internet-crazy - filipino globe
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internet-crazy - filipino globe
filipino globe hong kong / manila edition Volume 2 Issue 1 INTERNET-CRAZY Handling strangers and being heard 24 www.filglobe.com THE WINNERS Are you one of the lucky ones? Check out how you fared in our competition November 2007 CALICOAN 8 Tucked away from it all, it’s one of the few places you’d like to be stranded in 33 Philippines moves to ease peso-dollar pain Government sets three-point program to tackle OFW woes over surging peso THE MAIN POINTS Reggie Amigo in Manila The government is set to announce a three-point program to ease the impact of a surging peso on overseas Filipino workers and their families. Malacanang confirmed this to Filipino Globe after a cabinet meeting during which the Department of Labor presented the initiative to President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. “The President is very concerned,” said Marianito Roque, administrator of the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration, who made the cabinet presentation. “In fact, she said it [the issue of the soaring peso] is always on her mind,” Roque said. He said the program includes wideranging measures but breaks down to three main points: • Providing income-boosting livelihood projects • Making low-cost basic commodities more widely available • Providing local training and employment “Our marching orders from the President is to look for ways we can supplement the income of marginal overseas workers – those earning less than US$200 a month,” Roque said. The program, to be launched in the next six months, is expected to cost the government a fraction of the US$12.8 billion sent home last year by more than eight million OFWs. It will be announced in a series of public discussions starting next week, which will include a steppedup campaign by the Bangko Sentral to educate OFW families on the efficient use of money. A big part of the initiative involves the Department of Agriculture, which has been accelerating its countryside CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 Launch income-boosting livelihood projects for marginal OFWs Make basic goods and services more affordable through commissaries Provide local training and employment BANKS’ ROLE Major lenders are being asked to participate in a hedging scheme aimed at stabilising exchange rates 2 PESO SOARS AGAIN Analysts expect peso to test P42.75, while others see it settling down to more modest levels WHO’S HURTING? The peso broke new ground earlier in the week, soaring to a seven-year high of P42.795 against the US dollar. Most Filipinos are not affected by the deteriorating dollar-peso exchange rate, says SWS Singapore model may be the one for us PAGE 2 2 4 2 the surging peso filipino globe ANGBANSA Peso stays on course for more gains The peso hit a seven-year high, breaching the P42 barrier, before closing trade on Friday back above P43 to the US dollar. “The weakness of the US dollar across the board and expected cut of US Fed rate supports the strength of the peso,” said Marcelo Ayes, vice-president of Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Traditionally, most remittances from overseas Filipino workers pour into the country in the last three months of the year. Traders expect remittances to reach US$14.7 billion this year. However, the continuing strength of the peso decreases the value of dollar earnings, particularly from OFWs in the US. More dollar sales are expected to come as the remittance season goes into high gear toward the Christmas season. Ayes said the surging peso is expected to be sustained by continuing investment flows from initial public offerings of Splash Corp and TKC Steel, and the privatisation of the 20 per cent share of Philippine National Oil Corp.The peso is expected to test P42.75 to P42.40 in the weeks ahead, traders said. For next year, the peso is seen falling within the government’s target of P45 to P47 against the dollar. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas expects the peso to average P46 to P48 this year. Market players were surprised that Bangko Sentral did not support the US dollar at P43. “The failure of the BSP to provide support to the dollar gave traders the green light to sell US dollars aggressively as they reversed long US dollar positions and others added to their short US dollar positions,” the Metrobank said. The US dollar weakened further against major currencies after US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said the American economy will slow down in the coming months due to a slump in the housing sector. Higher oil prices are also expected to put pressure on the greenback for some time more. Davao The Department of Agrarian Reform Davao will hold a stakeholders’ forum this month to muster support for the extension of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program that is set to end in 2008. Fraulein Montañez, information officer of DAR’s provincial office, said DAR will invite mayors, congressmen, church officials, people’s organizations, non-government organizations and members of the academe to the forum. “We aim to gather support for the CARP extension after we we found in our latest inventory that there are still more areas to be covered in this program,” Montañez said. She said there is yet 1.3 million hectares of land nationwide to be distributed under land reform. Pangasinan Commercial banks and remittance service providers are being asked to consider a hedging scheme. Singapore-style fund ‘may be the answer’ Roque floats idea of re-introducing investment vehicle Raul Acedre in Manila A provident fund that combines the features of a pension scheme and an investment vehicle might be just the ticket for banishing our exchange-rate ills. “Something similar to the Central Provident Fund in Singapore might work for us,” OWWA administrator Marianito Roque said. Loved and hated by Singaporeans, CPF is a mandatory pension scheme to which employer and employee contribute a certain proportion of the latter’s salary towards his retirement. Its resources are handled by professional fund managers and invested in various assets. Members may draw on the fund for BY THE NUMBERS 500 Amount in US dollars an OFW must earn to take part in a CPF-style scheme specific purposes, such as to pay for a down payment on a flat. In the case of OFWs, a similar fund could be used to help stabilise exchange rates. Roque said its compulsory nature might not sit well with workers and the cost of running it requires a high level of contribution, which makes it something not for everyone. “We’re talking about a comfort zone of US$500 – that’s the minimum that an OFW should be earning per month to be able to afford the monthly contribution,” he said. He said the closest OFWs got to having their own managed fund was the Overseas Worker Investment Fund, which “did not happen due to low yield,” Roque said. “The basis for the fund was Philippine debt papers, which were projected to yield 13 per cent,” Roque said. “We ended up with 6 per cent.” Roque said the fund could be reintroduced with certain features that will institutionalise the sourcing and regeneration of assets so it can continue to be a viable proposition.Any such move requires legislative action. RP sets 3-pronged attack on exchange woes FROM PAGE 1 development program. The Technical Education and Development Authority and the Department of Trade and Industry have been directed to provide training and help create employment opportunities, respectively, in the communities of marginal OFWs. This is the first time the government has flagged its response to growing concerns about the soaring peso, which has seen US dollar remittances shrink in value by more than 23 per cent since last year. November 2007 And for the first time, the peso was up against the currencies of all major OFW host countries, including Saudi Arabia, Britain, Japan, Canada, Australia and Singapore on November 6. It hit a seven-year high of P42.795. Several other measures are on the table, including a form of hedging to cushion fluctuations in the exchange rate. This could be in the form of currency forward contracts in which banks could buy foreign exchange at a pre-agreed rate and at a pre-deter- mined time in the future. Roque said commercial banks could cover half of the remittances under this scheme but added that because of the huge amount involved, it is under “careful consideration”. A proposal for an exchange rate stabilisation fund, which Vice President Noli De Castro is understood to have taken up with President Arroyo, is getting short shrift from critics who say it is unaffordable. “Where will the money come from?” said a Hong Kong-based in- vestment adviser, who asked not to be identified. “It can’t be like the oil price stabilisation fund in the old days and the export stabilisation fund, because in both instances, money was plowed back into the funds in the form of surcharges which then paid for any fluctuations in prices,” he said. “There is no such mechanism for remittances. The moment you deduct anything from a remittance to put into the stabilisation fund, you defeat the purpose of the whole exercise.” Nineteen outgoing barangay chairmen will be honored by the Alaminos City government in an appropriate ceremony at the Don Leopoldo Sison Auditorium here on November 24. Mayor Hernani Braganza, vice-mayor Teofilo Humilde Jr and members of the city council will honor the outgoing barangay chairmen. Also to be honored are outgoing Sangguniang Kabataan chairpersons. City administrator Wilmer Panabang said the occasion will coincide with the presentation and mass induction of the city’s new set of barangay and SK officials. Braganza and Humilde will confer plaques of recognition to the outgoing barangay chairmen. Most of the outgoing barangay captains served for a maximum of three consecutive terms. Bacolod Eight regional festival queens in Western Visayas are all-out in their support of the newest program of the Department of Tourism in pushing entrepreneurial tourism in the countryside. A grand finals and beauty pageant of the region’s Miss Western Visayas Tourism culminated in the coronation of Miss Masskara 2007 queen Rosario Ann Sales and Miss Tourism and her court. The ceremonies were held at the covered gym of the Negros Occidental capitol grounds in Bacolod City. First runner-up was Christy Joy Comohoy of the Paraw Regatta Festival of Iloilo City and second runner-up was Christer Mari Taclobos of Panaad Festival Lin-ay sang Negros. filipino globe November 2007 3 4 the surging peso filipino globe November 2007 Soaring peso not a problem for most of us, says survey Remittance boycott in Gulf states fizzles out SWS poll shows 30pc of families better off when dollar exchange rate was high Most Filipino families are unaffacted by the surging peso, the latest Social Weather Station survey shows. The survey, conducted from September 2 to 5 showed that 57 per cent, or about 10 million Filipino families, were not affected by the stronger currency. However, 30 per cent or about five million families said their lives were better off when the exchange rate was over P50 to the US dollar. The peso closed at P42.92 against the dollar on Friday. Only 13 per cent or about two million Filipino families said they are better off with a higher peso exchange rate. However, the survey noted that “while majority of families say their well-being has not changed much, the net effect of the stronger peso is negative in all areas and classes.” Among families in Luzon, 33 per cent said they were better off before, while 11 per cent said they are better off now, for a net effect of -22. Twenty-six per cent of Metro Manila households reported that they were better off before, while 11 per cent said they are better off now, or a net of -15. Twenty-six per cent of families in the Visayas also said they were better off before, while 13 per cent said they are better off now. Twenty-nine per cent of Mindanao families said they were better off be- Twenty-eight per cent of lower-income families say they are better off before than they are now as a result of the strong peso. fore, while 17 per cent said they are better off now, or a net of -12. Among class ABC families, 34 per cent said they were better before, while only 9 per cent said they are better off now. Thirty-two per cent of hj. class E families said they were better off before, while 11 perc ent said they are better off now. Among class D families, 28 per cent reported that they were better off before, while 14 per cent said they are better off now. A Gulf-wide remittance boycott by Filipinos appears to have flopped, at least in Bahrain, with many sending payday money home. Through e-mails and blogs, Filipino organisations in the Gulf states and Saudi Arabia called on compatriots to boycott remittance in a bid to exert pressure on the Philippine government to fix a steady peso-dollar rate. The peso rose dramatically over the past few months and hit a seven-year high of P42.795 on Monday. The boycott was supposed to continue until that day. Mohammed Ismail, 40, did not see any clear goal the boycott would achieve. He was at the counter of an exchange centre in Manama to remit money as has been his routine every month for the past five years. “It is just normal for me like the others. We cannot just let our family wait. Besides, the boycott does not have any clear goal,” he said. “Such a call will not help any, especially not my family. We are losing part of our income but there are ways to cope with the loss, not a boycott.” city filipino globe November 2007 ANGBANSA Zamboanga The Worldwide Fund for Nature-Philippines, together with concerned civil society groups, is campaigning to stop an Australian geo-engineering firm from dumping massive amounts of toxic urea in the Sulu Sea, the heart of the earth’s coral triangle. WWF-Philippines information, education and communications officer Gregg Yan said the firm had originally scheduled to dump the urea in the Sulu Sea before the yearend. However, Yan said it would not push through this year due to strong clamor from environmentalist groups for the firm to secure an approval from the government first before dumping the urea. Urea is an organic compound that is commercially derived from ammonia and carbon dioxide. Cebu A senior official of the Department of Energy has cited Cebu’s need for additional power plants, especially since the power reserve has dropped to 30 megawatts from the normal reserve of 50 mw. Korean Electric Power Corp had announced that it would build a 200 mw plant in the city of Naga, Cebu but the project is still under negotiation, said Antonio Labios, DOE Visayas Field Office director. Starting November 16 Philippine Airlines Check-In in Hong Kong will be at SkyPlaza Terminal 2 DOE is mandated by law to make plans and set the policy regarding energy. Officials cannot categorically state the reasons for the delay in Kepco’s power project. This is despite the fact that President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and Cebu governor Gwendolyn Garcia had endorsed the energy development project as early as two years ago. Eastern Samar Philippine Airlines welcomes you to SkyPlaza Terminal 2 of the Hong Kong International Airport (Chek Lap Kok). It is direcly connected to Terminal 1. Checking-in at our new Philippine Airlines counters at SkyPlaza Terminal 2 is now more enjoyable and convenient with more shopping, dining and entertainment centers; a coach station; and an automated people mover that takes you directly to your boarding gate. Have a pleasant experience. For booking and inquiries, call Philippine Airlines Reservations at (852) 2301 9300 or your travel agent. The provincial government of Eastern Samar sponsored a job fair which fast-tracked the meeting of job seekers and employers/overseas recruitment agencies in only one venue. In line with the celebration of 42nd founding anniversary of the province, job seekers and employers met with employment agencies. The National Statistics Office served 13 clients for marriage contracts and 104 clients for birth certificates, while 88 clients for new and renewal clearance were served by the National Bureau of Investigation. The Department of Foreign Affairs processed new and renewed passports. Other participating agencies were Department of Labor and Employment, TESDA and POEA. For advertising inquiries Bob Waterfield (Hong Kong) 9470 2764 Ricky Sumallo (Philippines) 0917 539 0486 TJ Badon-Doble (Philippines) 0928 502 0379 Josephine Miranda (Philippines) 0920 951 6917 filipino globe the OFW newspaper 1905 Lippo Centre Tower 2 Queensway, Admiralty, Hong Kong (852) 2918 8248, email: info@filglobe.com Visit our website for more information about our advertising and marketing solutions www.filglobe.com 5 6 city filipino globe November 2007 Beijing gets Macau consulate assurance from top RP envoy ConGen Al Vicente says opening unlikely this year ‘unless there’s a miracle’ Jose Marcelo in Hong Kong China’s central government has been given assurance that a full consulate in Macau is forthcoming as the Philippines moves closer to establishing an official presence in the enclave. In a call to the China’s foreign ministry, Ambassador Sonia Brady, joined by all the Filipino consuls general in China, informed Chinese officials that an appropriation for a Macau consulate is in the Philippine government’s 2008 budget, Brady also assured them that Macau would be given priority in the likely event that a budget allocation for additional consulates in China is approved by Congress, Consul General Al Vicente said. “Natuwa naman ang mga Chinese officials with what we had to say,” said Vicente, who has faced intense pressure from both the mainland and Macau governments for the Philippines to fulfill its consular commitment to the former Portuguese colony. “We knew they would bring up the Macau issue so kami na ang nag-bring up. The ambassador also conveyed to them that if we do succeed in opening another consulate in China, the first to be established would be Macau. “So I hope we now deliver on what we promised because 2000 pa ‘yong commitment natin to put up a consulate there.” The Macau government has placed the number of Filipino migrant workers in Asia’s booming gambling capital at 11,000, making the situation there difficult to manage from the Hong Kong post. Macau has also withdrawn official recognition of the Philippine Labor Extension Office there. Unconfirmed reports said the government-run Philippine Gaming Corp has entered the picture and is assisting foreign affairs officials looking for office space where a career consulate could be established. Although officials denied knowledge about the development, The number of employers on the consulate’s watch list climbed to a high of almost 300 at the end of October after three more were barred from hiring Filipino domestic helpers. Labor attaché Romy Salud (right) has blacklisted 78 individuals since intensifying the drive against employers with dubious hiring records, bringing the number to 127 this year and 296 overall. The latest to make the list are two Chinese couples as well as a French employer after their Filipino domestic helpers reported abuse November 2007 ANGBANSA Iloilo The Department of Environment and Natural Resources launched the first regional ecology center in the country in Iloilo coinciding with the two-day second Regional Solid Waste Management Summit at the Punta Villa Resort. Zoilo Andin Jr, executive director of the National Solid Waste Management Commission Secretariat said the center aims to create a network and database of accomplishments of various government agencies on environmental programs. DENR Secretary Lito Atienza in a message read by Environmental Management Bureau director Julian D Amador expressed confidence that the regional offices will succeed in propogating the program in the countryside. Palawan Thousands of Filipino workers are being drawn to Macau amid a construction that shows no sign of slowing. BY THE NUMBERS 11,000 Filipino migrants working in Macau’s casino-driven building boom they see Pagcor’s involvement, if true, as a sign that top government officials are keen to speed up the process.Pagcor may get involved in the funding aspect of the plan until a consulate in Macau is given a budget appropriation, they said. But despite the encouraging developments, Vicente doubts if a career consulate in Macau would be in place by this year. “Hindi na siguro aabot (for this year) … unless there’s a miracle,” he said. Brion’s men ready for big move The Department of Labor and Employment is making preparations in anticipation of the opening of a consulate in Macau. Bernie Julve, former labor attaché to Hong Kong, has laid the groundwork for the integration of a labor office to a full consulate in the enclave on orders of Labor Secretary Arturo Brion (right). “Hopefully, we’ll have a consulate in Macau soon so from our end, we’re preparing for that eventuality,” said Julve at the end of an official mission to Macau, Hong Kong and key cities in the mainland. As Brion’s emissary, Julve has moved to smoothen relations with officials of Macau who early this year had stripped the Philippine Labor Extension Office there of official recognition. The Macau officials’ move had effectively clipped its authority to mediate on behalf of Filipino workers in labor negotiations and come to the aid of distressed nationals. “We’ve assured Macau officials that we’re going in that direction [of putting up a consulate there], Julve said. Jose Marcelo Palawan board member Ernesto Llacuna is proving to be an ally of local barangay officials not just in the province, but nationwide. Llacuna filed a resolution that seeks the automatic retention of the 50 per cent share from all community tax collections to enhance revenue generation programs for basic priority projects. In his resolution, Llacuna said that under Section 156 of the Local Government Code, cities or municipalities may levy a community tax. The proceeds of the community tax, actually and directly collected by the city or municipal treasurer shall accrue entirely to the general fund of the city or municipal concerned. However, the proceeds of the community tax collected through the barangay treasurer shall be apportioned as provided for under the Local Government Code. Employers on blacklist hit 300 as more complaints filed Jose Marcelo in Hong Kong filipino globe and indignities they allegedly suffered under their employ. One domestic helper from the slums of Tondo sought the help of the consulate’s labor office after her harrowing experience in just over a month of working for a Chinese couple. She recounted a catalog of physical and verbal abuse at the hands of her employer’s wife who she said would not stop beating her even if she had a baby in her arms. “Tinatakot ako ng husto – minura, tinulak, dinuro. Hindi ko binibitawan ang bata para hindi n’ya ako masaktan. Tinuturo ang aking dibdib at lalamunan, masakit kaya umiiwas ako,” she said in a seven-page letter to the consulate. “Masakit rin mata ko sa sampal at suntok nila. Nahihilo na rin ako sa batok n’ya. She continued: “Grabi si ma’am, walang respeto sa buhay ng isang tao. Higit pa sa alipin at alila ang turing sa iyo. “Naranasan kong matulog ng alas tres ng umaga at gumising ng alas kuwatro. Sa gabi gigisingin ako ni ma’am mga bandang 2:30 para patayin lang ang ilaw nila sa kwarto at pagalitan at insultuhin ng isang oras.” She has since quit her job and sought refuge at the consulate’s Foreign Workers Refugee Center. Consulate officials had initially helped her file a case of physical abuse against the employer, but she backed down when her boss accused the maid of stealing money from her. The maid left on November 7 without collecting her wages, a welfare officer said. Another domestic helper said she was made to work from 7 am to one the following morning with very little food to tide her over. “No food every morning. I eat for lunch whatever is left from her two children aged three and five. I eat at 3 pm. At dinner I also eat very little,” she said. A third maid’s letter to the consulate recounted an even worse fate at the hands of her French employer. “If we buy eight kilos of rice, she wants us to [to make it last for] one month. No bathroom. We just sneak into [the masters] bathroom when they’re out because they get angry,” she said. “The problem is they don’t want us to open all the windows. There was no aircon (in the house).” western union (film) 7 8 filipino globe city Announcing the winners of filipino globe Sagutin at manalo Round-trip ticket (HKG-MNL-HKG or MNL-HKG-MNL) Elena Belo, W865526(2), Tseung Kwan O, Kowloon Maria Luisa F Thurman, P962828(6), Sai Ying Pun, Hong Kong iPod Nano Arlene B Delmonte, W306922(6), Ap Lei Chau, Hong Kong Janette A Posa, W754384(3), Mid-Levels, Hong Kong Remedios P Borlaza, W381247(5), The Peak, Hong Kong Ticket to Hong Kong Disneyland Ruby Socorro A Paciente, W666098(8), Wanchai, Hong Kong Maria Vivian Cruz Geremillo, W609301(1), Island South, Hong Kong Alma Grace A Serrano, W617511(5), Quarry Bay, Hong Kong Emily F Pineda, W474145(8), Kwun Tong, Kowloon Anacorita S Carolino, W634663(7), Hung Hom, Kowloon November 2007 ANGBANSA Cebu Visitors to the Cebu City Public Library can now access rare Filipiniana materials, new books and more than 36,000 titles of foreign journals through the Electronic Library Project. Thesis and dissertations, bibliographic database and other reference materials from five agencies are also available and can be downloaded by users. The project is a joint undertaking by the Department of Agriculture, Department of Science and Technology, Commission on Higher Education, University of the Philippines and the National Library of the Philippines. Consolidated records, materials, books and the entire library collection of the five agencies and all their affiliates can also be accessed using the service. Baguio The city government will implement next year improvements on Burnham Park, including the development of the long-neglected children’s park. City councilor Pinky Chan Rondez said about P30 million from the national government has been earmarked for the facelift of the 15-hectare premier park on the fringes of the central business district. city filipino globe November 2007 Children’s gift enough prize for former HK helper By rewarding their parents with hard work, they helped create model family Jose Marcelo in Hong Kong Siony Narag Castillo stood on stage in her Sunday best, alongside doctors, engineers and other men with glowing titles before and after their names. The kindly domestic helper admitted she was awed by her surroundings, but she nonetheless was beaming with pride. “Iyon na siguro ang isa sa mga pinakamasayang araw sa buhay ko,” said the 57-year-old lady from Fugaru Anladanan, Isabela, weeks after her family was named among the finalists in OWWA’s nationwide search for the 2007 Model OFW Family of the Year. “Isipin mo, puro mga duktor at mga engineers ang mga kasama kong pina- rangalan, ako lang ang nag-iisang domestic helper. Kaya siguro noong ako na ang tinawag, nagpalakpakan lahat sila.” Weeks after that special day at the Roma Hotel in Tuguegarao, Cagayan, the smile still lingers in Siony’s face. And understandably so. The trophy, check and plaque the family received, Siony said, were a heartwarming validation that the sacrifices she has made working as a domestic helper in Hong Kong for the past 14 years have been worth it. Her real trophies, though, are her children – all seven of them. The education they have attained and the success they are now enjoying, Siony said, would have been beyond the family’s reach had she not decided to Siony Narag Castillo and husband George are understandably proud of the honor, but they say their biggest success is in having given education to their children. leave her job as a Grade 3 teacher and set sail for Hong Kong in 1993. “Pareho kaming titser ng mister ko, pero kulang na kulang ang suweldo namin dahil lumalaki na nga ang aming mga anak,” said Siony. “Labingisang taon ako sa serbisyo, pero ang hj. suweldo naming mag-asawa noon mga P2,600 lang. “Kaya noong nagka-chance ako na pumunta ng Hong Kong, nag-file muna ako ng indefinite leave. Noong nagustuhan ko na sa Hong Kong, bumalik na lang ako after one year at H A P P Y H O L I D A Y S She said the city has improved its promenades, dredged the lagoon, installed a dancing fountain, planted more ornamental and perennial trees. “The children’s park is envisioned to delight kids who want to play and whose safety and welfare are the utmost concern of the parents and the authorities. The city will do our best to improve its facilities, landscape and security,” she said. Legazpi Sagot 1) Ayala Center or Automart 2) Robert Jaworski and Atoy Co 3) Charlie’s Angels (Jaclyn Smith, Farrah Fawcett and Kate Jackson) 4) Guada Sanchez 5) Mike Hanopol (Juan dela Cruz band) 6) Guadalupe 7) Cubao (Aurora Boulevard) Terms and conditions: • Entries may be submitted starting on July 14 but not later than October 31, 2007 • Entries with the most number of correct answers will qualify to win a prize • Only one entry per person is allowed • Winners will be announced in the November issue of Filipino Globe and on our website (www.filglobe.com) • Winners will be notified individually by telephone, and may claim their prize at a pre-arranged time • Flights must be taken within six months of the prize being presented, except during the Christmas and Chinese New Year holidays • Information required in this entry form must be properly filled and completed. Otherwise, the entry may be invalidated • Employees and correspondents of Filipino Globe or their dependents cannot participate • In case of any dispute, Filipino Globe reserves the right to make the final decision The city government is determined to increase agricultural production, particularly vegetables and root crops to meet the increasing demand in the Bicol region. Mayor Noel Rosal said the massive devastation from successive typhoons on agricultural and fishery production has led the administration to implement more food security projects to enable this sector to bounce back from its losses. “The agriculture sector in this city has recovered after 10 months of rehabilitation,” Rosal said. Land for the commercial production of cassava and corn in barangays Bariis and Banquerohan will be expanded from 60 to 100 hectares, he said. More land will be planted to high-yield rice varieties. 