The Filipino Express v28 Issue 34
Transcription
The Filipino Express v28 Issue 34
VOL. 28 w NO. 34 w August 22-28, 2014 w NATIONAL EDITION w NEW JERSEY w NEW YORK w (201) 434-1114 w $1.00 Former Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. looks pensive shortly after being sentenced to death by musketry by a military tribunal in 1977 (left), and on his flight home from the United States on August 21, 1983 (right), moments before being shot dead (center) on the tarmac of the then Manila International Airport. Inquirer Photos Undelivered speech of Senator Benigno S. Aquino Jr. (Upon his return from the United States of America on Aug. 21, 1983) I have returned on my free will to join the ranks of those struggling to restore our rights and freedoms through nonviolence. I seek no confrontation. I only pray and will strive for a genuine national reconciliation founded on justice. I am prepared for the worst, and have decided against the advice of my mother, my spiritual adviser, many of my tested friends and a few of my most valued political mentors. A death sentence awaits me. Two more subversion charges, both calling for death penalties, have been filed since I left three years ago and are now Filipino on trial in California for terrorist plot RIVERSIDE, California -Jurors must weigh whether two Inland Empire men, including a Filipino, posed a true threat with their plans to travel overseas and join Al Qaeda or if investigators exaggerated, as their trial resumed in federal court here. Ralph Kenneth Deleon, 25, of Ontario, and Sohiel Omar Kabir, 36, of Pomona, face five counts of conspiracy, including plans to provide support to overseas terrorist groups, commit terrorist acts overseas and receive Al Qaeda training, reported the Los Angeles Times. Kabir, a naturalized American citizen who was born in Afghanistan, allegedly persuaded Deleon, a Filipino citizen and legal resident of the United States, and two other men to go to Afghanistan to fight alongside the Taliban and later join Al Qaeda. The other men, Miguel Alejandro Santana, 23, of Upland and Arifeen David Gojali, 23, of Riverside, are scheduled to testify against the remaining two defendants. u Page 13 pending with the courts. I could have opted to seek political asylum in America, but I feel it is my duty, as it is the duty of every Filipino, to suffer with his people especially in time of crisis. I never sought nor have I been given assurances or promise of leniency by the regime. I return voluntarily armed only with a clear conscience and fortified in the faith that in the end Suspect Ralph de Leon justice will emerge triumphant. According to Gandhi, the willing sacrifice of the innocent is the most powerful answer to insolent tyranny u Page 8 Islamic militants plan Southeast Asian caliphate Page 13 DFA hits harassment of PH fishers by Chinese By Christine O. Avendaño and Redempto D. Anda The Aquino family and friends attended the mass commemorating the 31st death anniversary of Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. Kristine Sabillo Commemoration of Ninoy Aquino death anniversary generally peaceful By Julliane Love De Jesus MANILA -- Except for pockets of anti-corruption rallies in Makati and Quezon City, the commemoration of the 31st death anniversary of Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. on Thursday, August 21 was generally peaceful with no untoward incidents reported, the police said. Police Director Carmelo Valmoria, National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO) chief, told INQUIRER.net over the phone that as of 3 p.m., no crime or troublesome incidents were reported in Metro Manila. “There are no untoward incidents except the lightning rallies. In Makati City, 300 members of a group against corruption gathered there,” Valmoria MANILA -- The Department of Foreign Affairs will include incidents of Chinese harassment of Filipino fishermen exercising their right to fish in Philippine seas, in its new diplomatic protest to be filed this week against China's “illegitimate sovereignty patrols” in Philippine waters. Incidents like this would show proof of the Philippines' concern over the “constant and overwhelming presence” of China in Philippine waters, said Assistant Secretary Charles Jose, the DFA spokesman. He said they will be included in a new diplomatic protest “because this is the result of the presence of China, they are harassing (fishermen) and this is affecting our ability to exercise our sovereign rights there.” Jose made the remarks in reaction to an incident last Aug. 1 where a Chinese Coast Guard vessel allegedly harassed a small fishing boat carrying local officials led by Pag-asa island Mayor Eugenio Bito-onon Jr. and journalists to the island off Palawan. u Page 5 Pope: Thanks for prayers for my family's grief said. Earlier Thursday, various groups held a protest against corruption and political dynasties near the Ninoy Associated Press Aquino Monument along Ayala VATICAN CITY -- Saying “even the pope has a Avenue. Some also called for a special family,” Pope Francis has expressed thanks for the investigation of the Commission on prayers and condolences sent him after the death of a Audit (COA) on the allegedly nephew's wife and her two young children in a car overpriced Makati City Hall building. crash in the pontiff's native Argentina. In Quezon City, Mayor Herbert During his weekly public audience Wednesday, Bautista and Vice Mayor Joy Belmonte Francis listened as priests expressed condolences led a wreath-laying ceremony at the expressed in several languages. As the appearance Ninoy Aquino monument on Timog ended, Francis told his audience that one of his 16 Avenue. nephews had a car accident, “lost his wife and two But while the ceremony was little ones and is in critical condition” in a hospital ongoing, protesters from human after Tuesday's highway accident. Francis said “I rights groups Karapatan, Bukluran ng thank you very much for your condolences and Manggagawang Pilipino (BMP), Pope Francis attends his weekly general audience prayers.” Sanlakas, and Samahan ng ExThe injured nephew, Emanuel, is the son of one of in the Paul VI hall, at the Vatican, Wednesday, Aug. detainees Laban sa Detensyon at the pope's four siblings. Inquirer.net 20, 2014. AP u Page 4 August 22-28, 2014 Page 2 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Senate President Franklin Drilon. Ryan Leagogo Drilon calls for LP meeting on Charter change, Aquino 2nd term By Kristine Angeli Sabillo MANILA -- Senate President Franklin Drilon on Thursday, August 21 confirmed that he had endorsed a meeting among Liberal Party (LP) members to discuss the issue of Charter change. However, he said it would also tackle President Benigno Aquino III's decision not to push through with a second term. “(Budget) Secretary (Florencio) Abad suggested that a meeting should be held (and) I endorsed that,” Drilon told media after a mass for the late Ninoy Aquino at the Manila Memorial Park in Parañaque. He said there is no schedule yet. Asked what they would discuss, he said, “Para liwanagin na talagang ang sabi nga ng Pangulo ay hindi nga s'ya interesado sa second term.” (To clarify that what the President said was that he is not interested in a second term.) “Hindi s'ya interesado doon sa pagamyenda ng saligang batas during his term so para matapos din ('yung usapin),” Drilon added. (He is not interested in amending the Philippine Constitution during his term so the issue should stop there.) Drilon said he believes Aquino is “averse to a second term.” Meanwhile, he said their agreement at Congress was to let the House of Representatives push through with their resolution on amending the economic provisions of the Constitution. “Kung matapos nila maipasa nila, dadalhin sa Senado,” he said. (If they are able to approve it, it will be brought to the Senate.) Inquirer.net From left, former Makati City Representative Butz Aquino, PNOC director Paul Aquino and Tarlac Representative Peping Cojuangco. Inquirer file photos/www.pia.gov.ph Aquino uncles back Binay's presidential bid By Marc Jayson Cayabyab MANILA -- The uncles of President Benigno Aquino III are rooting for Vice President Jejomar Binay for President in 2016, Radyo Inquirer 990AM reported on Thursday, August 21. The report said former senator Agapito “Butz” Aquino said it is not only he who supports Binay but also the president's two other uncles Paul Aquino, the brother of the late senator Ninoy Aquino, and Jose “Peping” Cojuangco, Jr., the brother of late former president Corazon Aquino. Sought for a reaction, Binay said he was flattered that the two Aquinos and Cojuangco, who he calls his friends, have expressed support for him. “Sa akin, mahalaga kasi mga kaibigan ko talaga 'yun, kasama sa hirap at ginhawa. Iyon bang reiteration ng aming pinagsamahan (It's important for me because they are my friends, in hardship and comfort. It's a reiteration of our friendship),” Binay said in an interview. However, Aquino's uncles said in case Aquino is allowed to seek reelection if charter change moves succeed, they would still choose President Aquino over Binay. Inquirer.net Our Lady of Guadalupe - Message of Trust and Hope ‘..... I am the ever Virgin Holy Mary, Mother of the true Godfor whom we live, of the Creator of all things, Lord of Heaven and the earth. I wish that a temple be erected here quickly, so I may therein exhibit and give all my love, compassion, help and protection, because I am your merciful mother, to you and to all ......’ Pilgrimage Mexico City Cuernavaca Taxco Tlaxcala Ocotlan Puebla (Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe) December 8-13, 2014 US$1,499.00 RTA TRAVEL NEW YORK: 39-85 65th Place, Woodside, New York 11377 Phone: 718-507-2500 Fax 718-478-8683 Email: atgajilan@aol.com NEW JERSEY: 2713 Kennedy Boulevard, Jersey City, 07306 Phone: 201-434-8282 Fax 201-434-0880 Email: litogajilan@yahoo.com August 22-28, 2014 Page 3 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Want to marry a Filipina? Bill seeks additional requirements on foreign boyfriends By DJ Yap MANILA -- Want to marry a Filipina? Submit an employment certificate and a certificate of good moral character first. A bill pending in the House of Representatives sets certain requirements before male foreigners can wed Filipino women. The proposed legislation, according to the author, seeks to protect Filipino women from exploitation. The House approved on second reading House Bill 2387 prescribing additional requirements for interracial unions after it received sponsorship in the committee on revision of laws chaired by Pa n ga s i n a n Re p . M a rly n Primicias-Agabas. The bill was a substitute for House Bill 2387 authored by Cebu Rep. Gwendolyn F. Garcia, who described her measure as protection against “vagabonds or social and moral derelicts in their own country” and whose real motive is to abuse Filipino women. T h e o r i g i n a l ve r s i o n amends Article 66 of the Civil Code, which requires foreigners to submit a certificate of legal capacity to contract marriage to be issued by diplomatic or consular officials. The new version will revise Article 21 of the Family Code, a more recent law amending sections of the old one. “The bill shall protect Filipino women against exploitation of foreigners who marry without evident means to support a family,” PrimiciasAgabas said. Garcia cited a need to protect Filipinas from foreigners whose “real motive for marriage is only to take advantage and exploit our women by making them work for the family and worse, by sending them to prostitution and other degrading and dehumanizing occupations.” “The exploitation of our Filipino women, through the so-called mail-order or penpal, Facebook, website-made, and other internet-made marriages, has not only caused untold miseries and suffering to our Filipino women but it has also brought dishonor and disgrace to the Filipino womanhood,” she said. The bill requires prospective foreign husbands to provide a certificate of good moral character and a certificate that he has a gainful trade, business, employment or other lawful source of incometo be issued by his country's diplomatic or consular official. The two new certificates are in addition to the existing requirement of a certificate of legal capacity. Garcia's co-authors to the bill are Representatives Henry Oaminal of Misamis Occidental, Ibarra Gutierrez III of Akbayan, Nicasio Aliping Jr. of Baguio City, Rodel Batocabe of Ako Bicol, Silvestre Bello III of 1 BAP, Al Francis Bichara of Albay, Arthur Defensor Jr. of Iloilo), Evelina Escudero of Sorsogon, Elisa Kho of Masbate, and Roman Romulo of Pasig City. Inquirer.net Italian envoy pleads not guilty to child abuse, trafficking raps By Maricar Cinco LOS BAÑOS, Laguna -- Italian diplomat Daniele Bosio pleaded not guilty to charges of abuse and trafficking of three Filipino children. Accompanied by his legal counsel and his brother, Bosio was arraigned Wednesday afternoon before Judge Teodoro Solis at the Regional Trial Court Branch 25 in Biñan City, Laguna. Also present at the arraignment were members of the non-government child rights group, Bahay Tuluyan Foundation, whose member had alerted the authorities and prompted the arrest of the diplomat at the Splash Island resort in Biñan City on April 8. The foundation claimed their members saw Bosio “touching and caressing” the three young boys he was with at the resort. Bosio, the Italian ambassador to Turkmenistan, was on a holiday in the Philippines when he was arrested. In a phone interview, Solis said the arraignment lasted less than an hour. “The arraignment was set at 2 p.m. but they (parties) were there around 1:45 (p.m.),” he said. He said Bosio, who was wearing a suit at the arraignment, “looked just fine.” Ambassador Daniele Bosio in a photo taken from the official website of the Italian Embassy in Ashgabat. The arraignment pushed through despite a petition, filed by the prosecution at the Supreme Court, to have the case transferred to Manila. Bosio's camp, on the other hand, has a petition filed at the Department of Justice to have the case reviewed. Bosio is on temporary release after posting a P900,000 bail in July. T h e B i ñ a n C i t y p o l i c e h ave confiscated Bosio's passport to ensure he would not flee the Philippines. Inquirer.net August 22-28, 2014 Page 4 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Filipino crewmen stranded on ship ask for 'humanitarian parole' By Rocelle Tangi LOS ANGELES, California - Filipino crew members aboard a 700-foot freighter are asking for “humanitarian parole” from the US Customs and Border Protection after being stuck for over four months on a shop anchored in the Delaware River. The ship is manned by 17 Filipinos (not 18 as previously reported), aged 23 to 54, two Ukrainian officials and an Egyptian captain. Although provided with cell phones, Internet connection, food and water and regular paychecks, the Filipino seamen demanded they be let out of the ship Nikol H. “They want to get out, so n o w, S e a m a n ' s C h u r c h Institute is helping them to get humanitarian parole that would allow them to go outside the ship,” Philadelphia Filipino community leader Ruth Luyun said. “If you can imagine,” said the Rev. Peter Stube, Seamen's Church executive director, “being on a small boat for three or four months without being able to get off, and land within sight. We have made a point of making sure they can s t ay i n to u c h w i t h t h e families.” “Most of them have visas when they arrived, which allowed them off. [T]he visa however is only good for 29 days so once the 29-days limit was up then they were restricted to their ship,” Stube said. The Greek-owned ship, Nikol H failed to pass a routine maintenance test that caused it to dock at Pier 48 in South Philadelphia for a month. The US Coast Guard d e t a i n e d t h e f re i g h t e r, because its owner, Derna Carriers, failed to pay its docking bills amounting to more than $1 million. “Their morale is still OK, but of course, we really don't know, maybe they get lonely sometimes because of their families [who are not with t h e m ] ,” H e r m i e A c z o n , another community leader, said. The Seaman's Church Institute is continuing to negotiate with US Border authorities to grant the crew members an extension to their visas. Meanwhile, Consul General Art Romua of the Philippine Consulate in New York confirmed that there is no assurance of when the ship will be able to leave. Derna Carriers claims not to have the money to pay, according to Philadelphiabased maritime lawyer Alfred Kuffler. Recently, there has been an attempt to sell the ship and pay the vendors, but the negotiation did not push through. “If no buyer comes soon, once the ship goes to berth for repairs, it likely may be auctioned,” Pastor Bill Rex of the Seamen's Church Institute said. Inquirer.net US labor, wage, hour issues forum set at PH Consulate SAN FRANCISCO, California --The Philippine Consulate and the Philippine American Press Club will host a discussion of “Labor and Employment in the United States” observance of US Labor Week Free and open to the public, the Talakayan will be held on Friday, 29 August 29 from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the Philippine Center, 447 Sutter Street. A discussion and open forum will be held at the Consulate's waiting area on the 6th floor from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., featuring resource speakers from the Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission, and the San Mateo County Government's Job Information Center. The resource speakers will then hold a labor and employment clinic at the ground floor of the Philippine Center, from 1O:30 to 12:30 p.m. to offer one-on-one counseling sessions on matters pertaining to labor and employment. For more information regarding the clinic, or to indicate your interest in participation, kindly email cultural@philippinessanfrancisco.org, subject line: TALAKAYAN LABOR WEEK. Inquirer.net Commemoration ... medal of valor by the Ninoy Aquino Movement (NAM). For his part, Senior Superintendent Ariel Andrade, Parañaque City Police chief, the commemoration was carried out peacefully at the Manila Memorial Park, where the hero was laid to rest since his death on August 21, 1983. President Benigno Aquino III and siblings Kris Aquino, Maria Elena “Ballsy” Aquino-Cruz, Aurora Corazon “Pinky” Aquino- Abellada, and Victoria Elisa “Viel” Aquino-Dee. Kris's children Josh and Bimby gathered for a mass in Manila Memorial. Officials who joined the mass include Senate President Franklin Drilon, Interior Secretary Manuel “Mar” Roxas II, Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, Social Welfare Secretary C o ra z o n “ D i n k y ” S o l i m a n , a n d Congresswoman Gina De Venecia. Inquirer.net From page 1 Aresto (Selda) tried to penetrate the blockade set up by the police near the residence of the President on Times Street. The rallyists opposed against calls for Aquino's term extension. “No one was hurt in the demonstration. The rallyists were dispersed even before lunch time,” Valmoria said. In Pasay City, Vice President Jejomar Binay and some relatives of the late Aquino patriarch went to the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia) terminal 1 tarmac, where Aquino was assassinated in 1983. A mass honoring Aquino was also attended by Binay, who received earlier in the day a Ninoy Aquino Memorial EU gives P1.8B for PH health services By Department of Health, DoH, European Union, Health Services MANILA -- The European Union has extended a grant of 30-million euros, or around P1.8 billion, to the Philippines to help the government push for initiatives that would improve the health sector, according to the Department of Health (DOH). The DOH said that under the agreement, 20.5-million euros, or roughly P1.2 billion, would go directly to the National Treasury while the rest of the grant would be used to fund various technical assistance and capacitybuilding programs to boost its health delivery systems. “The DOH has continually aspired to strengthen national and local health systems by rationalizing and improving the quality of health services and ensuring better access to these services by Filipinos, especially the poor and the disadvantaged,” Health Secretary Enrique Ona said in a statement. “The partnership of the Philippines and the EU provides the much needed boost to further the health sector reforms towards the achievement of universal health care for Filipinos,” added Ona. The latest agreement brings to three the number of EU-funded programs supporting the Philippine Health Sector Reform Agenda, which was launched in 2005 t o s p e e d u p t h e implementation of critical health interventions. Under the Aquino administration, the government launched the Aquino Health Agenda highlighting the Universal Health Care Strategy, which aims to provide health insurance coverage to all Filipinos and improve their access to quality hospital and health care facilities. The new deal between the Philippines and the European Union also augmented the latter's support to the health sector to a total of 118-million euros (P7.2 billion) from 2006 to 2018, noted the DOH. The DOH said the European Union had been persistent in supporting its programs that had achieved significant progress over the past years. DOH records showed that health programs for mothers and children helped bring down child mortality in the country from 58 in 1998 to 30 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2011. Insurance