park at the orbiting outpost.

"Falcon 9 is on its way," said a commentator at SpaceX mission control as the white rocket launched under a dark night sky from Cape Canaveral, Florida at 12:45 am local time (0445 GMT).

Following the launch, the rocket separated, sending the cargo to orbit. Then, the first stage of the rocket successfully fired its engines again to maneuver its way back to land on solid ground at Cape Canaveral.

SpaceX mission control erupted in cheers as live video footage showed the first stage of the rocket landing steady and upright, marking the second such solid-ground touchdown for SpaceX.

It first accomplished the feat in December 2015, as part of the California-based company's ongoing effort to re-use costly rocket parts instead of jettisoning them into the ocean.

Cargo en route

DRAGON AND FALCON. A multiple exposure photo showing the trail of the Dragon spacecraft as it lifts off, with the Falcon 9 rocket's trail as it landed, at Cape Canaveral, Florida, July 18, 2016. Photo courtesy SpaceX

The nearly 5,000 pounds (2,300 kilograms) of cargo on board includes an international docking adaptor which will function as a parking spot for commercial space taxis in the coming years.

A previous version was destroyed – along with $118 million in equipment – when SpaceX's rocket exploded in June 2015 shortly after liftoff, due to a faulty strut that allowed a helium tank to break loose and caused the blast.

The docking adaptor is the first of two to be sent to the ISS, and will enable future arrivals by privately owned spaceships which are under construction by SpaceX and Boeing.

These commercial crew vehicles will restore US capability to send astronauts to space, following the 2011 retirement of the space shuttle program which has left Russia's Soyuz capsules as the world's sole means of crew transport.

The first crew flights are planned for late 2017, and 2018.

According to NASA, the Boeing-built docking adaptors will function automatically, making it faster and easier for spaceships – including the Boeing Starliner and SpaceX's Dragon crew vehicle – to come and go from the station.

"It used to be, in the old days, you had to do it the hard way and dock manually," said NASA's Steve Payne.

"This has all the instrumentation that will allow spacecraft to come do it all automatically and it is a whole lot lighter workload on the crew."

The Dragon cargo vehicle is expected to arrive early Wednesday, when astronauts will use the outpost's robotic arm to grab the incoming spacecraft and attach it to the station.

"The spacecraft will be grappled to the space station at 7 am (1100 GMT) Wednesday, July 20, by NASA astronaut Jeff Williams, supported by NASA astronaut Kate Rubins," said the US space agency. – Rappler.com

Duterte: No demolition without relocation under my watch

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'NO DEMOLITION.' President Rodrigo Duterte calls the practice of demolition without relocation inhumane. File photo by Manman Dejeto

MANILA, Philippines – During his administration, there will be no demolition of homes unless residents are assured of relocation, said President Rodrigo Duterte.

"During my time, there will be no demolition 'pag walang relocation. Hindi ako papayag," said Duterte at the start of his speech in front of San Beda Law School batchmates on Sunday night, July 17, in Malacañang Palace.

(During my time, there will be no demolition if there is no relocation. I won't allow it.)

Duterte condemned demolitions approved even when relocation sites for affected families have not been readied. He blasted the practice as inhumane.

"Kasi 'yung walang mapuntahan, sirain mo ang bahay, parang aso. Eh saan pupunta 'yung mga tao? Where will they find another shelter?" he said. 

(Those who have nowhere to go to, you destroy their house, they are like dogs. Where will they go? Where will they find another shelter?)

In comparison, the President said he would be "very generous" to victims of demolitions. 

"I'd look for money, 'yung lahat na gusto nating gamitin (all that we want to use). We will go for suitable relocation," he explained.

Support for new industries is another strategy his administration would use to help improve the quality of life of those affected by demolitions. 

"That is why, itong mga bagong papasok (the new ones coming in), we have to build new industries. We have to create an activity, economics, or otherwise para may pupuntahan sila (so they have something to turn to)," Duterte said.

Though he did not elaborate on how he would implement his policy, Duterte has appointed Vice President Leni Robredo to head the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council (HUDCC).