9 nag-retire.” She proudly ticks off her children’s accomplishments, hardly missing a beat. Their eldest Jocelyn, 32, is a registered nurse based in New York with her husband. Judith, 30 and a mother of two, finished her studies at the National University and is now a licensed pharmacist at International Pharmaceutical Inc. Juvie Ann, 29, graduated cum laude from the University of the Philippines and is now a Central Bank accountant ,while 26-year-old Janice is a licensed physical therapist. She works in a call center. Johanne, 25, is an accountant who graduated cum laude from the Polytechnic University of the Philippines; only son Guardson, 22, has just finished his nursing course at Perpetual Help while their youngest, Jennifer, has recently passed the nursing licensure exam. “Sila po ang dahilan kung bakit ako nagpunta sa Hong Kong, pangarap ko talaga na sila lahat makapag-aral,” Siony, a petite lady with the cheerful disposition of a caring aunt, said. “At alam po nila ang hirap na pinagdaanan ko dito, kaya pinagbuti nila. “Iyon daw po ang pagsukli nila sa sakripisyo ko.” Her success story would have gone unnoticed had Visitacion Bungal, a friend and a co-teacher of her husband George, not gotten wind of the MOFYA awards and nominated the family for the honor. Siony and her family made it all the way to the final five for Region II in the search, but fell just short of becoming the region’s representative in the grand finals where a winner each would be named for Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. 10 city filipino globe November 2007 Fund boost sought for ATNs Proposed budget measure seeks to double allocation for distressed nationals Jose Marcelo in Hong Kong Consulate officials are keeping their fingers crossed that a Department of Foreign Affairs budget proposal to double the allocations for Assistance to Nationals sections and the Legal Action Fund will pass through Congress without drastic cuts. DFA officials are seeking to raise the ATN allocation from P51 million to P100 million and the Legal Action Fund from P15 million to P30 million – an increase which vice-consul Val Roque (right) said has become necessary to meet the increasing needs of a growing migrant population. “We welcome it of course and we hope it gets approved,” said Roque, head of the ATN section in Hong Kong. BY THE NUMBERS 23,000 Cost in Hong Kong dollars of repatriating a body to the Philippines The DFA said that foreign posts are forced to constantly dip into the two funds since the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration only takes care of members, whereas embassies and consulates come to the aid of all migrant workers whether documented or not. The rise in the number of undocumented workers, it said, has triggered a corresponding increase in the num- ber of problems that foreign posts need to address, most of them requiring significant funding. It is for this reason that the ATN budget, which left a surplus of P5 million in 2004, started experiencing deficits of P17 million in 2005, according to the Office Undersecretary for Migrant Workers Affairs. Roque said the bulk of ATN expenditure goes to the repatriation of human remains – $23,000 per case in Hong Kong and 48,300 patacas in Macau. The ATN fund is also used to cover medical expenses, plane tickets for distressed undocumented Filipinos. Consul Kira Danganan said the Hong Kong post rarely taps into the Legal Action Fund with a legal aid program in place in the territory. “In most cases, the home office supports our recommendations,” said Danganan. Roque hopes that a bigger budget would allow the creation of a revolving fund. This is especially essential in Hong Kong, where the ATN often has to deal with incidents involving terminated domestic helpers who are sued for petty offences by their employers.. Bail in these cases can be anywhere from $300 to $500, Roque said, while the visa extension cost around $160. “Kapag kinasuhan kasi, tatanungin kung may pang-bond ang worker. Sometimes they can’t afford it,” he said. Loan sharks linked to rise in lost passports Vice-governor Emmanuel Piñol, who earlier whacked with a golf putter an abusive South Korean in Davao City last week, has asked the Bureau of Immigration and Deportation to initiate deportation proceedings against the foreigner. Piñol pushed for deportation of the abusive Korean national in a letter to immigration commissioner Marcelino Libanan. Pinol said foreigners must learn to respect the people of their host country. He met with immigration officials in Manila to discuss the case against Korean Young Yong-yun who figured in a golf putter whacking incident on November 9 at the Davao City Golf Club. “I believe that we, Filipinos, must protect our honor and dignity as a people,” Piñol said. Governor Nestor Fongwan has asked authorities to conduct analysis of drinking water in barangay Gumatdang after a person died and 50 others fell ill with suspected diarrhea. Those who fell ill hours after consuming lavish food in a traditional feast in the area were brought to hospitals. Not all those who ate the food fell ill. A woman arrested recently in Central yielded 14 passports said to have fallen into the hands of loan sharks as collateral. had used them as collateral for loans at cutthroat rates. It turned out to be just the tip of the iceberg. The 14 passports, police later learned, were just her haul for the day. A follow-up operation, a consulate official said, yielded a cache of over 70 passports, loan agreements and employment contracts which were also pawned to the illegal lenders. “Karamihan sa mga pumupunta sa amin dito, ganyan ang reklamo,” said attaché Abner Sto Domingo, revealing that on one Sunday alone, almost 30 maids had sought their help. Vice-consul Val Roque, head of the Assistance to Nationals section, said the consulate is trying to approach the menace two ways – help the police track down the masterminds while deterring domestic helpers from dealing with loan sharks. “The consulate is taking the position that this is an illegal activity and we want to dig deep into the root of the problem,” said Roque. “We’re balancing two things here: the need of our workers for continued employment in Hong Kong and the need to enforce our laws. We don’t want them to lose their jobs, but at the same time we want them to realize that what they’re doing is illegal.” To strengthen the case against the loan shark, who is out on bail while awaiting trial in a case of lending at excessive rates, the consulate has mandated the owners of the 14 confiscated passports to make a statement with the Hong Kong police. Until the illegal practice was uncovered, most victims had been able to go around the problem by declaring their passports lost. “We just want to make sure that they’re helping the police prosecute these people,” Roque said. “And remember, the affidavit is a public document which we can use against them if they do it again.” Consulate starts e-passport application on Monday The Hong Kong consulate will become the first foreign post to issue the new machine-readable Philippine passport. Starting on November 19, consulate officials will accept applications for a passport designed for faster checks at airports and with features meant to deter, if not eliminate, North Cotabato Benguet Jose Marcelo in Hong Kong Aling Conching was desperate and close to tears. Her contract, she told a consulate official, was up for renewal in less than three weeks’ time and her passport was still in the hands of a loan shark who was holding it as a collateral for a debt she shared with a relative. The domestic helper feared that she would only end up being charged if she went to the police. She couldn’t tell her dilemma to her employer, for fear that she would be sacked. She had settled her loan, but her relative has no way of paying the $6,000 balance – most of it interest. “At may tumatawag po sa akin gabigabi, tinatakot po ako,” she sobbed. “Hindi ko na po alam ang gagawin ko.” Aling Conching is not alone in her predicament. According to consulate officials, more and more Filipino domestic helpers are, like Aling Conching, putting themselves in desperate situations due to dealings with loan sharks in Hong Kong who use pawned passports and other documents to bleed their clients dry. An arrest made by police on September 26 showed just how bad the situation has become. The Filipina domestic helper nabbed in Central had 14 passports in her possession – all of them owned by maids who ANGBANSA tampering. Taking into account the three-week lag between the filing of the application and the completion of the intricate process, consulate officials estimate that the maroon-colored passports will begin coming out in Hong Kong in the second week of December. “This will be up to international standards. In fact, we are one of only 38 countries with machinereadable passports,” said Consul Kira Danganan. “And as always, Hong Kong will serve as a pilot for this project.” Consulate officials said the new passports will be worth the wait. The data page alone contains a scanned photo, a thumb mark and encoded particulars that only need to be swiped – not entered into computers – in most immigration counters. It is also replete with advanced security features. The binding of the pages also makes it difficult to tear off pages, a practice common among illegal recruiters. Jose Marcelo The results of the laboratory analysis of the victims’ waste samples were not made available to the media as of this time. Fongwan said that due to the number of the people who suffered stomach ache which is a common sign of water-borne diarrhea, the government has to ascertain the potability of the drinking water from local springs and deep wells. The request was pending as of Friday evening. Aklan The provincial government has begun preparing for the million tourists projected to visit Boracay in 2010. Nieven Maquirang, CaticlanCagban Port administrator, said he received instructions from governor Carlito Marquez to coordinate with the provincial engineer’s office and map out plans to ensure that the tourist target will be realised. Maquirang said there is a plan to float some P50 million to P100 million worth of bonds to be used to finance infrastructure development on the island. “We are building a twostorey building in Cagban Jetty Port that will serve as a business center of the provincial government under the Economic Enterprise Development program,” Maquirang said. news & views from home filipino globe national November 2007 11 15 Manila agencies suspended for overcharging The Philippine Overseas Employment Administration has cancelled the license of 15 recruitment agencies for violation of the placement fee policy. POEA chief Rosalinda Baldoz said the the agencies had been charging more than the amount allowed by law. Those suspended were Tierra The POEA will remain vigilant against malpractices by recruiters. POEA not taking over from private recruiters Baldoz says agency’s role is limited to agreements with certain countries The Philippine Overseas Employment Administrator said it is not taking over the recruitment of Filipino overseas workers from licensed agencies. “Contrary to reports, the POEA will limit its recruitment to service the manpower requirements of foreign government clients only,” POEA administrator Rosalinda Dimapilis-Baldoz said. “The recruitment of hundreds of thousands of Filipino workers will continue to be serviced by the private recruitment agencies licensed by POEA,” Some members of the recruitment industry have accused the government of taking away from the private sector the task of deploying overseas Filipino workers. Baldoz reiterated the government policy not to compete directly with the private sector which is expected to deliver the target of one million decent overseas jobs a year. She said the POEA is not expected to handle recruitment on a large scale except for its small share of the deployment volume representing the limited hiring of its small group of clients and special hiring programs covered by bilateral agreements such as those with Taiwan and South Korea. However, she warned that the POEA will remain vigilant in actively managing the overseas employment program and will be ready to intervene in cases of malpractices by recruitment agencies. BY THE NUMBERS 20,000 Filipino workers deployed under the Employment Permit System She said the deployment of POEA through its Government Placement Branch accounts for only 3 per cent of the total. Baldoz said the decision of the Korean government to implement the Employment Permit System only through a public organization in specific sending countries was an aftermath of the malpractices of some recruitment agencies and brokers. Other than the Philippines, EPS is also implemented in Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Mongolia and Sri Lanka. Baldoz said the POEA can handle the EPS program and has since deployed some 20,000 Filipino workers since its pilot testing in August 2004. Baldoz said EPS has built-in protection mechanisms by way of laws governing the employment of foreign workers in Korea. Filipino workers are covered by a grievance mechanism implemented by the Korean Ministry of Labor. On-site labor problems are attended to by the Philippine Overseas Labor Office at the Philippine embassy in Seoul. Mar Services Inc; Micro Pacific Manpower Development Corp; Ren-Glo Enterprises Placement Agency; Castle Rock Human Resources and Management; Madison Overseas Placement; Adventure Placement and Promotion; Rubies International Services; PMAC International Management Services; FEIMS International Manpower Services; Future Careers Recruitment Agency; Six C’s Manpower Centre; RDRI International Manpower; Skyline International Placement Agency; Town international Manpower Services, Inc.; and Blue Bay Employment Services. Raul Acedre 12 national filipino globe November 2007 Arroyo escapes impeachment Committee blocks complaint, ensuring no fresh bid can be mounted for now A congressional committee has blocked a new impeachment complaint against President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo over corruption allegations. The vote was held a day after a nailbomb attack on Congress that killed four people, including a Muslim legislator, and wounded 17. Wahab Akbar, who represented Basilan, was killed on Wednesday. Police said Akbar, who had clashed with Muslim militants operating from Basilan, was the probable prime target of Tuesday’s blast . Other legislators were injured in the explosion, and Manila’s police chief said police were checking to see if they could have been targets. “Among the group, it is Akbar who has the more colourful life, who has the more threats,” national police chief Avelino Razon said . Although it was the first attack on a central government building and comes less than a month after an explosion killed 11 people in a Manila mall, investors shrugged off the blast. “It is unnerving, that is true, but it does not affect the fundamental forces that drive the economy,” said Luz Lorenzo, an analyst with ATR-Kim Eng Securities in Manila. It is the third consecutive year that Arroyo’s allies in the House of Representatives have blocked moves to impeach her. The vote will end any further bids to impeach her. Members of the opposition did not Manila filipino globe November 2007 13 ANGBANSA Hong Kong Jumbo Tours The Philippine Supreme Court has ruled that Filipinos who undergo sex reassignment surgery cannot have their gender and name changed in their birth certificates. The high tribunal issued the ruling following a plea by a 45-year-old Filipino man to alter his birth records after becoming a woman through a sex-change operation in Bangkok five years ago. The petitioner wanted to change his gender and name in his birth certificate to reflect her transformation so she can marry her American boyfriend. The Supreme Court, however, ruled that the man’s request was not possible at this time in the predominantly Catholic Philippines. “Under the Civil Registrar Law, a birth certificate is a historical record of the facts as they existed at the time of birth,” the court ruling said. Palawan attend the session, claiming the deliberation in the justice committee was a sham. The failed impeachment complaint stemmed from allegations that Arroyo condoned an alleged bribery attempt by a Chinese firm to ensure that it got a US$329 million government contract for the national broadband project. Arroyo cancelled the controversial deal in October after the allegations of kickbacks, bribery threatened to derail her government. World leaders send condolences Speaker Jose de Venecia said he has received an “outpouring of sympathy and condolences” from governments and parliamentary leaders in Asia, Europe and North America after the bomb attack on Congress. De Venecia said the House has received messages from the governments of the United States, conveyed by Ambassador Kristie Kenney; the United Kingdom and the European Union, conveyed by British Ambassador Peter Beckingham, the Italian Ambassador Rubens Anna Fedele and the government of New Zealand. Liliane Foundation Philippines, a foundation for children with disabilities in developing countries, has assisted 7,776 children and youth with disabilities in the country. This was announced by Sr Argentia Naval, national coordinator of Liliane Foundation Philippines, during a regional media forum. Voucher contract worker tickets to Canada/USA Naval said the LFP, which is registered as a branch of LF-Netherlands, has a partnerorganizations nationwide to extend direct assistance to children and youth with various forms of disabilities. These children are visually impaired, orthopedically handicapped, hearing impaired, physically handicapped, mentally challenged or and those with cerebral palsy. The foundation began operation in 1985. It’s that time of year again Cheapest airline tickets to Canada Canada PR plus AC joint fare city (Toronto Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, Winnipeg and Montreal) Canada one-way ticket on PR at $2,850 up Cebu To book your ad, please call 2918 8248 filipino globe The Department of Agriculture Region 7 is putting up barangay food terminals in Cebu and the region to help farmers who are often exploited by middlemen. Geraldine Montecillo Franza, chief of the DA 7 agribusiness and marketing assistance division, said farmers are often the victims of middlemen who buy their products at token prices and sell them in Carbon market in Cebu City at rates 10 times higher. Franza said DA 7 will put up as many barangay food terminals all over Central Visayas as there are planned. A food terminal will be launched on November 20 in barangay Inayawan and another one on November 26 in barangay Sambag II, both in Cebu City. “These two barangays are depressed areas. Their officials are coordinating with us,” Franza said. Call us now ... 2366 2818 Cebu Pacific promo Booking available now Licence No: 352022 Email: hkjumbo@pacific.net.hk Bring this ad and get a free gift Or visit us ... Rm 504, 5/F Metropole Building 57 Peking Road Tsimshatsui MTR station Exit C1, opposite Fortress, above Spaghetti House Monday-Friday: 9am to 6pm Saturday: 9am to 3pm Sunday: 11am to 4pm © filipino globe ad design 14 November 2007 filipino globe national filipino globe Poor village girl’s wish comes true much too late November 2007 JUMBO BOX 24 x 24 x 30 PREMIUM 24 x 14 x 14 15 MILLENNIUM 24 x 18 x 20 Suicide note and unmailed letter tell of dreams and despair of 12-year-old Raul Acedre in Manila It would have been a dream come true for Mariennet Amper. Everything she wished for became reality: a pair of school shoes for herself, a bicycle for her brother and goats for her unemployed parents. Sadly, she didn’t live to see it happen. Mariennet, 12 hanged herself just weeks earlier inside the family thatched house in the village of Maa, Davao City, a victim, reports say, of grinding proverty. Earlier, she had written to GMA 7’s “Wish Ko Lang” show, where she expressed her yearning for the things she would most dearly love. The letter, written two years ago, remained unmailed because she had no money for stamps, but it came to light after relatives discovered a suicide note the girl had written. In it, she despaired over hunger and extreme poverty. The network came through, albeit too late. At her funeral last week, Mariennet had an unusual wealth of people mourning her death and praising her short life.“All her classmates were present and they cried..We cried, but could do nothing else now,” the girl’s father said. A government official’s statement that the girl’s suicide was an isolated incident stirred a hornet’s nest. “A child committing suicide because of hunger and poverty may be an isolated case, but Filipino families experiencing extreme hunger and poverty are definitely prevalent,” Alphonse Rivera, head of the child rights organization, Salinlahi Alliance for Children’s Concerns, said. Two Roman Catholic bishops viewed the young girl’s suicide differently, according to a report by the online publication GMA News.TV. Bishop Leonardo Medroso, head of the CBCP’s Episcopal Commission on Canon Law, urged others to draw lessons from Mariennet’s tragedy by not losing hope. “They said the reason a person commits suicide is because the person lost hope. A Christian should never lose hope,” Medroso was quoted as saying. But Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Oscar Cruz (above) said the Catholic church could reverse its discipline on suicide victims due to the advancement of behavioral sciences. 