coverage for the population also climbed from 62 percent in 2010 to 83 percent in 2012, of which 53 percent come from the poorest and most vulnerable families in the country, data s h owe d . J o c e ly n R . U y. Inquirer.net The Filipino Express is only $40 (52 copies) for one year. That’s only 77 cents per copy and mailed right to your home ! For details, call us at 201-434-1114 or send an email to filexpress@aol.com. August 22-28, 2014 Page 5 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Life on the run: Palparan tells of 32 months as a fugitive By Tonette Orejas Dec. 19, 2011, when Bureau of Immigration personnel at the Clark International Airport in Pampanga stopped him from leaving for Singapore. With the help of a friend, he was able to obtain the use of a safe house near Fort Bonifacio, he said. It was from this location less than a week later that a person he only identified as a “classmate” volunteered to negotiate for his surrender to President Aquino through a contact in Malacañang. “I wanted to face the case and wanted assurances of security for myself and my family,” he said. Nothing came of the attempt because the President “did not agree to the proposal,” he said. MALOLOS, Bulacan -- In the two years and eight months that he was being hunted by the authorities, retired Army Maj. Gen. Jovito Palparan Jr. was hiding in seven places around Metro Manila. In all that time, Palparan said he was on his own, without the support or help of active or retired generals, soldiers or communities he had worked with in his 33 years in the Armed Forces. He said he stayed in Metro Manila to be near his wife, a daughter and two sons. “I had to be ready to defend them while I was in hiding,” Palparan said in an interview Thursday in his prison cell at the Bulacan Provincial Jail here. Family's safety He said he feared for the safety of his family because the communist New People's Army (NPA) had threatened to kill him and his family. Palparan, the former commander of the Army's 7th Infantry Division in Central Luzon, is on trial on charges of kidnapping and serious illegal detention in connection with the disappearance of University of the Philippines students Sherlyn Cadapan and Karen Empeño, who were last seen in Hagonoy, Bulacan, in June 2006. Jovito Palparan. Inquirer photo/Joan Bondoc After his arrest in Sta. Mesa, Manila, last Aug. 12, he was temporarily held at the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) headquarters. Following his arraignment at the Malolos Regional Trial Court Branch 14 on Monday, Palparan was detained at the provincial jail here. Palparan said he was worried DFA hits harassment ... From page 1 According to Jose, the DFA has not received a report on the Pag-asa island incident, explaining that the department gets intelligence reports involving Filipino fishermen being harassed by Chinese ships in Philippine waters. He said the diplomatic protest will be made through a note verbale sent to the Chinese Embassy in Manila. Jose earlier said diplomatic protest will deal not only with the incident reported by President Aquino involving the presence of two Chinese research vessels on the oil-rich Recto Bank in the West Philippine Sea, but also to what appeared to be China's “constant and overwhelming presence” in areas where the Philippines has exclusive sovereignty rights. Illegitimate patrols Jose said the government was concerned not only about the Chinese intrusion in Recto Bank but the overall situation where Chinese ships were conducting “illegitimate sovereignty patrols” in Philippine waters. China's conduct violated the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct in the South China Sea, he said. Jose also said the government was considering taking other measures to address Chinese intrusions but declined to give details. Meanwhile, Bito-onon on Tuesday urged the government to protest the harassment by a Chinese Coast Guard vessel of a boatload of journalists, including himself, as they approached the disputed Ayungin Shoal of Pagasa island more than two weeks ago. “We were on our way to Ayungin Shoal when a Chinese Coast Guard vessel with that he could be jailed for life because of the case. On Monday, he filed a motion to quash the case for lack of jurisdiction. He said it was the Sandiganbayan that should try him as he was still in the military service when the crime allegedly happened. He also said he did not want to submit to the lower court's jurisdiction because the case filed by the Department of Justice was not among the nine complaints that he had answered during the preliminary investigations. Palparan's life on the run began on Dec. 20, 2011, a day after the regional trial court here issued an arrest warrant against him and three coaccused. He was last seen in public on 'Leave it to Gazmin' “Leave it to General Gazmin (Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin),” the Malacañang contact with whom Palparan's classmate discussed his surrender was supposed to have said. Palparan said he abandoned the idea of asking Gazmin for help because, in his assessment, the defense secretary had no influence on the agencies that would have been able to help in dropping the case against him. “I wasn't his 'bata' (favorite) either,” Palparan said. His next hideout was in the Pateros-Pasig u Page 6 body number CCG 311 tried to block our path and stopped in front of us that we almost collided with them. It was a dangerous and irresponsible maneuver,” he said. “It was already dark when it happened last Aug. 1 and the sea was very turbulent. Anything could have happened to us if we were not able to maneuver because they were just about 50 meters right in front of our boat,” Bito-onon said in a text message sent from Kalayaan on Pag-asa island. Bito-onon said they managed to slip past the Chinese vessel despite the rough seas by maneuvering into the shallow waters before finally reaching the BRP Sierra Madre wreck where a detachment of Philippine soldiers is stationed. The mayor explained that they were stranded on the Sierra Madre for five days because of Typhoon “Inday.” Responsible power Meanwhile, Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said the Philippines does acknowledge China's rise as an economic giant and its role in world affairs. However, for Beijing to be viewed as a “positive force and responsible power, it must adhere and respect the rule of law, especially in settling the South China Sea disputes, he said. Del Rosario made the statement at the 51st National Defense College of the Philippines founding anniversary and alumni homecoming at Camp Aguinaldo in Quezon City. The foreign secretary talked about the approaches that the Philippines has undertaken to help keep peace, security and stability in the Asia-Pacific region. Del Rosario said that China has been manifesting an “increasing pattern of aggressive behavior and provocative actions” in the South China Sea which “seriously threaten the peace, security, stability and freedom of navigation and overflight in the region. Inquirer.net August 22-28, 2014 Page 6 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Filipino hairstylist makes cutting-edge difference in New York City By Frances Mangosing He does the hairstyles of wealthy clients in an upscale salon in New York City, but on Sundays, his only day off, he does it for the homeless. Mark Bustos, a 30-year-old Filipino-American hairstylist of Three Squares Studio, is making the rounds in social media after a story made by The Huffington Post on his Instagram posts about giving a cutting-edge look to the needy. Bustos has been offering sophisticated haircuts for the homeless since May 2012 when he travelled to his family in the Philippines to visit relatives. While abroad, he rented a barber's chair to offer his services to impoverished children. So far, he has also given free haircuts to the less fortunate in Jamaica, Costa Rica and Los Angeles. “The feeling was so rewarding, I decided to bring the positive energy back to NYC,” he told Huffington Post. Most of his free haircut services Mark Bustos. Facebook photo are done on the streets based on his Instagram posts. It comes with hashtag #BeAwesometoSomebody. Bustos explained that he does his services in open spaces not for people to see him, but for others to be inspired to do a good deed to the needy. “Even a simple smile can go a long way,” he said. Inquirer.net Filipino caregiver in Alaska shot dead by patient SAN FRANCISCO, California -- A 51-year-old resident of a small assisted-living home in Anchorage, Alaska called 911 Tuesday evening, August 12, to report that he had shot his c a re t a ke r, a 6 3 - ye a r - o l d Filipino man. Anchorage police found Paul Miller waiting outside of the home, at 309 E. 24th Ave, with a .380-caliber semiautomatic handgun sitting on the railing of the front porch, reported the Alaska Dispatch News. Police took Miller into custody. He was charged with first- and second-degree murder. Court documents say Miller told the 911 operator he “ j u s t s h o t t h e F i l i p i n o ,” according to the Dispatch News. Inside the home, Allison Assisted Living Home, police officers found the body of 63year-old Eduardo Escalante, who died from multiple gunshot wounds to his neck, arm and torso, said the documents filed in Anchorage District Court. Family members of Escalante said he worked at the Shooting suspect Paul Miller in police custody. Alaska Dispatch News photo assisted-living home with his wife. The couple moved to Anchorage from the Philippines in March. A witness said that before the shooting, E s c a l a n t e wa s wa t c h i n g television in the kitchen. Miller was outside on the phone. The man said he did not see the shooting, but heard three to four shots inside the house. Miller made his first court appearance August 13 at the Anchorage Correctional Complex. For each murder charge, Miller faces up to 99 Life on the run ... From page 5 area, in the care of a woman who was a supporter of the Bantay party-list group, which he briefly represented in Congress. But he said the woman's daughter feared for their family's safety so he decided to move out after a few weeks there. He described the third location as being on the western section of Metro Manila, where he stayed for five months. The fourth hideout was the family's house in Taguig City, where he stayed from May to mid-June of 2012. When his son received information that raids were about to be launched in the properties of Palparan and when relatives of soldiers living near his house reported seeing men surveiling the area, Palparan transferred to an exclusive subdivision in Quezon City. Small but safe That was where he stayed the longest, from June 2012 to May 2014, accompanied by two people. Palparan said the place was small but he felt safe and comfortable, adding he had Internet access and cable television. His hideout allowed him to see people coming in and out of the village, he said. It was his pension from the military that financed his life on the run, said Palparan. His daily routine was limited to cooking, eating and sleeping. “It was like I was already in prison,” he said. The sixth location was in the PasigMandaluyong area where Palparan stayed for a few days. Lawmen finally caught up with him in a house on Teresa St. in Sta. Mesa, years in jail and a fine of up to $500,000. M i l l e r h a s a l e n g t hy criminal record in Alaska. Between 1982 and 1991, he was convicted of assault at least five times, as well criminal trespassing, disorderly conduct, driving while intoxicated and shoplifting. Miller's bail was set at $500,000 cash. If he posts bail, he is to stay away from 309 E. 24th Ave. and not possess firearms. Inquirer.net Manila, which Palparan described as a “transit house” as he was preparing to return to the Quezon City subdivision. He said he had to stay in Sta. Mesa from about May so he could be examined and treated by a doctor for ulcers, low blood pressure, stiff shoulder and intermittent loss of memory - ailments that Palparan believes are related to the stress of his life on the run. “I was much on my own,” he said, refusing to seek help from other people as he did not want them to become involved in his problems. He subsisted on sweet potato, bananas and vegetables. No gadgets “I had no sophisticated network. I had no gadgets,” he said. But he had several mobile phones and used prepaid SIM cards. He said he was caught because he let his guard down. “I did not follow my plan to stay for just a few days in the Sta. Mesa house. I trusted some people. I should have instructed them to withdraw from an ATM (automated teller machine) that was far from my [hiding] place. I should have withdrawn bigger amounts. Nagrelax ako,” Palparan said. Those who withdrew money for him were a teenaged girl and a boy, he said. “If [government agents] located me through my ATM [transactions], the bank or the government violated the Bank Secrecy Law,” he said. He suspected that a young man, who is known in the Sta. Mesa neighborhood as a petty thief, must have been the contact of the arresting teams. “I don't regret hiding because I came out alive,” he said. Inquirer.net August 22-28, 2014 Page 7 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Ballet Philippines in Oct. tour of US West Coast, British Columbia SEATTLE, Washington -- Now in its 45th year, Ballet Philippines will be back in the US West Coast and British Columbia in Canada for a month-long tour in October, in time for Filipino-American Heritage Month. The company will perform “Master Pieces,” which showcases some of the best works from the company's wide-ranging repertoire. Ballet Philippines (BP) is the premier classical and contemporary dance company in the Philippines; it is a resident dance company of the Cultural Center of the Philippines. Former Miss Universe Margie Moran-Floirendo is on her sixth, year leading the longest running dance company in Southeast Asia. Alice Reyes, recently declared Philippine National Artist for Dance and co-founder of Ballet Philippines said, “I think Margie is the perfect match for the company.” Founded by Reyes with the help of Eddie Elejar, BP has come a long way i n p ro d u c i n g exc e l l e n t productions and outstanding dancers, with an unparalleled 400 c h o re o g ra p h i c wo rks i n i t s repertoire. “Ballet Philippines has been touring around the world in all its years. The last time we were in the US was in 1998,” said Moran. “We performed in The Kennedy Center. We don't take it lightly that the company reached this milestone. Being here for 45 years is a big achievement. We ought to celebrate and what better way than to share the gift of dance with Pinoys and the Filipinos-at-heart abroad.” Moran added: “It is my hope that this tour would open more doors for Ballet Philippines on the international dance scene. I have seen local and foreign audiences stand and applaud in awe. In the Yeosu Expo in South Korea in 2012, audiences crowded outside the performance hall and waited for a chance to come in and watch Ballet Philippines.” Being company president is a volunteer job, but the responsibility is great. Moran has to raise funds meet the salaries of dancers and staff, as well as production costs for the season's concerts. Ticket sales only make up less than 40 percent of company income; the larger chunk comes from donations from individuals and corporations. “We were fortunate that we were able to get sponsors and thus make both ends meet,” said Moran. “Being president of Ballet Philippines involves taking care of some 50 dancers. We book a hundred performances a year, including mall and school shows.” The Philippine Council for NGO Certification categorized Ballet Philippines as a donee foundation. BP is only one of two arts companies awarded with the distinction. “In other words, sustaining a dance company is not just about passion,” Moran said. “You also need discipline in getting the company's financial ledger in order. We have to be credible to the donors and patrons of the arts.” Margie has bigger plans for the company. “One is that Filipinos would come to know Ballet Philippines and say with pride that Ballet Philippines is homegrown. Another is to make the company more sustainable. We recently launched our page in Give2Asia where international donors can easily and securely send their contributions to Ballet Philippines. We also have a recurring donation option in our website where supporters can send their donations monthly. It helps the regular cash flow needs of the company.” When asked what made her go through the difficult times, Margie shared, “When you see the dancers give their best in performances this is the best reward for me. After all, not everything in this world is about money.” Dancers do not perform for money but money will certainly help them. Ballet Philippines' North American tour includes the following dates and venues: Pasadena Civic Center Los Angeles (Oct.4), California Theater San Jose (Oct.12), Lincoln Hall Portland State University (Oct 15), Kenneth J. Minnaert Center for the Arts INQUIRER.net stock photo 2 Filipino students win gold, silver medals in China math tourney By Jerry E. Esplanada MANILA -- Two young Filipino n u m b e r s a c e s h ave m a d e t h e Philippines proud anew by winning two medals - a gold and a silver - in the just-ended 2014 China Western Mathematics Invitational (CWMI) competition, held Aug. 14 to 18 in Chongqing city, located in the southwestern Chinese province of Sichuan. The good news was relayed to the Philippine Daily Inquirer on Monday night by Dr. Simon Chua, president of the non-government Mathematics Trainers' Guild Philippines (MTG), which trained gold medalist Clyde Wesley Ang, a student of the Chiang Kai Shek College in Manila, and bronze medalist Albert John Patupat, a student of the Holy Rosary College in Sta. Rosa, Laguna. Both Ang and Patupat bagged individual and team gold medals during last month's Korea International Math Competition in Daejeon, South Korea. In a text message, Chua said the Chinese team topped the nine-nation contest with a medal haul of four golds and four silvers. Aside from the Philippines and host China, the other participating countries were Singapore, Hong Kong, Macau, Malaysia, Indonesia, Mongolia, and Kazakhstan. Four other members of the Philippine team had backed out so they could take the University of the Philippines College Admission Test, or UPCAT. Chua cited the two MTG wards, saying he was “very proud of their p e r fo r m a n c e , c o n s i d e r i n g t h i s competition is one of the toughest in the region.” This year's CWMI contest was the 12th edition of the contest. After the suspension of the annual event in 2012, said to be due to Tibet-related issues, it was held again last year. Inquirer.net Ballet Philippines President Margie Moran Floirendo Olympia (Oct . 