The agency is tasked with ensuring demolitions all over the country abide by requirements for demolition and relocation based on the Urban Development and Housing Act of 1992 or Republic Act No. 7279.

According to the law, demolition is only allowed under specific situations such as when the residents occupy danger zones and public places, areas where government infrastructure projects are about to be implemented, or where there is a court order for eviction and demolition. – Rappler.com

Brillante Mendoza on directing SONA: I'll capture the true Duterte

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DIREK FOR DUTERTE'S SONA. Award-winning director Brillante Mendoza inspects the Batasang Pambansa plenary hall, where President Rodrigo Duterte will deliver his first State of the Nation Address. Photo by Mara Cepeda/Rappler

MANILA, Philippines – Why does the President's State of the Nation Address (SONA) need a film director?

World-renowned director Brillante Mendoza and Palace Communications Office (PCO) chief Martin Andanar on Monday, July 18, did an ocular visit at the plenary hall of the Batasang Pambansa, where Duterte is set to deliver his first SONA next Monday, July 25.

Mendoza, who received international acclaim for his films like Kinatay and Thy Womb, accepted Andanar’s offer to direct the President's SONA pro bono. (READ: Director Brillante Mendoza urges Duterte to 'change' Philippines)

{source}

<div class="fb-video" data-href="http://go.rappler.com/https://www.facebook.com/rapplerdotcom/videos/1268365109850936/" data-width="800" data-show-text="true"><blockquote cite="https://www.facebook.com/rapplerdotcom/videos/1268365109850936/" class="fb-xfbml-parse-ignore"><a href="http://go.rappler.com/https://www.facebook.com/rapplerdotcom/videos/1268365109850936/"></a><p>Director Brillante Mendoza conducts an ocular visit at Batasang Pambansa for Presidente Rody Duterte&#039;s State of the Nation Address (SONA). #SONA2016</p>Posted by <a href="http://go.rappler.com/https://www.facebook.com/rapplerdotcom/">Rappler</a> on Sunday, July 17, 2016</blockquote></div>

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So in terms of mga direction, kasi baka nagtataka ‘yung iba, ‘Bakit may direktor sa SONA?’ Gusto lang natin i-clear ‘yun. Ang gagawin ng director para mas ma-reach natin ‘yung order ng mga shots and just to make sure also na ‘yung gusto nating ma-capture natin kung anong klaseng presidente siya,” Mendoza told reporters after touring the SONA venue.

(People might be wondering, 'Why is there a director for the SONA?' I just want to clear that up. I’m here as a director so we can reach the proper order of the shots and just to make sure also that we would be able to capture what kind of president he truly is.)

Pagdating sa SONA, hindi lang siya ‘yung formal na nagsasalita coming from his point of view, but what we want to capture is being able to communicate and connect with the people. And the people would be able to understand him, kung anong gusto niyang mangyari, gusto niyang sabihin,” he added.

(For the SONA, I just don’t want to show the President speaking from his point of view. We also want to capture how he is able to communicate and connect with the people. And the people would be able to understand him, what he wants to achieve, what he wants to say.) 

INSPECTION. Mendoza (right) is joined by PCO chief Martin Andanar (center) and Department of Finance spokesperson Paola Alvarez, daughter of presumptive House Speaker and Davao del Norte 1st District Representative Bebot Alvarez. Photo by Mara Cepeda/Rappler

The filmmaker said he does not plan to hold any sessions with Duterte prior to the SONA so he can “capture‘yung spontaneity.” 

Walang session. Dapat ‘di nire-rehearse dahil ‘di naman ganun ang president. Ika-capture talaga ‘yung moment na nagsasalita siya,” explained Mendoza. 

(No sessions. There should be no rehearsals because the President’s not like that. We will capture the moment that he will be speaking.)

Mendoza said that the PCO already approached him to do some information campaigns for the government. He confirmed that he would be more involved in doing projects for the Duterte administration. 

Ang maganda nun, in line din siya sa mga advocacy ko, sa mga ginagawa ko. If you notice, 'yung mga pelikula ko in the past 10 years, tungkol lahat sa mga social issues. Recent film ko, alam natin tungkol sa drugs and corruption,” said Mendoza. 