24 x 24 x o 30 b Jum Children’s changing eating habits alarm state agencies Filipino children’s eating habits have been changing as they eat more empty calories and no longer eat vegetables, the National Nutrition Council says in a study. They have been eating less than half of the required consumption of vegetables and resort to eating hamburgers, potato fries and other easy-to-prepare food from fast food chains. A sample population of children was taken from Metro Manila and Cagayan de Oro City, the study said. The Department of Health and NNC also said the Philippines has 1,163 barangays or barrios that are “vulnerable to hunger and malnutrition”. These are in the provinces of Masbate, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Apayao, Capiz, Negros Oriental, Zamboanga del Norte, Basilan, Bukidnon, Maguindanao and Lanao del Sur. Alarmed by the changing eating habits, the government has been campaigning for higher consumption of vegetables that will supply the children with the nutrients the body needs such as calcium, ferrous, thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, vitamins C and A. Television and radio programs promote locally produced nutritious food, specifically vegetables. Influence of adult members of the family has a lot to do with the children’s changing eating habits. the survey said. Children eat what the adult family members eat, the study said. According to the survey, children do not want to eat vegetables because they are not palatable. Preferred vegetables for those who eat them are squash, potatoes and string beans. Majority do not want to eat ampalaya (bitter gourd) and okra. Consumption of vegetables has declined by more than 50 per cent from 1978 up to 2003, according to the study. Eating in fast-food chains has become a status symbol. Filipino children envy others who do not eat vegetables. Hotline No. 2877 4395 / 2877 4391 For advertising inquiries Bob Waterfield (Hong Kong) 9470 2764 Ricky Sumallo (Philippines) 0917 539 0486 TJ Badon-Doble (Philippines) 0928 502 0379 Josephine Miranda (Philippines) 0920 951 6917 filipino globe the OFW newspaper 1905 Lippo Centre Tower 2 Queensway, Admiralty, Hong Kong (852) 2918 8248, email: info@filglobe.com SMS No. 6933 1687 / 6704 0196 filipino globe world 16 global news & views November 2007 filipino globe US bill sets tougher nurse entry rules Filipinos will be required to serve home country before being allowed to work in American institutions Filipino nurses will be required to serve the home country before being allowed to work in the US if a draft legislation becomes law. Employers will pay US$1,500 for each nurse to help fund a federal program for training US nurses. The measure, introduced by US Senator Dick Durbin, has cleared the Senate. “Nurses care for our children and grandchildren, our parents and other loved ones. We know the difference Pension bill splits US war veterans They are sometimes called the invisible veterans – soldiers who defied death fighting for the United States, only to be denied US benefits at war’s end. Now in their 80s, these Filipino veterans, effectively drafted in World War II to fight alongside the US military against Japan, are dying, about 10 a day, while they still hope to win veterans benefits for their service. Their number has dwindled to about 6,000 in the United States and 12,000 in the Philippines. For 17 years, they have asked Washington for benefits. Now, for the first time, a bill to grant full pension payments to Filipino veterans has cleared the House and Senate veterans affairs committees, raising hopes it could pass this year. Time is running out for veterans like Peping Baclig, 85, a US citizen and community activist in Los Angeles, who was captured by the Japanese and survived the Bataan Death March in 1942. The bill has drawn opposition from some veterans groups, which say the plan would fund the Filipino benefits – which would cost US$500 million to US$900 million over the next 10 years – by taking money from a program for disabled veterans whose disabilities are not combat-related. And some opponents of the bill argue that it is overly generous to veterans based in the Philippines, where a lower standard of living would elevate their health and death benefits. They also note that the US is no longer responsible for the Philippines, which was granted independence in 1946. Baclig said the pension and other benefits were less important to him than the official acknowledgment of his service to his country. “It’s the recognition,” he said, “the gratitude of the US government for our sacrifices with our war comrades.” nurses make in our lives – and increasingly we are noticing the difference when we do not have enough of these dedicated men and women when we need them most,” said Durbin. “More needs to be done to boost our nursing schools in order to train the nurses we will need in the years to come,” he said. Durbin’s amendment also contains two provisions to enhance global healthcare cooperation and to safeguard against an exodus of foreign BY THE NUMBERS 1,500 Amount in US dollars an employer of a Filipino nurse will pay to a federal fund healthcare workers from countries where they are critically needed. A high number of Filipino nurses are leaving the Philippines each year, tens of thousands of them find work in America and other industrialised countries, leaving the health care system in the Philippines in dire need of competent nurses. The World Health Organization said the Philippines was the biggest supplier of nurses globally because of their English skills, smartness and competence. The first provision would allow a healthcare worker who is a legal per- manent resident in the US to temporarily provide healthcare services in a country that is underdeveloped or that has suffered a disaster or public health emergency without jeopardizing his or her immigration status in the United States. “Projections show that by the year 2020, our country’s nursing shortage will have grown to 1 million. Importing several thousand foreign nurses is only a band-aid solution to this projected shortage,” said Durbin. After miracle surgery, Pinoy twins start to live separate lives Arlene carries Carl into a bus in Scarsdale, New York. Clarence is in the window. When Arlene Aguirre came to the US in 2003, she had her own idea of the American Dream. It wasn’t a good job or a better life for herself. It was a fervent wish to give her two young sons a chance at their own separate lives. Aguirre had her wish. Carl and Clarence, who were born conjoined at the top of their heads, emerged one night on separate stretchers – fragile but each with his own life. The death-defying surgery at the Montefirore Medical Center in New York captivated the public and sparked headlines around the world. Arlene appeared on CNN and on the “Today” show in which she repeatedly expressed her gratitude. She was an accidental and reluctant celebrity, basking in the media glare beyond her wildest dream. Four years later, the cameras are gone, but the Aguirres are not. The twins need more surgery, and it can only be performed in the US. And Arlene is alone, contemplating the uncertainties of the future and struggling to care for her boys, who are still in diapers even though they are now five years old.. ‘I have to be strong for my little boys’ Carl can speak a few words, but they are often unintelligible, and he cannot walk on his own because of an impaired left side; he crawls with his right knee and arm, dragging his limp left limbs as he moves about the house. Clarence can walk and talk, though his speech is somewhat garbled. The boys do not eat well, so they must be fed all night, every night. Liquid food is pumped into their bodies through tubes Arlene attaches to an opening in their bellies. The family lives in a home managed by a charity, and Arlene is not sure how much longer they will be allowed to stay. If the donations that have supported them dry up, she wonders, how she is going to provide for her sons since, as a visitor from abroad, she is not allowed to work. “I guess nobody really think, if ever we’re going to live in a community, how we’re going to survive,” she said. Over the past two years, Arlene 33, has slowly cut the family’s daily ties to the doctors, nurses, therapists and social workers who had made up their safety net. Now Arlene and her sons are caught in a vacuum, celebrating the end of the first phase of the boys’ recovery while waiting to hear when the next portion of their treatment, an operation to reconstruct the parts of their skulls that were removed in the separation surgeries, will take place. (Had they not been separated, the boys would probably not have survived their second birthday, doctors said.) Residents in their Scarsdale community collected donations that provide a monthly food allowance of US$160 for the Aguirres at a local supermarket, but it is not certain how much longer the allowance will last. Arlene has no relatives or friends in the US, except for Meredith Gosin, a social worker and Ronald Feiner, a Manhattan entertainment lawyer. For the past two years, Arlene and the twins have lived in Scarsdale, in a house managed by Westhab, a charity that provides shelter for homeless families in Westchester County. In August, a Westhab worker told Arlene that their home would have to be vacated by the end of the school year. The Aguirres’ medical visas must be renewed every six months. Arlene, who fills out the visa renewal forms with Ms. Gosin’s help, said that the last visas expired in September, and she still does not know if new ones have been approved. “I cry, but nobody see. I feel embarrassed to cry. If I’m going to cry, I’m like a weak person, and nobody is going to help me because I’m a weak person,” Arlene said. “Because of everything that’s going on with the boys, with our lives, I have to stay strong.” November 2007 17 18 world filipino globe November 2007 Human traffickers have been using fraudulent electronic plane tickets to smuggle Filipinos into Singapore. During the past two months 15 Filipinos have been jailed for between three and 10 months for using fake return tickets, the Department of Foreign Affairs said. Filipino tourists who travel abroad are required to purchase return tickets to discourage illegal immigration. Human traffickers entice their victims with the offer of a return e-ticket – sometimes faked with the help with travel agencies, the department said. The victims are then compelled by the traffickers to repay spurious debts of up to US$6,000 , it added. Philippine Ambassador Belen Anota said that Philippine ambassador in Islamabad Jaime Yambao “is reaching out to Filipinos in Pakistan, advising them to take personal safeguards and precautions and immediately report to the embassy. He said Philippine honorary consul in Karachi and Lahore is also ready to help ensure their safety. Cristobal said the embassy has been coordinating with embassies BY THE NUMBERS 9,000,000 Filipinos living or working overseas according to the latest estimate warned Filipinos to closely scrutinise return e-tickets and to buy open-dated tickets if unsure of a return date. In a meeting with the leaders of the Filipino community in Singapore, Anota asked for support in informing travelers to the city-state about the problem. She warned travel agencies they Authorities say travelers to Singapore should use open-dated return tickets if unsure of a return date. risk facing charges if they engage in the sale of spurious electronic tickets. To curb the rampant use of fake return tickets, the embassy has proposed the following measures: • Tougher penalties against erring travel agencies and individuals • Stricter monitoring by immigration officers • Stepped-up information campaign The Philippine embassy in Singapore linked the worsening problem of human trafficking to the rampant use of dummy tickets by Filipino travelers. To lure prospective victims, human traffickers and illegal recruiters provide “free” round-trip tickets (usually The ill-starred Japanese tanker Golden Nori, similar to the one above, had 23 Filipino crewmen aboard. Mutineers home free as ship Hope grows owner won’t press charges for 23 Filipino Nine Filipino mutineers surrendered in Mauritius after commandeering their fishing boat because of alleged mistreatment, and were headed home after the Taiwanese owner decided not to press charges. The ship had left the Indian Ocean nation of Mauritius for what was to be a three-month fishing expedition. But the Filipino sailors locked their Taiwanese captain in a room and seized the steel-hulled ship last week, four days into the trip because of exhausting labor, paltry meals and meager pay, Filipino crew leader Roderick Sumang said. The ship later returned to the Mauritius capital Port Louis, where the Filipinos were taken to the police station, Sumang said. The Philippine consul from Kenya, Bernadette Mendoza, flew to Mauritius to help the crew negotiate a settlement with Huang Jui-yin, the Taiwanese ship owner and captain, Sumang said. In Manila, Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Esteban Conejos said no criminal charges will be filed. “That is so far the agreement that we have,” he said. Philippine Vice President Noli de Castro, who is also presidential adviser on overseas Filipino workers, said: “This is good news as no one got hurt from this unfortunate incident.” No threat to nationals in Pakistan, says DFA There is no immediate and direct threat to the safety of the estimated 3,000 Filipinos in Pakistan, despite the worsening political violence in the country, the Department of Foreign Affairs said. But it’s not taking things easy. It has asked Filipinos in the country to contact the Philippine embassy in the event of a worst-case scenario. DFA spokesman Claro Cristobal 19 Department of Foreign Affairs issues warning after 15 Filipinos fall prey US may demand his extradition but Washington silent on possible move He was arrested in west Belfast in January 2004, and faced eight different charges which allegedly linked him to the Southeast Asian Islamic terror group Jemaah Islamiya, also known as JI. Six of those charges were dropped because of defence applications in the intervening years. He was acquitted of the last two counts. Prosecutors had claimed he was involved in financial transactions for JI and had also accessed information useful to terrorists. Some of the claims were allegedly based on CIA information about computer contact between Belfast and the Philippines. US President George W Bush (above) has tagged JI as a terrorist cell and marked it as major target in his global war on terror. The group operates in the southern Philippines through a maze of cells linked to organizations in Pakistan, Afghanistan and the Middle East. It is also on the terror list of the Philippines. November 2007 Snakeheads slip victims to Singapore using e-tickets Belfast jury clears Pinoy of Islamist terror charges A Filipino man has been acquitted of Islamist terrorism charges in Northern Ireland after spending almost four years awaiting trial. Jaybe Ofrasio, 34, will have his passport returned and his civil rights restored after the verdict by a jury in Belfast. No evidence was offered against Ofrasio, but his lawyer said he still had concerns about Ofrasio’s legal status until his passport is returned. Sources indicated the US government had expressed interest in Ofrasio, raising the possibility that he could be extradited. Washington has so far refused to respond to questions about its interest in Ofrasio, who lives in Mercer Street in Lisburn. Solicitor Patricia Coyle of Harte Coyle Collins said he requested the return of Ofrasio’s passport. Belfast authorities said a number of exhibits are “being processed and are to be returned by arrangement.” Ofrasio feared re-arrest for extradition proceedings but walked free from the court. He refused to speak to reporters and covered his face. world filipino globe of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in Pakistan on how to assist their respective nationals in emergency situations. “Just hours after the proclamation of the state of emergency on Saturday, ambassador Yambao released an advisory to the leaders of Filipino organizations,” Cristobal said President Pervez Musharraf (right) declared the emergency amid escalating violence. seamen in Somali hijack Talks are continuing to secure the release of 23 Filipino crewmen of a Japanese tanker hijacked by Somali pirates last month. Vice President Noli De Castro said he had received information that the owner of the hijacked Golden Nori, Dorval Kaiun KK of Japan, has established contact with the hijackers, but no details were available.. The Golden Nori was seized on October 28 off the Somali coast. It was loaded with a chemical shipment headed for Europe. De Castro said the Philippine government is not directly involved in the negotiations and has no direct knowledge of the talks. “We are not privy to the negotiations because the ship’s owners are the ones negotiating with the hostage takers,” De Castro said. The Filipino ship captain, Restituto Bulinan, was allowed to call his wife and the ship’s headquarters on Thursday. The other Filipino hostages are chief officer Melchor Cayabyab, second officer Loreto Quiles, third officer Raymundo Panaligan Jr, chief engineer Mario Ocenar, first engineer Adelino Amparo, second engineer Virgilio Lotoc, boatswain Laureano Villanueva, and chief cook Ismael Perez. juno’s house of beauty haircut for all ages hair styling / rebond / straightening firming /spa treatment / hot oil protein treatment / hair coloring facial / pampering / relaxing cleansing / facelift / make-up foot spa / foot massage manicure / pedicure full-body massage aromatic / swedish reflexology Rm 701 Sunny House, 12-16 Li Yuen Street West, Hong Kong. Telefax (852) 2522 6884. To book an appointment, please call 2522 6884 or 9470 4814. in the form of e-tickets), valid for one way, and charge them a minimal fee. To lower the costs, human traffickers connive with travel agencies to issue dummy return tickets, usually from an airline different from the outbound portion, to comply with the Philippines’ immigration requirement of a round-trip ticket for tourists. 20 world filipino globe November 2007 Garantisadong serbisyo sa abot-kayang halaga Mahmood Transport Co • Hong Kong airport transfers • Air cargo terminal transport • Office and household removals • Import & export removals • Comprehensive transport service • Advance booking available editorial, community & features filipino globe Lomondot taps network in personal diplomacy to secure Pinoy’s freedom Chito Manuel in Jeddah Sarkia Pondusan is wheeled into emergency admission. Her sister-in-law was dead on arrival at King Fahd Hospital. Filipina survives pesticide accident A second victim in a pesticide suffocation accident in Jeddah last month has been discharged from hospital and is expected to fully recover. Sarkia Pondusan spent two weeks at King Fahd Hospital. Pondusan’s sister-in-law, Kalsun Handi, a 36-year-old mother of two from Zamboanga del Norte province in the southern Philippines, did not survive. She was declared dead hours after she and Pondusan were admitted to the hospital. In an interview at her hospital bed earlier in the week, Pondusan said she went to the apartment of Handi and her husband Jul-anni Saleh Entuman as she usually did during her day off. She said she and Kalsun did some general cleaning. “Kalsun told me that she and Jul- anni sprayed pesticide in the dark or hidden corners of the apartment the night before,” she said. “We didn’t know that we were inhaling the pesticide because it was of the odorless type.” Pondusan said it was only after they went to bed that she and Kalsun began having difficulty breathing. Both were rushed to hospital as their condition worsened. Dailies fight for Pinoy hearts and minds Mark Pineda in Jeddah The Filipino card is increasingly being played in the theater of war of the English-language dailies in Saudi Arabia. In near death following years of declining circulation and falling advertising revenue, cash-rich Saudi Gazette, instead of folding, posed a renewed challenge to top dog Arab News in the battle for the hearts of minds of the readers. To lure the Filipino readership, Saudi Gazette started Kabayan, a two-page daily insert in the Tagalog language, on October 13. This section that targets a particular audience was added months after Saudi Gazette was relaunched as a broadsheet in semi-glossy paper. Three Filipino sub-editors recruited from Manila arrived for the relaunch , and when Kabayan became part of the paper, another was rehired to beef up the Gazette’s Filipino staff. Kabayan seemed to be well received by the Filipinos whose hunger for news from home Kabayan hoped to sate with a daily staple of hard news, showbiz gossip and sports news. This was not the first time that Saudi OFWs got to read news in the vernacular or in Filipino, if you will. The defunct Riyadh Daily introduced in succession a weekly supplement in Filipino, Kabayan and Tagalog, in the mid-1990s. The latter was a four-page tabloid that combined local and Philippine news and the former was added in the paper’s news pages. When loss-making Riyadh Daily shut down operations in December 2003, Arab News saw an opportunity to rope in the Riyadh-based paper’s Pinoy readers and launched Pinoy Xtra, an eight-page pullout that comes out every Sunday. Despite enjoying brisk sales, let alone massive ad revenues, Arab News is not resting on its laurels and, already, there are plans to double the frequency of Pinoy Xtra. Rasheed Abou-Alsamh, a SaudiAmerican senior editor at Arab News who loves most things Filipino, was philosophical in reaction to the competition. Rasheed told Filipino Globe: “The recent addition of two daily Tagaloglanguage pages in the Saudi Gazette is, I think, a reaction to Arab News’ Pinoy Xtra weekly tabloid. We in Arab News started Pinoy Xtra more than three years ago. At the time, SG was tabloid-sized and was on the road of eliminating a daily page dedicated to Philippine news. This I think, ate into their readership, causing many Filipinos to turn to AN for our daily page of Philippine news.” Using what he calls “personal diplomacy and personal touch,” Consul General Pendosina Lomondot (below) saved a truck driver from a possible death penalty after working for his release from jail in a case that had been closely followed by government officials back in the Philippines. Benedicto Mariano Capulong, a 57year old trailer truck driver who killed four people in a vehicular accident on June 12, 2004 walked a free man days after the Ramadan Eid holidays. He was released from the Briman prison in Jeddah after being granted clemency by the royal court on recommendation of the grand shariah court of Jeddah. Capulong’s case was elevated to the royal court for final resolution after the payment of “diyah” or blood money to satisfy the private rights of the heirs of the victims. Under the Islamic judicial system, the public aspect still needs to be settled apart from the private details of a criminal case. “Masaya ako dahil ako ay malaya na. Labis labis ang aking pasasalamat sa lahat ng tumulong sa akin lalunglalo na kay Congen Lomdondot,” Capulong told Filipino Globe in an interview at Lomondot’s office at the Philippine Consulate General in Jeddah. The short and stocky Capulong spent three years and four months in jail. Based on the investigation of the Jeddah police, Capulong was found liable for the deaths of two men and two women. One woman was killed on the spot and the three others died in a hospital the following day. According to Capulong, the accident happened at 9 p.m. He was maneuvering his truck on the left shoulder of the Jammuh highway outside Jeddah when the GMC Suburban carrying the four people and traveling at top speed ran smack into his 10-wheeler. BY THE NUMBERS 250,000 Amount in Saudi riyal paid to the victims of a traffic accident involving Capulong Capulong, a resident of barangay Makinabang, Baliuag, Bulacan, said he saw the oncoming vehicle from long distance and thought he had enough time to turn and clear the road. Lomondot tapped his network of friends to raise the blood money of 250,000 riyal (100,000 riyal each for the two men and 50, 000 riyal for one woman). The heirs of the fourth victim, a woman, had waived their rights. Of the amount 200,000 riyal came from a Saudi philanthropist, who refused recognition, and 50,000 riyal from a businessman, Lomondot said. He said no less than Senator Aquilino “Nene” Pimentel, Jr and Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Rafael Seguis followed the Capulong case. Though Capulong’s was a “hadis moroor” or traffic accident and not murder, he could still be meted the death penalty if the blood money was not paid, said Lomondot. A similar case happened in 1995. Yolando Isanan had not been saved from execution two years later because of the failure to pay blood money. “Magmula nang dumating ako dito sa Jeddah as Consul General hindi ko pinabayaan ang mga may kaso ng capital offenses,” Lomondot said. November 2007 21 We need Nora back to sing – and lift our collective spirits Please call Arshid Mahmood on 9811 1945 or 8207 8318 Driver in fatal Jeddah car crash escapes death penalty focus I Germany was rebuilt after the war, which could have been an opportunity for corrupt officials to make plenty of money. No honor among thieves, is there? T he controversies swirling around Gloria remind me of three great figures of World War II. These are England’s Winston Churchill, France’s Charles de Gaulle and Germany’s Konrad Adenauer. In the postwar period of massive reconstruction from the ashes and rubble of the war, these men presided over the gargantuan effort that, in another milieu, let’s say the Philippines, could have earned them under-the-table billions in contracts to keep them and their families in obscene luxury for several lifetimes on earth. To their everlasting credit, they spurned the grand opportunities the times and their position in government offered. Churchill’s widow, Lady Valentine, was for a time contemplating to sell some of her husband’s paintings (when he was depressed, as when right after Hitler’s Germany was crushed, the Half-Century Man lost the elections to a namby-pamby Labor Party leader, Churchill liked to paint). The British Parliament immediately raised her monthly pension to enable her to maintain her accustomed lifestyle. De Gaulle’s Olympian hauteur (the standing joke at the Elysee if he was late for a meeting with his Cabinet was “the President is still talking to God”) most certainly forbade him to descend to the level of a common thief. And Adenauer, in his down- PRESSBOX comment FT Ocampo to-earth style of governance, concentrated on recapturing the lost glory from the horribly tarnished reputation of his country and rehabilitating the former self-respect and dignity associated with the German name. Their superlative achievements, without any thought of immoral enrichment and material gains, was made possible by a sterling quality of leadership that moved a most respected pundit to coin the phrase “immaterial something plus” ingrained in their character. Great world leaders with great integrity, notably of the past, intuitively felt in their interior world their great responsibility to God and history. In this epical context, all time will be the measure of their glory. All these years since her presidency, I had nursed a vibrant hope that Gloria could lift this country to the “sunlit uplands”, perhaps not within her term, but by laying the groundwork for its realisation in the not so distant future. Complementing her academic credentials is an inherent strength that was buttressed by deep religiosity and abiding faith. She has balls enough to make her worthy of any man’s steel and, for a time, I was carried away by my illusions. She could be another Margaret Thatcher, the Iron Lady who was never tainted with the acquisitions of filthy lucre and whose 11-1/2 years of brilliantly masterful stewardship of the United Kingdom is now being hailed by contemporary historians as the Thatcher Era. Well, we live and learn. I am also reminded of a saying prevalent in some mercenary circles, that there is no honor among thieves. Her recklessly hasty pardon of a convicted plunderer proved otherwise. S urprise, surprise. With an estimated nine million OFWs around the world, the Philippines ranked fourth only among the top recipients of overseas remittances, according to a United Nations report. Leading the pack per report of the UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development was India with US$24.5 billion, closely followed by Mexico with US$24.2 billion, and China with US$21 billion. Russia with US$13 billion, was in the 5th slot, after the Philippines. But there’s an interesting caveat, the US$14.65 billion remittances to our country was based on a “conservative estimate”. SWS survey: first, the Erap pardon and now this The credibility of the Social Weather Stations keeps going from bad to worse. Only recently, the public opinion pollster opened itself to accusations of bias when it released an opposition-financed survey, purportedly showing that a majority of Metro Manila residents favored a pardon for deposed President Joseph Estrada. The survey results came – as if on cue – a week before the antigraft court, the Sandiganbayan, was to pass judgment in his plunder trial. The opposition was quick to OTHERVOICES what they say Manila Standard Today capitalise on the “findings”, calling the survey a vindication of the deposed president but neglecting to say they paid for the whole exercise, and suggested what questions to ask. Now comes a report from the SWS claiming that five million families say they are worse off now that the peso has strengthened against the US dollar. In contrast, the SWS says, only two million families say they are better off with a strong peso. Now we learn that the survey was based on 1,200 respondents. Can anyone say with confidence that these respondents were representative of the entire population? The economic circumstances of any one respondent could be vastly different from the next. t has been really difficult trying to find the proverbial silver lining amidst all the “clouds” bedevilling the Philippines these days. For me, the gloom set in when Nora Aunor, who has settled in California, said she didn’t want to go back to Manila. She said this after completing the community service imposed for her drug misdemeanor. She probably felt she has lost face – and her fans – for getting caught in a bit of a shady mess. I find this rather sad, having been a Guy admirer ever since she became an actress. Why, I wonder, hasn’t she considered that we Pinoys would probably give her the benefit of the doubt – after all, haven’t we allowed real criminals to return to the country from their luxurious exiles and let them become government officials and all manner of celebrities? Haven’t all those hundreds of cases pending in the courts against those important people (we know their names) been relegated to limbo – with the lame excuse given that we’re a Christian people who forgive all sinners and let bygones be bygones? It wasn’t just Nora who broke our hearts recently. What was more shattering was the depressing plethora of corruption charges in government, followed soon after by the outrageous presidential pardon of Joseph Estrada. The absolute last straw came when a report soon appeared about the administration thinking of appointing Erap a “Poverty Czar.” It was enough to turn the numbing national despondency into acute despair. For a country once labelled “the showcase of democracy”, there simply aren’t enough words to describe the depths to which our politicians have sunk. With the rule of law now well and truly trampled, the country could easily join the list of countries like Burma, China, Kenya and Zimbabwe, where good governance is non-existent and corruption is rife. Seeking a ray of hope amidst all this appalling news, I found it in the report from the International Labor Organization, which declared that Filipino women are giving their country a good name – notwithstanding their country’s political situation. The report brought to mind that Mao Tse-tung dictum about women “holding up half the sky”. Call me a female chauvinist sow, but I’ll wager that it’s not just half but three-quarters of Pinays who are holding up their country’s national ceiling. None of this is news, of course. It’s been going on for a while, the result of the Marcos legacy which left the country impoverished and demoralised. As the analysts have shown, Filipinos today are still suffering PINOYDIMSUM observations Isabel T Escoda from the consequences of that dictatorship. The malignant corruption generated by that era has spread around the country, damaging not just livelihoods but morale and morals. And it’s been the women, as highlighted in the ILO report, who have been battling against this national malaise. The statistics reveal that not just large numbers of Pinays comprise the numbers of domestic contract workers abroad, they also dominate in office jobs at home. Over 40 per cent of the work force of 37 million people in the Philippines are female. The ILO quotes the ratio of women to men in executive jobs (58 per cent) in the Philippines as the highest in the world – in the U.S., the ratio is only 42.3 per cent. “ For a country once labelled the ‘showcase of democracy’, there aren’t enough words to describe the depths to which our politicians have sunk Our own Department of Labor has noted a 2.25 million rise of women in senior positions in 2006, compared to 1.62 million men. Professor Danilo Antonio of the Asian Institute of Management has said that women are “better managers of people; they are also more hardworking”. He added that women have “strong human leadership skills.”