17), Highline Performing Arts Center Seattle (Oct.22) and Chandos Pattison Auditorium British Columbia (Oct.25). Call and get your tickets now! To c o n t r i b u t e t o B a l l e t Philippines through GIVE2ASIA visit http://www.give2asia.org/BP and to support the company through recurring donations, visit BP's website www.ballet.ph or send an email at info@ballet.ph to know more about how to send your donations. Inquirer.net August 22-28, 2014 Page 8 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Republic or can we sit down as brothers and sisters and discuss our differences with reason and goodwill? From page 1 I have often wondered how many disputes could have been that has yet been conceived by s e t t l e d e a s i l y h a d t h e God and man. disputants only dared to define Three years ago when I left their terms. for an emergency heart bypass So as to leave no room for operation, I hoped and prayed misunderstanding, I shall that the rights and freedoms of define my terms: our people would soon be 1. Six years ago, I was restored, that living conditions sentenced to die before a firing would improve and that blood- squad by a Military Tribunal letting would stop. whose jurisdiction I steadfastly Rather than move forward, refused to recognize. It is now we have moved backward. The time for the regime to decide. killings have increased, the Order my immediate execution economy has taken a turn for or set me free. I was sentenced the worse and the human rights to die for allegedly being the situation has deteriorated. leading communist leader. I am During the martial law not a communist, never was period, the Supreme Court and never will be. heard petitions for Habeas 2. National reconciliation Corpus. It is most ironic, after and unity can be achieved but martial law has allegedly been only with justice, including lifted, that the Supreme Court justice for our Muslim and last April ruled it can no longer Ifugao brothers. There can be Defense lawyers Soc Rodrigo, Joker Arroyo and Lorenzo Tañada Sr. support Ninoy Aquino in his defiant stand against entertain petitions for Habeas no deal with a Dictator. No Marcos. Edgardo Santiago Corpus for persons detained compromise with Dictatorship. under a Presidential 3. In a revolution there can Commitment Order, which really be no victors, only By Joker P. Arroyo generals and colonels appointed by Military Commission No. 2 covers all so-called national victims. We do not have to Marcos. resumed its proceedings after Ninoy security cases and which under destroy in order to build. Six acts of defiance, one of which The strongman had already regained his health. present circumstances can 4. Subversion stems from ended in the death of a man, sparked prejudged him guilty as charged, cover almost anything. economic, social and political a seventh, which started the rebirth and the military commission took Third act The country is far advanced causes and will not be solved by of a democracy. his cue. In his third act of defiance, Ninoy in her times of trouble. purely military solutions; it can In 1972, when the late dictator Ninoy argued that the Articles of challenged the individual Economic, social and political be curbed not with ever Ferdinand Marcos contemptuously War that governed the proceedings competence and impartiality of each problems bedevil the Filipino. increasing repression but with padlocked Congress and the media, of the military commission were and every member of the T h e s e p ro b l e m s m ay b e a more equitable distribution of placed the entire country under designed only for men in uniform commission. surmounted if we are united. wealth, more democracy and martial rule and ordered the arrest and not for civilians like himself On Nov. 25, 1977, two days But we can be united only if all more freedom, and of opposition leaders and when civil courts were functioning. before Ninoy's birthday, the the rights and freedoms 5. For the economy to get journalists, it would have been most And so he refused to participate commission, in a supreme act of enjoyed before September 21, g o i n g o n c e a g a i n , t h e expedient for Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” in the trials. Convict me if you must, sadism, sentenced him to die by 1972 are fully restored. workingman must be given his Aquino Jr. to simply collaborate with he told the commission, but I will not musketry. But the international The Filipino asks for just and rightful share of his the dictator. dignify your illegal trials with my outcry that followed prevented nothing more, but will surely labor, and to the owners and participation. Marcos from confirming the death First act Military Commission No. 2 order. accept nothing less, than all the managers must be restored the Marcos was just waiting for that. responded by having Ninoy dragged r i g h t s a n d f r e e d o m s hope where there is so much But Ninoy, the most prominent from his prison cell where he was Fourth act g u a ra n te e d by t h e 1 9 3 5 uncertainty if not despair. among the arrested oppositionists, held in solitary confinement to the Ninoy made his fourth act of Constitution - the most sacred On one of the long corridors flatly refused. So Marcos ordered gymnasium in Fort Bonifacio, the defiance in 1978, when Marcos legacies from the Founding of Harvard University are him tried on false charges of venue of his trial. allowed the election of the members Fathers. carved in granite the words of rebellion, murder and illegal of the Interim Batasan Pambansa. Yes, the Filipino is patient, Archibald Macleish: possession of firearms by a military Second act Ninoy filed a certificate of candidacy but there is a limit to his “How shall freedom be commission, under the rules and Ninoy staged his second act of to lead the opposition group Laban, patience. Must we wait until defended? By arms when it is procedures that govern courtdefiance by going on a hunger strike. launching his campaign from that patience snaps? attacked by arms; by truth martial proceedings for officers and On May 13, 1975, the 40th day of his solitary confinement. The nation-wide rebellion when it is attacked by lies; by soldiers. protest fast, Ninoy's condition The unprecedented success of a is escalating and threatens to democratic faith when it is That started Ninoy's defiance of became critical. noise barrage on the eve of the e x p l o d e i n t o a b l o o d y attacked by authoritarian Marcos and a war of attrition But Marcos would not have the elections forced Marcos to proclaim revolution. There is a growing dogma. Always, and in the final between the tormentor and the blood of a political martyr on his all his Kilusang Bagong Lipunan cadre of young Filipinos who act, by determination and faith.” tormented. It was a battle of wills all hands, and Ninoy was forcibly candidates winners with only 25 have finally come to realize that I return from exile and to an the way. rushed to V. Luna General Hospital to percent of the votes canvassed. freedom is never granted, it is uncertain future with only In his first act of defiance, Ninoy be medically revived. Marcos knew In 1980, Ninoy was afflicted with taken. Must we relive the determination and faith to offer challenged the jurisdiction and that anointing Ninoy a hero would a heart problem while in the agonies and the blood-letting of - faith in our people and faith in independence of Military be sheer folly. History would later stockade. Believing that he would be the past that brought forth our God. Commission No. 2, composed of prove him right. u Page 14 Ninoy Aquino's seven acts of defiance Undelivered speech ... vgslaw@gmail.com August 22-28, 2014 Page 9 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Remembering Ninoy THE TRIAL. Aug. 27, 1973, Fort Bonifacio. Sen. Benigno Aquino “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. challenged the jurisdiction and independence of the military commission of Marcos-appointed generals and colonels. He refused to participate in the trial. On Nov. 25, 1977, the military tribunal sentenced him to die by musketry. Photos by Ed Santiago Cory Aquino with toddler Kris and older brother Noynoy (partly seen). THAT'S WHAT FRIENDS ARE FOR. Ninoy is shown with fellow members of the Liberal Party Jovito Salonga and Gerry Roxas. Photographs and memories by Ed Santiago, photojournalist Ninoy's funeral By Emmie G. Velarde MANILA -- For 41 years, photographs on this page were stashed in a sealed envelope that occupied a place of honor among his “chaotic” files - a vast collection of black-and-whites, his life's work. “I should start seriously organizing these files,” veteran photojournalist Edgardo “Ed” Santiago said. “I'm 79; there are many things I wouldn't remember if not for my pictures. I consult them; they talk to me.” The first day in Ninoy Aquino's trial by a military court is among the other “things,” he wouldn't forget. He didn't even listen to the proceedings, he admitted; he couldn't help tuning in to what had been unspoken. From Ninoy's evident agitation, Ed sensed how intense the questioning was. “Intense. He was driven to tears.” 'Dead man walking' He recalled becoming increasingly certain that his subject was a dead man walking. It was August 1973. “I realized they would kill him.” From that moment on, he could see only the main characters in the unfolding scene: the prosecutors, the accused, the weary family. Ed, already an awarded photo essayist at the time, had found his “story”Ninoy this close to crumbling, the wife stoic, their youngest daughter mercifully spared the sense of foreboding but felt in his gut that it could not be told anytime soon. Dangerous time Back at work, no one asked Ed for photographs of the coverage, and he wasn't surprised. “I had known that beforehand, but I still went to cover because it was my assignment; also, because it was clearly bound to be a page in our history.” He processed the negatives and printed the pictures himself, then brought them home. “I was right to do that,” he said. True enough, when the Daily Express shut down in January 1987, heaps of negatives were left behind. “Many pictures about martial law were destroyed.” Everything of his that he felt important, Ed saved “for when the right time came.” Meanwhile, he avoided talking about the pictures from that trial. “A few colleagues asked for prints; I gave away one or two, and a few portraits. Everything else, I kept. I had little choice; it was a dangerous time.” Originals Before Ed's visit to the Inquirer three weeks ago, he had long planned to entrust the pictures to editor in chief Letty JimenezMagsanoc. The prints he presented to the editors were remarkably clear and sharp. “Originals,” he told u Page 14 August 22-28, 2014 Page 10 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS A terrible blunder Is President Aquino gunning for a second term? He dropped broad hints in a television interview conducted last Wednesday but aired only on Sunday night: “When I took this office, I recall that it was only for one term of six years,” he told TV5. “Now, after having said that, of course, I have to listen to my bosses” alluding to a supposed clamor from the people for a second term. His spokespersons, however, have denied there was any actual plan to push for a second term, which requires the use of the still-untried process of constitutional amendment. “What I remember the President say was that he's thinking about it. He didn't say, 'Let's do this tomorrow,'” deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte told reporters on August 15. But the fact alone that Mr. Aquino was considering a second term, even tentatively (openness to the idea, he was careful to say in the interview, did not necessarily mean that he “would automatically go after an additional term”), was a startling about-face for a reluctant politician who had always been against changing the Constitution that his own mother midwifed into existence. Why did he even raise the possibility? We can think of at least three plausible reasons; each one demeans the memory of his mother, the first President Aquino, who personified the post-Marcos ideal of a single presidential term. Not one of the reasons comes close to being even an adequate justification. Whatever the rationale, the damage to the President's reputation has been done. The President was testing the idea. One of his close allies in the Senate, Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV, said as much: “It was a trial balloon to begin with.” In that case, Mr. Aquino besmirched the memory of his own mother merely in an attempt to plumb political waters. Just three weeks ago, the second President Aquino echoed the first when he used his penultimate State of the Nation Address to say, again, that he was counting down the days until the end of his presidency. The abrupt turn sharpens the contrast between mother and son; it also undermines the most effective part of his fifth Sona. He had choked up when he recalled his parents' sacrifices: “If I had turned my back on the opportunity [to serve by running on a reform platform], then I might as well have turned my back on my father and mother, and all the sacrifices they made for all of us; that will not happen.” A second term would run counter to the spirit of self-abnegation that Sen. Ninoy Aquino proved during seven years in prison and three years in exile and that Cory Aquino displayed not only when she willingly stepped down from office but when she counseled her successors against term extensions. He was trying to intimidate the Supreme Court. During the interview, the President actually had more to say about the threat of judicial overreach, and the need to strike a balance between the three branches of government, than his own term extension. “Before all of these happened, I admit I had a closed mind. But now I realized that there is judicial [over]reach. Congress and the executive may act but they can be punished anytime.” Valte offered a variation on the same theme. In the TV interview, she said, the President “indicated his openness to Charter change to restore the balance” between the three powers. This is not only a misreading of the true source of judicial review (that power is rooted not in the Constitution per se but in the existence of a judicial branch in the first place), but an Does Obama Have Authority to Stop Deportation? As House Republicans closed its doors to any possible compromise on immigration reform, the President announced in a press conference recently that he will act on his own to address the issue. Presidential action, according to sources from the White House, would include measures that would provide temporary relief to a significant number of the 11 million undocumented in the country. The measures would presumably allow them to remain in the U.S. without fear of deportation and provide them with work permits. Hou se Rep u b lica n s have accused the President of overstepping his authority with his executive orders. They even approved a lawsuit against the President for abuse of authority in the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. As to the President's intention to use his executive power to unilaterally provide a solution on immigration, Senator Jeff Session (R-Alabama) stated that the President cannot do this and that a large-scale “administrative amnesty” would p ro m p t c o n f ro n t a t i o n w i t h Congress. While it is true that the President cannot grant legal status to the undocumented, the President by virtue of his office has executive authority to grant the undocumented temporary reprieve from deportation as part of his “prosecutorial discretion.” The executive branch is charged with the implementation of immigration laws and has the duty to exercise “prosecutorial discretion” in its enforcement. “Prosecutorial discretion” is the authority of an enforcement agency or officer to decide whether to enforce the law against an individual. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has issued several internal memos which deal with prosecutorial discretion. In June 2011, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Director John Morton issued a memo instructing ICE agents and officers to avoid deportation of “low priority” or non-criminal aliens and prioritize deportation of aliens who have been charged or convicted of crimes and those who pose a threat to public safety. It called on enforcement officers to regularly exercise their discretion to prioritize the use of the agency's limited resources. However, reports show that the memo has been widely ignored by enforcement officers. u Page 12 Amnesia antidote u Page 12 Publisher/Editor-in-Chief: Lito A. Gajilan, Jr. Columnists: Reuben S. Seguritan, Esq., Juan L. Mercado, Joseph G. Lariosa Correspondent: Grace G. Baldisseri The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not reflect the opinion of the paper nor that of the publisher. Email: filexpress@aol.com Phone: 201-434-1114 Fax 201-434-0880 2711 John F. Kennedy Boulevard, Jersey City, NJ 07306 “National amnesia causes us to forget who and what we are.” Is that the fix we're in when the country marks, this Thursday, the 31st anniversary of Sen. Benigno Aquino Jr.'s airport tarmac murder? The most concise summary of that assassination is perhaps found in the tape recorder of then Time magazine's Sandra Burton. She propped it against a window of China Airlines Flight 811 jet, when it parked at what is today's Ninoy Aquino International Airport. Three soldiers escort Aquino out. The tape catches the gangway exchange. “Eto na, eto na! Ako na, ako na! Pusila, pusila (This is it, this is it! Let me, let me! Shoot, shoot)!” Gunfire erupts and Ninoy's bloodied body crumples on the tarmac. “What happened?” a woman passenger screams, Burton's tape continues. More gunshots. The wailing becomes louder. “Inside, inside, inside!” several men scream. “The soldiers… shot Ninoy. He's dead out there,” the woman cries out. “They shot Ninoy?” asks a passenger. Burton: “Yeah.” Man: “Where?” Burton: “Right at the bottom of the stairs.” Man: “When Ninoy was still on it or when?” Burton: “No, when he got off. I'm sure he's dead.” Man: “What did you see? Who did it?” Burton: “Soldiers.” Man: “How many of them?” Burton: “I don't know. I think we'd better wait.” Man: “Did you recognize Aquino?” Burton: “Yeah.” Man: “What's your name?” Burton: “No, I'm not gonna… this is not the place to talk. We had just seen two assassinations take place right outside our window.” As Time bureau chief, Burton flew with those covering Ninoy Aquino. She was later called to testify at the Agrava Fact-Finding Board and she turned her tape over to prosecutors. Then Justice Manuel Pamaran acquitted all respondents, including Marcos' ally, AFP chief of staff Gen. Fabian Ver. A f te r Pe o p l e Powe r, t h e Supreme Court ordered a retrial. Constable Rogelio Moreno (tagged by the Sandiganbayan as the one who shot Aquino) and 15 others were convicted. But the mastermind(s) were never held to account until now. Burton was 62 when she died in Bali in May 2004. “She was a female u Page 12 August 22-28, 2014 Page 11 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS If President Aquino were allowed to run for re-election, it is like letting a player change the rules in the middle of the game. Mr. Aquino is just a part, who cannot be larger the whole. Letting Mr. Aquino run for reelection, like Marcos, is like an employee giving himself a raise when the 1987 Philippine Constitution does not even allow Congress to increase their salaries in the middle of their term nor allow the grant of royalty or nobility. That is why the gravies better known as PDAF (Priority Development Assistance Fund) and DAP (Disbursement Appropriations Program) were found by the Supreme Court so revolting because Aquino gave senators and congressmen millions of pesos of perks as a bait (bribe) to convict Supreme Court Chief Justice Making life worth living Ellen Tordesillas Faced with overwhelming opposition to a Charter Change to allow President Aquino to extend his term beyond 2016, Malacañang has backtracked and assured the public that he is not supporting changes in the Constitution in the last two years of his presidency. Press Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr and Deputy Presidential Spokesperson Abigail Valte can resort to all kinds of spins but it is on record (TV5's interview Aug. 13 interview) that Aquino said he was open to charter change to clip the powers of the Supreme Court and to another term. But why did Aquino float it in the first place? We can think of five possible reasons: Children of God! JGL Eye Renato Corona. The Philippine Constitution has always given premium on morality of an action, not its result. The end never justifies the means. Because if this were otherwise, then Mr. Aquino could have allowed Cudia to graduate in the PMA to justify lying or cheating in class to pass a test or to allow extra-judicial killings of journalists in order to silence them. When Alexander the Great was dying and was asked by his subordinates who would succeed him, Alexander mentioned the name, “Krateros,” a general, who was not around. But others, who heard it, thought it was “Kratistos,” the strongest. There were speculations that Alexander bestowed leadership only on someone, who does not crave for it. Is history repeating itself? When President Aquino By JOSEPH G. LARIOSA (© 2014 Journal GlobaLinks) warmed himself up to the proposal to amend the 1987 Philippine Constitution that will extend his term of office, it reminded me of former President and now detained Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo pardoning my friend former President and now Manila Mayor Joseph Erap Estrada so she would also be pardoned by her successor in case she ended up being prisoner herself, too. Perhaps, finding himself in the same boat with President Arroyo, Mr. Aquino made public his deepest secret on Aug. 13 (unlucky 13?) when he told listeners of TV Channel 5 that he is now listening to the clamor of his bosses (Filipino voters) that he should extend his term because he is the only one who could preserve the gains that he started. Isn't it idiotic, self-serving and Marcosian? “Si PNoy na lang ba ang anak ng Diyos sa kawawang Pilipinas?” (Is PNoy the only child of God in the forsaken Philippines?). Paging my friend, Atty. Mel “Batas” Mauricio: Mr. Aquino is a potential convert of your sect. Mr. Aquino's fear merely made presumptive front-runner Vice President Jojo Binay not only quiver because like Mr. Binay, Mr. Aquino will also likely face similar plunder charges brought against Mrs. Arroyo, not even considering the four impeachment charges filed against Aquino now pending in Congress. And Mr. Binay might also not be there to rescue him or pardon him either. Mr. Aquino's apprehension will soon become moot if the Philippine Supreme Court would deny his motion for reconsideration in his Disbursement Appropriations Program (DAP) appeal. And this unease was made more possible when Mrs. Arroyo was charged with plunder and is now under detention; the Supreme Court Chief Justice Corona was impeached and convicted; three senators, including once powerful Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, and even the elusive General Jovito “The Butcher” Palparan, are now all locked behind bars. So, here are my suggestions: Any presidential candidate in 2016, who wants my vote, should make a campaign pledge to the Filipino voters and to repeat after u Page 12 5 possible reasons why PNoy floated Chacha and term extension 1. He doesn't want to be considered a lameduck. Online dictionairies define “lameduck” as “A president who is completing a term of office and chooses not to run or is ineligible to run for reelection; politicians who are known to be in their final term of office, when colleagues and electors look toward a successor. Politicians gravitate to where their interests are served. That means being allied with someone who will be in a position of power for a long time. A possible second term will dissuade those who are thinking of going to the other side to stay on with him. It's understandable that Aquino is anxious that he should continue being seen as having formidable political clout by members of Congress because he still has some important legislations to pass, one of them the Bangsamoro Law. Impeachment complaints have been filed against Aquino. It is unlikely to pass in the House with the administration coalition in the majority. A possible second term for Aquino would make an effective disincentive for those who are being convinced to sign on to the complaint. 