(What’s good is that these are also in line with my advocacies. If you notice, the films I've made in the past 10 years were all about social issues. My recent film was about drugs and corruption.) 

He is referring to Ma' Rosa, which was shown recently at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival. Jaclyn Jose, who won as Best Actress, played the role of a mother forced to sell drugs to survive.

Duterte is known for his tough stance against crime and illegal drugs, vowing to suppress these within 3 to 6 months. He's been criticized for allowing extrajudicial killings to achieve this goal. – Rappler.com

PH students bring home 9 awards from HK world math contest

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WINNERS. Filipino contestants show their medals and trophies at the awarding ceremony of the 19th Po Leung Kuk Primary Mathematics World Contest in Hong Kong. Photo by MTG Philippines

MANILA, Philippines – Twelve-year-old Raphael Dalida did not expect to get a perfect score when he answered hard math questions during the 19th Po Leung Kuk Primary Mathematics World Contest (PMWC) held in Hong Kong last July 12 to 16.

"I cried and I was really happy. It was indescribable," said Dalida, a student of St Mary's Academy in Pasay who brought home a gold medal from the contest.

He earned the medal during the individual round, when he solved 15 questions in 90 minutes – equivalent to spending 6 minutes per question. (READ: Life lessons from mathematics)

Dalida and other elementary students from different Philippine schools won a total of 9 medals and awards from the world math contest, the Mathematics Trainers' Guild (MTG) Philippines said in a statement Monday, July 18.

Gold-medalist Dalida, who has been training with MTG since 2014, dedicated his award to "everyone who supported me", including his parents. His father is an overseas Filipino worker in Croatia.

Filbert Wu from MGC-New Life Christian Academy in Taguig was the silver medalist among the Philippine delegation.

Meanwhile, the following students won bronze medals:

  • Evgeny Cruz - Palanan Elementary School, Makati
  • Enzo Chan - Bayanihan Institute, Tarlac
  • Chiara Tan-Gatue - St Jude Catholic School, Manila
  • Kristen Teh - Grace Christian College, Quezon City
  • Cassidy Tan - Davao Christian High School, Davao City

The delegation also participated in the team contest, with Team B composed of Dalida, Tan, Wu, and Sean Matthew Tan of Jubilee Christian Academy as second runner-up.

Team A, composed of Cruz, Matthew Carpio of Agoo Kiddie Special School, Noel Dequito of Xavier School in Nuvali, and Ethan Jao of St Jude Catholic School, won a merit award.

Erin Christen Noceda from the Special Education Center for the Gifted also joined the Philippine delegation that competed in Hong Kong.

They were accompanied by Dr Simon Chua, Renard Chua, Robert Degolacion, and Vincent Charles Go of MTG Philippines, and Ma. Christina Ilaw of the Department of Science and Technology's Science Education Institute.

"We at MTG are proud of the kids' performance," MTG President Simon Chua said in the statement.

Students from United States, Australia, South Africa, Bulgaria, China, Hong Kong, Mongolia, Macau, Taiwan, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Vietnam also participated in the contest. – Rappler.com


44 communist rebels surrender to rebel-turned-mayor

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NOW FOR PEACE. Rebel returnees from Sta Ana, Pampanga. Photo by Jun A. Malig/Rappler

PAMPANGA, Philippines – Forty-four members of the communist New People’s Army (NPA) and its breakaway faction, the Rebolusyonaryong Hukbo ng Bayan (RHB), in Santa Ana town surrendered to the new mayor, himself a former guerrilla.

The 25 NPA and 19 RHB rebels sought the help of Santa Ana Mayor Norberto Gamboa, a former three-term village chief of Barangay Santa Lucia to surrender to the government, Major Ericson Bulosan of the Armed Forces of the Philippines’ Civil Relations Service told Rappler. 

Gamboa, known in the underground communist movement as Ka Ross, used to be a district commander of the NPA overseeing the rebel group’s activities and operations in Arayat town in this province.