. So what about Pinoy men? Are most of them now so emasculated, which is why they’re often seen in the usual “istambay” poses around the country – when they aren’t thronging the cockpits and porno cinemas on weekends? Do they live month to month just waiting for their women’s remittances from abroad to pay for cigarettes and San Miguel beer and jueteng? What a sad state of affairs. Where is Nora now that we need her to sing and lift our collective spirits? 22 forum filipino globe TINGINNAMIN November 2007 Numbers up in search for greener pastures Dante Vino in Manila A stroke of boldness and not much else A mixed bag. That’s what we got from the government in its response to demands for measures to mitigate the pain of the runaway peso. And that’s what it’s going to get in return when the measures come in for review by OFWs. Short on detail, the so-called three-point program looks more like an investment in the future than anything resembling relief, here and now, for our stressed dollar earners. Those three points are nothing new. They’re already part of existing programs the government likes to trumpet everytime it goes on the road. Conspicuous by its absence is immediate action to inject confidence. No matter how insignificant, a reduction in certain fees (if not the elimination of others) would have done the job. It would not hurt to revisit the noplacement-fee policy, which has been openly flouted by some employment agencies, to see what can be done to ensure its strict implementation. Still, the measures bear watching for their stroke of boldness. By asking banks to look into foreign currency hedging to help stabilise exchange rates, the government has shown it means business. With a vast amount of money needed to cover currency forward contracts, the banks are expected to move softly, softly. But they will move nonetheless. And then there is the idea of an institutional approach, such as an OFW investment fund. Let’s see what happens. SULATLETTERS Ang iksi ng ating alaala. Ilang taon lang ang nakararaan, nagkaisa tayong lahat sa Edsa para patalsikin ang pinakamalaking gambling lord sa bansa. Tingin natin magiging isang aral ang nangyari kay Erap sa lahat ng mga corrupt government officials. Ngayon, hindi lang talamak ang graft sa ating pamahalaan, nasa labas na rin si Erap matapos ang kwestionableng pardon ni Pangulong Arroyo. Ano na ang nangyari kabayan? Jorge Lapitan Hong Kong There has been too much confusion about holidays domestic helpers are entitled to. As an employer, I am as confused as them. Is there a way for our consulate to publish these holidays. I understand some of them are movable, meaning they vary from one year to the next. But it should be a lot of help if we’re given at least an idea of the regular ones. Marie Hong Kong I have to disagree with your assertion that your consulate has been dealing with abusive employers. including Filipinos, fairly. I am not sure it is fair to publicise one such employer in the way that Jacky Cheung was castigated in the press, while others enjoy the protection of anonymity. There should be discretion in the release of information by your consulate to the media. The number of Filipino nurses seeking gainful employment in the United States has soared almost 50 per cent, according to the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines. TUCP spokesperson Alex Aguilar said that in the nine months to September 30 this year, a total of 15,083 Philippine-educated nurses sought to practice their profession in America by taking for the first time the eligibility test of the US National Council of State Boards of Nursing. This represents an increase of 4,793 (or 47 per cent) compared to the 10,290 Filipino nurses who took the NCLEX first time (that is, non-repeaters) in the same nine-month period in 2006, according to Aguilar. Citing official statistics, Aguilar said the 15,083 who took the NCLEX in the nine months to September this year just about matched the 15,171 Filipino nurses who sat the examination for the first time in the whole of last year. NCLEX, or National Council Licensure Examination, is the final step in the nurse eligibility process in the US – the equivalent of the Philippines’ nursing licensure test. Aguilar said the Philippines still led the five countries with the greatest number of (non-US) nationals who took the NCLEX for the first time in the three quarters to September. India came in second, with 4,071 examinees, followed by South Korea, 1,440; Canada, 682; and Cuba, 525. TUCP’s disclosure comes not long after the NCSBN started allowing Filipino nurses aspiring to work in America to take the NCLEX in Manila. This was in August, with the installation here of a new international test center. The labor group earlier said it expects the number of Filipino nurses applying for US jobs and subsequently passing the NCLEX to increase significantly in the months ahead on account of “the favorable home ground testing.” Previously, Filipino nurses had to travel overseas to take the NCLEX in test centers elsewhere inAsia and the Pacific. This created accompanying disadvantages and pressures, the foremost of which was financial. Partly owing to these past difficulties, historically, only about half of the Filipino nurses passed the test the first time they took it. TUCP has been batting for the deployment of surplus Filipino nurses to more lucrative job “ NCLEX, or National Council Licensure Examination, is the final step in the US eligibility process – the equivalent of our nursing licensure test markets abroad, saying that every professional is entitled to take his or her skills to wherever these would get the greatest reward. Lured by the promise of greener pastures abroad, the number of Filipinos wanting to become nurses has been growing by leaps and bounds. As of June this year, a staggering total of 632,108 students were enrolled in more than 400 Philippine nursing schools, an increase of 30 per cent, or 145,875, from the 486,233 last year. CONSULAR FEES AND CHARGES New/renewal 32 pages $425 New/renewal 64 pages Replacement of lost passport 32 pages Replacement of lost passport 64 pages Issuance of travel document Amendment of passport entries Single entry (3 months) $212.50 Multiple Entry (3 months) $425 Special investors resident visa Special resident retiree’s visa • The first day of January • Lunar New Year’s Day • The second day of Lunar New Year • The third day of Lunar New Year • Ching Ming Festival • The first day of May • Tuen Ng Festival • The day following the Chinese MidAutumn Festival • Chung Yeung Festival • Chinese Winter Solstice Festival or $510 $765 $1,190 $255 $170 Multiple Entry (6 months) $680 Multiple entry (1 year) $1,020 $3,400 $3,400 Notarial services Affidavit of support/consent Acknowledgment of instruments (deeds, powers of attorney) Authentication of documents Jurat (sworn statements, letters) Original Seen Seen and noted Contracts (authentication and verification) Issuance of certified true copy of document Taking of deposition Report/registration of marriage/birth/death Any other certification $212.50 $212.50 $212.50 $212.50 $212.50 $212.50 $297.50 $212.50 $212.50 $212.50 $212.50 SSS CONTRIBUTION SCHEDULE All OFW members Salary bracket 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Compensation range (pesos) 4,750 – 5,249.99 5,250 – 5,749.99 5,750 – 6,249.99 6,250 – 6,749.99 6,750 – 7,249.99 7,250 – 7,749.99 7,750 – 8,249.99 8,250 – 8,749.99 8,750 – 9,249.99 9,250 – 9,749.99 9,750 – 10,249.99 10,250 – 10,749.99 10,750 – 11,249.99 11,250 – 11,749.99 11,750 – 12,249.99 12,250 – 12,749.99 12,750 – 13,249.99 13,250 – 13,749.99 13,750 – 14,249.99 14,250 – 14,749.99 14,750 and over Comparative schedule Before Now Before Now Monthly salary credit (pesos) 5,000 5,500 6,000 6,500 7,000 7,500 8,000 8,500 9,000 9,500 10,000 10,500 11,000 11,500 12,000 12,500 13,000 13,500 14,000 14,500 15,000 Before Now 470 520 705 780 940 1,040 517 572 752 832 987 1,092 564 624 799 884 1,034 1,144 611 676 846 936 1,081 1,196 658 728 893 988 1,128 1,248 New monthly contributions (pesos) 520 572 624 676 728 780 832 884 936 988 1,040 1,092 1,144 1,196 1,248 1,300 1,352 1,404 1,456 1,508 1,560 Before Now 1,175 1,222 1,269 1,316 1,363 1,410 1,300 1,352 1,404 1,456 1,508 1,560 Contributions must not be less than P200 a month PHILIPPINE CONSULATE GENERAL 14/F UNITED CENTRE, 95 QUEENSWAY, ADMIRALTY Hotlines: 9155 4023 (Consular), 608 08323 (Labor), 6345 9324 (OWWA), Trunkline: 2823 8501 Fax: 2866 9885 Ngayon meron, ngayon wala. Ito ba ang hinaharap ng ating mga kababayan sa Macau sa paghihintay ng pagbubukas ng Konsulado. Sawa na siguro sila sa mga pakonti-konti na kilos ng ating gobyerno pagdating sa isyung ito. Working hours and statutory holidays Filipino nurse hopefuls can now take the US licensure exam in Manila. PUBLISHER Reggie Amigo Executive EDITOR Rex Aguado PUBLISHING CONSULTANT Philip Evardone ADVISERs Therese Necio-Ortega, Prof Dr Maurice Teo CORRespondents Eddie Alinea (Manila), Celeste Terrenal (Manila), Terrie Fucanan (Manila), Chito Manuel (Jeddah). Rick Sumallo (New Jersey), Loi Liwanag (Los Angeles) ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Bernie Domantay, AccessPoint (Philippines) Josephine Miranda (Philippines), TJ Badon-Doble (Philippines), Bob Waterfield (Hong Kong) EDITORIAL BOARD Reggie Amigo, Rex Aguado, Philip Evardone, Prof Dr Maurice Teo CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Beting Laygo Dolor, Teo Antonio, Chito Manuel, Danny Vibas, Dante Vino Filipino Globe is published once a month by Apex Services (HK) Ltd, Suite 1905, Lippo Centre Tower 2, Queensway, Admiralty, Hong Kong, telephone (852) 2918 8248, email info@filglobe.com. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the publishers. Printed by Premier Printing Group, Yuen Long, New Terrories, Hong Kong The Consulate is open from 9 am to 4 pm, Sundays to Thursdays, except during the following holidays: For advertising inquiries 1 July Hong Kong SAR Establishment Day Bob Waterfield (Hong Kong) 9470 2764 Ricky Sumallo (Philippines) 0917 539 0486 TJ Badon-Doble (Philippines) 0928 502 0379 Josephine Miranda (Philippines) 0920 951 6917 26 September Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival 1 October China National Day 19 October Chung Yeung Festival 1-2 November All Saints’ and All Souls’ Day 23 HONG KONG STATUTORY HOLIDAYS Passport services Visa services November 2007 Flexi Fund Name and address supplied Name and address supplied lingkod-bayan filipino globe 30 November Bonifacio Day 22 December Chinese Winter Solstice Festival 24-25 December Christmas Day 30 December Rizal Day Note: Other holidays may be declared by the Philippine government filipino globe the OFW newspaper 1905 Lippo Centre Tower 2 Queensway, Admiralty, Hong Kong (852) 2918 8248, email: info@filglobe.com Christmas Day (at the option of the employer) • The first day of July • The first day of October If an employer needs the services of a worker during a statutory holiday, the employer has to give the worker prior notice of not less than 48 hours and an alternative holiday within 60 days of the statutory holiday. 24 features filipino globe T echnology, particularly the internet and the mobile phone, have dramatically brought people from distant places closer together, this vast universe shrinking into a global village. Nowhere is this phenomenon felt more than in the lives of families torn apart by circumstances, as in the case of Filipino workers driven to a foreign land by the promise of a better life. Gone are the days when homesick husbands and wives, daughters and sons and friends communicated to loved ones by writing kilometric letters and personal telenovelas on tearstained yellow paper that took weeks to reach their destination by mail – if they get there at all. Nowadays, loved ones – even strangers – are just a fingertip away. One click of the computer mouse or the keypad of your handheld phone and your message is posted, pronto. Welcome to the 21st century, the age of instant gratification. Cyberspace has changed the way we conduct our lives and do business – from courtship to the purchase of books and merchandise, even the transmission of news and information. More and more people, especially the young and professionals, are turning to the internet for news, gossip and entertainment – a complement if not an alternative to newspapers and magazines. From this has grown a community of people with ideas to share and voices dying to be heard. Call them bloggers. They set up their personal websites and reflect on everyday topics – from those as mundane as what dress to wear to a party and to more serious like a strong peso’s effect on OFWs’ buying power. Never mind if other people care to read them. Their blogs serve as journals, diaries or, as blogger.com calls them, “daily pulpits”, “political soapbox” and “memos to the world”. Interested in the lives of Filipinos residing in Hong Kong? There are bloggers who can satisfy your curiosity, maybe keep you interested enough that you start looking them up regularly. Just see what they’re up to, what they’re thinking, how they’re feeling. It’s easy to relate to – or disagree with – them. In the world of bloggers, blogger.com says, “there are no real rules”. lmer Cagape, a systems engineer, web developer and of late a search engine marketing man, has made the SAR his home for the past six years. He started his blog, Living in Hong Kong (A day in the Life of a Filipino in HK), in mid-2004. As “one of those who jumped into the blogging bandwagon”, this Davaoeno E finds himself no different from the typical blogger, for whom no topic seems off limits. Quarry Bay-based Elmer writes about a whole gamut of topics: his travels, barkada, encounters with fellow Filipino migrants, even Cantopop celebrity sightings. He has been fortunate to see Maggie Q, Charlene Choi of the Twins and professional model Rosemary Vanderbroucke in the flesh but has yet to stumble on the most famous Hongkonger in the world: Jackie Chan. A sample of the halo-halo, sari-sari entries in his blog: Tips for Tourists Coming to HK, Maintaining Friendster Friends, Paradox on Hong Kong Fake Goods, Army of Maids Labor Hard for Little Returns, Philippino vs Filipino, Quality Migrant Plan Needs More Promotion, Balikbayan Box: The Door-to-door Dilemma, and Tips on Movie-watching in Hong Kong. One of Elmer’s musings, MTR Secret: They Have Toilets!, posted on August 28, is an eye-catcher. Although most of us commuters have never seen them, there are at least seven toilets in each MTR station for staff use, according to Elmer. Only in cases of emergency are the public allowed in. “I get to share what are the benefits and constraints for a typical foreigner living here that other people may not think or be aware of [dealing with language barriers, discrimination, culture, etc] My other blog (SEO Hong Kong) helps me find new contacts who share the same interests and possible collaborations,” Elmer says. “I get satisfaction from readers and blog reviewers who appreciate my writing style and varying points of view. Blogging requires ample amount of time and brain activity. So when someone says he/she reads my entries every now and then and leaves a ‘keep up the good work’ message, I get fulfillment from that.” t is ironic that in a medium that allows its users to introduce, even advertise, themselves to the world, Jon Mariano prefers to be anonymous. His blog, Filipino Life in HK (Just Plodding Along), does not carry a single photo of himself. Neither does it reveal personal information – apart from describing himself as your “ordinary OFW”. His reflections are often serious, insightful and informative, largely on Philippine politics and economy. If he were a newspaper columnist, Jon would be the hard-hitting type. But he is also a basketball fan at heart and not averse to some showbiz chika (if there’s a lesson to be learned). This fortysomething Ilonggo is a permanent Hong Kong resident and engineer, which perhaps explains the colorful photos of the city’s architecture and I INTERNET MADNESS There’s a very personal dimension to this new-age phenomenon that makes it more than a tool to send mail, view porn, read news, check spelling or do your homework. Gabby Alvarado zeroes in on blogging landmarks on his website. Among the commentaries in Jon’s blog are: Blips in Times of Plenty, Hong Kong is Generous, Time for HK to Stop Maid Levy, The Strong Peso – Who Benefits?, Pinoy Prosti, Hiding the Truth By Running Away, H5N1 is Here Again!, Supreme Court has Lost its Respectability, and My EDSA 1 Not surprisingly, his first two entries, If It Ain’ Broke, Don’t Fix It and Counting the Votes, dealt on politics and the raucous national elections that pitted Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo against FPJ, among others. A regular reader of all online Philippine newspapers, he is also fond of the websites of veteran Filipino Filipino is indeed a whimsical language. Whilst Cantonese was invented for non-Chinese to utterly ridicule themselves and German sounds like a linguistic war-hammer to the rest of the world, Filipino is best described as a straightforward language that lacks the past perfect tense. For instance, if someone screams the words umpug, wakas or disgrasya at you, you would instinctively associate something with bodily harm. And you’re right. Now that’s really onomatopoeic. Onomate ... what? Wiki describes it best: “onomatopoeia is a figure of speech that employs a word [...] that imitates, echoes, or suggests the object it is describing.” With the right volume Filipino can infuse so many (negative) emotions into the pronunciation of the words it’s like being bent to a pretzel by a female wrestler. I always get goose bumps watching Filipino dramas where people scream at each other. It’s comparable to looking at the Medusa with the help of a mirror. You may witness the terror without being petrified. Evil father who repudiates daughter: “Wag kang bumalik dito o ...” followed by the nasty word tarantado. Frail, crying daughter: “Daddy, ayo kong lumayas...” followed by words journalists Manuel Quezon III (“he seems to offer a realistic political view of the Philippines”) and Ellen Tordesillas (“she offers the view of the masses”) . He says: “I like writing and it has helped me express my thoughts a little better – I think – using the written word. It [blogging] has also opened online friendships – if you can call it that. But it sure beats doing nothing.” nd then there’s Lory May Martin. She’s funny, fascinating and quirky. This Filipina, raised in Germany where her parents were both employed as nurses, came to Hong Kong because of a “rascally Chinese also known as my husband.” The love of her life, identified in her blog as Kar-Leung but is actually KarWing in real life, took a job in the SAR a few years ago. Lory May followed him to live the life of an expat wife. She later found a job of her own in the SAR and tried to get her MBA – “a much more meaningful activity than shopping,” she explains. Her musings on her blog, Dice Six (We demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!), have catchy titles like Fashionation, PSP –Praise Stimulated Person, Going K-razy (on Korean telenovelas like `Jewel in the Palace’), The Cult About Yakult, Defeat Isn’t Bitter if You Don’t Swallow it, Boobitrap (on bras), A Geekeed Out, Don’t Sit Next To Me; Just Because I’m Asian, My Big Fat Chinese Wedding, LKF Laughable Kinky Females, Supercaliegoistic, and Leg-Intimate. “Whenever I blog about Hong Kong topics, it’s mainly about three things,” 27-year-old Lory May says, “Food, shopping and cultural differences which I refuse to comprehend.” Just how funny this lady is? Listen to her HK shopping experience. “Before I came to Hong Kong, I did not know much about fashion brands. Hell, I once mixed up Mark Jacobs with Marks & Spencer,” she says. “But once you enter the gates of shopping you go through the whole `The Devil Wears Prada’ transformation. That’s what this place does to you. After three months, you are able to spot a fake LV bag 50 meters away on a hazy day.” It’s difficult to tell when she’s talking as Lory May or Dice Six. “The real me and my blogger persona are not exactly the same,” she offers. “Actually the blogger me is a filtered and more cheerful version of me. I have the need to censor it to some degree in case I get to read all the stuff I’ve written years later and realise what a kitschy-drama dope I was. “It’s easy to describe your younger self but I have difficulties describing me in the here and now. Let’s say I’m a person who knows that she should improve herself or even strive to perfection but came to realise it is easier to accept oneself.” Two of Lory May’s entries, This Used to Be My Playground and The Spirit of Travel, posted in September and October 2005, talk about her visit to her mother’s hometown of Baguio, where Lory May spent her preelementary days. On this exhilarating trip, she was accompanied by her sister Jazz and German friends Silk and Sanne. “I know that Filipinos stay longer on my blog when they find out that I’m one of them,” she says. “Blogging has helped me improve my Filipino spelling. I sometimes write short sentences in Tagalog or try to integrate new Tagalog words I’ve just learned. So I’m forced to look them up because I don’t want to embarrass myself in front of my Pinoy posse.” There are two Hong Kong-based Filipinos whose blogs she often reads. One is http://www.knoizki.net/. “His blog is the slice-of-life-kind of blog. It feels real and makes you feel good because you see how another nice person tries to cope in Hong Kong.” The other blogger is http://blog. myspace.com/donatbel, who she regards as a friend. “She usually blogs when she’s down,” Lory May explains. “So I check up on her by reading her blog.” JON MARIANO LORY MAY MARTIN ELMER CAGAPE I’ve often read articles that spell Filipino, my nationality as Philippino. I don’t know why such misspelling occurs. Even the British, whom I think are knowledgeable enough about the name of people who live in the Philippines can still go wrong. Let alone those who aren’t so familiar with geography or adopt English as a second language. I guess it’s similar to being called a Thailander instead of Thai, or Hongkie instead of Hongkonger. Just a piece of correction to what I am called. Let’s simplify it, I am a Filipino which is easier to spell than Philippino; people sometimes spell it Phillipines instead of Philippines. (1986) Memory. “I’m quite concerned about what’s happening in our country and blogging has given me a platform to let myself be heard. That’s the main reason why I blog,” says Jon. “Recently I started to look at the monetization of my blog. It’s exciting to see that it really works. Jon started blogging in June 2004. November 2007 drowned in tears which Dicey cannot understand because her Filipino is crappy. So much wretched despair and furious anger, it could fuel the dark force for aeons. Especially Filipino mothers can add this pinch of highpitched hysteria in their scolding technique. Imagine they’re hitting the brakes really, really hard leaving the smell of burned nerves behind and skid marks on your vulnerable soul. During the war, Hopi Indians were wind talkers, Filipino mothers could have been an interrogation instrument. God cop and pissed mum. I hope my mum won’t get to read this. Phone speakers do not extenuate the sonic impact. The past few months was an experience that is both exciting, mentally challenging, and sometimes, well, dragging and choppy. I’m talking about my blogging experience. It was exciting and a nice challenge to communicate and exchange ideas with other bloggers. It was enjoyable to see other people’s ideas and to sometimes lock horns with them over some issues. And it was pleasing to see that Filipinos care about the motherland. It is indeed going to be a serious medium in expressing one’s ideas and preferences, albeit I think that for Filipinos, it still has to take some time to be so. I mainly dabbled in Philippine politics discussion. I shared my ideas and feelings on Manuel L Quezon III’s blog at www. quezon.ph/blog, Ellen Tordesillas’ at www. ellentordesillas.com, Dean Jorge Bocobo’s at philippinecommentary.blogspot. com, and John Marzan’s at politicaljunkie.blogspot.com Some of the things I have observed: At the moment, blogs about TV shows and stars gets more traffic. Blogs about song lyrics and food gets more traffic than serious discussions about politics. • Good blogs gets visited a lot (very obvious) • Your blog can generate some income thru adsense, but you need to have a lot of traffic for it to be appreciable • Even in serious discussions, there will always be hecklers I think that I will continue to do what I’ve been doing. 