2. He has not gotten over the unanimous rejection that he got from the Supreme Court of his Disbursement Accelerated Program or DAP. With his own appointees voting against his pet initiative, Aquino felt betrayed. He had expected some justices voting against it and was told that it would be a close vote, 7-6 in their favor. When it was 13-0, declaring parts of DAP unconstitutional, Aquino couldn't take it. As playwright William Congreve said “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.” 3. Aquino's party, the Liberal Party, is desperate who to put up against Vice President Jejomar Binay, the political opposition's candidate in the 2016 presidential elections, who is far ahead of other possible presidential candidates, in the surveys. The numbers of Interior Secretary Mar Roxas are not u Page 14 performing administration are enough to elicit knee-jerk expressions of admiration and easy mass distraction. As Dorothy soon realized in The Wizard of Oz, we're way past Kansas now. After all, to all the old accusations of incompetence and noynoying have been heaped the serious, jail-inviting charges of corruption on a scale never before heard of. The massive illegal impounding and misuse of both pork barrel and Disbursement Acceleration Program funds, to the tune of hundreds of billions of hard-earned taxpayers' money, have ensured that all the fake tears from Aquino or any member of his family, any attempts to bring back the fading memories of his dead parents or even any ploys to raise the bogeyman of Chinese hegemony will fail. Consolidating all the Yellow propaganda forces, hiring all the shady American political advisers and ramping up all the Internet trolling operations will only be a further waste of government time and assetswhich are, of course, public assets collected at extortionist rates from all of usin a renewed and ultimately futile attempt to shore up Aquino's flagging popularity will be to no avail. Even Aquino's few remaining boosters who have been backing him up in good faith (another phrase that has been grossly devalued by its abuse by this government, by the way) decamped when tampering with the Charter and floating an illegal term extension were floated, never to return after they witnessed for themselves the petty, selfish and dictatorial tendencies of their former idol. Aquino will not be saved by ratcheting up the propaganda. And the sooner he gets that through his thick C-student's skull and starts concentrating on the things he can do while he still holds the reins of power, the better off he will be. The blowback will be as terrible as it is now inevitable. Bet on it. *** Speaking of Aquino's family, one other member is now being linked to a non-government organization that has run afoul of state auditors for alleged improper use of pubic funds to pay for a milkfeeding program for indigent children. Presidential sister Viel Aquino-Dee is, after all, the cochairman of the Assisi Development Foundation, one of the private groups involved in a P229.6-million milk-feeding program implemented by the stateu Page 12 Pres. Aquino Blowback Those who live by propaganda and image-making could get killed using those tools, as well. But as he limps, lame-duck fashion, toward the final months of his thoroughly underwhelming, time- and opportunity-wasting term, President Noynoy Aquino sees no reason not to go back to the well that has always been good to him the harnessing of the marketing, advertising and media “assets” of his administration to once again bail him out of his latest and most destructive self-inflicted crisis. That Aquino's response to the monster he himself created by floating the idea of amending the Constitution to give himself a second term and to clip the powers of the Supreme Court is to ramp up the propaganda comes as no surprise. As they say, if your only tool is a hammer, you see every problem as a nail to be hammered down. (By the way, that foolish woman spokesman's feeble attempt to spin her boss out of trouble by saying that Aquino was merely “thinking” about these things when he talked to a former lawyer of Cory Aquino who now pretends to be a television journalist should be dismissed out of hand. A President speaks on matters of policy and direction all the time - to argue that he doesn't is to say, like another ineffectual spokesman memorably posited, that his declarations should not be taken seriously.) But more and more Filipinos understand that the time is long gone when catchy slogans, blametossing and all the other breadand-circuses ploys of this non- August 22-28, 2014 Page 12 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Children of God! From page 11 me: “I will not pardon a senator, congressman or government cabinet official if they are convicted for plunder and graft and corruption for complicity in PDAF, DAP, Malampaya scandals, etc. Let justice take its course. So, help me God.” The only smart guy Letting Aquino run for reelection is not only a violation of the 1987 Philippine Constitution but also it assumes that not one of the 100-million Filipinos is smarter than him. Besides, Art. III Sec. 31 of the Constitution is explicit: “No law granting a title of royalty or nobility shall be enacted.”cralaw Okay, if Mr. Aquino now wants to run, he can call for a snap election, like Marcos. But in order to level the playing field, Mr. Aquino should relinquish his presidential position to a noncandidate successor, so he cannot use the arsenal of his office, including the P500billion discretionary funds, to outspend and intimidate his rivals, including Mr. Binay. Because it will take an amendment to the Constitution for Mr. Aquino to run for reelection, I suggest Congress also insert the following amendments: 1. All candidates for president, vice president, s e n a t o r, c o n g r e s s m e n , governors, mayors and justices of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals and chairmen of Constitutional bodies should get a “clearance” (at least valid for one year) from a soon-to-becreated Constitutional Commission (similar to Judicial Bar Council) that states that prior to their filing for candidacy or application for their positions they have at least an average, if not better, not only academic (at least a four-year college Liberal Arts education) record but also to have legal, SOUND, repeat SOUND mental and physical capacities to run and/or occupy those offices. Anti-political dynasty, FOIA should be self-executing! 2. The provisions in the Constitution that require Congress to pass implementing laws to abolish political dynasty and establish Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) should be deleted. Instead the new amendments -- abolishing political dynasty and establishing FOIA should be kept but should be selfexecuting and should take effect as soon as the Filipino people approve them in a plebiscite or referendum. These anti-political dynasty law and FOIA, if passed, are harmful to the well being of immoral government officials. 3. Another amendment is for political turncoats to be ineligible to run for elective position for at least six years. Turncoats should start at the end of the line, like a rookie partisan. 4. If a government is mired in deficit, all senators and congressmen are automatically disqualified for re-election. 5. There should be block voting when it comes to the elections of the president and vice president so that the winning tandem will come under the same party to avoid constant bickering by these two officials throughout their terms of office. 6. Any Filipino citizen or Filipino taxpayer can file bribery, corruption of public official, plunder and graft charges against any government official, including the President, the senator, congressman, judges and justices during their terms of office, even if this citizen or taxpayer does not get any bribe. 7. The two-term limit, fouryear term should be restored without further extension even if the government turned in a surplus. And 8 . I f t h e re i s a preponderance of evidence of mismanagement of the office by the president, the president should step down upon finding of probable cause by an independent Constitutional body and be hauled to court to answer for criminal charges and not wait for his term to lapse before he is charged in court. After all when Mrs. Arroyo was charged in court after leaving office, she was immediately arrested. Why prolong the agony? (lariosa_jos@sbcglobal.net) Blowback From page 11 owned National Dairy Authority, the funds for which were sourced from the unconstitutional DAP. The Commission on Audit has questioned “dubious signatures, conflict of interest in buying milk products and insufficient monitoring” that attended the implementation of the program, as well as the propriety of using DAP funds intended to jump-start the national economy for a feeding program for pregnant women, senior citizens and children in day care, preschool and grade school levels. I only hope the CoA auditors who are questioning Assisi's involvement in the feeding program have alternativecareer options, because they could very well lose their current jobs once 5 possible reasons ... From page 11 improving. It is doubtful if Aquino's endorsement could carry Roxas to Malacanang in 2016. If not Roxas, who in LP? Senate President Franklin Drilon? His numbers are no better than Roxas's. Does Obama have ... From page 10 Deferred Action is a form of prosecutorial discretion where the DHS may grant temporary relief from deportation when it determines that enforcement is not warranted for that particular time. This authority springs from the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) which sets forth its overall authority for immigration enforcement. Beneficiaries of deferred action do not attain legal status; however, regulations allow the DHS to grant travel authorization as well as work permits for a specified period of time. The DHS granted deferred action to certain categories of individuals in the past such as battered individuals under the Violence Against Women Act and potential U visa beneficiaries before regulations were put in place. Nurses, who had not passed their licensure exam, were also beneficiaries of deferred action. In 1977, I was the lawyer of the National Alliance for Fair Licensure of Foreign Nurse Graduates which obtained for these nurses, who were under deportation threat, “deferred voluntary departure status” and this halted their deportation and allowed them to work and be reinstated to H-1 status. Malacañang gets into the act to rescue Dee's reputation. The CoA investigation into Dee's foundation is way different from the coffee-shop insinuations about the involvement of another Aquino sister, Ballsy Aquino-Cruz, in the purchase of MRT coaches from Czech supplier Inekon, after all. And if Malacañang went after those who were impugning Cruz' honorand, by extension, the wellguarded image of incorruptibility of the entire familyto the point where even MRT general manager Al Vitangcol was fired, then there is no telling how harsh it will be on the CoA personnel who dared to launch an official probe of Dee. My only hope is that some time in the future, we end up with a government that will make sure that no probe of any anomalous transaction is halted simply because a presidential relative is involved. I can dream, can't I? Aquino's desire to have a partymate as successor is understandable not only to continue his programs but also to make sure that he would be protected from cases that are expected to be filed against him when he is no longer in Malacañang. 4. He is enjoying being president. Kung makalusot, why not? 5. Type lang niya i-gudtime ang madlang pipol. Widows or widowers of U.S. citizens who were married less than two years at the time of death of their U.S. citizen spouse and who were residing in the U.S. at that time were also granted deferred action in June 2009 to allow them to remain in the country while obtaining legal status. And most r e c e n t l y, q u a l i f i e d y o u n g undocumented immigrants who were brought in the U.S. as kids benefited from President Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. House Republicans will without doubt oppose efforts similar to the DACA program and accuse the President of overreaching his executive authority. Presently, the Obama administration is studying measures which would provide similar relief granted to DACA recipients to a broader population of undocumented immigrants. While it may seem that House Republicans have succeeded in impeding the passing of any kind of immigration bill in the Congress, they simply cannot stop the President from exercising his constitutional authority to deal with immigration. (Editor's Note: REUBEN S. SEGURITAN has been practicing law for over 30 years. For more information, you may log on to his website at www.seguritan.com or call (212) 695-5281.) A terrible blunder ... From page 10 unfortunate continuation of the war over the Disbursement Acceleration Program by other means. Yes, the judiciary can overreach, but the solution is not a constitutional overhaul (no one is dense enough to suggest doing away with judges) but naming better candidates to the bench. The President wants to continue the reforms he started. On its face, this rationale appears to be substantial, but in fact it only shows that the Aquino administration has failed to provide for something fundamental: continuity of program. With less than two years to go, the administration does not yet have a viable candidate to succeed Mr. Aquino. His sudden openness to Charter change, then, is best understood as a president's worst lame-duck fears come to life. Not only is his signature budget reform initiative under attack; the durability of reform now looks uncertain. The President's surprise semi-announcement only adds to the uncertainty. Inquirer.net August 22-28, 2014 Page 13 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Filipino on trial ... From page 1 Deleon, Santana and Gojali were arrested in November 2012 as they prepared to leave California to rendezvous with Kabir, who had relocated to Afghanistan, according to the LA Times. Kabir was seized by American soldiers in Afghanistan and returned to the United States to face charges. A confidential informant who became close with the men recorded audio and video of them as they spoke openly of their plans. The suspects allegedly began physical and weapons training. Deleon dropped out of college and sold his car to raise money for the trip, prosecutors say. Defense attorneys argue that overzealous federal authorities misinterpreted the men's “sometimes immature actions as true threats,” and said their clients never intended to actually join or assist terrorist groups. “This was a very carefully planned out plot by the government from the investigation stage onwards,” the LA Times quoted David Thomas, who represents Deleon. “It was a manufactured prosecution, is our argument. They had their target two years ago and executed.” On Friday, August 15, the second day of testimony, witnesses included a firearms range manager and a Customs and Border Protection inspector who testified about the men's actions before their arrest. After the prosecution showed video from a hidden camera reportedly taken by the informant of Deleon firing weapons at the range, defense attorneys challenged the evidence, saying that only the informant could verify the authenticity of the video. The defense has subpoenaed the informant to appear. Although U.S. District Judge Virginia Phillips determined that the video evidence was admissible, the confidential informant remains a sticking point in the case. The Los Angeles branch of CAIR, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, an advocacy organization, alleges that the frequent federal use of informants in terrorism cases can lead to entrapment of suspects. “We've seen other communities targeted by the FBI with informants sent into communities and mosques,” said Fatima Dadabhoy, senior civil rights lawyer for CAIR in Los Angeles. Inquirer.net Islamic militants plan Southeast Asian caliphate Agence France-Presse KUALA LUMPUR -Malaysian police have foiled plans for a wave of bombings drawn up by radical Islamic militants inspired by Iraq's extremist jihad group the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (Isis), a top counterterrorism official said on Tuesday, August 19. The 19 suspected militants arrested from April to June were formulating plans to bomb pubs, discos and a Malaysian brewery of Danish beer producer Carlsberg, said Ayob Khan Mydin, deputy chief of the Malaysian police counterterrorism division. Ayob Khan told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that the group, all Malaysians, had visions of establishing a hardline Southeast Asian Islamic caliphate spanning Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and Singapore, and planned to travel to Syria to learn from Isis. The plotters included professionals and two housewives. Inquirer report A recent Philippine Daily Inquirer report, from correspondent Arlyn de la Cruz, said Manila officials were on alert following an increase in the number of Filipinos going to Iraq and Syria to fight with Isis militants. Felizardo Serapio Jr., executive director of the Philippine Center on Transnational Crime, said Syria had grown to be an attractive destination for foreign fighters and Muslim Filipinos were among those lured to join Isis, according to the Inquirer story. Close to 200 Filipinos may have joined Isis. The Inquirer story quoted a government report in March as saying about 100 Filipinos had undergone training in Iran before going to Syria and that two Filipinos had died for taking part in the conflict. The arrested Malaysians were only in the early stages of discussing their plans and did not have heavy weapons or bomb-making knowledge, Ayob Khan said. Seven have already been charged with offenses ranging from promoting terrorism to possession of homemade rifles. They planned “a campaign of violence and armed struggle and to die as martyrs,” Ayob Khan said, adding that police believed that there could still be coplotters at large in Malaysia. Middle Eastern caliphate 280 Luis Munoz Marin Boulevard Jersey City, NJ 07302 Some of those arrested were apprehended at airports on the way to Turkey and Syria to seek training and other support from Isis. Also known as Islamic State, Isis espouses an extreme brand of Islam. It is believed to have thousands of Islamist fighters in Syria and Iraq, some of them westerners. brewery near Kuala Lumpur were apparently targeted because alcohol consumption is forbidden by Islam, Ayob Khan said. He said the suspects also had hoped to create networks with regional and global cells. He said police believed that up to 40 Malaysians had gone to Syria to join the civil war there. Money via Facebook It has overrun large swathes of Iraq as it wages a ruthless campaign to establish a Middle Eastern caliphate under conditions akin to those of the religion's early years. The Malaysian plotters were ages between 20 and 50. Some of the arrests had been previously announced by authorities, but police had not yet detailed the group's suspected plans and ideology. Some had begun raising money - including via Facebook - to travel to Syria, typically under the pretext of “humanitarian work,” Ayob Khan said. “From interrogating them, they talk about Isis ideology, including the killing of innocent people and also Muslims who are not in their group,” he said. Breeding ground Muslim-majority Malaysia practices a moderate brand of Islam and has not seen any notable terror attacks in recent years. But concern has risen in the multifaith nation over growing hard-line Islamic views and the country's p o te n t i a l a s a m i l i t a n t breeding ground. According to local media reports, 26-year-old Malaysian factory worker Ahmad Tarmimi Maliki blew up 25 elite Iraqi soldiers in a suicide car-bomb attack there in May. Malaysia has previously been home to several suspected key figures in groups such as the al-Qaidalinked Jemaah Islamiyah, a Southeast Asia-based organization blamed for the deadly 2002 Bali bombings and numerous other attacks. Inquirer.net Global cells Bars and the Carlsberg 201-333-8060 BY APPOINTMENT ONLY August 22-28, 2014 Page 14 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Ninoy Aquino’s 7 acts ... From page 8 rid of his most potent rival, Marcos allowed Ninoy to go to the United States for a heart bypass. After his operation, Ninoy energetically barnstormed the United States and other countries to denounce the Marcos regime. Fifth, sixth acts But by 1983, Ninoy felt he had to go home. He felt that as the acknowledged leader of the opposition, his place was in the Philippines. In his fifth act of defiance, Ninoy came home. He paid for the act with his own life. Filipinos responded by showing up by the millions at his wake and funeral. In 1985, or two years after Ninoy's death, Marcos called a snap presidential election, and Ninoy's widow took up what could be called his sixth act of defiance. She took up the challenge against Marcos. Value of