Bulosan said Gamboa and several other rebels surrendered to AFP chief of staff Ricardo Visaya in 2004, when the latter was still a lieutenant colonel and commander of the Army’s 69th Infantry Battalion based in this province.

“The rebels trust Mayor Gamboa. They know that he really wants to help them, and he was one of their own, a district commander of the NPA until he surrendered to then  Lt. Col. Ricardo Visaya, commander of the 69th Infantry Battalion, in 2004. Even when Mayor Gamboa was still a barangay captain, he had been helping rebels to return to the fold of the law,” said Bulosan, who worked under Visaya at the 69th IB here.

The rebel returnees, some of them women, were presented to Pampanga Governor Lilia Pineda, Police Regional Office 3 director Chief Supt. Aaron Aquino, and officers of the AFP’s 7th Infantry Division at the executive room of the provincial capitol building here on Monday, July 18.

Joy “Ka Jeanette” Macasaquit, a former member of the RHB since 1998, said she hopes that the Duterte administration would uphold the right of the farmers to till farmlands.

She said they decided to seek Gamboa’s help to have a normal life. “Nakita po ni mayor ang sitwasyon namin at gusto rin niya na maging payapa na lang ang pamumuhay namin, kaya tinulungan niya kami.” 

Gamboa, who joined the NPA when he was only 18 years old, told Rappler that he decided to help the rebels surrender to authorities to help them with their livelihood. “Nakikita ko silang nagtitinda ng gulay at iba pang bagay, kahit maalinsangan nakatakip ang ulo nila at balot na balot ang katawan nila. Kahit madilim, naka-sunglasses. Ayaw man nilang lumantad, kailangan nilang mag-hanapbuhay para sa mga pamilya nila. Gusto kong kahit paano guminhawa ang buhay nila at makapag-hanapbuhay sila ng matiwasay at walang kinatatakutan na huliin sila ng military,” the first-term mayor said. (I would see them sell vegetables, all covered and wearing sunglasses to conceal their identities. They would rather not be seen in public but they're forced to do so to feed their families.)

Gamboa said that even when he was still a village chief, several rebels had approached and asked his help in their surrender. “Tinulungan at patuloy tayong tinutulungan ni AFP Chief-of-Staff Ricardo Visaya sa pagbabalik-loob ng ating mga kapatid na rebelde sa pagbabalik-loob sa lipunan,” he said, adding that he expects more rebels to surrender to the government.

On the returnees’ safety, Gamboa appealed to the military to avoid turning them into intelligence agents or organizers of anti-rebel groups. They will not be harmed as long as they don't betray the movement they once served, Gamboa said. "Hindi sila  gagalawin ng NPA at RHB kung mamumuhay lang sila ng marangal at payapa,” he said.

The mayor said he will review the finances of his municipality and find ways to provide the rebel returnees with carts for the products they sell and other means of support for their livelihood. He said Governor Pineda had also assured him that she would support the financial and other needs of the former rebels. – Rappler.com

Beijing to hold South China Sea war games after ruling

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This photo taken on May 10, 2016 shows crew members of China's South Sea Fleet taking part in a logistics supply drill near the James Shoal area on South China Sea. AFP photo/File

BEIJING, China – Beijing will close off access to part of the South China Sea for military drills, officials said Monday, July 18, after an international tribunal ruled against its sweeping claims in the waters.

An area off the east coast of China's island province of Hainan will host military exercises from Tuesday to Thursday (July 19 to 21), China's maritime administration said on its website, adding that entrance was "prohibited".

The area of sea identified is some distance from the Paracel islands and even further from the Spratlys, with both chains claimed by Beijing and several other neighboring states.

The Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) in The Hague last week ruled that there was no legal basis for Beijing's claims to much of the sea, embodied in a "nine-dash line" that dates from 1940s maps and stretches close to other countries' coasts.

Manila – which lodged the suit against Beijing – welcomed the decision, as China dismissed it as a "piece of waste paper".

Despite Chinese objections, the European Union weighed in on the subject at a regional summit this weekend, with President Donald Tusk telling reporters that the grouping "will continue to speak out in support of upholding international law", adding that it had "full confidence" in the PCA and its decisions.