25 Fear and loathing, pride and prejudice in cyberspace Laura G Perez in Sacramento So you think that time, travel and education have narrowed the divide between people of different races. We imagine ourselves to be more broadminded, accepting of other cultures and open to interracial relationships. We are pleased that technological advances have expanded our choices. A local newspaper report says over 100,000 Filipinos have registered with online dating services based in the Philippines, namely itzamatch. com and Friendster. In the US, there are match.com, cupidjunction.com, eHarmony. com and loveacess.com, among many others. Singles don’t meet that many eligible individuals in socials anymore. They are biased against those who hang out in bars. Besides, you get to specify what you want in a perfect mate on search engines and eliminate undesirable characteristics right away (“Those on welfare with police record need not apply!”). Search engines give you several hits in all states and even outside the country. They say Russian women have replaced Filipinas in the mailorder bride category. Women’s groups have tried in vain to shake this tag off. So are we any different from Jane Austen’s society? Does it make sense to wait eternally for somebody to come along while we are cooped up in our tiny cubicle – counting other’s money, spell-checking, organizing files – or are we right in taking the initiative, in exploring new frontiers? Initially, the problem with internet correspondence is that you get letters like this: “I want my best frind weed not juge me as i wood not juge her welling to let me pamper her i dont cheet I wood hope she wood showe me the the same. and ever I get the nochion to jump bick and off in to yhe sunseat and just rubb my nick once en a will that wood just fine.” Or “I’m not a member of this site so you’ll have to give me an email address.” The next time you check, your yahoo account is flooded with spams. You wouldn’t believe the fascinating characters that populate cyberspace. Executives and bums, geniuses and retardates, straight, bisexual, and downright confused. The fun part is creating a profile. It is like a creative writing exercise. You can describe yourself in fancy adjectives, post a nice photo taken in your heyday (prior to your lobotomy) and set down some impossible criteria for your soulmate like this one posted by a Kansas man: “I’m hoping to find an attractive, fit, intelligent, passionate woman who is interested in other cultures, who takes care of herself, and who is confident enough and friendly enough to greet a passing stranger. “You should definitely enjoy international food, and hopefully have had some experience with other cultures or a desire to learn ... Hope to find someone who enjoys life ... who likes to laugh (including laughing at herself at times) ... who is very sensual and very sexual, with a sparkle in her eyes and a devilish grin at the right times. Hopefully, you will also enjoy animals (I have four neutered cats) and kids from two previous marriages. “Oh, one more thing ... if you voted for George W, it would probably be a waste of your time to contact me because we would have some major differences that might be too great to bridge.” You would expect him to say in the end that “Some mustard and pickles wouldn’t hurt. And could you deliver that in fifteen minutes?” There are egomaniacs with profiles like this: “My ambitions are geared to large-scale goals and I love to overcome obstacles, live up to challenges, and reach out for the stars to bring them down to earth. Like the Snake that enchanted Eve, I know how to make more than one person lose their head! When I start out, my efficiency is terrifying and all the more so as I often work alone and at my own rhythm. I am faster than the average person, as I slide over obstacles like a snake in the grass.” Move over, Spiderman. After exchanging a few letters, you are now ready for the moment of truth – meeting them in person. A friend said her date turned out to be a survivor of a horrific car accident who walked with a limp. She didn’t mind the limp too much. It was his shortterm memory loss that bothered her. “He said he might forget my name or what he said to me a few minutes ago.” Of course, that could create really big problems like he might turn to you later while driving, ask who you are and throw you out of the car. Other Romeos talk mostly about their former wives, the big-time court battles over alimony and child support that drove them to a therapist’s couch. An alarm should go off in your head. Some are frank about their being a recovering alcoholic or sex addict. Now all you have to consider is whether it would be wise to give them a chance considering that you have teenage daughters. You wonder if there’s anything they are hiding from you such as a rare, congenital illness that will transform you into an instant caregiver. And how would you like meeting a folk singer who claims he is a prophet? Once in a while, you find someone who sweeps you off your feet. He brings his Bible, prays with you before and after meal and serenades you with his guitar. He opens the trunk of his car to reveal a telescope and proceeds to show you Venus, coincidentally way up there in its splendor on this particular night. Perfect, you keep on thinking, perfect. He sends you an email the next day. It reads: “Dear Karen” ..... Ooooops ... but your name is not Karen. Anyway, you read on: “I had a wonderful evening and I just wanted to drop you a note letting you know that it was amazing. By the way ... you kiss a lot better than your dog. Man! I gotta get a different shade of lipstick!” Needless to say, you don’t have a dog. If I said dorks are the rule rather than the exception in cyberspace, you would say I am prejudiced, right? Let me then say that depending on your diligence and perception, there is a chance you could meet someone online who is tantalizingly NORMAL. Some basic rules: Take your blinders off and find out who the person really is. Be aware of the currents of life and accept the rude economics that govern all social classes. Above all, trust your judgment when you take the risk. 26 community filipino globe November 2007 community filipino globe November 2007 Gal R Roma looks back on the years with classmates she grew up with and catches up with them as workers in a foreign land The three winners of the Boardwalk Dream Girl search pose with finalists. Right photo shows Boardwalk directors with company president Bernardo Madera, business development head Brenda Pingol (left) and Hong Kong branch head Gemma Montalban. Occasion was the first anniversary of the company’s Hong Kong business. Hong Kong newcomer shines through Thoughts of ailing father come rushing in as Bicol lass is crowned Ms Barkadahan. Gabby Alvarado finds out what’s so special about this day for Marian Joy Zafe S o many things are happening for the very first time in the life of 22-year-old Marian Joy Zafe. Her 14-month stay so far in Hong Kong is her first time to be away from her mama Emma and papa Miguel. Cheerful but introverted by nature, Marian Joy never thought she had the silky moves, much less the guts, for belly dancing in front of thousands of strangers. Until she joined SmarTone’s Ms Barkadahan beauty pageant, another first for this charming Bicolana who had never been part of even a Mutya ng Barangay contest. “Nag-search lang po ako sa internet kung paano isayaw yon,” she says of belly dancing, which she performed in the pageant’s talent portion and definitely one of the reasons that won the hearts of the judges and the crowd at Chater Garden. “Walang time po mag-practice dahil laging may kasama sa bahay na alagang bata at yeye. Sa boarding house na lang po ako nag-practice bago mag-umpisa ang contest. Pahabol lang. Dinasal ko na lang na sana sumunod ang katawan ko sa kanta.” Marian Joy, a midwifery graduate from Virac, Catanduanes, had never entertained thoughts of becoming a beauty queen. But the urgings of four aunts, who also happen to be working in Hong Kong, and the lure of the prize money and perks on offer were enough for her to overcome her inhibitions. Joining the contest, for her, was not a form of vanity – it was done for the parents left back home, particularly her bedridden papa. “Naisip ko ang pera para sa papa ko. Bedridden siya since 2005. Na-stroke one week bago yung graduation ko. Hindi na ako nagattend ng graduation kasi mas gusto ko doon ako sa tabi niya sa hospital,” she says. Gerlie Marfil, the 2006 SmarTone Winners of the search for Ms Barkadahan 2007. From left to right: Resilie Rivera, second runner-Up; Marian Joy Zafe, Ms Barkadahan 2007 grand winner and Ms Fitness 2007; and Brinny Amoro, first runner-up. Zafe shows her winning form on the catwalk (below). “ Naisip ko ang pera para sa papa ko. Bedridden siya since 2005. Na-stroke one week bago yung graduation ko. Hindi na ako nag-attend ng graduation MARIAN JOY ZAFE Ms Barkadahan 2007 Ms Barkadahan winner from Malabon, found fulfilment in performing her duties as ambassador and spokeswoman for the mobile phone network provider during her 12-month reign. Her beauty title, as well as previous experience as an amateur stage actress in college, helped her land a role in the play Migrant Collective, staged at the Fringe Club earlier this year. For five successive Sunday afternoons in the lead-up to this year’s contest, Gerlie tirelessly joined the 10 finalists from almost 200 aspirants in plotting dance moves, rehearsing poses and helping boost their confidence for their big day. What she and all the 10 aspiring beauty queens have is a kinship, a bond that speaks of woman power. Unlike typical beauty pageant contestants who are pampered, trained ramp models or grew up in well-to-do families, these strong, admirable women are their family’s breadwinners. They do not let the hardships of a domestic helper’s life hinder their quest to become well-rounded persons in search of a better life for their loved ones. Their monthly remittances are among the reasons why the country’s economy is booming. Each is already a winner even before she stepped on the makeshift stage. And on November 11, before shrieking supporters and whistles from male admirers, Marian Joy became the fifth winner of the competition. Cebu City’s Brinny Amoro, 24, took first-runner-up honors while Resilie Rivera, 23, of Balagtas, Bulacan, was second runner-up. Prizes worth P500,000 awaited the top winners, and for Marian Joy that included HK$17,000 worth of prizes as Ms Barkadahan and an additional HK$5,000 for winning the Miss Fitness award and a cache of vitamins and food supplement from sponsor Health Comes first, which she intends to give out to aunts Susan, Salome, Susie and Sarah Abundo, who had nagged her into joining the contest. Her campaign was a Bayanihanstyle affair, with support from friends in the Shatin building where she works, her elder sister Mariel who is also a domestic helper based in North Point and a generous couple she calls Mama Jean and Papa Jo who provided most of her needs including the costume for belly dancing. “Na-develop ang confidence ko dahil sa contest. Dati takot akong mag-approach ng tao,” says Marian Joy. “Natuto akong makihalubilo sa mga kasama ko dito na taga-ibaibang lugar. Mababait pala sila. At saka nalamn ko na marami pala ang nagki-care sa akin.” Marian Joy is the second among three siblings. Her mama sells seafood and maintains a small boutique in Virac while her papa was a tricycle driver until he was taken ill. She describes herself as a “food tripper” who loves traveling and reading pocketbooks, and is a big fan of pop and R&B music, especially those of Beyonce, Akon and Pussycat Dolls. Ever the polite and dutiful daughter, this reluctant beauty queen has a simple wish. “Simple lang po ang gusto ko,” Marian Joy says, “Maiangat sina mama at papa sa kahirapan.” That’s something you don’t hear from a Dayanara Torres or Charlene Gonzales or Gloria Diaz. High school life, and the days we now live overseas L isette Garcia-Idala thought she could become a teacher in her hometown in Pangasinan, where life is simple and everything is familiar. Instead, she became a nurse in a place where the people, food, language, culture and work ethics are foreign, and where strict Islamic law rules – Saudi Arabia. Jolly Carani’s ambition was to pursue justice and represent the poor in court. In his third year in law school, he left the Philippines and became a caregiver in Hampshire, UK. He has not touched any law books since then. Meanwhile, Ricardo Romero was just a couple of years away from becoming a doctor. For some reason, he took a slight turn and never looked back. He became an emergency medical technician (EMT) in Qatar. They’re ordinary Filipinos who, because of circumstances, decided to forgo their dreams and work abroad. To me, however, they are something else. They are extraordinary individuals whom I have had the opportunity to grow up and dream big dreams with, when we were classmates in high school. Fifteen years ago, when we were but adolescents enjoying the pleasures of high school life, we wanted nothing but to just finish college and land a job, and grow old loving that job. The term “overseas worker” was something foreign to us. Who would ever think that’s exactly what we have become? So what was it that made them decide to work abroad? Why have they become one of the millions of Filipinos who take care of the elderly, or talk to patients in sign language or in foreign accents, in a country that is not theirs? “It’s really just about the money,” says Idala, working as a nurse for three years now at a foreign hospital in southern Saudi Arabia. “If I have a choice, I would stay in the Philippines.” Idala did not dream of becoming a nurse in the first place. Back in high school, she excelled in oratorical and declamation contests. She could have chosen a career in theater or press relations, or teaching, but constant prodding from relatives took her to a different path. “My aunt wanted me to enrol in nursing. Mas maganda raw ang future ko sa nursing,” she tells me. After passing the licensure exam, Idala worked as a nurse at the Philippine General Hospital in Manila. It was an ideal job, serving the poor and caring for the needy in a public hospital. “Since the salary was not enough, I was pressured to go abroad,” Idala continues, adding “but I resisted the need to do so because I thought it was still best to work in your own country.” Idala instead decided to move to his husband’s hometown of Kalibo, Aklan so they could start building a simpler lifestyle, and to have more time to raise their then two-year old son. She became a school nurse for a couple of years before deciding that her job was not enough to build a good future for their son. She applied for work abroad. “I was scared at first because there are many restrictions when working in a Middle Eastern country,” Idala says. “After a few months, I realized that the work was not really difficult. Gal Roma revisits her high school days with the help of an old class photo (inset). Lisette Idala gets ready for work in a Saudi hospital. Jolly Carani (below right) takes a break in EuroDisney and Ricardo Romero is on call as an emergency personnel in Qatar. “ It’s hard to accept the reality that many Filipino medical professionals apply their skills abroad because of lack of opportunities back home RICARDO ROMERO Qatar medical emergency staff The only problem was the language because not too many patients speak English. But I am still thankful for this work. The money I earn here is really far better than what I received back home.” But does she plan to work in Saudi for a long time? “No, no, I want to go home to my family, finish the house we’re building, and get a teaching job like my husband. That’s what I really like to do, just a simple life,” she says. olly Carani took his name to heart – he’s a funny, exuberant and witty person who makes everyone around him laugh. That’s how I knew him in high school and he has not changed a bit, except for the slight British accent in between our mixed conversation in Filipino, English and Pangasinense. “I used to feel a bit frustrated because my work is totally incongruent with what I studied. Maybe there’s a reason for this,” says Carani in a phone interview. Carani has a degree in English and masters in education and was in his third year in law school at the University of Sto Tomas when he decided to become a caregiver in Hampshire, in the south of Britain. It has been five years since, and next year, he will be getting his citizenship. “I decided to embrace my calling as a caregiver and have taken special courses and management training to improve my skills,” Carani says. His efforts have paid off and last month was J 27 promoted as deputy manager, next to a Jamaican boss. He said he has stopped regretting about not becoming a lawyer. Now, he revels in his job taking care of children with learning disabilities. He finds satisfaction in being able to communicate with them through the use of “Makaton”, which uses signs and symbols to teach people with special needs. Carani says the work is not difficult, sometimes it is the environment that makes it difficult to work. “Filipino workers in the UK cannot get rid of their ‘crab mentality’ and some British see the Asian race as ‘inferior,” he says. “Hindi supportive ang mga kababayan mo pag umangat ka sa trabaho, tapos ‘yung mga ibang locals, maliit pa ang tingin nila sa iyo. You really have to work doubly hard if you want to be on par with the locals.” But these challenges make Carani appreciate his work more and get accustomed to a life with bread and jam, and porridge and English tea with milk. But does he want to go back home someday? “I still desire to go back but it seems that the longer I stay here in the UK, the lesser I long for my mother country. If we to take into account the political and economic conditions in the Philippines, it’s not reasonable to go back permanently.” icardo Romero was in his third year in medical school when he realized the path to his becoming a doctor was getting very long and very costly. “After a long soul searching, I decided to let go of that dream,” Romero says. He wanted to earn some money and help his parents. He decided to take a caregiving course, as well as an EMT training course in UP-PGH so he could apply for a job abroad. “Naging positive ‘yung results ng application ko as a caregiver in Canada and UK. But I was also accepted as an EMT in Qatar so I didn’t know what to do,” Romero says. He was torn between earning a citizenship in both commonwealth countries and the idea that he could further his career as an EMT in Qatar. “In the end, I chose to work in Qatar and I have no regrets. I love the job,” he says. Romero is equally proud of the fact that he belongs to one of the first batches to be hired as EMTs in Qatar, in 2004. “They saw how competent Filipino workers were so the hospital decided to hire more.” His line of work involves responding to all kinds of medical emergencies. “I have the same work as those people working for rescue 9/11 and throughout my duty, I am in the ambulance.” His wife Merci, a pediatrician, followed him in 2006, also to work as an EMT. “We both discussed our decision to stay here. Of course, the salary is better. We can also get additional training which we can apply when we eventually go home to the Philippines.” Romero plans to enrol in a two-year course to become a paramedic while his wife is getting specialization in emergency medicine. “It’s hard to accept the reality that many Filipino medical professionals apply their skills abroad because of lack of opportunities back home,” Romero says. “But I am happy I made the decision to leave. Pero babalik pa rin ako. Mas gusto kong tumanda sa Pilipinas.” R filipino globe 28 November 2007 filipino globe filipino globe center internet cafe November 2007 29 Some home truths about paint and wall cover From cheery to airy – choose the world you live in. Tom Arguelles looks at the endless possibilities inside and outside your door P aint and wall coverings are two of the best design tools for creating attractive, comfortable spaces in your home. They make walls come alive, accentuate furniture and accessories, and help tie the overall look of a room together. The versatility of paint makes it a popular choice for do-it-yourselfers and homeowners who want quick results. “Because paint isn’t permanent, it’s an easy and not very expensive way to make a dramatic change to a room,” says Manila contractor Jason Go. New formulations make the latest interior and exterior paints very userfriendly. Preparation and priming is the key to achieving that professional look. “Paint has come a long way since its inception,” Go says. “Lower volatile organic compounds and new formulations make paint more durable than ever,” he says. You also need to choose the right type of paint and sheen for your particular project. “If you have a high traffic area, you don’t want to use a flat surface paint that picks up marks,” Go says. A satin finish paint that provides a bit of sheen would be a better choice.” “ Because paint isn’t permanent, it’s an easy and not very expensive way to make a dramatic change to a room JASON GO Contractor New textures, natural colors, and subtle designs make today’s wall coverings a far cry from the frilly, garish prints that hung in your grandmother’s house. The trend nowadays is towards the classic look. Tropical prints, botanicals, and animal prints are popular, especially for bedrooms. “Large-scale floral patterns, especially roses, are very popular and great in romantic spaces like bedrooms,” Go says. When choosing the right Start with a mix of color (left), then choose a scheme for your exteriors (top). By not limiting yourself to certain colors, you can be more flexible with the wall cover, such as wallpaper (above). wallpaper for your home, consider the task at hand. “You need to choose what you like and choose something suitable for the room intended,” says interior designer Carol Sta Maria. Solid-sheet vinyl or vinyl-coated wallpapers are good choices for a kitchen or bath, because of their easy- to-clean qualities and resistance to moisture and grease. More delicate wall coverings, like genuine grass cloth or silk, are better suited for spaces like living rooms and bedrooms. Some of the latest wall coverings are also more user-friendly, allowing you to install and remove them faster than ever. Before you make your final selection, consider consulting with an expert. “I tell people to visit independent retailers because they have designers on staff who can help point the consumer in the right direction,” Sta Maria says. I thought I knew man’s best friend until I had one of my own now open in north point shop 75 b&c, block 13, city garden shopping arcade 233 electric road, north point home, health & beauty, money, travel, stars & sports life Q I have dealt with dogs for much of my adult life, but I realised that when it comes to basic care, I have a lot to learn, more so now that I have one of my own. Grace Togonon Hong Kong A telephone: 2982 0221 Having a dog in the house can be a lot of work. Among the main tasks involved in caring for your dog are feeding, bathing, grooming, and exercise. In general, dry dog food is more nutritious than moist dog food. Any time there’s a new pet, however, check with a veterinarian for dietary recommendations. Never offer your dog pork chop bones, chicken bones, or fish DIYBOB do it yourself ROBERT LUNARIA bones. These can splinter into sharp pieces and catch in your pet’s throat. If you must give your dog a bone, give only marrow or knuckle bones that have first been boiled to remove fat and grease that might cause diarrhea. Take the bone away as soon as it starts to splinter. On a hot day, be vigilant about your dog’s water supply. Fill your pet’s bowl with cold tap water and freshen it often. When it comes to grooming, comb a long-haired dog before a bath. Then you won’t have to untangle wet hair. Make certain the water temperature is roughly 100 degrees fahrenheit. Warmer or cooler water will cause your pet distress and may make it difficult to handle. Wash the head, ears, and neck first. If you don’t, any fleas that are on the animal will take refuge there while you clean the body. If your dog smells bad but there’s no time to give it a bath, rub baking soda or cornstarch into its coat and brush it off. Remember, few things pleases a dog more than being taken out on a walk. This may also be a good chance to relieve the animal, but be prepared to clean up the mess. Never-ending loyalty will be your reward from your pet. Send your questions or comments to diybob@filglobe.com 30 health matters filipino globe November 2007 filipino globe November 2007 31 Your biological clock is ticking, but it’s all part of the process W omen at a certain age begin to experience symptoms associated with the end of their reproductive years. Often, these are transitory, meaning they will come to pass as the bioglogical process takes hold. Some of these symptoms are flagged well beforehand. Writing in from Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Clara Medel wonders whether her symptoms are warning signs she’s entering menopause. We asked Dr Ernesto Lactaoen, a gynecologist at the Mandaluyong City Medical Center, to give us an idea about premenopausal syndrome. He writes: Menopause is defined as the cessation of the menstrual cycle for a year without a known underlying HEALTHTALK what the doctor says Dr Jun Amigo cause. It usually occurs in women between 45 and 50. Syndrome refers to a collection of symptoms and changes that often occur together. Premenopausal syndrome is just a collection of symptoms and changes in a woman’s body before menopause. “ It’s just a collection of symptoms and changes in a woman’s body before menopause Among the symptoms are physical and emotional changes such as irregular period, hot flushes, vaginal dryness, drying and wrinkling of the skin, irritability, sleep disturbances and to some even memory loss. Also, menopausal women are at risk of certain medical conditions, including osteoporosis and heart disease. Premenopausal syndrome occurs when a woman no longer produces eggs in her ovaries which are responsible for the production of the two hormones estrogen and progesterone. Since this condition is part of the aging process, premenopausal syndrome need not be treated. The symptoms are best relieved by oral contraceptives (pills). The contraceptives eliminate hot flushes, vaginal dryness and emotional symptoms of irritability. As the woman progresses from premenopausal to menopause, oral contraceptives can be replaced by estrogen replacement therapy. This involves low estrogen drugs that tend to replace the lacking hormones. However, long-term use of hormone therapy has certain side effects. Studies have shown that prolonged hormone replacement therapy increases the risk of breast cancer, heart disease, strokes and osteoporosis. A woman with a strong family history of breast cancer should not be getting hormone replacement therapy. In dealing with premenopausal syndrome, women should note that these changes that occur in their bodies are part of a natural biologic process called aging. Send queries to health@filglobe.com Solon wants ‘misleading’ cigarette labels stubbed Pia Cayetano calls them lies and backs move for mandatory graphic warnings Raul Acedre in Manila Senator Pia Cayetano is calling for the removal of misleading information on cigarette packs, saying it does not help in educating the public about the risks of smoking. She said “Mild, Low Tar and Light” on cigarette labels, which purports to indicate milder effects of smoking, should be stubbed. Cayetano, chair of the Senate Committee on Health and Demography, described the label as lies and totally misleading to the public. She said the tags are useless in educating the people against the dangerous effects of smoking. Cayetano lauded a proposal by the Department of Health and the World Health Organization to implement rules and