preservation Photographs and memories ... From Page 9 his promptly engaged audience. “No one else had seen these until now.” Let alone their mint condition, he was proud of the photos' integrity. “Negatives don't lie,” he said. He had shot the trial proceedings in color as well but, he insisted, some narratives just naturally lent themselves to blackand-whites. This headstrong veteran of five daily broadsheets has yet to cross over to digital photography. He has kept three beloved Nikon Fs, an enlarger and several lenses, even if they're stuck up. “They no longer move.” That trial was not his first, or last, encounter with Ninoy. “I used to cover President Marcos' trips abroad as part of the official entourage,” Ed said. “I chanced upon Ninoy on one of those trips, in Washington, DC. He and (newspaper columnist) Teodoro Valencia were friends. I have shots of him being interviewed there by The Associated Press. It looked serious. I was shooting through a glass window from outside the hotel.” On Aug. 31, 1983, Ed covered Ninoy's funeral procession from a Amnesia ... From page 10 rarity in the sometimes aggressively gung-ho masculine world of foreign correspondents: courteous, fairminded and intellectually honest,” Philip Bowring wrote then in the South China Morning Post. These traits stood Burton in good stead when she led Time's Beijing bureau during the drama of Tiananmen Square and the horrors of the June 4 killing. “She was never a combat journalist, but when firing began around Tiananmen she showed resolve to stay and find the facts.” The journalist-to-the-bone is also seen in the work she did, as Time bureau chief in Hong Kong, from 1990 through the wrenching handover of the British colony in March 1997. In the Philippines, “everyone got a little carried away by the euphoria of the 'People Power' revolution against Ferdinand Marcos.” But she did not let it divert her from covering Philippine e v e n t s a s d i s p a s s i o n a t e ly a s circumstances allowed. Her search for hard facts anchored sources for her 483-page book “The Impossible Dream.” Published by Warner Books, it is one of the more, if n o t t h e m o s t a c c u ra te - a n d spellbinding - accounts of the Philippines' turmoil of the 1980s. Burton had intimate access to the building on Roxas Boulevard. This one was not an assignment. “I should be part of my country's history. My grandchildren know I am a photojournalist. I should be able to tell them what happened in my time, through my pictures.” Part of the funeral cortege found its way to the Aquino Museum in Hacienda Luisita, a friend told Ed. “I haven't gone there to check,” he said. “It might hurt to look.” But that's just because, he jested, “My friend said it was cropped (pointed to the lower part) here.” Seriously, what he told his friend was, “I'll first have it published in the Inquirer. Then we can go. Attention: Jaime Zobel In several other sealed envelopes at home, Ed keeps a few more visual history capsules waiting for the right time and platform. A set from the day that journalists, arrested at the onset of martial law, were released? “I'd like to show them to Jaime Zobel de Ayala and maybe exhibit them in his gallery. His appreciation would mean much to me because he's a photographer, too.” And that would be his most preferred addition to a long list of solo and group exhibits he has held or joined, here and abroad (Nauru, Japan, Holland). Ed is content for the most part. His two sons (out of seven children) are professional photographers. He has ventured into art photography (“distortion, abstraction”) and, though he has found some joy in color, is happy to have also found a camera shop in Makati that still offers black-and-white negative processing. He gets his R&R every six months in the United States, where a sibling resides. Now, if he could only organize those files. “My father, Manuel Ma. Santiago, was a science illustrator who worked at the National Museum,” Ed said. “He taught me the value of preservation and I should honor that.” Manuel also bought his son's first camera. Ed likes telling this story: “I took up fine arts at the University of Santo Tomas. One of my professors, Vicente Manansala (who would be National Artist) told my father, 'Your son can't paint but he sees things that no one else does. Get him a camera.'” His hair all white, Ed still goes around in Levi's 501 jeans but now wears what he calls “proper” shirts (cotton, button-down) more often than his trademark work tops, sleeveless white tanks. “Give me a press ID,” he joked, “and I'll shed 50 years right before your eyes.” Inquirer.net Aquinos and Marcoses, during the crucial four years when their roles reversed to recast society, wrote journalist Stanley Karnow in his book “In Our Image” (Random House). Her insights do not portray “the Marcoses as unredeemable villains or the Aquinos as sinless saints.” “For the first time, I could imagine what the Filipino voters, who had elected him twice and then tolerated his takeover, must have seen in him,” Burton writes of her first meeting with Marcos in September 1983 at Malacañang. “He was the kind of lawyer you would hire to get you off if yo u we re re a l ly i n t ro u b l e particularly if you were guilty. He was the kind of maverick you would elect president when you deemed the system to be beyond the power of conventional leaders and remedies to repair.” Imelda is trounced in the Burton reports as an insatiably grasping woman who fabricated her family history, then scrambled to make it reality. She recalls a night-long interview with Imelda: “People said awful things…. But they were describing a rational woman, full of malice aforethought. The woman I was listening to could not be judged by normal standards. She was manic. Mad, perhaps. Touches of brilliance and insight here and there. But how was one to judge them in this tidal wave, this glut of diagrams, equations and pop geostrategy?” Burton reports the transformation of Corazon Aquino from a self-effacing housewife into the quiet, determined president. Her friendship with the bereaved widow “enabled her to witness the change and to hear from Cory herself how it came about.” She takes readers from the moment Cory returns to the Philippines, overseeing her husband's funeral, to the day she spends 10 hours in a Carmelite convent, meditating whether to run for president. The courage of Cory Aquino comes through, And so do her “weaknesses.” Burton describes a world leader who takes time out to watch “Dallas” and “Falcon Crest,” but who never makes important decisions - no matter how urgent - without pausing to pray. Journalists are often regarded as abrasive. Skepticism is a necessary tool of a good journalist, Bowring wrote. Like idealism, it can easily turn into cynicism at the sight, up-close, of dishonesty, avarice and vacuousness of celebrities. The 17-year-old Manila Times correspondent who covered the Korean war, Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr., would have agreed. The 31st anniversary of Ninoy's murder also shows Journalism 101 can provide an antidote to national amnesia. Final act Marcos cheated, as he did in the 1978 elections. The people responded resoundingly and trooped to Edsa, in a final, seventh act of defiance that jolted the world. Ninoy's sacrifice on Aug. 21, 1983, served as a whiplash on the national conscience. His assassination unleashed a torrent of pent-up resentment against the dictatorship that led the country to penury, perdition and ruin. The shock of Aug. 21 turned to hurt, outrage and quiet courage, and led the nation to new hopes two and a half years later. (Reprinted from the Philippine Daily Inquirer, Aug. 20, 2000). Inquirer.net August 22-28, 2014 Page 15 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Why they are coming home and retiring in good old Pinas By Chit Roces-Santos As if it's the most natural thing, Filipinos who have spent their most productive years abroad come home not only to retire but also to share both wealth and know-how. Not a few of them could resist the nostalgic call of the islands, the tug of family ties, the long-missed feeling of belonging, or the challenge that a young growing country offers and, yet for some, the lure of wanting to give back. To be sure, as many as there are who have come home, there are those who for some reason cannot. But that's another story. Hedy Taylor-Toolen “I look at it not as retirement but as a return to the place where I was born and raised, where I lived happily during my first 20 years. I am half-Filipino, half-American, seeking a kind of cosmic balance, and I had this wild idea that if fate was kind I would live half my life in each country and reconcile the 'separate sides' of my head. With the first 20 years in the Philippines, the next 40 in the US and, fingers crossed, the last 20 back in the Philippines, I will have made it. “I also hoped that 20 years would allow me sufficient time to fulfill a simmering sense of obligation to the country, unclear though the form it would take, and I'm not certain after nine years that I've come close to it. “After an absence of 40 years, I Annabelle and Tom Wisniewski Jim and Hedy Toolen could also look at the Philippines as a travel adventure to a new exotic destination. My American husband viewed it similarly, even if it meant leaving his family, although today, leaving family does not have the same dire permanence as in the past. We have had to make many adjustments, he more than I, but on the whole, it has been positive…” Jim Toolen “Consider this: Born a month after my uncle, a US Army doctor had been liberated from internment camp during the Battle of Manila. I grew up enthralled by stories of his heroism and his a d m i ra t i o n fo r h i s F i l i p i n o comrades. Later in life I was hired as an onstage escort for the Miss International beauty pageant and got randomly chosen to escort Miss Philippines. She was surely the most beautiful woman I had ever seen and she won! “We were reunited after 48 years, and Gemma Cruz-Araneta and I have since become wonderful friends. “After college, my teaching career took me to a seaside community near Los Angeles, where many of my students were Fil-Am youngsters whose parents had migrated to the region seeking employment in the fishing industry. That's when I first learned to love Filipinos and their cuisine. This path seemed preordained to lead me to the love of my life, my beautiful wife. So, is there any doubt why I felt instantly at home here? My new Filipino friends are like family. True, I will always love America, but it is the Philippines I now proudly call home.” Bobby Jimenez “I was brought back by one of the visionaries of local business. I didn't care much for his emissary, but he was somebody I knew from Harvard days; he knew which buttons to press. It was a new challenge when everyday life in Manhattan had become routinely boring. The project didn't happen, but it reintroduced me to Philippine life. “The depth and range of the country's problems came into focus, and they were awesome. The u Page 29 Did you know? The late Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. Inquirer file photo Former Senator Benigno S. Aquino Jr. was assassinated on the tarmac of Manila International Airport on Aug. 21, 1983. His 11hour funeral march 10 days later from Sto. Domingo Church in Quezon City to Manila Memorial Park, Parañaque, is considered one of the longest in Philippine history. Ninoy Aquino Day is marked every Aug. 21 under Republic Act No. 9256 signed by then President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo on Feb. 25, 2004. Inquirer.net HAPPY BIRTHDAY, FPJ. A worker at Mowelfund Plaza in Quezon City prepares a figurine of the late movie legend and 2004 presidential candidate Fernando Poe Jr. for his 75th birth anniversary. Lyn Rillon August 20 is the 75th birth anniversary of National Artist for Film Ronald Allan Poe, more popularly known as Fernando Poe Jr. Born in 1939 in Manila, the “King of Philippine Cinema” was known for his roles in iconic films including the “Panday” series, which made him a legend in the local film industry. On July 20, 2012, President Aquino signed Proclamation No. 435 confirming his posthumous declaration as a National Artist as conferred in Proclamation No. 1069 dated May 23, 2006. Poe died on Dec. 14, 2004. Inquirer.net August 22-28, 2014 Page 16 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS By Cathy Yamsuan Four sets of traditional native garb in varying shades of red project a commanding presence at the entrance to the permanent textile exhibit of the Museum of the People in Manila. The floor-to-ceiling glass case features a two-piece formal female attire worn by the Gaddang of Ifugao. Beside it is a sa-ul, a set of shirt and trousers traditionally worn by males of the B'laan tribe of Sta. Cruz, Davao del Sur. Next to this is the more subdued mid-calf-length formal wear of a Tinguian female from Abra, followed by a brightly hued dagom and sawa worn exclusively by a male Mandaya of high rank in Davao Oriental. The clothes, along with other textiles from different parts of the Philippines, all came to the city with stories to tellbirths, coming-of-age, weddings and other milestone rituals, and, ultimately, death. The clothes and fabrics are showcased at the fourth floor of the former Department of Finance building that is now an annex of the National Museum. Bold attempt Dubbed “Hibla ng Lahing Pilipino: The Artistry of Philippine Textiles,” the exhibit is a bold attempt to isolate the Filipino's DNA through fabric. Unlike old-school exhibits that classify specimen through ancient standards like materials and dates, “Hibla” does not hesitate to bring clothes and their stories together using their similarities in design as basis for an unconventional mix that actually works better. Common among the four sets of traditional clothes is the use of cotton, dyes and beads. But more than that, they all have bold g e o m e t r i c d e s i g n s t h a t a re unmistakably Filipino, even to the untrained eye. “Hibla means thread or fiber, which is the basic thread that binds all of us. These are the ties that bind us, whether [the fabric is] ikat or malong, inabel or hablon,” said Sen. Loren Legarda, chair of the Senate cultural communities committee and well-regarded patron of the museum. It was through Legarda that the museum was able to put up the exhibit, initially housed in the nearby old Legislative building. It moved last September to the Museum of the People beside the Agrifina Circle along Taft Avenue. The guest book boasts the signatures of Queen Sofia of Spain, Paolo Zegna of the Europe-based design house Ermenegildo Zegna, and Lady Lynn Forester de Rothschild. Legarda said National Museum director Jeremy Barns and senior director Ana M. T. Labrador proposed some years back an exhibit of Filipino indigenous textiles based on design, not chronological or geographical criteria as now observed in more modern countries. “I like it that we juxtapose [the Queen Sofia of Spain was one of the first visitors of the “Hibla” textile exhibit. Intricate, colorful ensemble of albong (blouse), malong and belt of Sebaan beads worn by B'laan women of southern Mindanao. Anthropologists have noticed that some indigenous groups now recycle plastic and mold it into beads to embellish their traditional garb. Photos by Jilson Seckler Tiu Senate cultural communities chair Loren Legarda and National Museum director Ana Labrador take turns explaining how similarities and distinctions in design became basis for curating the textile exhibit at the Museum of the People in Manila. Details of a blouse, belt and lufid skirt used by Bontoc women. designs from] the Cordillera and Mindanao, so you really see unity in diversity,” the senator said. Fibers or threads from more than 100 kinds of textiles, including abaca, banana, pineapple and cotton, are seen in the exhibit. The works of more than 100 indigenous groups are featured. Intricate tapestries “Hibla” offers a glossy colored catalog that details the stories about each item of clothing, from the source of material to how it is painstakingly handcrafted, the occasion it was worn in and who is allowed by traditional edict to wear it. The intricate tapestries of the Tausug's pis siyabit signified the wearer's social rank. The tangkulu, a headcloth worn by Bagobo warriors or magani, can display varying shades from chocolate to blood red, depending on the number of lives taken by the wearer. As expected, there are tribes that consider fabrics as a form of currency. Marriages can be forbidden among some groups without the possession of the proper cloth. The T'boli woman who cannot weave well was considered low in social status and disallowed from demanding a high bride wealth or dowry, while Bontoc girls were required to learn weaving when they reached 12 years old. The museum has photos, taken by director Labrador, of the funeral of a ranking Bontoc male whose status afforded him to wear an exclusive finangulawan of dark cloth designed with an intricate white pattern during his burial. Labrador, an anthropologist, noted that Cordillerans are fond of red. “Others believe it's because they are a warring people, but I don't think so. In the past, red dye was difficult to get so it has an added value. Besides, they plant twice a year so the environment is green 70 to 80 percent all year round. Red is a complementary color, so I believe this is why they like it,” she said. Accessories Aside from garments narrating personal histories, the exhibit also features accessories worn by indigenous peoples. Enclosed in a glass case are necklaces worn by the Gaddang to indicate social status. Materials include beads, cowrie shells, mother of pearl, horn, turtle shell, brass and strings. Labrador explained that people of the Cordillera descended to the lowlands between planting and harvest time, using the furlough to trade with people of the plains and coastal areas, even foreigners. “You see these things and you realize the people traded extensively with other cultures. You have glass, agate, semiprecious stones. Glass beads with gold leaf. It's important for people to wear these things because they connote rank,” she said. Studies show the glass came from Indonesia and India. Beads that showed up in the highlands implied interactions with Muslim traders. Fo r s o m e t i m e n o w, academicians have expressed concern over the vanishing weaving traditions of indigenous p e o p l e s . L e ga rd a d e s c r i b e d weaving as “a vanishing tradition,” adding that in many cases, the master weavers of a tribe could not find a worthy protégé among members of the younger generation. She recalled the case of a young Gaddang girl who was only forced to take to her mother's loom when the elder woman got sick and their family income dwindled. “Weaving is also a tedious process. It usually takes a week, even a month to finish a garment,” the senator added. Unscrupulous middlemen would also sometimes exploit the weavers by pressuring them to sell at unfairly low prices. Modern trends Labrador noted that there is also concern about how some tribes have begun using modern materials like acrylic to make fabrics, or adopt the trends of the modern world. Members of one group, for example, collect the plastic shells that house the ink tubes of ballpoint pens, melt these and mold the plastic into beads. M e a n w h i l e , t h e yo u n g e r Bontocs drape their lufid in a way that the skirt has ruffles instead of flowing straight down from their waists. “Sometimes there are purists, especially in the academe, who object to such things because they want the indigenous people to stay traditional, but I think it's a good thing, especially for young people when they adjust because they make [whatever is new] relevant [to themselves],” Labrador said. “When traditional people face modern times, I think they should be given that certain freedom, and they can always innovate because they already do that in their materials,” she added. Labrador said that as an anthropologist, she sees the decision to use synthetic materials to adjust to the times as “a reason to celebrate.” “It means people change. Problem is, sometimes we want to view indigenous people as static, kind of fixed because it's too messy for us if we try to understand they [could be] just like us,” she explained. This does not mean, however, that Labrador and others who continually study and support the indigenous tribes make no effort to preserve their weaving traditions. Since the temporary textile exhibit opened in 2012, the National Museum had already hosted numerous forums in an effort to make the weaving and dyemaking traditions known to the urbanized world. Dr. Maria Stanyukovich, curator of Philippine and Southeast Asian textiles at the St. Peter the Great Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia, spoke when the temporary exhibit opened two years ago. u Page 29 August 22-28, 2014 Page 17 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS August 22-28, 2014 Page 18 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Filipino arts and eats fest goes mainstream in Toronto TORONTO, Canada -- Kain Kalye or the Filipino Street Eats Competition drew lines of eager tasters at the 9th Annual Kultura Filipino Arts Festival August 7 to 10 at Wychwood Barns. Grazers shelled out $3 to $7 for halo-halo, longganisa, chicken and pork barbecues and other traditional Filipino dishes, from local eateries like H a l o - H a l o Wo r l d C a f é , TitaFlips, Lola Kusina, Tocino