China pressured countries in the ASEAN bloc of Southeast Asian nations not to issue a joint statement on the ruling, diplomats said.

Beijing held military drills in the South China Sea just days before the international arbitration court ruling, state media reported.

China has rapidly built reefs in the waters into artificial islands capable of military use.

In a separate message on its website, the maritime administration said last week that four out of five lighthouses built atop islands and reefs in the sea have been activated, and a fifth would be put into use soon. – Rappler.com

4 killed in attacks in Kazakhstan's financial capital Almaty

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ALMATY, Kazakhstan (UPDATED) – Three police officers and one civilian were killed Monday, July 18, following armed attacks on a police station and a security service office in Kazakhstan's largest city Almaty, the interior ministry said.

Parts of the city were in lockdown following the incident with one suspect in custody and a manhunt underway for an accomplice still at large, the interior ministry said in a statement.

The detained man is accused of killing a local resident during a carjacking and attacking a police station at around 11 am (0500 GMT), shooting a police officer and taking his gun, said the statement.

The suspect then shot two officers as they gave chase before being arrested.

"According to preliminary information, the detained man is a 27-year-old man with previous convictions," the ministry said, adding that he is "suspected of murdering a woman at the weekend".

It said that police are now searching for the gunman's "partner in crime."

Local media reported that at least seven police are being treated in hospital.

The country's anti-terror service has issued a red alert threat warning following the attacks and police have called on residents of the city to stay in their homes.

'Very tense'

A woman who lives in the Almalinsky district of Almaty where the police station was attacked told Agence France-Presse the situation in the city was "very tense".

"I left Almalinsky district in the morning and everything was calm. Now I do not know how I am going to return home," the 22-year-old woman, Sholpan, told Agence France-Presse by telephone.

Several areas of the city have been cordoned off including the city's railway station, witnesses told Agence France-Presse.

The country has been rocked by several violent incidents in recent months.

Gunmen went on a rampage in the northwestern city of Aktobe near the Russian border on June 5, killing three civilians at two gun stores before trying to storm a military base with a hijacked bus, killing 3 soldiers.

In a statement on last month's violence President Nursultan Nazarbayev called the attackers "followers of radical pseudo-religious groups" adding that the gunmen had operated on "instructions received from abroad."

At least 18 suspects were killed in police anti-terror raids following those attacks.

For much of its independence Kazakhstan was able to avoid the kind of political tumult seen in other countries in ex-Soviet Central Asia.

But growing social dissatisfaction in the majority Muslim nation has grown as the economy reels from low oil prices and a crisis in neighboring Russia, a strategic ally. – Rappler.com

 

 

Classes in QC schools suspended on SONA day, July 25

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MANILA, Philippines – The local government of Quezon City announced the suspension of classes in all levels on Monday, July 25 – the day President Rodrigo Duterte will deliver his first State of the Nation Address (SONA). 

The announcement was first posted on the Facebook page of Quezon City Mayor Herbert Bautista on Monday, July 18, or a week before the SONA.

"On the occasion of the State of the Nation Address of [President Rodrigo Roa Duterte] on July 25, 2016, classes at all levels in QC are suspended," the post read. 

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This was also announced on the local government unit's  Twitter account:

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/walangpasok?src=hash">#walangpasok</a> ADVISORY: No classes on Monday (July 25) in all levels in QC due to the SONA of Pres. Duterte <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/SONA2016?src=hash">#SONA2016</a></p>&mdash; QC Local Government (@qclocalgovt) <a href="https://twitter.com/qclocalgovt/status/754938189463195648">July 18, 2016</a></blockquote>
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Duterte is set to deliver his first SONA at the Batasan Pambansa in Quezon City.