regulations on the cigarette labeling. The proposal calls for mandatory placing of graphic photographs on the serious effects of cigarette smoking. Also under the proposal, half of each cigarette pack must have a warning in English on the front and in Pilipino on the back cover. The picture-based warning is one of the recommendations under article 11 of the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, in which the Philippines is one of 35 signatories. The warning has been introduced in Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Uruguay, Canada and Singapore. Cayetano said those picture-based warnings on cigarette packs being The most common method of transmission of the AIDS virus remains heterosexual sex and drug use. Overseas workers top AIDS list “ It’s ironic that cigarette labels with graphic warnings sold in Thailand are printed in the Philippines PIA CAYETANO Senator sold in Thailand were manufactured in the Philippines yet, “the country has failed to implement the same here”, she said. “It’s ironic that cigarette labels with graphic health warnings being sold in Thailand are actually printed in the Philippines, but these are not being required here,” she said. Filipinos working overseas account for about a third of 3,000 HIV cases in the Philippines. The total number of infected individuals over the past 20 years is far below estimates, the Department of Health said. The National Epidemiology Centre, which monitors human immunodeficiency virus cases in the country, said 2,916 such cases have been traced in the country since 1984. About 770 cases developed into full-blown AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome), it said without giving the figures of deaths due to the disease. International health experts estimated about 10,000 HIV infections in the country, but a government programme is proving to be successful in the fight against the disease. It said more than half of those infected were males in the 25-39 age bracket. Sexual intercourse, which accounts for 87 per cent of the cases, was the leading mode of transmission. This was followed by perinatal transmission, where the virus is passed from a mother to her unborn child, and drug use by injection. Health chief confirms Samar diarrhea outbreak Health Secretary Francisco Duque III confirmed an outbreak of diarrhea in Gamay town in Northern Samar but said steps are being taken to contain it. Duque said that 85 cases out of the 154 diarrhea consultations from last month to last week were admitted to Gamay District Hospital. About 30 per cent of the cases came from Barangay Burabod. He said the worst-hit age group is one to 14. One death was reported, the Department of Health said. Duque said the DOH Center for Health Development Region 8 has provided technical assistance to help determine the source of infection. This will enable local health authorities to conduct environmental inspections and water sampling. Reports said patient showed cholera-like symptoms. Hospitals and rural health units in Gamay and Lapinig were provided medicines, intravenous fluids and other medical supplies. The regional center also distributed chlorine for home water chlorination to ensure safe drinking water. Residents have been advised to observe personal hygiene. Medical personnel have been sent from other areas to help stressed health workers in the affected towns. Raul Acedre products available at filipino globe center 32 lakbayan filipino globe November 2007 Lahos Island in Caramoan (above) offers the usual sun, sea and sand alternative, but the real beauty of nature reveals itself in the wilds of Camarines Sur, from the waterfall below to a deer farm. Wild thrills for the adventure seeker Camarines Sur has what it takes to complete a perfect vacation. Tess Mauricio visits its many attractions M ost Filipinos think only of Camarines Sur as the source of the smallest , commercially harvested fish in the world, the “sinarapan”. Yet the goby specie is not the only wonder of Bicol province. When it comes to new and exciting activities, Camarines Sur is emerging as the next big destination. CamSur, as the province is commonly called, lies in the heart of Bicolandia. It is fast becoming one of the prominent a must-go places in the Philippines and now in the international scene, thanks to the opening of CamSur Watersports Complex, a facility offering wild thrills for adventure seekers. Formally opened on 21 May this year, the complex is the very first world-class water sports complex in the Philippines and in Asia. It boasts an impressive six-hectare park with a six-point cable ski system suspended at the top of a man-made freshwater lake. The complex is now a well-known destination for international and local wakeboarding enthusiasts as the lake’s setting in the middle of the park makes the water flat at all times and conducive to riding. As a testament to its popularity, the facility will play host to the 2008 International Water Ski Federation cable Wakeboard World Championships. The event is expected to draw about 400 participants and 3,000 spectators from around the globe. The complex, only five minutes from the airport, is ready for the global competition. So are Pili and the nearby towns that would accommodate participants and visitors. Within the premises is another exciting option, a mountain bike park. The area offers suitable grounds for each of the major disciplines of the sport, including BMX. It has several rugged loops for cross-country, very technical routes for downhill and a dual slalom track for the riders and racers, all easily “ CamSur would be a more adventurous alternative to frequented sun, sea and sand destinations convertible to other or newer forms of the sport such as four-cross and Super D. Recently, they have been boasting a new addition, a pump track. It is a course for mountain bikers and BMX riders alike to improve their bike handling skills by using (pumping) the back lips of the obstacles to gain momentum without pedalling. With its white and sandy beaches stretching along the edge of the gulf, CamSur would be a more adventurous alternative to frequented sun, sea and sand destinations such as Boracay and Palawan. The Caramoan Peninsula, on the northeastern side of the province, is an ideal place for travellers looking for calm and isolation in a holiday destination with turquoise waters loaded with rich marine life. The immense and peculiar limestone and geologic formations, the coves and secret lagoons likewise add to the area’s mystique, as well as a venue for another extreme activity, rock climbing. The province is also a favourite of mountaineers due to Mt Isarog. With an elevation of 6,489 feet above sea level, experienced climbers consider the eight to 10-hour trek among the most technical ascent in the Philippines. The climb passes by steep, rocky and challenging terrain from Barangay Panicuason to the summit. Mt Isarog, considered as the last rainforest of Southern Luzon, is a sanctuary of indigenous flora and fauna such as the Isarog shrew mouse, striped shrew rat, forest frog and the velvet-fronted nuthatch. Hundreds of waterfalls and hot springs remain relatively untouched within the thick forest such as Malabsay Falls, Mabuntalan Spring, Slide Falls and the Hiwacloy Sulfur Springs. Aside from the sinarapan found in Lake Buhi, popular swimmers of CamSur waters are the dolphins. The friendly creatures are frequently found in the Ragay Gulf from December to August. Common species like the spotted dolphin and the Indo-Pacific dolphin often enthral the gulf’s visitors with their delightful exhibitions. Naga, Camarines Sur’s provincial capital, is already nationally famous for the Penafrancia festival. Annually held in the second half of September at the Naga Metropolitan Cathedral, the feast of Bicol’s patron saint is characterised by a fluvial procession carrying the image of the Virgin Mary, participated in by barefoot male devotees according to custom. Another religious festival is observed in the city of Iriga every February honouring Our Lady of Lourdes. The thanksgiving rite for a fruitful harvest is celebrated at the Milaor Parish church, built in 1585 with St Joseph as the patron saint. A Filipino version of Italy’s leaning Tower of Pisa can likewise be found in the province. The Bombon Parish and its Leaning Bell Tower started construction during the term of Fray dela Torre but was completed under father Jose Ribaya. Every summer, the province commemorates a literally hot festival to celebrate its foundation day. With the chilli pepper as the festival symbol, it is no secret as to why the provincial cuisine is described as spicy. The festivity is the largest and most colorful in the Bicol region and runs for nine days starting on 20 May. Bordered by Camarines Norte and Quezon on the north, Catanduanes is the east and Albay in the South, Camarines Sur can be accessed by all modes of transport. By air, Philippine Airlines services a daily, 45-minute flight from Manila to Pili. The Maharlika and Quirino Highways plus the Philippine National Railway tracks are the main routes by land from the Philippine capital. From Cebu, CamSur can be reached by sea transport using the Pasacao and Nato Ports in Sagnay town. lakbayan filipino globe February 2007 November 33 Calicoan rides tourism wave on crest of surfing boom Reggie Amigo sizes up the island’s potential and finds that its biggest plans are on a modest scale I magine yourself being swept up on a surfboard by a giant wave, slapped down across its belly under a cascade of water and triumphantly brought to shore on a foamy brine. “It’s the biggest thrill,” says Tom Stadler, a 27-year-old amateur surfer from Hawaii. You’d have to believe him. Having grown up on the beach in Kona, one of the hottest destinations for surfers of all stripes, Stadler has seen it all. “I’ve surfed Hawaii, California, Australia and Bali, but one of my best moments was in Calicoan last summer,” he says. Thanks to people like Stadler, Calicoan has earned its credentials by word of mouth, not bad for this speck of an island off the southern tip of Eastern Samar which outsiders knew little about just over a year ago. “We don’t really advertise, so people learn about us from other people, from magazine writeups and TV features,” says general manager Kevin Go. “We have a good mix of locals and foreigners. Most of our Filipino guests come from Manila, but many balikbayan Samarenos also book with us,” he says. “In the surf season, some American and European surfers also find their way here.” Here is where Calicoan’s varied attractions lie. The island is girdled by a white, powdery beach, which seems to go on forever under the clear, silky water. It’s a place for peace and quiet. But the island’s main draw is its less serene side, the part that opens out to a breathtaking vista of nothing but sea and sky – the Pacific Ocean. Here, waves crash on a wall of rock, leaving it with a pocked, sharp surface that makes it dangerous to tread. The constant bombardment creates a spectacle of giant swells breaking up into a spray of water twice the height of the boulder. This phenomenon brings the ideal conditions for surfing, which could run to seven months of the year from April. The beach is unruffled by the ebb and flow of this force of nature, but excitement runs wild among enthusiasts at the sight of “competition-standard” waves that come thundering in succession. A virgin forest sits on the resort’s doorstep, putting a different world of thrills within a heartbeat. Nature trekkers are well served with guided walks through its cool, sun-dappled footpaths. With an itinerary given over to nature, you are left to your own devices the deeper you go. None of this was lost on the owners when they decided to develop part of the island into a world-class surfing resort, complete with amenities for competition and recreation, which they aptly named Surf Camp. “It was a family-and-friends private resort for us at the time. In 2005 we constructed more cottages and we now have seven – three tropical villas, three superior cottages and a deluxe cottage,” says Go, who oversees the 1.5-hectare property and another 400 hectares in various places on the island. The Go family, some members of the Aboitiz clan (both Cebu families have extensive interests in shipping, among others) and their partners developed Surf Camp to the last detail of a master plan that calls for a “cozy and exclusive feel” and controlled expansion. “We’d like to keep it that way. Ultimately, we’d like to build more cottages and expand the facilities a bit, but we’d like to keep the number It’s a surfer’s picture-postcard moment (top) in Calicoan island, which is served by plane charters (top) between Cebu and Guiuan town. “ In the surf season, some American and European surfers also find their way here KEVIN GO Surf Camp general manager of rooms to 10, certainly no more than 12,” Go says. “As resorts go, we have a very high staff-to-guest ratio.” The owners want to avoid the pitfalls of “runaway, hodgepodge development” that has often characterised many of the country’s leading tourist spots, and keep the island as close to its natural state as possible. “Our guests always comment about the gentle hushing sound of the waves, which can be heard throughout the resort, and how relaxing it is,” Go says. “The island’s tourism potential is enormous.” Still, Calicoan struggles to find its place on the international tourism map. Because Eastern Samar is not known as a tourist destination, Calicoan suffers from poor name association. “That’s what we want to overcome,” says Eastern Samar governor Ben Evardone. “We want to promote the province and make people aware of the exciting things it has to offer.” That aside, it’s the things that people don’t know about Calicoan that make it seem too far off, or worse, inaccessible. In fact, it isn’t. Calicoan lies just off the coast of Guiuan town, a major staging point for the US Army during World War II. The town, which inherited an airstrip from the Americans, is a twohour drive from Tacloban, gateway to Eastern Visayas, which itself is just an hour’s flight from Manila. Guiuan can be reached quite as easily by fast ferry from Cebu through Ormoc, where transfers can be arranged. Surf Camp also operates plane charters between Cebu and Guiuan. “The plan is for the Guiuan airstrip to be upgraded into an airport and open it to commercial traffic,” Evardone says. “We have been getting a positive feedback from the national government and from potential stakeholders.” Ironically, it’s the idea that the island is the perfect getaway, tucked away from it all in an obscure, quiet location, that may be its greatest asset. This may change if Calicoan is overrun by tourists and its owners respond by building recklessly on the demand. But for now, you couldn’t find a better place to get stranded in. P20m project links long-lost Samar neighbors The road ahead ... infrastructure development is transforming Eastern Samar. The dusty, bumpy travel across the border between Northern and Eastern Samar will soon be a thing of the past with the completion of the P20 million Jipapad-Lapinig road project. The 5.22-kilometer corridor completes the Samar circumferential road project aimed at easing the flow of transportation, goods and services by connecting Lapinig, Northern Samar with Eastern Samar. At the same time, the ArtecheLapinig road is being upgraded. The infrastructure projects, would spur tourism development in Eastern Samar, particularly in Guiuan town, governor Ben Evardone said. Guiuan boasts an airstrip it inherited from the Americans during World War II, which is being eyed for redevelopment for commercial air traffic. Presently, it can handle light aircraft. Also under way is the rehabilitation of the farm-to-market road in Lavezares, Northern Samar, and construction of a similar access road in barangay Obong, Can-avid. The projects received a boost during a visit by President Arroyo to Eastern Samar last week. Arroyo made a brief inspection tour, received reports on the progress of the projects and ordered that work be stepped up. 34 money matters filipino globe November 2007 Here’s why you need to make your remittances work harder R ecently, a private research company which surveyed OFW families in Manila revealed that, generally, dependents were apparently living it up at the expense of their relatives abroad. While the primary purpose of an individual in working overseas is to earn good money to adequately provide for the family, the effort often results in almost nothing saved for both income earner and beneficiary. It’s a black hole, particularly if the OFW is also burdened with expenses for the medical needs of a sick family member. With the peso growing stronger against the greenback – and forecast to continue for the next three years – there is a need for many OFWs to seriously rethink their remittances. The strong peso means that more dollars should be remitted to beneficiaries. That basically reduces the OFW’s own personal expenses. From a high of 56 pesos to the greenback last year, the US dollar has lost some 22 per cent of its value in pesos today. It’s OFWs and their beneficiaries started a frank discussion about their lifestyle and spending habits. Except OFWWISE be your own boss Herbie Sancianco for tuition fees, school expenses, home-cooked meals, household utilities, medicine and health maintenance, other non-essential items should be reviewed and either reduced or completely stopped. There should now be a conscious effort to save money. Loans to relatives that in many cases are not paid back should be stopped. For spouses left behind and unemployed, I strongly recommend that a feasible business be considered. It can be a home-based entity if it’s a sole proprietorship. If there are several other OFW families within the area, a business cooperative or a formal corporation can be formed with a modest capital. They can pool some of their Aklan vice-governor Gabrielle Calizo has urged small and medium entrepreneurs in the province to invest in homemade “pasalubong” or souvenir items. The call was made by Calizo, who said majority of pasalubongs or souvenir items that are being sold in the island comes from Cebu or Mindanao. “If we are looking for potential economic opportunities and employment generation, then making homemade souvenirs to be sold to foreign and local After harvest, rice stalks are left in a compost to turn into organic fertilizer. It’s then used to grow Magsaysay Rice, or Magrice as villagers like to call it. Pride of Magsaysay farmers Organic fertilizer using rice waste makes staple the new star on the table Your next copy of Filipino Globe will arrive by hand Subscribe now ... don’t be left behind SUBSCRIPTION FORM Name: November 2007 35 Aklan entrepreneurs told to boost souvenir business savings for the initial working capital. Examining opportunities should be the first step in determining the business idea. An inherent skill can be a starting point in creating a product or service. One of the easiest ways to do this is to go into the food business. A laundry service is also a good idea. A home industry could include sewing. Making Christmas decor for sale in local tiangges or department stores from mid-November is a winner. There are many more ideas, of course. You just need to be imaginative. Working around a budget out of the money remitted from overseas is highly recommended. The profit that will eventually be earned will be able to more than supplement the financial needs of the family. A productive OFW family is more financially secure and will help ease the financial pressure on the dollar earner. This, in turn, will help create a stronger family relationship. Herbie Sancianco is a professor in the graduate school for continuing education, De La Salle College of St Benilde, Manila money matters filipino globe Or subscribe through our website www.filglobe.com Address: Mobile No: Clip this form and send to Filipino Globe Suite 1905, Lippo Centre Tower 2 Queensway, Admiralty, Hong Kong Enclose a check payable to Apex Services (HK) Ltd Subscription rates: $180 (one year) $90 (six months) filipino globe the OFW newspaper P utting down her “garab” or harvesting knife for a short rest, Juanita Boliva, 36, scans the wide open rice fields of Bala village, as far as her eyes can see. “We’ve been here since six in the morning,” she says, wiping the beads of sweat from her sunburnt forehead with her forearms. “We won’t stop until we get this whole field harvested before sundown.” Her fellow harvesters, mostly in long-sleeved dark shirts, wearing wide-brim “buli” hats to shield them from the searing heat of the mid-morning sun, kept slicing at the thick clusters of brownish-green rice stalks, now heavy with golden palay grains. It’s harvest time at the rice fields of picturesque Bala village and farmfolk like Juanita, along with her relatives, are out in the fields – the third time this year – just a short distance away beside the narrow, pebble-strewn road, is the rice thresher, chug-chugging away the rice stalks, filling up the 50 kg white poly sacks. Filled with palay grains, villagers will soon load them into trucks which haul the sackfilled grains to the big rice mills in nearby Bansalan town where they are milled into a special kind of white rice. This rice harvested by Juanita isn’t just any ordinary rice. And the rice farm in Bala village, Magsaysay, Davao del Sur, is not just any rice field. This is a special organic rice grown here using only organic fertilizers from rice wastes. Big piles of rice stalks, turning brown under the sun, will soon be carried to wide rectangular ditches where they are allowed to decompose along with organic wastes like manure from chickens, horses, carabaos, cows and even fish intestines. In four to six months, this pile of rice wastes will turn to organic fertilizer. This organic rice farm here is run by farmers belonging to the Diversifed Organic Farming System, a special rice production program set up by the local government of Magsaysay town. Farmers here don’t use any kind of chemicals to grow this special kind of rice and they make sure this rice has not been adulterated with other varieties of rice. “It’s safe because we don’t use chemicals or any pesticides to kill off the usual pests that bother the growing of rice here,” says Juanita who joined the group last year. The only fertilizers they use for growing their organic rice are the “organic fertilizers” which they “ We’ve been here since six. We won’t stop till we get this whole field harvested before sundown JUANITA BOLIVA Farmer produced from rice stalks, weeds and organic wastes. “We can’t use them because they suck out the nutrients from the soil. If we use them, our rice fields will produce less rice,” says Juanita. Magsaysay farmers call their organic rice “Magrice”, an acronym for Magsaysay Rice, to identify it closely with its origin here. The “Magrice” brand name is spreading like wildfire and becoming more popular in Davao, Cebu, and Manila. A number of foreign buyers who heard about this rice have been sending inquiries to the Department of Trade and Industry Davao regional office asking how they can order this organic rice in big volumes on a regular basis. tourists in Boracay is one,” said Calizo during a meeting of small entrpreneurs organised by the Department of Trade and Industry and the German Technical Cooperation. Majority of the small businesses in the province are producers of fibers and furniture that are being sold abroad. Poor residents want to produce products for local consumption but they lack skills and financial support. DTI provincial director Ermelinda Pollentes said the Hugod Akeanon, an organization of small businesmen in Aklan, has established a product showcase center in Boracay. She said there is still a need for additional local souvenir items or homemade delicacies that could be sold in the resort island. Most of the locally made delicacies and souvenir items are currently being sold at the Kalibo Airport, but few of these are available in local shops within reach of tourists. 