Boys and Lamesa. The sixmonth-old Lola Kusina's crispy siopao won the popular vote. With “cultural pride and a progressive outlook on the Filipino-Canadian experience, Kultura Filipino Arts Festival has captured the broader Toronto public for a decade with its innovative programming of live performances, traditional and modern cuisine, curated interactive art installations and a bustling marketplace,” reports CBC News Toronto. The Kultura Filipino Arts Festival Marketplace offered wares from Filipino-Canadian a r t s a n d c ra f t s s e l l e r s . Inquirer.net Janmer, 14, and Maximo, 13, are both visually impaired Crowds at Kultura Filipino Arts Festival at Wychwood Barns. Tocino Boys barbecue a big hit at Kain Kalye Kapisanan Philippine Centre for Arts & Culture photos Special Education Brings Hope to Two Boys from Meycauayan M E YC AUAYA N , B u l a c a n - Sometimes all a child needs is a second chance. Two brothers, Janmer and Maximo Obedencio, fulfilled a lifelong goal when they attended school for the first time two years ago. But their time in the classroom was short. Janmer, 14, and Maximo, 13, are both visually impaired. They could not succeed without specialized instruction. In addition, expensive, unreliable transportation made it difficult to get to school each day. Janmer and Maximo left school just months after they enrolled. Janmer and Maximo's second chance for an education came last summer. It started with a knock on the door from Ludy Anile, a travelling education specialist from Resources for the Blind, Inc. (RBI). Ms. Anile had learned of the brothers' difficulties and visited their home to offer help. “ I i m m e d i a te ly s aw t h e i r willingness to attend school,” said Ms. Anile. “They were excited when they realized that they could go back to class with their sighted peers.” The brothers returned to school in August 2013 this time with more reliable transportation paid for by a local church. RBI also arranged for u Page 19 TFC stars and tourism shine at Fiesta In America Concert King Martin Nievera and superstar Jericho Rosales, ABS-CBN contract artists, and famed comedienne Fe de los Reyes wowed the packed concert audience on both days of Fiesta In America (August 16 and 17) at the Meadowlands Expo Center in Secaucus, New Jersey. Widely considered as the most significant indoor expo on the east coast for and about Filipino Americans, Fiesta In America marked its 16th anniversary with a special focus on Philippine tourism. “We purposely shone the spotlight on promoting tourism throughout the Fiesta,” said Nanding Mendez, Fiesta In America President and CEO, “by devoting more than five full pages on TIEZA (Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority) as well as the DOT (Department of Tourism) in Fiesta Talks Magazine, by featuring DOT videos on the jumbo screen, by installing tourism-related banners all over the Expo Center, and by peppering the concert hosts' script with exhortations to the audience to proudly spread the word about the Philippines as a world-class attraction.” Comic and singer Fe de los Reyes set the stage for the TVC stars with her hilarious and, at times, bittersweet take on the plight of overstaying or undocumented Filipinos. De los Reyes punctuated her rendition of Martin Nievera and Consul General Mario De Leon Jr. (10th and 11th from left, respectively) cut the ribbon to formally open the Fiesta in America at the Meadowlands Expo Center in Secaucus, NJ on Saturday, August 16. Lionel Richie's melancholy “Hello, Is It Me You're Looking For?” with jarring blasts of her phone's ring tone and the amusing ways Pinoys w o u l d n e r v o u s l y a n s w e r, depending on their illegal immigrant situation. Swooning female members of the concert audience, meanwhile, proved why Jericho Rosales is the reigning film and TV heartthrob. By coming down from the stage and engaging in “selfies” with his smart phoneand IPad-wielding fans, the actorsinger gave the concert audience a night to remember and to share on the social network. On the other hand, the Philippines' reigning Concert King, Martin Nievera, oozed with the cool-crooner charm that has thrilled Filipino record-buyers and concert audiences throughout the world for more than 15 years. As a welcome surprise, Nievera was joined on stage by his son Robin on guitar and vocals. The younger Nievera showcased the talents of three generations of Nievera performing artists (Robin's grandfather, Bert, was a member of the celebrated Society of Seven, a popular '70s pop group). The concert was capped by a rousing finale featuring Jericho and Martin on stage with the “Ambassadors of Original Pinoy Music (OPM),” the Sounds of Manila. Fiesta In America's 16th anniversary edition also featured AARP workshops on caring for elderly loved ones, presented by retired Major General Antonio “Tony” Taguba, and on how to ensure financial stability for the 50+, by financial expert Donna Ortega from AARP's headquarters in Washington, D.C. AARP made its debut at the Fiesta as major s p o n s o r. O t h e r w o r k s h o p s included an instructional p re s e n t a t i o n fo r f i r s t - t i m e homebuyers by Melvin Castillo of the United Northern Mortgage Bankers (also a first-time Fiesta sponsor); seminars on chronic pain by Drs. Michael Lacap and Michael Failla; and free skin diagnosis by cosmetologist Joey Bautista Cruz. Tru e to i t s t ra di t i o n o f promoting new Filipino performing artists, Fiesta In America presented a varied cast that included the Sounds of Manila, the award-winning dancing duo of Craig and Samantha CamposAbaya, pop standouts Oliver Dagum and Alyssa Jade Shoemaker, as well as rock and pop bands Friends of Enemies, Heart's Desire, and Take the Stage. And as a reflection of Fiesta's growing inclusiveness, performers from the Asian community (Cherry Hill Chinese Dance Group, the Jung Tra d i t i o n a l Ko re a n D a n c e Academy) and the Latino community (Anayka, Pagia Musik and Tailon) rounded up the live concerts on both nights of the Fiesta with widely varying styles. “Together with the trade pavilion that overflowed with export-quality products from the Philippines, the coronation of the first Fiesta King and Queen International, the seniors' pavilion that included a simultaneous chess exhibition by chess master Nonoy Rafael, the children's pavilion, and a food court stocked with dishes from various Philippine regions, Fiesta In America's Sweet 16 was a complete day of entertainment for the whole family and an avenue for Filipino small business to directly m a rke t t h e i r p ro d u c t s a n d services,” said Nanding Mendez. “The event will continue to be a strong bond that keeps the Fil-Am community of the northeast cohesive.” To participate in 2015 Fiesta in America, please call (212) 6826610; email: sepmgzn@yahoo.com or visit www.philippinefiesta.com. (Photography: YetBo/LoveRita) August 22-28, 2014 Page 19 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Jersey City's State of the Art Wellness Center at Route 440 By Grace G. Baldisseri The Hudson Rehab Spa is a modern wellness center located at the Hudson Mall at Route 440 in Jersey City. It is a physical therapy, rehabilitation center and a health and spa rolled into one - fully equipped with modern equipment you do not usually see in a regular Rehab and Spa Clinic. The wellness center has its grand opening on June 7, 2014 which is just 77 days old but they have already reached their one year goal in terms of the number of regular patients who patronize the clinic everyday. The business partners behind the success of the Hudson Rehab Spa are ELIZABETH D I V I NAG R AC I A a n d M I K E FLORENDO, both highly experienced in the field of wellness program (Beth as a practitioner and Mike as PRO & Marketing expert}, h a r dw o r k i n g , a n d compassionate professionals who put their clients/patients above themselves. Most of the patients who come here are those who suffer from ankle sprains, sports injury, body pains, fractures, muscle sprains, neurological disorders and they come not only from Jersey City but from Livingstone, Old Bridge and Staten Island. In an exclusive interview with MIKE, co-owner and Marketing Director of the Clinic, he said that he is blessed for having a trusted business partner, a dedicated staff who sometimes extend their time to work for as long as there are customers, and most of all having valued customer/patients who experienced quality service : yoga, physical therapy, massage and acupuncture. Their website explains their Core Values as a team spelled HEALS: Honesty - Adhering to truthfulness, fairness and trustworthiness in all interactions and facets of our practice. Excellence - Consistently providing advance technology Special education ... From page 18 them to work with a trained special education teacher using curriculum that meets their unique needs. The brothers started the new school year on June 4 in regular second grade classes with teacher Marilyn Reyes, whom the students call ma'am Len. “Ms. Reyes is impressed with the brothers' perseverance in their study and with their active participation,” said Amy Mojica, RBI training director and supervisor of low vision services. During a classroom visit, Janmer told Ms. Aline, “I am happy for I have new friends in our regular class. They were curious about how we read and write in Braille.” Maximo added, “I like my math. Although it is a little noisy in my class, I listen very well to ma'am Len's lesson.” Janmer and Maximo also work with special education teacher Bernice Antonette Dagsaan, who helps Ms. Reyes adapt lessons for the brothers. Ms. Dagsaan is one of 28 teachers who RBI recently trained at Philippine Normal University in Manila, with support from Lions Club International and Perkins International. Perkins began working in the Philippines in 1989. Its partners, including RBI, have helped provide quality education to students like Janmer and Maximo. “Occasionally, we still meet parents who do not send their children who are blind to school,” said Ms. Mojica. “In the case of the brothers, their mother believed her children's visual impairments would not allow them to succeed in regular school. She thought of bringing them to a nearby private special school but they do not have the money. Janmer and Maximo each have congenital cataracts and nystagmus in both eyes. Nystagmus causes the eyes to make uncontrolled and repetitive movements, often reducing vision. In and using the best sources in the delivery of service to patients through specialized and individualized treatment programs that would best fit the individual client. Accountability - Taking full responsibility for the quality of care extended to patients and the conduct of our staff in every aspect of operation. Learning - Continuous education of staff and patients with the latest trends, concepts, breakthroughs, practices and methods toward better treatment and service. Social Responsibility - By promoting mutual trust between our facility and society in response to health and wellness needs of individuals and the community we serve. When in Jersey City, come v i s i t t h i s s t a te - o f - t h e - a r t wellness center, the Hudson Rehab Spa at 701 State Route 440, Jersey City, NJ 07305. Or call and set an appointment at 201305-9859. 2006, Maximo went to first grade, but that lasted only a few weeks. Classmates teased and picked on him and the boy refused to go back. Because of Janmer's vision problems, his parents did not send him to school until 2012. Since the brothers returned to school, Ms. Mojica reports that both the school and the community in Meycauayan are more friendly and more accepting of Janmer and Maximo. The boys inspire the RBI team in their ongoing effort to help other children with visual impairments in the Philippines particularly those living in isolated rural areas. Educating children who are blind or have low vision also brings joy to their families. According to Ms. Mojica, Mrs. Mercedes Obedencio is thankful that her sons can now read and write along with their younger siblings. “The brothers' interest in learning and improving their lives encourages us to continue searching for more visually impaired children in the community who are just staying at home,” said Ms. Mojica. “Children like Maximo and Janmer if given the opportunity and appropriate training will discover and develop their skills and capabilities, which will prepare them to have a quality life in the future.” Elizabeth Divinagracia and Mike Florendo Got hurt at work? LISA A. ARKIN, ESQ. NO CHARGE CONSULTATIONS “Dedicated to helping injured workers” 201-444-1078 About Perkins: Founded in 1829 as the first school for the blind in the U.S.A., Perkins now provides education, products and services that build productive, meaningful lives for nearly a million people around the world. www.Perkins.org Wwww.lisaarkinlaw.com www.lisaarkin.com August 22-28, 2014 Page 20 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Solon bats for full foreign ownership of retail businesses in PH By Aries Joseph Hegina MANILA -- In a bid to boost foreign direct investment in the retail and wholesale sector, a lawmaker is pushing for a bill allowing foreign investors to fully own retail businesses in the country. Isabela fourth district representative Giorgidi Aggabao filed House Bill (HB) 4402 that seeks to amend Republic Act 8762 or the Retail Trade Liberalization Law by removing the capital requirement provision in the law that prohibits foreign investors to fully own retail businesses in the country. Under HB 4402, foreign investors may be allowed to wholly own a retail business in the country with a paid up capital of $2.5 to $7.5 million. A l s o , fo re i g n e r s m ay wh o l ly ow n e n te r p r i s e s specializing in high-end or luxury products with a paid-up capital of only $250,000 per store. “It proposes to do away with these restrictions by removing the equipment and capitalization requirements in the Retail Trade Liberalization Law in order to provide a more attractive and favorable investment climate in the country,” Aggabao said. HB 4402 also stipulates that foreign investors shall be required to maintain a full amount of their capital or the unsold amount of their capital in case any part of the capital is sold to a Filipino citizen or a local corporation when they cease operation in the country. Under the proposed bill, foreign investors who will fail to maintain the prescribed capital in their retail businesses will be sanctioned by the Department of Trade and Industry and the Securities and Exchange Commission. Foreign direct investment (FDI) in the field of retail and wholesale sector amounted only to one percent of the total FDI from 2000-2009, Aggabao claimed. Currently, under Section 5 of RA 8762, businesses with paid-up capital of less than $2.5 million shall be reserved exclusively for Filipino citizens and corporations wholly owned by Filipinos. Inquirer.net Baguio offers investors new profit opportunities Photo by Tessa R. Salazar Gov't entices shippers to Batangas port PPA hopes port perks will reduce Manila cargo traffic By Miguel R. Camus Malacañang has approved financial incentives to lure shippers to the underutilized Batangas Port in a bid to decongest Manila's seaports, which serve as the primary gateway to the capital district and nearby areas. The Philippine Ports Authority said in a statement over the weekend that the Office of The President approved a reduction in port charges and other vessel-handling fees at the Batangas Port. Specifically, direct callers at Batangas Port will get a 90-percent discount on port dues from the existing fee of $0.081 per gross revenue ton (GRT) per day to only $0.008 per GRT per day as well as a 90-percent cut in dockage-at-berth from $0.039 per GRT to only $0.004 per GRT per day. The new rates, however, will be applicable only for six months, wherein the discount for the succeeding six months will be reduced by half for both, or from $0.081 per GRT to $0.040 per GRT per day, and from $0.039 per GRT to $0.020 per GRT per day. The new rates took effect at the start of this month. “This is a big boost in our bid to increase utilization of the Batangas Port,” PPA General Manager Juan C. Sta. Ana said. “The new directive has likewise changed the basis in the computation of the dockage-at-berth from per GRT per calendar day, or a fraction thereof, to per GRT per block of 24 hours, or a fraction thereof.” Currently, there are at least six international carriers calling at the Batangas Port since June: MCC u Page 22 Investors advised to stay on course PINE IS FINE. Baguio residents have been vigilant about the city's remaining trees, which help sustain its aquifer. Investments that could protect the forest are welcome. Richard Balonglong By Vincent Cabreza BAGUIO CITY -- Rains have pounded the summer capital again and, for a city that lives off rationed water, each unused drop could be money down the drain. Rainwater could become a commodity that might be sold to neighboring provinces in the future, if Baguio and likeminded towns in the Cordilleras were to spend on a network of reservoirs in the region's forests that would be treated for potable water use, experts said. Rainwater is but one of many unconventional business options that investors may consider as residents push for the reshaping and improvement of Baguio, which turns 105 years old on Sept. 1. The Baguio Heritage Foundation (BHF) is promoting a sustainable urban mobility program (SUMP) that invites investors to develop environment friendly mass transport systems, such as the electric jeepney suited to mountain terrain. Heavy traffic in the city has forced the Baguio government to seek out investors who are accomplished in parking management systems. Green architecture is also in great demand here, given the construction projects around the downtown area. Raining profits But Baguio's exposure to heavy rainfall grants it a resource that could quickly be developed. During the National Competitiveness Council roadshow here in March, the World Wide Fund for Nature Philippines (WWFPhilippines) said rainfall could be a profit center for Baguio, which receives the highest rainfall in the country. The mountain resort has a population of 325,000 (as of 2010), taxing the city's aquifer and watersheds, records showed. The city has been living off rationed water since the 1980s. “But why depend on watersheds when rainfall is your prime source of water?” asked Moncini Hinay, WWFPhilippines project manager, who spoke at the roadshow. A WWF-Philippines business risk assessment report urges cities like Baguio to “steer new investment toward climate-appropriate The local stock market is still on a “secular” bull cycle as it maintains the index target of 10,000 by 2018, stock experts from Philequity group said. Despite a string of recent negative news here and abroad, the fact that the Philippine Stock Exchange index broke past the 7,000 barrier suggested the market possessed an “underlying strength,” enabling investors to buy on dips, said Miguel Agarao, an analyst handling institutional sales at Wealth Securities. Last week, PSEi jumped 128.17 points, or 1.86 percent, week-on-week to close at 7,008.51 on Friday, getting a boost from the latest MSCI rebalancing. The index is now trading at 14-month highs. Wealth Securities is “neutral” on the market over the short-term, but bullish over the long term, Agarao said in a briefing for Philequity investors last Saturday. Agarao also advised investors to stay on course. Jerome Gonzales, head of research at Philequity Management Inc. - a fund management firm whose equity funds have consistently outperformed the PSEi over the last 20 years - said the previous consolidation phase would act as a strong support for the market. Gonzales said the Philippine stock market had recently finished the fourth of five Elliot waves - a tool for technical analysis which tracks repetitive patterns or waves to anticipate market cycles. Gonzales said that, while the peak of the wave was around 7,400, which was hit last year, wave 5 would hit a new high of 8,290. The group maintained the view that the record high of 7,400 would be revisited by the first quarter of 2015 and further reach 8,100 by the first quarter of 2016. The long-term goal is 10,000, assuming that the pace of reforms will continue, while structural changes are delivered and other important growth drivers developed. “Technical analysis is not an exact science,” Gonzales said. “Sometimes the waves are shorter, sometimes they extend. What's important is the direction moving forward is higher.” Wilson Sy, director of Philequity, said that while there had been concerns on what would happen by 2016 - when the Philippines will elect a new president - the market could take comfort in the view held by global rating agency Standard & Poor's that the structural reforms in the country would endure beyond 2016. Inquirer.net u Page 22 August 22-28, 2014 Page 21 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS CALLBOX Sales and Marketing Solutions celebrated its 10th year last July 4 with Callbox CEO and founder Rom Agustin (right) giving out awards to employees, including Ian Van Cubing (left). Iloilo-based BPO rises to become among world's best By Hazel P. Villa ILOILO CITY -- A FilipinoAmerican systems engineer visited a relative here in July 2004 and chanced upon an Internet cafe in La Paz district. Little did Rom Agustin know that the fateful visit to the cafe would lead him to establish Iloilo City's first and