As in past SONAs, heavy traffic is expected on Monday in areas surrounding the House of Representatives. (READ: Brillante Mendoza on directing SONA: I'll capture the true Duterte) – Rappler.com

France to fall silent for Nice victims as politicians bicker

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TRIBUTES. This photo taken on July 16, 2016 in Nice shows a make-shift memorial for victims of the deadly Bastille Day attack. Valery Hache/AFP

NICE, France – France was set to hold a minute's silence on Monday, July 18, to honor the 84 victims of the Nice truck attack, but a period of national mourning was overshadowed by bickering politicians.

Church bells will toll across the country, and the country will fall silent at midday, a now grimly familiar ritual after the third major terror attack in 18 months on French soil.

French investigators have yet to find links between attacker Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, a 31-year-old Tunisian, and the Islamic State (ISIS) group which claimed responsibility for the carnage, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve told France's RTL radio.

"We cannot exclude that an unbalanced and very violent individual" has been "through a rapid radicalization, committed to this absolutely despicable crime," he said.

Six people were in custody on Monday including a 38-year-old Albanian suspected of providing Lahouaiej-Bouhlel with a pistol he used to fire at police during the attack.

Lahouaiej-Bouhlel was shot dead after zigzagging a 19-tonne truck through a crowd of tourists, locals and families enjoying a fireworks display in the Riviera city of Nice on Bastille Day, July 14.

Mangled bodies were left strewn across the Riviera city's seafront in the grisly attack by a man described by those who knew him as a loner with a history of violence and depression.

The attack comes 8 months after ISIS jihadists killed 130 people across Paris, and 18 months after 3 days of terror at the Charlie Hebdo weekly and a Jewish supermarket killed 17.

Former president and main opposition leader Nicolas Sarkozy said Sunday that "everything that should have been done the past 18 months was not done".

"We are at war, outright war. So I will use strong words: it will be us or them," he said.

'Shameful' politicians

While previous attacks saw grand displays of national unity, any semblance of cohesion quickly unravelled after the Nice massacre and Sarkozy joins a long line of opposition politicians who have criticized the government.

Cazeneuve described the politicians as "shameful".

"Certain members of the political class have not respected the mourning period. Arguments broke out right away which personally saddens and shocks me," he said.

The frustration of the French was writ large in some of the messages left among flowers and tributes on Nice's seafront.

"Enough with the speeches" and "Sick of carnage in our streets", the messages read.

The government has sought to fend off criticism, assuring that security at the Bastille Day event was high and scrambling to reassure citizens about their safety.

Cazeneuve called for volunteers to boost the security forces who were already on high alert under an eight-month-old state of emergency.

"I want to call on all French patriots who wish to do so, to join this operational reserve," said Cazeneuve of a force currently made up of 12,000 volunteers aged between 17 and 30.

The latest attack comes after a French parliamentary inquiry last week criticized numerous failings by the intelligence services following jihadist assaults in January and November last year.

France is a prime target of ISIS, due to its role in fighting the group in Iraq and Syria, its emphasis on secular values, and what the government has admitted is a "social and ethnic apartheid" that alienates its large Muslim community.

Text messages and selfies

But the deadly use of an easily obtainable vehicle as a weapon by a man who had no history of radicalization, has highlighted the challenge for intelligence and security officials in stopping such attacks.

"We are now confronted with individuals open to IS's message to engage in extremely violent actions without necessarily having been trained or having the weapons to carry out a mass (casualty) attack," Cazeneuve said earlier.

As investigators piece together details about his motives and planning, it emerged Lahouaiej-Bouhlel had used the rented truck to stake out the Nice seafront for two consecutive days before striking.

A source close to the investigation told Agence France-Presse that he had also sent a text message just before the attack in which he "expresses satisfaction at having obtained a 7.65-millimeter pistol and discusses the supply of other weapons".

He also took a selfie at the wheel of the truck in the days before the attack.

In Nice, many people were still desperately waiting for news of their loved ones.

Prosecutors said just 52 victims had been officially identified so far as they take painstaking measures to avoid errors of identification seen during the Paris attacks last November.

At least 10 children were among the dead, as well as tourists from Ukraine, Switzerland, Germany, and a local Russian association said there were about 10 victims from Russia.

Health Minister Marisol Touraine said 85 people were still hospitalized, 18 of them in critical condition. – Rappler.com

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