36 celebrity filipino globe November 2007 celebrity filipino globe Gabby’s call to birthday girl Jolina seals movie team-up Danny Vibas in Manila Star mess-up over Dennis Trillo L Danny Vibas in Manila Warning to girls who would allow themselves to get romantically linked to remarkably handsome actor Dennis Trillo: former Binibining Pilipinas Carlene Aguilar, with whom he has just had a love child born in California, doesn’t take things lightly. Carlene, who came home with their baby boy only a few weeks ago, reportedly sought out GMA 7 actress Cristine Reyes while the latter was taping for the show All Star K Videoke Challenge at the network’s studios in Broadway Centrum. Cristine was once linked romantically to Dennis – though she denied that there was something going on between them. She said they are just friends who often see each other during tapings of GMA 7 shows that they have been part of, such as Lupin and Super Twins. Carlene’s alleged excuse for going to the studio was to bring her pasalubong to her friend Jenny Miller, a sexy actress like Cristine. But showbiz reporters who happened to be around did not see anything being handed over to Jenny by Carlene when they met in the studio. The showbiz scribes suspect that Carlene had learned from Jenny that Cristine was among the contestants. Some of them overheard Carlene asking Jenny to introduce her to Cristine. When Jenny allegedly refused – because she, too, is aware that Dennis was once linked to Cristine – Carlene turned to some staff of the show for help to no avail. Carlene finally found a way to introduce herself to Cristine during a break in the taping. When Carlene shook Cristine’s hand, Carlene is said to have squeezed it so hard Cristine reportedly cringed with pain. Witnesses said instead of saying anything, Cristine turned her back and walked away. When Carlene tried to follow Cristine, the show’s director, Rico Gutierrez, who had earlier become aware of Carlene’s presence, reportedly blocked her and asked her to leave. Cristine later refused to say if she was hurt by Carlene’s handshake, but the reporters noted that she was teary-eyed. Meanwhile, a reporter for one of the network’s showbiz-magazine shows wrote that he talked to Carlene before she left the studio premises. The reporter, who also writes a column for a tabloid, quoted Carlene as saying she would not have gone to see Jenny Miller at the taping had she known that Cristine was going to be there. Recalling that Carlene once called Cristine “a home wrecker”, he tried to confirm with her if she did call Ara Mina’s younger sister that. To which Carlene replied: “Hindi ko na po maalaala.” She then pleaded to be spared from anymore questions about Cristine and Dennis. Reports have it that Dennis sees his son anytime, though Dennis and Carlene don’t seem to be living together. They are unmarried, and both claim that they broke up a long time ago. Carlene once denied that she was pregnant and admitted only because GMA 7 showbiz reporter Lahr Santiago bumped into her in California. She also denied that the father of the baby was Dennis who claimed to have broken up with her. Dennis would later say it was upon Carlene’s insistence that he lie about their ongoing relationship. When Carlene gave birth sometime in September, one of the attending nurses was a Filipina, who immediately e-mailed the news to friends, including the identity of the father. With Shaina-Rayver love team, will John Prats make 3? Will ABS-CBN 2 still bother to promote the Shaina MagdayaoRayver Cruz on-screen loveteam now that actor-dancer John Prats has finally admitted that he has been courting Shaina who is some six years his junior? John says he is happy whenever he is with the actress. He describes Vina Morales’ younger sister as a “very good person.” John also admits he gave Shaina a “fashion ring” – and not a “commitment ring” as previous reports suggested. “It’s just a fashion ring. And it’s not the his-and-hers kind. I bought only for her and not for myself. “Kung engagement ring ‘yon, bakit ko naman ikakahihiyang isuot ko ang akin? Look, I’m not wearing one now,” he said. The diminutive actor-dancer said he doesn’t know exactly when he began falling for Shaina. “Nagulat din ako. Matagal ko na siyang kilala, kasama pa siya ni Camille [Prats, John’s sister], so I saw her grow up. Never kong plinano na ligawan siya, dumating na lang isang araw,” he said. “Also for the record, never pa kaming nag-date na kaming dalawa lang. Every time na lumalabas kami, it’s always with a group,” he said. “Nang nabalitang nag-dinner daw kami some place, that’s true, but we were with Nikki [Gil], Iya [Villania], and Joross [Gamboa] after ASAP [the ABS-CBN 2 Sunday noontime musical-variety show]. Magpa-practice kami nang sabay-sabay that afternoon for the Star Magic ball.” He does not expect ABS-CBN to team him up with Shaina just because of the revelation. “Si Rayver pa rin ang kaloveteam ni Shaina, hindi ko ito sisirain. The good thing about Star Magic, hindi rin sila nakikialam sa private affairs namin.” Would the network promote instead a love triangle? Watch this space. Danny Vibas ooks like fans of Gabby Concepcion who have been aching to watch the stunningly handsome ‘80s matinee idol on the big screen could get their fervent wish next year. GMA Films, the sister movie company of TV network GMA 7 has begun to crow about starring megastar Sharon Cuneta’s first husband in a movie with Jolina Magdangal. Gabby has been living in the US for more than 10 years now, and he is reportedly a very successful real estate agent now – though in his early years, he worked as a bellboy in a hotel in San Francisco, California. The movie will be shot in Italy and some parts of Europe. The story will involve a European cruise. Their doing a movie together is the reason the biological dad of KC Concepcion made an overseas call from the US to Jolina when she celebrated her birthday at the GMA 7 Sunday noontime show SOP last week. At first, Jolina thought the call was a joke being played on her by SOP host Janno Gibbs who is very good at mimicking voices. But Jolina soon realized it was indeed Gabby who was at the end of the line. “Natutuwa ako na nabati kita kahit sa telepono lang. Magkikita rin tayo nang personal,” Gabby announced to Jolina. “Salamat po, at sana magkita tayo pagpunta ko riyan ‘pag may show ako,” replied Jolina. “Oo, magkikita tayo. Kapag dumating ka rito, tawagan mo ako para sunduin kita. Ano ba gusto mo, limousine o jeep?” Gabby said. “Siyempre limo, para sosyal,” laughed Jolina, who began her showbiz career as a child singer who was a member of a group called 14K. Jolina is aware, of course, that GMA Films has been quietly negotiating with Gabby about the film whose title is still under wraps. Gabby’s call to her practically confirms that he has accepted the terms offered to him for the project. His last movie must have been a decade ago – and practically no one remembers what it was. Also yet to be announced are the directors and the rest of the cast. But its script has been finalised by Gina Marissa Tagasa-David, the favorite scriptwriter of GMA Films, which is headed by lawyer Annete GozonAbroga, daughter of GMA Network big boss Felipe Gozon who is also a lawyer like his daughter. Marvin Agustin, Jolina’s on-screen sweetheart back in their ABS-CBN days as a love team, may or may not be cast in the Jolina-Gabby movie. Jolina, 28, recalls that she first met Gabby at a hotel in San Francisco, California when he was a real-life bellboy. Jolina was then in a show tour in the US with other Pinoy showbiz idols. She says since no one in the group recognized him, it was Gabby himself who announced to them that he was the once very famous Pinoy actor. Meanwhile, Jolina is very much “on” with lawyer boyfriend Bebong Muñoz who lived in the US for about five years – all the while keeping a long-distance romance with Jolina. Bebong, who failed in his bid in Caloocan to become a congressman, “ Oo, magkikita tayo. Kapag dumating ka rito, tawagan mo ako para sunduin kita GABBY CONCEPCION Calling Jolina on her birthday sang to Jolina during her birthday celebration at SOP. Well, singing runs in their family. He is an older brother of the late young singer Tenten Muñoz. For some reason, Jolina and Bebong seem to be not in a hurry to get married even as their romance has been going on for seven years now. Gabby went to the US a few years after his marriage with Sharon Cuneta broke up – with only KC (for Kristina Cassandra) as the fruit of their not-so-happy marriage. Before Gabby migrated to the US, though, he had one daughter each with the mestiza model Jenny Syquia and the brown-skinned Grace Ibuna who comes from a political family in Gabby’s native San Juan town. 27 37 Iza gets taste of Pinoy Hollywood production Iza Calzado (right) is back from Canada, where she finished filming the horror movie The Echo with actor Jesse Bradford under the direction of Filipino film maker Yam Laranas. The Echo is the Hollywood version of Laranas’ own Filipino film Sigaw, which was his entry in the Metro Manila Film Festival just a few years ago. Laranas is reputedly the first Philippine-born film maker of his generation to get a Hollywood break. Iza was also in Sigaw, which All but director and cast yet to be named before filming starts in Europe for the ‘80s idol and one of the country’s hottest young stars today Carlene Aguilar (above, center) was reportedly asked to leave the studio after the incident with Cristine Reyes (below) over her supposed affair with Dennis Trillo (inset). Trillo has fathered a lovechild with Carlene. November 2007 Marian Rivera and Katrina Halili (inset) went through the bodywork routine. Marimar bikini showdown scene ready to make waves For the love of Sergio, bitter rivals put on their best shape in sexiest episode Danny Vibas in Manila GMA 7 boasts that its Marimar teleseries has been rating as high as 47 per cent in Mega Manila, which, aside from Metro Manila, includes some parts of Pampanga, Bulacan, and Cavite. But that dizzying rating from an AGB survey hasn’t stopped the network from doing other “gimmicks” that can make the show’s rating soar higher over that of rival ABS-CBN. The local adaptation of the soap opera once made phenomenally popular in the Philippines by Mexican bombshell Thalia will soon feature a bikini showdown between the characters Marimar/Bella and Aldama/Angelika Santibañez. In effect, that means, a bikini showdown between Marian Rivera as Marimar/Bella and Katrina Halili as Aldama/Angelika Santibañez. “Kinunan na ang bikini showdown nina Marian Rivera at Katrina Halili sa isang resort sa San Pablo, Laguna. Inabot nang late ang mga eksena dahil sa pagkuha ng maraming anggulo sa katawan nina Marian at Katrina,” a scribe said. It will be Marian’s first time to appear on screen in a bikini, though as Marimar, she has been sashaying and going around in body-hugging and thigh-exposing dresses. For Katrina, though, strutting around in a bikini is next to normal and natural. She has been on the cover and inside pages of the men’s adult magazine FHM twice. “Ninenerbiyos ako kasi never pa akong nagsuot ng ganito ka-sexy,” said Marian. “Kaya dusa ako sa diyeta. Nag-workout din ako as much as I can para mas makatulong sa pagpapapaganda ng katawan ko.” Katrina laughingly told the press: Hindi na ako worried, unlike noong mga una kong mag-bikini. Hindi ako confident noon. Pero ngayon, kahit araw-arawin na natin.” Katrina appeared in a bikini with Ehra Madrigal in the defunct GMA 7 fantasy adventure series Lupin topbilled by Richard Gutierrez. “Pero sa eksena namin na ito ni Marian, hindi lang paseksihan ito, kasi matindi ang drama naming dalawa. Kumbaga, pagtutuos ito kung sino ang pipiliin ni Sergio. Kaya ‘yan ang abangan nila,” Katrina said. Sergio is portrayed by Dingdong Dantes. was topbilled by Richard Gutierrez and Angel Locsin. Iza reprised in the Hollywood version her role in the Filipino version: battered wife of a demented policeman (locally played by Jomari YIIana). The Echo wrapped up shooting in Canada and the US and is currently in the final stages of production. Experiencing Hollywood production first hand was hard work and nerve-wracking, said Iza, a daughter of former dancerchoreographer Lito Calzado. “Mas organised ang shooting kasi mas mahaba ‘yong preparation,” she said. She said she learned from Yam that the film’s production budget was US$7 million, which is low budget by Holllywood standard. “At kung ganun lang ang pera ninyo sa Hollywood, kailangan talagang pagplanuhan nang mabuti ang shoot para matapos ang pelikula within the budget.” Danny Vibas 38 celebrity filipino globe November 2007 Baywalk dancer admits mobile-phone sex video said during a promotion of the latest album of her group – The Very Best of Baywalk Bodies. She suspects that it must have been through Will’s cellphone that the sex video spread around. “Baka po kasi may nakialam ng cell phone niya kaya kumalat ‘yon,” she said. She admitted, however, that she once showed the video to an entertainment reporter. Another reporter said a colleague had a cellphone copy of the video. Even before Palmolive’s revelation, some of her Baywalk Bodies colleagues had told some showbiz reporters about the existence of the video. Meanwhile, neither ABS-CBN management nor Will’s manager, Dondon Monteverde, has commented on the issue. But inside Big Brother’s house, Will is said to be developing a romance with “housemate” Riza Santos, a Fil-Canadian beauty queen. Palmolive Palma (second from left) admits she and Will Devaughn are in an explicit video making the rounds via mobile phones. His separation from the network immediately led people to believe that he had become a has-been before his star had risen. There was talk that rival network GMA 7 was going to sign him up. But it didn’t. The young man is a Visual Arts student of the University of the Philippines in Diliman and has the budding skills of an independent film maker. He has, in fact, written and 39 Batman movie wraps up HK shoot Dozens of police officers storm a skyscraper in Central and Hong Kong’s world-famous Victoria Harbor sunset brings the curtains down on another installment of the Batman movie. Although none of this involved the major stars, led by Christian Bale and Morgan Freeman, the final take provided more highlights of a shoot notable for scenes off the camera. For starters, the high-profile shoot was clouded by concerns over pollution, noise and energy consumption. “The Dark Knight,” which also involves scenes shot in Chicago and The SexBomb Girls move on without Jopay Paguia. Manager Joy Cancio says Jopay is welcome to return. Punishing schedule too much for SexBomb girl Jopay Paguia takes a long break but group leaves door open Danny Vibas in Manila S exBomb member Jopay Paguia is denying rumors that she is set to leave the popular allfemale dance-singing group. She clarified that she only wants to take a break from the frenetic pace of showbiz. “Magbabakasyon po ako. Magla-lie low po muna ako para ma-ano ko po ang sarili ko ... Para makapagpahinga po ako,” she said. She admitted that she is overfatigued by the continuous taping she had for their afternoon show on GMA 7, Daisy Siete. “Siguro po napagod lang po ako. Simula po nung namatay po ang dad ko, dire-diretso po talaga yung taping ko. Nagmano-mano po, Chiquita, tapos ngayon po, Tabachingching.” Jopay further made it clear that there was no argument or fight with any SexBomb member that could have caused her to ask for a leave of absence. “Kasi nung sinabi ko po sa kanila, nagulat po sila. Na-huh, bakit ganoon?’ Pero inintindi po nila na, ‘Oo nga, kailangan mo talagang magpahinga muna kasi nga yung health mo’,” Jopay narrated. She said she has the support of Joy Cancio, the group’s manager, about “ Basta ang sabi niya sa akin, mag-ingat lang daw po ako kung magbabakasyon po ako JOPAY PAGUIA On manager Joy Cancio her decision to take a break from the group. “Yun nga po, pinayagan niya naman po ako. Basta ang sabi niya sa akin, mag-ingat lang daw po ako kung magbabakasyon po ako. Huwag daw ako masyado magpapataba kasi nga SexBomb pa rin po ako,” the young dancer said. This was confirmed by SexBomb manager Joy Cancio in a separate interview. “Nakiusap nga si Jopay. Inintindi ko naman kasi nga, na-realize ko din po ... Kasi nga namatay ang father niya, talagang pinilit naming magtaping kasi trabaho ‘yan. Talagang dire-diretso po siya, puyat ... Nakita mo naman na yung hita niya, wala na. Talagang nangayayat,” Joy said. Joy, however, cautions Jopay not to stay away too long. “Kapag sinabi na namahinga, ibig sabihin mawawala sa showbiz. Actually yung rest lang to give time to your family and to yourself. Hindi yung matagal. Kasi mahirap mabawi yung career na ginawa namin for her.” Jopay has only kind words for her manager. “Sabi ko, naiintindihan ko naman po. Wala naman akong ibang sisisihin kundi ang sarili ko sakali man bumagsak ako.” Hero Angeles shines again, this time behind the camera Hero Angeles may yet make a name for himself as a well-rounded independent film maker. Remember the guy? He was the last winner of the defunct Kapamilya network star search reality show Star Circle Quest. He was Sandara Park’s first on-cam sweetheart as they were both Star Circle Quest contestants. Hero had a falling out with ABSCBN 2 which was supposed to build him up to full stardom. November 2007 Off-camera scenes overshadow latest installment of top-grossing film franchise Danny Vibas in Manila The sex video maniacs are at it again. This time around, the victims are commercial model Will Devaughn (right) and dancersinger Palmolive Palma, who is a member of the all-female show group known Baywalk Bodies. Palmolive admitted it is she and Bill that are in a sex video being passed around in the Philippines through mobile phones. Talk about the existence of the video started to spread almost as soon as skinhead Will was presented as one of the 14 contestants on ABS-CBN 2’s reality show-contest Pinoy Big Brother-Celebrity Edition 2 a month ago. The contest requires the participants to stay together in a house-studio for at least 100 days – unless they get evicted. As of press time, only Palmolive has admitted that she is in the sex video. Will would neither confirm nor deny it. Palmolive said she was not the source of the mobile download of the sex video and that only she and Will have a copy of the video on their respective mobile phones. She said she and Will took the video themselves one drunken night when they were both ramp models. “Totoo pong may sex video kami ni Will. Pero matagal na po ‘yon nangyari. Wala po kaming relasyon, pero napagkasunduan po naming i-video ‘yon na para sa amin lang. Nag-promise pa po kami sa isa’t isa na dapat ay hindi namin ipakita ‘yon sa iba,” she celebrity filipino globe directed a digital film in which he was the lead actor. The movie is simply titled “Stockroom,” and it has been screened at Robinson’s Cinema in Ortigas Avenue, Pasig City and at the most recent Cine Malaya Independent Film Festival sponsored and hosted by the Cultural Center of the Philippines. The film has also begun to enjoy international exposure. It was shown on November 2 at a Halloween international film festival in Malta, the smallest country in the European Union. The festival, billed as “Revenge of the Blood,” was a one-day marathon screening of 13 horror films from various countries. Venue was the St James Cavalier Center of Creativity, reportedly the equivalent of the Cultural Center of the Philippines. The festival screened from classic films to indies. It included four premieres, including Stockroom. In it, Hero plays an unemployed English teacher who is left at home with his niece Naya. By accident, they disturb an element of the past while inside a stockroom. The incident sparks the beginning of the spirits’ intrusion into their lives. Samio and Naya find themselves trapped in the past, present and future. Danny Vibas London, involves Batman leaving Gotham City for the first time. His foray into Asia hit several snags in Hong Kong. Local media reported that filmmakers cut a scene involving Batman jumping from a plane into the city’s Victoria Harbor because of its filthy waters. Director Christopher Nolan denied the reports, saying the change was a scripting decision. Environmental activists also criticised a request from the film’s producers asking tenants of waterfront buildings to keep their lights on all night to better showcase Hong Kong’s skyline, filled with glittering skyscrapers, calling it a waste of energy. Hong Kong officials earlier also expressed concern over noise pollution and traffic chaos during the shoot. Earlier, director Christopher Nolan and his crew filmed Christian Bale, who plays Bruce Wayne and Batman, and Morgan Freeman, who portrays Lucius Fox, having a conversation on a pedestrian bridge that connects Hong Kong’s Central financial district and the upscale Mid-Levels residential area. They also filmed Lucius Fox arriving at the same office building stormed by the police officers and chatting with security guards. Bale said at a press conference he was scheduled to jump off Hong Kong’s tallest building, the 90-floor International Finance Center, a sequence also featured in “Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life,” starring Angelina Jolie. “The Dark Knight,” a sequel to the 2005 hit “Batman Begins,” also stars Heath Ledger as the Joker and Michael Caine as Batman’s butler, Alfred. The Warner Bros production is due out next summer. Christian Bale ... Who’s that guy? 40 celebrity filipino globe Harry turns to text messages to win back his girlfriend TAKEFIVE Tom Cruise fears his new movie Lions for Lambs will be an expensive flop after it failed to break into the top three at the box office in its opening weekend. He was hoping the film, which cost an estimated US$35 million to make, would be a hit, but the Robert Redforddirected movie debuted at No 4 in the box office with only US$6.7 million. The movie is the first release from Cruise’s United Artists studio. FRIEND Describing Chelsy Davy identity as her own person rather than as Prince Harry’s girlfriend.” The insider adds: “This is not an over-for-good situation.” The prince, 23, is said to be Harry and Chelsy love watching sports but apparently as a joint undertaking. She had issues when the prince went to a rugby match and passed up on her party. devastated over being dumped by Davy, 22, a South African socialite who recently moved to England to study law at Leeds University (she may soon ditch the school, too, according to the London Sun). Harry has purportedly been “bombarding” her with text messages and phone calls, with a pal explaining to the Mail. “He is keen to see her to talk things through.” But on Friday night, not long after their apparent bust-up, Harry seemed more keen to chit-chat with a “leggy brunette” at a London hot spot, where he and some pals rang up a US$4,000 bar tab, reports the Daily Mirror (one of his buddies paid the bill). Heather Mills is set to take to the dance floor once more in a special British festive edition of Dancing with the Stars. The one-legged former model and estranged wife of Paul McCartney appeared on the US reality TV show earlier this year, and has signed up to star in the UK equivalent, Strictly Come Dancing. Mills, who lost her left leg in a road accident in 1993, was criticised after she launched a scathing attack on the former Beatle in a string of TV interviews across the globe earlier this month. She is now keen to win over the public. November 2007 41 Advertisers are responsible for the content and accuracy of their advertisement. Readers are strongly advised to check the veracity of the advertisements before making any purchase. It’s a matter of view. Give your clients the full scope of your business. Call 2918 8248 to book this space Mills takes to floor “ She needs to carve her own identity rather than as Prince Harry’s girlfriend your guide to products & services filipino globe Lions worry Cruise British royal gets the boot after skipping Chelsy’s birthday party for rugby match You’re a young, hunky redhair popular enough to be in politics and too good-looking not to be in the movies. But what if you also happen to be a prince who likes rugby and hip parties. You get dumped by your girlfriend, that’s what. Just ask Britain’s Prince Harry. Girlfriend Chelsy Davy thought she had had enough of the prince’s antics after he skipped her birthday celebration and instead attended a rugby match, Britain’s Mail reports. And that’s just scratching the surface. There are deeper reasons, of course. “She still loves him,” a Chelsy source tells the paper. “But she feels she needs to carve an classified globe November 2007 Filipina • Filipino food products • Print, copy or fax • Karaoke • Internet Internet Cafefe Danna’s Keyboards sequencer singer Internet Cafe Shop B, G/F Yue On Bldg, 78-86 Catchick St Kennedy Town, Hong Kong Tel: 2819 1905 Fax: 2818 5284 Open every day Managing director: Lito Room 701, 7/F, 9-13 Li Yuen St, West 2nd Ale-Ale, Central, Hong Kong Fax: 2845 7043 Mobile: 9843 4188 Anil Fashion Bisakol Sikat and Services Internet Cafefe RTW Accessories Electronics (hulugan) Boardwalk Shoes Karaoke Food & drinks Lina 6097 7450 Flat 7 G-M/F Luckifast Bldg 1 Stone Nullah, Wanchai Shop 349 3/F World-Wide House, 19 Des Voeux Road Central, Hong Kong. Email: anils_fashion@yahoo.com Carlan Internet Cafefe No 2 1/F Li Yuen St. East, Central, Hong Kong Tel: 2574 3308 The Discovery Videoke Printing Internet tutorial Food & drinks Catering Party venue A doctor researching an ancient society deep in the Himalayan mountains, discovered that the people living close to certain wells of water, lived to be over 100 years, had no grey hair, and never lost their teeth. This region between Nepal and India, is considered by many, to be one of the most sacred places on earth. What’s in the water? Ricky Sumalloe IT Professional Wanted by Filipino company to maintain computers and internet network Please call (63) 917539 0486 for details Please call Bob 9470 2764 42 your guide to products & services filipino globe car central November 2007 filipino globe Free registration Orders being accepted second-hand cars for sale in the philippines November 2007 Advertisers are responsible for the content and accuracy of their advertisement. 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Kilala siya bilang “the Racing Diva.” Halos lahat ay napapalingon kay Gaby dela Merced, pero lahat ay iniiwanan din niyang kumakain ng alikabok, lalo na kapag sakay siya ng kanyang pangarerang kotse. Madalas na kuning modelo si Gaby. Ilan sa kanyang mga product endorsement ay ang sa skincare center at shampoo. Pero hindi maaaring husgahan ang nakikita lamang. Kahit mukhang hindimakabasag pinggan, si Gaby ay isa sa mga top drivers sa bansa. Katunayan, kahit na noong bata pa ito ay mahilig na ito sa extreme sports. Ngayon, itinuturing na isa sa mga prolipikong race-car driver si Gaby sa Asian Formula 3 circuit. Sa unang tingin ay hindi mo aakalain na agresibo ang 23-anyos na si Gaby, pero sa sandaling hawak na niya ang manibela, lumalabas na ang kanyang pagiging kompetitibo. “I think I was fascinated more with driving,” masayang wika niya. “I wasn’t much of a gear head GABY DELA MERCED Race-car driver growing up. I wasn’t the type who knew the insides of an engine.” “In fact, back then, if you showed me a Toyota and a Honda emblem, I wouldn’t know the difference. Now I can say my knowledge of cars is above average. I would know what’s wrong with my engine. At least I you more or less have control of your time,” wika niya. “That’s when I can juggle meetings with sponsors and my other rackets – because I don’t just do stocks, there are other business ventures that I’m getting into right now,” kuwento nito. Sumali na si Gaby sa local slalom championship noong 2001 kung saan nakuha niya ang ladies championship. Nang sumunod na taon, pumangatlo sita sa Philippine touring cars, sa novice production class. Noong 2003, muling pumangatlo si Gaby sa Philippine BRC Production Touring Car Championship. Sa Skating rink ang mundo ni Anna Villafuerte Celeste Maring in Manila Walang snow sa Pilipinas. Subalit sa sandaling nakasuot na ng kanyang saktes at nagsayaw na sa ice rink si Anna Isabel Villafuerte, tila buong buhay na ito na naglalaro sa niyebe. Kung tutuusin, nakagugulat na isipin na ang isang 11-anyos na Pilipina ay magtatagumpay sa isang sport na isang pampalipas oras lamang sa mga mall sa Pilipinas. Umaani ng tagumpay si Villafuerte hindi lamang sa local na kompetisyon, sa halip ay pambato rin siya ng bansa sa mga internasyunal na laban. Siya ay isa ring swimmer at soccer player sa kanyang paaralan, ay nagsanay sa gymnastics bago niya nadiskubre ang skating nang minsang bumisita ito sa mall noong walong taong gulang pa lamang siya. Pagkatapos ay nanood siya ng Disney on Ice at hindi na natigil pa sa pagkahumaling sa skating. Kinuha niya ang bronze medal sa kanyang unang mall competition noong 2003 pero kinailangan niyang mag-break ng anim na buwan bago muli sumabak sa skating. Sa ngayon ay anim hanggang pitong oras siya sa araw-araw na nagsasanay. Kumakatawan si Anna Villafuerte sa SM International Ice Skating Rink. Itinuturing si Villafuerte na isa sa mga achievers na kumakatawan sa SM International Ice Skating Rink, na nanalo ng medalya mula sa mga internasyunal na kompetisyon kabilang na ang sa Guangdong at Shenzhen sa China, at sa Bandung, Indonesia noong nakaraang taon Kamakailan lamang ay idinagdag niya sa kanyang mga medalya at tropeo ang panalo niya sa Skate Beijing sa China World Trade Center nang walisin niya ang lahat ng gintong medalya rito. Dinaig ni Villafuerte ang may 300 skaters mula sa Hong Kong, Guangdong, Shenzhen at Beijing. Siya lamang ang tanging Pilipino sa sport na ang naglalaban ay pawang mula sa mga bansang may tag-lamig na klima. Sa husay ni Villafuerte sa mga programa na inihanda, kinuha niya ang top score sa solo technical, solo footwork, solo artistic, solo spotlight, solo competition, at surprise number, at pair events na couple shot at jump and spin, kung saan naging kapareha niya ang kanyang coach na si Denise Martinez para sa panalo. “In some events, I was really scared because my competition, their programs were really good and then when it came to me, sometimes I was shaking. But when it came to the results, I was really surprised, I mean I didn’t know I did that good a job,” sabi ni Villafuerte . HK$3,320 Direct hire processing including working visa Direct hire processing including working visa Canada Philippines POEA License No. 168-LB-063003-R Iloilo Branch: New address: 1709 A. Mabini St, EKKSON Bldg Malate, Manila, Philippines Tel: (632) 4500 022 Telefax: (632) 5250 472 Rm A 2/F Ricamonte Bldg A Mabini St, Iloilo City Tel: (6333) 335 1634 “We were OK with three golds, because that’s where I saw she had the chance to win, but one came after the other,” sabi ni, Fe ang ina ni Villafuerte. Maging ang kanyang coach ay nagulat din sa ipinamalas ni Villafuerte. “Actually, before she got all the medals, I even scolded her because … she didn’t want to listen, but she proved me wrong again for the hundredth time,” dagdag ni Martinez. “But she was a fast-learner, progressing through the skating levels quickly.” Sa huli niyang panalo, nagkwalipika si Villafuerte na sumali sa ISI World Team Recreational Championships sa Chicago, ang kompetisyon na maaaring magpaangat ng kanyang tsansa na katawanin ang bansa sa 2010 Winter Olympics sa Vancouver, Canada. Subalit kahit na sunod-sunod ang tagumpay, hindi nagmamadali si Villafuerte. “You have to go step by step; you have to go through more stages, more levels, difficulties in skating. And I’m not in a rush to go to the Olympics. I’m still young and I am enjoying myself,” wika niya. taong din iyon, pumangalawa siya sa Production Class ng Philippine Petron GP Touring Car Series. Noong 2004, nasa third overall sa Philippine Formula Toyota Championship. At ang kanyang hirap at tiyaga ay nagbunga nang makasama siya sa formula BMW Asia scholarship driver noong taong din iyon. “I’ve always been passionate about what I do. And that’s how you should live life, no matter how ridiculous things seem. It’s not about showing the world, but showing yourself that this is what you want, this is where you want to go, and that you can find ways to get there,” sabi ni Gaby. 9170 7558 email: yatka@email.com Rm 1403 14/F Easey Commercial Bldg 253-261 Hennessy Road, Wanchai Hong Kong. Tel: 2824 9090 Fax: 2877 7773 Employment and Travel Services PABL ready to suspend play in bid to help national team The Philippine Basketball League will back the national team any time it’s called upon to help. Team owners committed their resources to the national team during a meeting to map out plans for next month’s 24th Southeast Asian Games in Thailand. The PBL board decided that the nationals, who are currently in Singapore for a series of tune-up matches, will be reinforced by more players seeing action in the ongoing PBL V-Go Extreme Energy Drink Cup. They include Fil-Am sensation Gabe Norwood of Hapee Toothpaste, who suited up for the RP Team to the FIBA-Asia qualifiers in Japan earlier this year. The league also agreed to throw its resources behind the effort to capture the SEA Games gold medal, the last international basketball crown the country holds, including suspending the current tournament, a spokesman said. “ Siyempre gusto naming makapagpro [professional player]. Lahat naman kami yun ang pangarap PAUL ECHAVEZ Amateur golfer Stalwarts of National Caddies Program tee it up in strong Hong Kong showing Aileen Gabutina in Hong Kong Carrying bags has taken Paul Echavez a long way from home. When the young Apo Golf Club caddy was approached by Tommy Manotoc and told he was going to compete in the 2007 Hong Kong Amateur Golf Open Championships, Echavez, for a fleeting moment, thought his coach was pulling his leg. He almost laughed. But then he realized Manotoc would never joke about such things. Manotoc knew too well how much an international trip meant to the 19year-old. Echavez, along with fellow Davaoeno Zanieboy Gialon and Zamboanga native Jerson Balasabas, flew to Hong Kong with Manotoc late last month and vied in the tournament which also saw players from other Asian countries and Britain compete. “Unang biyahe ko po ’to kaya grabe ang kaba ko. Pagdating ko nga dito sa Hong Kong sinabi ko kaagad sa sarili ko ‘hindi lahat ng tao nabibigyan ng chance na tulad nito.’ Pakiramdam ko nga nanalo na kaagad ako,” said the soft-spoken Echavez. “Ito kasi talaga ang gusto kong gawin mula pa noong bata ako.” Echavez’s two buddies from the National Caddies Program, Balasabas and Gialon, who also came from humble beginnings, made their first out-of-the-country trip last year, competing at a Malaysian tournament, where Gialon placed second. “Twelve years old palang kami ni Zanieboy nung magsimula kaming maglaro [ng golf]. Noon din kami nagsimula mag-caddy sa Apo [Golf Club] dun na kami natuto maglaro habang pinanonood namin yung mga players,” said Echavez. Gialon, 18, is not the only caddyturned-golfer in his family. His firstcousin, Dante Becierra, also from the Apo Golf Club, is a national team 45 YATKA A long way from home, a step closer to their dream Champion driver Gaby dela Merced is a fashion model and top product endorser. She also works at the stock exchange. think I know,” pahayag ni Gaby “I have a very special relationship with my car,” nakangiting wika ni Gaby. “When I’m behind the wheel, I become the car.” Bukod sa karera ng kotse, sumasali rin si Gaby sa extreme sports at nakasama na sa ilang adventure races. Coach din siya ng flag football club sa Miriam College grade school kung saan siya nag-aral. Bukod sa pagiging race-car driver, si Gaby ay nagtatrabaho rin sa stock market. “Well, the stock market is a 9-to-12 thing – it opens in the morning and closes at noon. So in the afternoon, November 2007 HK$2,000 Hong Kong Fil International Co License No. 100-LB-060507-R “ I’ve always been passionate about what I do. And that’s how you should live life, no matter how ridiculous things seem Spa & Beauty Center 1747 A. Mabini St, Malate Manila, Philippines Tel: 450 1509 Txt: 0905 220 380 Kung mahina-hina kang driver, usok at alikabok ang aabutin mo sa kanya Celeste Maring in Manila palakasan filipino globe Jerson Balasabas lines up a putt on his way to a tie for fifth place. player. Becierra, in fact, won the 2007 HK amateurs. Balasabas tied for fifth, Echavez placed 12th and Gialon tied for 14th. “Most of the caddies are from Davao,’’ said Manotoc. “Apo Golf Club, for years, has been a good venue in honing their skills dahil pinapayagan silang maglaro sa course unlike the private clubs in Metro Manila.” It was in 2005 that Manotoc discovered the three players at the National Caddies Open. Although the three failed to finish near the top at the open, they showed promise. Manotoc took Echavez, Gialon, and Balasabas to Batangas so they could play regularly at the Calatagan Golf Club, of which Manotoc is a member. The club is owned by Tonyboy Cojuangco, who is another supporter of the caddies program. The 24-year-old Balasabas, who started playing when he was 14, polished his skills at the Edwin Andrews Air Base Golf Club in Zamboanga. He said he was a latebloomer, and his entry into the caddies program took some nudging. “Nakiusap na nga lang ako kay coach na isama ako sa team pagkatapos ng 2005 Open,” said Balasabas. With sheer determination, Balasabas redeemed himself and topped the same tournament the next year. “It’s their break in life, that’s why you can really feel their dedication, their passion [in golf]. Unlike the golfers who can afford to play the sport, it’s a hobby to them. Sa mga batang ’to, eto na yung buhay nila,” said Manotoc. Echavez said the three of them share a dream. “Siyempre gusto naming makapag-pro [professional player]. Lahat naman kami yun ang pangarap.’’ The three players are now back in Calatagan. They are a long way from home, but they are one small step closer to their goal. Kahit caretaker lamang, taglay ni Sonny Barrios ang buong malasakit sa PBA Celeste Maring in Manila Nang hindi siya napiling Commissioner ng Philippine Basketball Association noong 2002, tinalikuran na rin ni Sonny Barrios ang kanyang pangarap na makuha ang naturang posisyon. Minsan nang nadismaya si Barrios nang ang kanyang pangarap na maging PBA commissioner ay di natupad, kaya’t laking gulat niya nang manombrahan siyang Officer-InCharge. Ang dahilan – hindi na siya naghahabol pa na maging Commissioner. “One qualification why Barrios was chosen] is because he has no ambition [of becoming commissioner],” sabi ni outgoing league chairman Ricky Vargas ng Talk ‘N Text . “And he had the inside track because of his knowledge of the PBA,” dagdag ni Vargas tungkol sa 60-taong gulang na si Barrios. “He will be purely the OIC. This is just a bridging job [for the next commissioner.” Si Barrios, nagtrabaho sa Commissioner’s Office ng 18 taon, ay dating executive director ng liga at naging OIC ng magkasakit noong 2000 si Emilio “Jun” Bernardino. Kung tutuusin, ang pagkakaibigan nina Barrios at Bernardino ay halos dalawang dekada na ang pinagdaanan. Graduate ng business studies sa Ateneo, pumasok si Barrios sa PBA noong 1984 bilang assistant ni Bernardino na noon naman ay executive director kay Mariano Yenko. “This came as a surprise,”sabi ni Barrios. “The circumstances surrounding 2002 notwithstanding, I never thought that this would come. Being a candidate in itself was a surprise.” Idinagdag ni Barrios na kahit na nasa Estados Unidos siya noon ay nanatili ang puso niya sa liga na matagal din niyang pinaglingkuran. May care-giving business si Barrios at ang kanyang asawang si Becky sa Sacramento, California. “My heart will always be with the PBA. I’ve been with the league for how many years and, certainly, my experiences will be of great value,” wika ni Barrios. Idinagdag niya na hindi alintana sa kanya na short term lamang ang kanyang pagiging commissioner at sa halip ay pinasasalamatan pa niya ang miyembro ng PBA board dahil sa tiwala nito sa kanya. Hindi napanalunan ni Barrios ang commissionership makaraang magretiro si Bernardino noong 2002 season. Si Noli Eala na nagbitiw kamakailan makaraang madisbar ng Supreme Court dahil sa “immorality,” ang naging ikaanim na commissioner matapos si Bernardino. Nagbago ng isip ang board sa pagpili ng OIC makaraang kumpirmahin ng mga miyembro nito na shoo-in na si former senator Freddie Webb sa puwesto. Nais ng board ang matagalang pamamalagi sa puwesto ni Webb. 46 palakasan filipino globe November 2007 Thank you all – it was well worth the journey Coming off a disastrous stint last season, the Celtics have put together their biggest start in 20 years at 4-0. Hot-streaking Boston out to put past behind Searing start sends Boston chasing history again, writes Tom Almazan S pare a thought for the Boston Celtics. After all this time, the winningest team in the NBA is still making history. With a 4-0 card, the Celtics have already assembled their best start in 20 years. They could forget about what happens next, except that Boston wants to wipe out the stain of their second worst record ever last season. “When you coach or play in Boston, every day is something with history,” Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. “This team is so history-rich. We’ve just got to get better.” The Celtics’ 16 championships are the most in NBA history. Their 18game losing streak last season was their longest ever. It fell to Kevin Garnett last week to get the Celtics on the march again, powering Boston past the Atlanta Hawks, 106-83. The 10-time All-Star but first-year Celtic had 27 points, 19 rebounds, six assists and three blocks against a young and improving Atlanta team. Boston is much older but has improved more since posting the second worst record in the franchise’s impressive history last season. That 4-0 start is their best opening since 1987-88, when they won their first six games, finished with 52 wins and went on to the Eastern Conference finals, the last time the original Big Three of Larry Bird, Kevin McHale and Robert Parish got there. “It’s not only Garnett,” Hawks coach Mike Woodson said. “When you throw Ray Allen and Paul Pierce in the mix, you know they’ve got shooters spaced all around Garnett.” Boston became the NBA’s only “ When you coach or play in Boston, every day is something with history. We’ve just got to get better DOC RIVERS Celtics coach remaining unbeaten team after the Los Angeles Clippers lost at Detroit in the same week. Garnett has had a double-double in all four games, Pierce scored 23 points, Allen had 14 and Boston led by at least eight throughout the Kevin Garnett is proving his trade from Minnesota well worth it. second half. Another newcomer, Eddie House, came off the bench to score 19, hitting four of five 3pointers. The Celtics won just 24 games during the past season but so far have lived up to pre-season predictions after they obtained Garnett and Allen. “Boston looks like a great team, three great All-Stars” Johnson said. “They play the game the way it should be played.” The Hawks led 31-30 before Allen’s short jumper gave the Celtics the lead for good and began an 11-2 run that made it 41-33 with 4:49 left in the second quarter. Atlanta cut that to 47-39 but Boston finished the half with an 8-2 spurt in which Pierce had six points. Atlanta came back again, trimming the lead to 67-59 with 2:42 left in the third quarter as the Celtics played sloppily. They finished with 18 turnovers. “We hit our own guy in the head with the ball,” Rivers said. “We’re better than we played tonight.” They were solid on defense, a point of emphasis for the rebuilt team. “The offense is the obvious, but you all don’t know how hard we work on our defense,” Garnett said. “Talking to each other and being one when we’re out there. We know we’re not flawless.” “We tightened up the defense and when we did that the offense started rolling,” House said. Garnett started that rally with a short turnaround jumper, House hit a three-pointer and Garnett sank two free throws before Marvin Williams’ tip drew the Hawks to 74-61 at the end of the third. But they could not turn the game around. The Lucky 8 expat Olympic torchbearers have been chosen and I didn’t make it. I have already posted a congratulatory message to the winners who were given the rare honor of carrying the Olympic torch for 200-400 meters, a short distance but perhaps a beautiful run for a lifetime. I joined the competition because like all the others I wanted to carry the sacred Olympic symbol of global peace, friendship and unity. The good thing about it was the fact that the organizers clearly stated that the China-wide search among expats was not purely a popularity contest. But because I believe that the best thing in the Olympics is by merely competing, all of us who joined the contest are all winners. From the bottom of my heart and on behalf of my family, I would like to thank everyone – all global Filipino citizens – who supported and joined our journey during the competition. I would like also to thank all of those who posted those heartwarming and beautiful messages. I really appreciate them. Some messages even moved me to tears. I am also very happy to be reconnected with childhood friends, former classmates, relatives, colleagues and fellow global citizens all over the world. I would like to mention especially the heartwarming and overwhelming support that our community in Hong Kong has given to me during my two-week “Olympic journey.” Hong Kong will always remain dear to me. As in life, the voting and selection process may not be perfect. But for me there were perfect moments during the competition – when I received those encouraging notes and messages from people who believed in me. Joining the competition was one of the most memorable experiences in my life. I will always treasure this. As an Olympic watcher and enthusiast since my high school days, I will always treasure the Olympic ideals of excellence and volunteerism. We should not only OLYMPICUPDATE letter from beijing Noel Novicio excel; more importantly we must also care for others. They have always been my guiding principles in life and in work. It is indeed a blessing to be in China at this time. This will be our home for the next three and a half years. We also look forward to watching some of the games live during the Beijing Olympics next year. As I wrote in my essay, my ultimate dream in next year’s Beijing Games is to hopefully witness our athletes win our very first Olympic gold medal since we first joined the Olympics at the 1924 Paris Olympiad. Twenty years after watching live my first Olympic Games at the 1988 Seoul Olympiad, I really feel blessed and privileged to be given again the opportunity to witness perhaps the greatest sports spectacle on earth. I’d like also to thank Lenovo and China Daily for giving us a platform to participate actively in pre-Olympic activities in Beijing. Finally, I would like to thank my wife, Doris, who is the moving inspiration behind my joining the competition. I share with her and our two children, Paolo and Clara, the joy of simply being in the contest. Maraming salamat sa lahat. Thank you very much everyone. Xie xie. The writer is Third Secretary and Vice Consul at the Philippine Embassy in Beijing. This is his personal contribution. dibersyon November 2007 BUHAYPALAD ARIES Mar 21-Apr 19 LIBRA Last month, Mercury was retrograde in your partnership and money sectors, which could have caused you a number of frustrating delays. Unanticipated obstacles may have come up to thwart your efforts, so you were continually challenged to come up with new solutions. Career is certainly on your mind, and you have been doing so very well since the end of September. The wind, however, will temporarily change direction for several months, so it will be imperative that you move to sew up current deals as quickly as you can and waste no time. TAURUS SCORPIO Apr 21-May 20 Olympic fever grips Beijing as the countdown to next year’s Games continues. This early, the city is sprucing up for the great event. Oct 23-Nov 22 There are certain souls who wake up on their birthday with a big grin on their face, and cheerily chirp to everyone they meet, “It’s my birthday!” and then invite friends to help them celebrate. You’ve always been a private person, and you often feel a bit embarrassed when people shower you with gifts. GEMINI May 21-Jun 20 SAGITTARIUS You have an impressive work picture this month, with interesting assignments and a solid sum of money coming your way. This is the kind of month that just gets better as you go along, so settle in for an unusually happy ride this month, enjoy the fruits of your labours and celebrate. Take a moment to catch your breath. You’ve been moving at the speed of light all year, but you might want to slow down just a little to survey all that you achieved this year, both in your career and on a personal level. You are nearing the end of a year of Jupiter in Sagittarius, which made 2007 a landmark year for you. CANCER CAPRICORN Nov 23-Dec 22 Dec 21-Jan 19 November finds you feeling in high spirits, and rightly so. Lots of cosmic goodies are in store for you, so you have every reason to believe that you’ll enjoy the month. Mars is still moving though Cancer, a sign that you are in the process of starting a brand new cycle. It has been probably a quiet year, a time when you would decide what, precisely, you want for your future. You may have spent a lot of time working on building a firm foundation for a future enterprise that is dear to you, or deciding which relationships needed to stay in your life. LEO Jul 21-Aug 21 AQUARIUS Are you ready to upgrade your home to all that you have always imagined it to be? Here’s your chance. Your home, family, and other real estate decisions are about to form a big theme. You may be amazed at how easily – and quickly – you can get things into place “just so.” This month will likely bring you an extraordinary career opportunity, and when it happens, the offer will materialise suddenly. Your new job will have prestige, room for creativity, and more responsibility, not so much that you’ll feel crushed with all you will have to do. VIRGO Aug 22-Sep 22 PISCES You are in top form, thinking clearly and moving forward with projects and plans. Last month could have been frustrating because your ruling planet – Mercury – was in weak retrograde. Mercury caused you delays and mix-ups, and possibly a few missed meetings as a result. Travel would be a grand idea this month, especially if you take your trip early in the month. You seem to be your own best ambassador, and all sort of serendipitous events will come up along the way to make you realise that this trip was to be blessed from the start. USEFUL NUMBERS Philippine Consulate 2823 8501 9155 4023 Labour Hotline 6080 8323 Immigration 2824 6111 Police/Fire/Hospital 999 Labour Department 2717 1771 Labour Tribunal 2717 1771 Airport assistance 2861 3980 Int’l Social Services 2836 3598 Caritas Filipino Serv 2526 4249 2147 5988 Bethune House 2721 3119 Bayanihan Center 2817 8928 Asian Migrant Center 2312 0031 Mission for Fil Mig 2522 8264 Unifil Hong Kong 2522 8264 Race Relations Unit 2835 1579 Fil Mig Work Union 2915 9468 ANGSISTE Sep 23-Oct 22 Last month was a difficult month because Mercury was retrograde and that probably caused you many delays, postponements, and mix-ups. This month, Mercury will go direct, but because it acts the wildest on the start and end of its retrograde, it’s best to wait until well into the month to resume normal activities. Jun 20-Jul 21 47 filipino globe KATUWAANLANG Doctors, bums, show-offs, husbands and wives Doctor: Mrs Cruz, your check came back. Mrs Cruz: So did my arthritis. Q: How many Pinoy guys does it take to change a light bulb? A: None. They just go to the sabungan and let their wives do it. Doctor: You’ll live to be 60. Patient: I am 60. Doctor: See? What did I tell you? Lying in a motel room with thin walls, a man kept hearing a woman next door saying, “How about it, John?” over and over for hours. He couldn’t sleep, thinking the boyfriend was a cold fish until he heard her yell, “How about getting off me, you ape.” Patient: Doc, I keep hearing ringing in my ears. Doctor: Don’t answer. Judge to drunk: You’ve been brought here for drinking. Drunk: Okay, let’s get started. Bum to Pinoy: Give me P100 until payday. Pinoy: When is payday? Bum: I don’t know. You’re the one that’s working. Bum to Filipina socialite: Ma’am, I haven’t eaten in three days. Socialite: Force yourself. Q: Why do many Pinoys die A guy was bragging to the boys: I just got back from a pleasure trip. I took my mother-in-law to the airport. before their wives? A: They want to. Q: Why do Pinay women make great parole officers? A: They never let anyone finish a sentence. A man tells his therapist: I’ve been in love with the same woman for 49 years. If my wife ever finds out, she’ll kill me. Someone stole his credit cards, but he won’t be reporting it. The thief spends less than his wife. LARONGSUDOKU Jan 20-Feb 18 Feb 19-Mar 20 Pinakamainit na laro ngayon, hamon sa kakayahang mag-isip at magbilang. Punuin ang mga square ng numero mula 1 hanggang 9 na hindi umuuulit. May dalawa kayong tsansa para hamunin ang sarili. Suko? Tingnan ang sagot sa aming internet edition (www.filglobe.com). YOURDIARY November 18 Passi City Iloilo Association of Hong Kong “Pinoy Got Talent” competition and fourth anniversary, 11 am - 6 pm, Grappa’s Cellar, Jardine House, Central. Noemi 9511 3224 November 18 Candonian HK Association fiesta and Miss Candonian 2007 coronation, 1-6 pm, Bayanihan Center, Kenedy Town. Rechilda 6151 6502 November 25 Federation of Eastern Samar OFWs in Hong Kong induction, 12-6 pm, Newton Hotel, North Point. Rachel 9233 8413 December 2 Overseas Filipino Friendship and Mutual Aid Association annual Christmas party, 2-6 pm, Caritas Community Hall, Caine Road, Central. Dorie 9433 7173 December 2 BSK Christmas party and induction, Empire Hotel, Wanchai. Aida 6227 7285 Ongoing activities Filipino Nurses AssociationHK signature campaign EXCHANGE RATES to introduce professional licensure examination for nurses in Hong Kong. Call 6438 4464 or 9518 0835 for details. Hong Kong dollar Unified Drivers Association invites all interested drivers to join the association. Marivic 9263 8634 Send your activities and programs for publication to info@filglobe.com British pound 5.5106 88.1405 Saudi riyal 11.4898 Canadian dollar 44.4122 Euro 62.9036 Australian dollar 39.7132 Japanese yen* 0.3852 Singapore dollar 29.6634 US dollar 42.9200 *per 100 yen Above rates are for reference only. Please check with your bank for the actual rates. shoot, show & tell filipino globe the big picture November 2007 48 ONLY IN SPAIN With Madrid opening up its labor market in various sectors, overseas Filipino workers have increasingly found Spain as a lucrative destination in Europe. OFWs are mostly in the services industries, and more recently, in health care, technology and engineering. Madrid and Manila have signed an agreement simplifying procedures, among others, for the entry of Filipino workers to the country. Pardon the noise, it’s just us trying not to think O ne of our neighbors works abroad as a seaman, and we always know when he’s in town. He throws a big party, an allnight celebration featuring lots of food, lots of guests and lots and lots and lots and lots of noise. Did I say lots of noise? Kindly excuse the weakness of my descriptive powers. What I meant was mind-shattering explosive bursts of hideous sound strong enough to split boulders and cause the resulting pebbles to bleed. The highlight of the celebration (and if you’re a true Filipino you’ll have guessed it by now) is a karaoke sing-along, where guests of various ages, genders and states of inebriation take turns belting out what I suspect to be music. I’m pretty sure they think they’re carrying a tune, although from where I am, it sounds like two drunken steel factories mating. I think my neighbors wire large speakers atop each tree, and bury a subwoofer the size of a living room in their garden. Anyway, the output can make the trees dance – in fact, the trees would probably want to run LIGHTERSIDE view from home Alan C Robles in Manila alan.robles@filglobe.com “ The minute Filipinos are compelled to be quiet, they’ll be forced to start thinking about serious stuff ... away, if they weren’t weighed down by speakers. My neighbors are just being Filipino. This, after all, is the Republic of Noise, where every citizen is duty bound to make a constant racket. Noise wakes you up in the morning, follows you in your commute, surrounds you in your office, in the malls, in the gym, escorts you home and tucks you in at night. After that. you can look forward to some restful quiet until such time (2 am) as you are blown off your bed by a passing jeep playing music loud enough to wake the dead. Speaking of the deceased, they shouldn’t expect to rest in too much peace either. Anyone who went to the cemetery this month during All Saint’s Day will have seen the touching Filipino tradition of showing reverence for our dead by bringing offerings such as food, memorabilia, mahjong sets and of course boom boxes, sound systems and the ever popular Magic Sing microphone pre-loaded with hundreds of karaoke tunes. No wonder we have so many stories involving vengeful ghosts. I’ve read that any sound above 75 decibels is supposed to pose health risks. One study puts the average noise level in Quezon City at 90 decibels – in QC’s district 2, it’s 110 decibels (district 2’s motto is “What Did You Say?”) A tricycle’s engine registers at 80 decibels. I’ve heard – get it? oh, never mind – the drivers actually remove mufflers because they want their machines noisy. I can picture the scene at the terminal, one macho driver holding forth, “Wala yan, konting ingay lang yan” while his pals nod and laugh uproariously though the truth is they can’t hear what he’s saying because they’re all stone deaf. A friend, Sheila Coronel, offers this explanation why Filipinos say they love noise: “masaya kasi.” Here’s how I see it: constant noise prevents any deep thought and reflection. The minute Filipinos are compelled to be quiet, they’ll be forced to start thinking about serious stuff like our political leaders and their bank accounts. And then there’ll be real trouble. So, next time you ask me to contemplate the age-old conundrum of the sound of one hand clapping, here’s what I’ll say: you bring your hand. I’ll bring the Magic Sing. It will be a perfect match. PHOTOESSAY Show us your flash for photography by giving us the big picture of the Filipino expat’s life. Photos must be accompanied by a caption of not more than 100 words, describing the event or circumstances behind them. Or tell us an interesting anecdote or observation in not more than 500 words and share them with the world. Each photo or essay entitles its owner HK$200 and becomes the property of Filipino Globe. Photos should have a minimum resolution of three megapixels. We reserve the right to make changes in line with house style. Entries should be sent to info@filglobe.com