largest homegrown business process outsourcing (BPO) marketing company, providing business-to-business (B2B) multichannel marketing services to a number of leading multinational companies in industries such as software development, information technology and financial, medical and business services. Callbox Sales and Marketing Solutions marked its 10th year here on July 4 and celebrated how it overcame the many challenges it faced in an industry dominated by inbound call centers that continues to grapple with the shifting tides of the international economy. Agustin and his college friend, Glen Norris, originally wanted a virtual answering companyhence the name Callboxbut saw that manpower was more affordable in the Philippines compared to the United States where they had prior business experience. With the majority of BPOs here handling inbound calls, Callbox decided to venture into the more difficult service of outbound calls such as making appointments for sales representatives and qualifying prospective customers for a product or service. This work is done according to a script and information on rebuttals to negative responses. “If there are companies who want lead generation, the first name they think of is Callbox. We are now a household name in Singapore and Australia,” said Ian Van Cubing, Callbox's IT manager. The job of lead generation companies such as Callbox is to look for potential buyers of their clients' products and services and qualify them through phone calls or through an “intelligent” online system. The names of potential buyers are then sent to clients who, in turn, are free to “chase” them and make a sale. On the other hand, B2B is a service or product not sold directly to the consumer but to another business. One such service is selling IT networking products for another company. Considering the cost and the decision-making process involved, B2B services and products are not purchased on the spot. Rather, they are “considered purchases,” thus, the need for a pipeline through which client and buyer information is generated so that decision makers can make informed choices. According to Van Cubing, Ilonggo software developers were able to develop a unique pipeline that helped boost Callbox's productivity. “It used to be that an agent can manage an account that earns $200 to $300 a month in 2005. But now, an agent has been earning $2,000 a month for the company since 2013 because the pipeline is very targeted,” said Van Cubing, an electrical engineering graduate of Central Philippine University whom Norris immediately hired as IT manager in 2005. Callbox's operations started with only two Ilonggos hired in 2004 and by 2005, three more joined the team that worked on basic search tools and basic controls for telephone systems. The systems became more complex as the business grew. “We made the pipeline from the ground up and made software for each feature, with Rom giving us the ideas and the IT team working on the tools,” said Van Cubing. “As a lead generation company, we give our clients an online system TO ADVERTISE, PLEASE CALL Through the Great Women Project, packaging and design of local products are improved. Photos by Annelle Tayao-Juego Locally made products with great potential for sales growth include handwoven bags Women find their place in market value chain By Annelle Tayao-Juego Women helping women. This simple concept is the driving force behind a countrywide public-private partnership program that is giving female micro-entrepreneurs a leg up in the market value chain. Dubbed Great Women, the program is spearheaded by Jeannie Javelosa, Chit Juan and Reena Francisco, the three women behind Echstore, a small retail chain that sells local artisanal and organic products. The Echotrio, as the three business partners are collectively called, started Great Women as a partnership with the Philippine Commission on Women (PCW). PCW initially implemented a five-year project on electoral empowerment for women in underprivileged communities called Great, which was funded by the Canadian International Development Agency (Cida). “However, [PCW] realized they couldn't fully empower these women, because empowerment meant making their own money. Eight months before the project (Great) ended, PCW approached us for help,” said Javelosa, who was with Juan and Francisco at the soft opening of their newest Echostore (now with an Echodeli) in Salcedo Village, Makati. “Our innovation, under the Echosi Foundation, was to provide market access for the women micro-entrepreneurs [through the Great Women program,” she added. Echosi (Empowering Communities with Hope and Opportunities through Sustainable Initiatives) Foundation, according to its website echosi.org.ph, “is a nonprofit foundation that teaches sustainability issues for e m p owe r i n g m a rg i n a l i z e d groups, women's groups and cultural communities.” The Echotrio put up the foundation to further improve their suppliers' product development and marketing. Javelosa is Echosi president. The Great Women program started about two years ago, with the Echotrio conducting design clinics, product development training using available local materials and skills training. Toget her w it h pa rt ner government agencies such as Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and Department of Science and Technology ( D O S T ) , a s we l l a s l o c a l government units, the Echotrio c o n d u c t e d t h e s e t ra i n i n g sessions in Bohol, Quezon, Iloilo, Bicol, Ifugao, Leyte and Davao. Designers such as Ann Pamintuan, Len Cabili and Lulu Tan-Gan also lent their talents to the program. Around 20-30 women micro-entrepreneurs were chosen for Great Women, including 62-year-old Princess Kumalah Sug-Elardo, a coffeemaker from Panamao, Sulu; 39year-old Bagobo weaver Vivencia Mamites, who makes inabal, a traditional cloth of the u Page 22 Finance chief open to income tax cuts But wants revenue-raising bills passed, too T h e Ta x M a n a g e m e n t are taxed at 32 percent. This is Association of the Philippines significantly higher than Finance department officials (TMAP) said income taxes in the Malaysia's 11 percent, Thailand's are open to amending the Philippines were the highest in 10 percent, Vietnam's 20 percent country's current income tax the region. The World Bank and Singapore's 2 percent. structure to bring rates and likewise said the government Among the measures brackets in line with regional should consider lowering income Purisima wanted passed before norms, but support would be taxes to make Filipino workers touching income taxes included contingent on the passage of more competitive in Southeast the rationalization of fiscal other measures to raise revenues. Asia. incentives for corporations and Speaking at the Senate For ordinary employees, the fiscal responsibility bill, Tuesday, August 19, Finance TMAP said the country's top which mandates that lawmakers Secretary Cesar V. Purisima said earners should be taxed 30 identify funding sources for what was vital was that the percent - at most - of their gross legislation that requires fresh government's spending program incomes. TMAP said a tax rate outlays for incentives. for infrastructure and social somewhere between 20 and 30 Purisima said the services remained funded. percent would be appropriate Department of Finance (DOF) “Once we pass the other and would be more in line with and the Department of Trade and measures, we'd be open to review regional standards. Industry (DTI), which grants this,” said Purisima, head of the This change should be done, incentives to companies, have Cabinet's economic cluster. “We the industry group said, “in order reached an agreement on a u Page 22 can't tweak just one part. We to make the Philippine workforce version of the bill that would be should run models to see the more competitive with its passed to Congress this week. effects,” he said. (Southeast Asian) neighbors.” Senate President Franklin Calls to amend the current Under existing laws, ordinary Drilon, a member of the Senate income tax regime, which has employees are taxed committee on finance, assured defined top earners as progressively according to their Purisima that amendments to individuals earning P500,000 a salaries. Those earning at least income tax would not be passed year, has snowballed in recent P500,000 a year - the prevailing without parallel revenue-raising weeks. threshold for the top tax bracket measures. Inquirer.net 201-434-1114 By Paolo G. Montecillo August 22-28, 2014 Page 22 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Women find ... From page 21 B a g o b o - Ta g a b awa t r i b e ; Ludivina Boston, 66, from Midsayap, North Cotabato, another weaver who has trained women on handloom weaving at the Rural Improvement Club; Emelia Galia, 44, heads a group of makers of cassava chips called the Bubon Food Processors Food Association in Baybay, Leyte; 38-year-old Ronavelle Amen from Iloilo who makes peanut products; and Teodora Aquino of Gainza, Camarines Sur, who makes crab paste. Javelosa said they had to be specific in their workshops, teaching the women how to price their products based on cost of materials and labor, and how to create more appealing designs to capture the niche lifestyle market. “There was one group that made wine. [We asked them], 'Where are you going to bring that?” Said Javelosa. “We can't compete internationally with other wine-making countries. So we said, 'This tastes more like vinegarlet's make it vinaigrette.'” Javelosa added that they were also very strict in choosing which entrepreneurs would be allowed to join the program. “I told them, if you don't have the discipline to become a Iloilo-based BPO ... From page 21 where they can get the information, which in turn comes from our existing database that is constantly updated. If the client says, 'I'd like to contact a thousand IT managers,' we could do that,” said Van Cubing. He added that companies approach Callbox just to buy its targeted and updated information from the pipeline that Ilonggos were able to build. businesswoman, then we don't have anything to talk about,” she said. The women microentrepreneurs had to go through four levels of assessment and workshops at the start of the project: First was product assessment and workshop; second, a design clinic and a check of the quality of food products; third, another clinic wherein participants were assigned “homework” to improve their products, and were taught how to cost their products and p r o d u c t i o n ; a n d l a s t l y, preparation of their products for market testing and usage. Those who weren't able to meet the requirements or turn in their homework were cut from the group. Phase 1 of Great Women ended last February, when the brand and its products were officially launched. Best-selling products include flavored peanuts, crab paste, flavored chips, vinaigrettes and dried noodles. With the program's success, the Echotrio is taking it one step further by making Great Women the country's gender platform at the next Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) Summit, which the Philippines is hosting in 2015. “[Cida] has approved the next phase [of Great Women] for the next five to six years,” The pipeline of information is a major revenue earner for Callbox that now has 800 employees in its Iloilo and Davao offices. It also has 20 software developers seeking to further f i n e t u n e t h e c o m p a ny ' s pipeline. Callbox chief executive officer Agustin, whose family comes from Pangasinan, said that when he set up the company's first office in Iloilo City, he wanted Callbox to be known as a Philippine-born company that is globally competitive. His goal has been achieved. Callbox is now one of the said Javelosa. They are now concentrating on introducing the Great Women brand and products to the international market. Thanks to a grant given by the Peace and Equity Foundation, Javelosa and Juan will be at the New York Artisan Resource Trade Show this month to showcase chic bag designs by local weavers, including those created by Bagobo weaver Vivencia Marites. “I, personally, am focusing on the indigenous textiles and design,” said Javelosa. “I want this to become more culturedriven.” Javelosa added that, under the Echosi Foundation, the Great Women brand will be open for licensing. “We are targeting big companies (for the licensing) so we can really spread the Great Women brand,” she said. The Echotrio are also tapping the Department of Agriculture, National Commission for Culture and the Arts, Center for International Trade Expositions and Missions (Citem) and the USAID to further strengthen Great Women. “I'm so passionate about this,” said Javelosa, “because I've seen the good that can come out of it.” Inquirer.net Baguio offers ... From page 20 technology, skills, infrastructure and systems that deliver on both current and future needs.” “At 3,914 millimeters (mm) a year, Baguio City already has the highest average rainfall in the Philippines. In 1910, it established a Philippine record for highest annual rainfall at 9,006 mm. In 1911, it garnered the world record [at the time] for highest rainfall in 24 hours at 1,168 mm. In 1950, it posted another world record for rainfall in 48 hours, at 2,009 mm,” the study said. “And more recently, in 2001, Baguio City registered the Philippine record for highest rainfall in one hour, 1,085 mm.” This means that the mountain resort city has substantial water resources that may be harnessed, Hinay said. The Baguio Water District (BWD) operates only one rain reservoir on Mt. Sto. Tomas, which it built in 1985 using a government loan. Recently, four water distribution companies expressed their interest in supplying Baguio water, among them businessman Manuel Pangilinan, who chairs the Philex Mining Corp. According to Edilberto Carabbacan, Cordillera regional director of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), towns or cities can invest in P10-million small impounding dams, or share in building a common rain reservoir that may cost up to P100 million. Selling potable water outside the region is a viable idea, he said, considering that the Cordillera has yet to see any economic windfall from being Lu zon's wa tershed cra dle. The headwaters of many Luzon rivers are in the upland Cordillera provinces. has been the expensive stage of water distribution for many utilities. Investors, however, can tap into new filtering technologies being developed for a mass-based clientele. The Cordillera Studies Center of the University of the Philippines Baguio (UP Baguio) has been studying various home filtration processes to draw out a costeffective filter that uses indigenous materials. One study focuses on a filtering device developed by the Mariano Marcos State University (MMSU). The device reduces the bacterial content of rainwater before it undergoes the conventional treatment process. UP Baguio is piloting a three-stage rain water filtration process for its campus. Green mobility Baguio groups have also been seeking technology to clean the city's air and unclog its jammed streets. Last year, Toshio Harashima of the Baguio-based Japanese Association in Northern Luzon set up a booth at the Benguet State University in La Trinidad town in Benguet province to popularize electric vehicles. This year, BHF began drawing signatures to a petition that calls for the institutionalization of SUMP. This urban renewal plan proposes to use batterypowered shuttles, instead of the conventional jeepneys and taxi cabs, on the side streets of downtown Baguio. BHF said the SUMP would free up downtown Session Road for purely pedestrian traffic, which would benefit local businesses based on an urban behavioral study that showed that less stressed residents are more prone to spend. Mayor Mauricio Domogan has a different mass transport solution, having commissioned a feasibility study for a light rail transit system that would accommodate people from neighboring Home filtering Water harvesting also opens up a Benguet towns who travel to Baguio to world's largest and most potential side business in water work or to study. recognized companies in the Domogan had also asked the private filtration systems, which investors B2B marketing industry. sector for ideas concerning parking in could design for single household use. I t wa s a wa r d e d To p Baguio households have been the central business district. Outsourcer of outbound On July 23, Kim Peter Glassborow, collecting rainwater each time the services by i n d u s t r y Parkwise Philippines chief executive monsoon season sets in. Owners of authority Contact Center houses and buildings in the city invest in officer, and Brian Cole, CW Developments World in 2009 and in 2010 and water tanks, recycled containers and Inc. president, discussed a proposal to named Leading Provider of plastic drums, which they use to collect dig the Melvin Jones football grounds in Outsourced Sales and water that they can use in cleaning and Burnham Park to build underground Marketing Services by parking spaces, on the suggestion of toilet flushing. D a t a m o n i t o r, w h i c h Four drums, a resident said, may cut Domogan. investigates hundreds of top But Glassborow said a feasibility down his family's water delivery performing BPO organizations expenses by as much as P1,000 a month, study would have to be done to ensure around the world in an the project would not affect Burnham when rains pour daily in Baguio. independent survey. Carabbacan said water treatment to Park's aquifer. Inquirer.net “Companies don't hire us convert rainwater into potable water because we are cheap, but because we are good,” said Agustin. Inquirer.net The PPA hopes that the reduction in fees will encourage ICTSI, as port operator, to shoulder the cost of moving From page 20 out all overstaying cargo at the Port of Transport Corp., NYK Shipping Lines, Manila. The vessel will ship about 6,000 SITC Container Lines, American containers out of Manila's ports to Subic. Presidents Lines, Regional Container ICTSI is chartering a vessel with a Lines/Pacific International Lines, and capacity of about 1,300 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) with a GRT of CMA-CGM. PPA said it also approved incentives 18,321 tons for at least 14 days to ferry for International Container Terminals empty containers and other overstaying Services Inc. (ICTSI) to declog the Ports containers from the Ports of Manila to Subic. of Manila. During its stay in the country, the PPA said the port dues for the vessel chartered by ICTSI to bring out vessel is expected to ship about 4,000overstaying cargo from the Port of 6,000 TEUs out of the Manila ports. Congestion at Manila's ports Manila to Subic would be reduced from $0.081 per GRT per call to only $1 per continues to decline, with yard call, while dockage-at-berth would be utilization almost down to the desired cut to $1 per vessel from $0.039 per GRT level of 80 percent, the PPA said. Inquirer.net per calendar day, or a fraction thereof. Gov’t entices ... To advertise please call 201-434-1114 August 22-28, 2014 Page 23 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Marian, Dingdong detail wedding plans Jose Mari Chan By Marjorie S. Duran 'A love to last a lifetime’ By Crispina Martinez - Belen For its 8th anniversary, Outbox Media Production (OBM) Agency and partners will present a concert to help rebuild Tacloban communities. The concert, billed “A Love to Last a Lifetime,” is a plated dinner affair top-billed by multi-awarded singer-composer Jose Mari Chan, Ate Gay and the Baihana trio. “Passion. Dedication. Diversity. Through the years, these three words continue to sum up what the OBM team is committed to. This concert is another proof of that. It will be a night of great music, delicious food, and a good cause,” says Rossel Taberna of OBM. Manila Bulletin Marian Rivera and Dingdong Dantes look forward to spending forever together. The two, known to fans as DongYan, will exchange “I do's” on Dec. 30 at the Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Cubao, Quezon City. At a press conference dubbed “The Royal Engagement,” the couple shared why they chose the venue and date. “Gusto namin mangyari sa simbahan bilang we're both Roman Catholic and yung (Immaculate Concepcion) ang isa sa mga simbahan na madalas naming puntahan…and Dec. 30 because gusto namin a day before the year ends, and we also wanted na mapaghandaan siya,” said the actor. Marian echoed his future husband's statement, adding, “Importante talaga sa akin na sa simbahan. Gusto ko talaga andiyan si God.” The couple hasn't decided yet on other wedding details, including the entourage and the reception venue; nor has Marian chosen a designer for her wedding gown. If anything, they are certain of two things: Marian's best friends, Roxanne Barcelo and Ana Feleo, will both be maids of honor; while Dingdong's younger brother, Angelo Dantes, will be best man. Marian and Dingdong will become one on Dec. 30 via church u Page 24 wedding (Photo by Michael Varcas) 'Barber's Tale:'A tribute to strong women By Bayani San Diego Jr. Anne Curtis If provoked, Anne Curtis would fight for her man By Marinel R. Cruz Anne Curtis will not hesitate to jump into a catfight for her man. “If a girl who is trying to seduce my boyfriend provokes me, I could get really physical with her. I'm speaking for every woman in love,” said Anne, who has been dating French-Filipino Erwan Heussaff since 2011. In her movie opening Sept. 3, the Chris Martinez romantic comedy “The Gifted,” Anne's character Zoe figures in a fight with childhood friend Aica (played by Cristine Reyes) over a classmate (Sam Milby). Anne recounted fighting for a relationship once. “My guy really Filmmaker Jun Robles Lana recalls having soldiers, priests and insurgents in his clan. As a kid living with his family in Bicol during martial law, he would hear the grown-ups talk about volatile social and political problems. But he never joined in the discussions. Now an adult, the awardwinning filmmaker gets to participate in the discourse through the film “Barber's Tales,” currently in local cinemas. The internationally-lauded film is based on an old script that won for Lana a Palanca Award in 1997. tried to avoid a girl who was Jun Robles Lana (right) directs the cast, led by Eugene Domingo (second from seducing him.” She added, “But if left) and Iza Calzado (third from right), in a remote town in Quezon province. you see that he's also entertaining Facebook photo the girl, walk away - they deserve each other.” Nonstop problems. It makes me wonder transcend the difficulties.” She addressed the persistent “I wanted to make a film on how much progress we've He described his ensemble rumor that she and Erwan had women empowerment, in honor actually achieved.” led by Domingo, Eddie Garcia, broken up: “This will just keep of my mom and all the strong Shoot for the film, in a remote Nonie Buencamino, Shamaine [spreading] because we're not very women who had a profound town in the mountains of Quezon Buencamino, Gladys Reyes and public with our relationship. We influence on my life,” he said. province, was quite arduous, he Iza Calzado - as “brilliant and don't post mushy pictures on Lead actress Eugene Domingo's recounted. “We shot nonstop for dedicated.” Instagram.” character Marilou is a tribute to almost a month - working 20 As a bonus, he got to direct As for settling down, the 29his mentor, the late filmmaker hours a day, at the height of the Nora Aunor. “I was shocked that year-old actress said she'd like this Marilou Diaz-Abaya. typhoon season. There was no she agreed to do a cameo. It was to happen in three or four years. “In Lana elaborated: “[The] electricity and no cell phone an extremely thrilling experience our industry, you stop being 1 9 7 0 s s a w o u r c o u n t r y signal there. We stayed in an to direct the Superstar.” leading-lady material when you struggling against poverty, abandoned and dilapidated “Barber's Tales” has won become a wife. But happily, times insurgency, corruption and schoolhouse.” awards in Udine (Italy), Tokyo are changing. People seem to be domestic issues like He lauded his hard-working (Japan) and Madrid (Spain), but u Page 24 reproductive health. It's 2014 c a s t a n d c r e w . “ T h e i r Lana's fondest wish is for his film u Page 24 and we're facing the same c o m m i t m e n t h e l p e d u s August 22-28, 2014 Page 24 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Cristine happy with role in 'The Gifted' By Shirley Pizarro Cristine Reyes is happy with her role in Viva Films' “The Gifted” because it didn't require her to bare skin unlike in past outings, including “The Trophy Wife.” She was vocal in saying that she is not inclined to pursue sexy roles after her last one because she wants to be able to try other portrayals that would help her become a better actress. She even announced that “The Trophy Wife” was to be the last time her male fans will see her bare on the big screen. In “The Gifted,” co-starring Anne Curtis and Sam Milby, Cristine plays the role of scholar Aica Tabayoyong, a poor and nerdy student with a bad case of acne and is given to wearing thick glasses. She used to be best friends with another outcast, rich and obese Zoe Tuazon (played by Anne Curtis), until they both fell for the same guy, Mark Ferrer (played by Sam). To win the affection of Mark, both If provoked ... From page 23 warming up to the idea of moms playing lead roles. Jodi Sta. Maria ('Be Careful With My Heart') is proof of that.” Anne hopes to become a mom in five years. “I'd rather get married before having a baby but, if it happens [the other way around], it would not be an issue to me.” How do you react when people say you drink too much? I've heard worse. I don't deny that I drink and that I get drunk sometimes. How would you assess your recently concluded TV program, “Dyesebel”? It's safe to admit that it suffered because it wasn't canned, pero naitawid naman namin. Did you have to adjust to working with your ex-boyfriend? Sam and I didn't speak for four years. The long break helped. He may not have worked out for me as a boyfriend, but he's amazing as a friend. Was Erwan ever jealous of Sam? Not anymore. Erwan just [felt] Barber’s Tale ... Cristine Reyes will go to great lengths to change their appearance. The interesting part about the movie is that both Cristine and Anne allowed themselves to be deglamorized for their respective roles, cooperating fully with film director Chris Martinez's requirements. Audiences should watch out for the catfights between the two. Playdate is Sept. 3. Manila Bulletin Davao City declares Ramon Bautista as 'persona non grata' By Aries Joseph Hegina MANILA -- The Davao City Council, led by Mayor Rodrigo Duterte, on Tuesday, August 19 declared comedian Ramon Bautista as “persona non grata” in Davao City, citing that “he is an extremely corrupt influence to the youth” and “his abusive behavior should not be tolerated,” a TV report said. The resolution stemmed from Bautista's remark in a rave party in Davao City during Saturday's Kadayawan Festival celebration, saying, “Ang daming hipon dito sa Davao.” He also led the people in chanting “hipon.” “Hipon” or shrimp is a colloquial term for a person who only has an attractive body but an unattractive face. Bautista later apologized after Davao City Vice Mayor Paolo Duterte reprimanded him. He also issued an apology to be embraced by his countrymen as well. Realistic “Foreigners loved our film [but] I am realistic in my expectations. It's not the usual box-office fare, but I still hope it will find an audience here,” said Lana. “At its core, it's about every Filipino's struggle for identity and recognition. But I made it entertaining and compelling, since cinema is primarily Marian, Dingdong ... From page 23 As to Principal Sponsors, DongYan has veteran star Vilma Santos and President NoyNoy Aquino in mind. “We have not spoken to (Pnoy) yet but we would love to have him if ever,” said Dingdong. Why public? Dingdong shrugged off insinuations that he made the wedding proposal public because he aims to run for public office in 2016. He finds the accusation “unfair,” explaining that all he wanted was to share the “happy” moment with fans. “Everyone has been part of our story. We can choose to keep this private but hindi namin ginawa. We can't deny the fact that we both started in GMA…” Marian and Dingdong first worked together on GMA-7's “Marimar” in 2008. Ramon Bautista. Inquirer photo on Twitter on Monday, admitting that he made a mistake and is willing to accept any consequence which may stem from his deed. The resolution also cited an incident where Bautista posted a picture of him with three young girls on his Instagram account during the said party with a caption, “Ito From page 23 ang kabataan ngayon hihi. # k a d a y a w a n #PasisikatinKitaHijaFoundat ion”. The City Council said that Bautista's action “willfully and arrogantly intended to propagate a culture of sexism and male chauvinism that promotes rude and disrespectful behavior against women.” Inquirer.net Happy family The two plan to start a family the soonest time possible. In fact, Marian, an only child, is already readying herself as a mom - and to a lot of children at that. She said, “Hanggat kaya gumawa ng madaming anak, bakit hindi? Mahirap awkward about the setup in the beginning. He complained that I spent more time with my ex than him. Now, he's cool with it. He's not jealous; he trusts me. That's the best part of being in a relationship with someone mature. How did you make him understand show biz culture? It helped that I was already in the biz when we met. Also, he's half-French, and very liberated in that sense. What was your reaction to making Time magazine's list of “50 smartest” celebrities? I didn't expect that. It's a great feeling! Time's smartest celeb Leonardo DiCaprio often tweets about environmental conservation. What do you think helped you earn the 28th spot? I think they based the result on several things, like the way you tweet or spell. All my (6.8 million) followers know that my Twitter account is a bunch of everything. It can be about social or environmental awareness or random things, like my outfits in “It's Showtime,” or my movie. Inquirer.net for entertainment.” He hopes the government will help make Filipino movies become more competitive here and abroad. “We need government's support to build an audience that is more open to other types and genres of cinema.” In the works is the third part of Lana's small-town trilogy that began with “Bwakaw” and continued in “Barber's Tales.” “The last one is 'Ama Namin (Our Father),' about an orphaned 14-year-old boy who finds out that his father is alive, but that he's a priest,” he said. Inquirer.net maranasan na nag-iisa ka lang, ayokong maranasan ng anak ko 'yun. Ang sarap kaya ng malaking pamilya!” In a serious tone, Dingdong said, “Ako, basta mahalaga sakin merong (anak).” To infinity and beyond With God in the center of their marriage, the couple is confident that the union will stand the test of time. “ Wa l a n g i m p o s i b l e k a p a g nananalig sa kanya. Lahat ng bagay nadadaan sa pagdadasal,” Marian said. “Wala namang relasyon na palaging smooth kasi lahat ay kahit papaano may pinagdadaanan.” Dingdong couldn't agree more, citing this as the very reason it is a must for them to be wed in church. The actor believes that once they are one through the sacrament of matrimony, “'yung paghihiwalay at pagtatapos ng relationship should not be an option.” To further strengthen their bond, the Kapuso actor also considers attending wedding seminars, saying he is “very much willing to take part in that.” “I believe may ibang mga groups who offer seminars and it won't hurt to add something great and good to what we already have,” said he. Manila Bulletn TO ADVERTISE, PLEASE CALL 201-434-1114 August 22-28, 2014 Page 25 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Lav Diaz’s epic 'Mula sa Kung Ano ang Noon' wins top prize at Locarno fest By Bayani San Diego Jr. Lav Diaz showing the trophy of his recent masterpiece “Mula sa Kung Ano ang Noon (From What Is Before)” for winning the Golden Leopard (or Pardo de Oro) in Locarno International Film Festival in Switzerland. Contributed photo/Sailas Vanetti. MANILA -- Filipino filmmaker Lav Diaz's five-anda-half-hour epic “Mula sa Kung Ano ang Noon (From What is Before)” won the top prize at the 67th Locarno International Film Festival. The awards ceremony was held in Switzerland, Saturday (August 16) evening (Swiss time). Diaz's film won the Golden Leopard (or Pardo de Oro) in the fest's main competition. Locarno is considered one of the top 14 film festivals in the world, along with Cannes, Venice and Berlin. Diaz, who attended the film fest in Switzerland, told the Inquirer in an email interview, that he dedicated the honor to the country: “This award is not just for me; it's for Philippine cinema.” According to the Locarno web site, the film won a cash prize of 90,000 CHF to be shared equally between the director and the producer of the Best Picture. Diaz's film also brought home the Fipresci prize, which is handed out by the International Federation of Film Criticsan organization of movie experts and reviewers. Earlier, on Friday, Filipino actress Hazel Orencio won the Boccalino de Oro Independent Critics Award for her work in “Mula sa Kung Ano ang Noon.” Diaz's film also earned rave reviews from foreign critics from various publications like indieWire, the Hollywood Reporter and Filmmaker Magazine. On the Locarno's official web site, five critics singled out Diaz's film as their “favorite” in the festival: Emanuele Sacchi of MyMovies.it, Tereza Fischer of Filmbulletin, Antonio Mariotti of Corriere del Ticino, Ugo Brusaporco of La Regione and Stéphane Gobbo of L'Hebdo. Inquirer.net 'Peksman' album a fairytale-come- Another Filipina makes the true for Hannah Nolasco country proud By Crispina Martinez - Belen By Crispina Martinez - Belen For 16-year-old rising star Hannah Nolasco, getting to record an album is like a fairytale-come-true. Hannah exemplifies the typical teenage Filipina. But what sets her apart from her peers is her being a free spirit. She also has the gift of being able to narrate her personal experiences through songs. She shares, “I want to capture the moments to remember what I am going through.” Hannah describes her music as fun and youthful. “My music will always reflect what I believe in.” Just like any father, Col. Ricardo L. Nolasco Jr. PAF (Ret), is quite supportive of her daughter. He explains, “The album is my humble way of bringing Hannah closer to the realization of her dreams.” With the prayers and support of her Lola Josie, her Tita Jackie and well-meaning friends from the media, “Peksman,” was successfully completed in no time. Hannah, a fourth year high school student from San Beda Alabang, will launch “Peksman” last August 17 at the Hard Rock Café as part of the advance celebration of her birthday on August 19. Hannah Nolasco Filipina beauty Joyce Peñas Pilarsky was recently crowned Classic Mrs. Asia International Global 2014. She is the first Pinay to win the title, besting 14 other finalists in the competition held in Kuala Lumpur. In a press conference held at Roma Salon at Manila Hotel, Joyce shared, “It has been my dream to become an international beauty queen and praise God, it happened!” Winning titles and awards is not new to Joyce, who is also a fashion designer. In 2000, she was named Mrs. PhilippinesGermany, and in 2013, she was chosen as Magnificent Women Icon Philippines. Other honors she's receieved are the Asian Achiever award as Outstanding Fashion Icon from the Asia Pacific Council; the 2014 Dangal ng Bayan award; and the 2014 Seal of Excellence award. Joyce's ultimate dream is to establish an international fashion brand with Angelina Jolie as signature model. Local celebrities who've worn Joyce's clothes include Solenn Heusaff, Mikee Cojuangco-Jaworski and Miss World Megan Young. Manila Bulletin Joyce Peñas Pilarsky August 22-28, 2014 Page 26 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Two Filipino films selected KC Concepcion joins in Asian Project Market 'Ikaw Lamang' By Jonathan M. Hicap The Asian Project Market (APM) will be held as part of the 19th Busan International Film Festival in South Korea in October. A total of 30 projects from 20 countries were chosen for this year's APM, and two these are Filipino gems directed by two award-winning Pinoy directors: Hannah Espia's “Learning to Build a Fire”; and Brillante Mendoza's “Fowl,” a co-production of the Philippines, France and Germany. Mendoza won the 2005 Locarno International Film Festival Golden Leopard (for “Masahista”) and the 2009 Cannes Film Festival Best Director (“Kinatay”) awards. Espia, on the other hand, has b e e n awa rd e d fo r B e s t Direction at this year's Gawad Urian Awards for the film “Transit.” The APM is the biggest investment and coproduction market in Asia, according to the organizers. It connects promising film projects to investors. KC Concepcion Directors Brillante Mendoza (left) and Hannah Espia (Photos: Mendoza's Instagram and Espia's Facebook) The 19th Busan International Film Festival will run from October 2 to 11; the Asian Project Market will be held from October 6 to 8. According to the film festival organizers, Korean a c t re s s M o o n S o r i a n d Japanese actor Ken Watanabe (who appeared in this year's “Godzilla”) will host the opening ceremony slated on October 2. Manila Bulletin MANILA -- Mega daughter KC Concepcion will return on television this August via the hit ABS-CBN primetime series "Ikaw Lamang." After the success of the soap's book one, Kim Chiu and Coco Martin's character will continue as next members of the Hidalgo and Severino families. Coco will now play Gabriel while Kim will breathe life to Andrea. KC, on the other hand, will take on the role of Natalia, the elder sister of Chiu's character. A s i d e f r o m KC , " I k a w Lamang" will also feature seasoned actors such as Amy Austria, Joel Torre, Rio Locsin, u Page 27 Isabelle's second wind By Marjorie S. Duran She is still known to many as “Duday,” her character in the now defunct GMA-7 sitcom “Daddy DiDoDu.” It's been eight years since her child acting turn but Isabelle de Leon noted, “hanggang ngayon Duday pa rin ang tawag sa akin.” Though grateful for having made her mark via the show, Isabelle maintains that it's high time she reintroduces herself to the public. “'Yung effort na lumayo from Duday feeling ko natural naman po kasi nagdadalaga na rin ako, nag-mamature,” she said. Isabelle now wants to be recognized as a singer-songwriter-actress. The 20-year-old made a splash in the recording scene via her debut album “LoveZone” released last year. She is now set on furthering her musical career via TV5's upcoming musical series “Trenderas,” along with Nora Aunor and newbie actresses Katrina Velarde and Lara Mauige. The former child star is hopeful that the series will propel her career to greater heights. “I'm just praying and doing my best sa bawat eksena,” she said. The devout Christian also added, “Kung saan man Niya ako dalhin, tuloy ang career o maging simple lang ako, I believe I'm content dahil alam ko na may plano ang Panginoon for me.” Isabelle is grateful for having a show that allows her to showcase her skills in acting and singing. “Parehong puso ang pinapagana sa dalawa. They are the arts na mahal na mahal ko talaga,” she said. “Trenderas” tells the story of three trinkets seller dreaming of becoming singing professionals. Starstruck If there's one thing that Isabelle would always cherish about being part of the show, it's the day that Nora heaped praises on her and fellow stars Katrina and Lara. She recalled Nora telling them, “Naku, ang gagaling nitong mga batang 'to.” The singer-actress considers herself lucky to work with the veteran actress whom she describes as “very kind, sobrang humble at napaka-generous.” Isabelle is cast in the upcoming series 'Trenderas' (Photo by Marjorie S. Duran) She said meeting Nora had left her “starstruck.” Thankfully, it helped that their scenes together required her to act just that. “Ang role niya (Nora), siya 'yung idol n a m i n n a m a g m e m e n to r s a m i n kalaunan,” she related. “'Yung (required emotion) sa eksena namin with her, 'yun din 'yung emosyon namin in real life. Starstruck na starstruck kami so inilalabas lang namin 'yung totoo naming nararamdaman.” Isabelle said Nora offered her some acting advice: “Magrelax lang. 'Wag kakabahan.” On 'daddy' Vic Some months back, Isabelle was reunited with “Daddy DiDoDu” lead actor Vic Sotto via “Eat Bulaga!” She said Vic uttered in surprise, “Dalagang dalaga ka na!” Isabelle added, “Tuwang-tuwa silang lahat (to see me again), including tito Joey de Leon, Michael V and tita Ruby (Rodriguez) kasi hindi nila akalain na marunong ako magsulat ng kanta.” Isabelle hopes to work with her 'daddy' Vic again and certainly wouldn't mind if an offer comes her way. Manila Bulletin August 22-28, 2014 Page 27 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Solenn Heussaff: I've already settled down Coco Martin. Inset: Joel Torre (top) and Christopher de Leon Coco looks up to Christopher, Joel By Rowena Tan Actor Coco Martin hopes to follow in the footsteps of veteran actors Joel Torre and Christopher de Leon, both of whom he is working with in the series “Ikaw Lamang.” “Sina Tito Boyet at Tito Joel, isa po silang inspirasyon para sa'kin. Sabi ko, sana dumating ang araw na marating ko 'yung narating nila na matatandaan ka ng tao dahil sa ginawa mo,” he told Bulletin Entertainment in a recent interview. The 32-year-old said he admires Torre and de Leon not only for their dedication and discipline as actors but also for their kind heart. “Siyempre nandoon din po 'yung marami akong natutunan sa kanila pagdating sa personal na buhay,” he added. Martin said that he notice a lot of “similarities” between him and Torre, revealing, “kapag nasa set kami, inaaral ko siya 'di lang bilang aktor (kundi pati) bilang tao.” He didn't discuss these parallels in depth, but he acknowledged that he still has a long way to go before reaching his status. “Nandoon pa lang ako sa gumagawa ako ng direksyon para sa sarili ko,” he said. Not pressured Martin's main priority at this point is to save for the future. He shared that this is so he can provide a good life for his future wife. “Siyempre dapat 'pag mahal mo ang isang tao… kapag nakita mo na ang taong minamahal mo, ipaglalaban mo na 'yan habang buhay eh, dapat nakapagipon ka na,” he said. Coco's is not aiming to be a multibillionaire, stressing that he only wants a comfortable life. “Sabi ko nga dati pa na hindi naman sobra-sobra 'yung gusto o pangarap ko para sa pamilya ko. Mataas 'yung pangarap ko pero alam ko lang kung ano 'yung para sa akin…” he said. Manila Bulletin KC Concepcion joins ... From page 26 Nonie Buencamino, and Christopher de Leon. Completing the new cast are Smokey Manaloto, Arlene Muhlach, Jojit Lorenzo, and Mylene Dizon. "Ikaw Lamang" started with the love story of Samuel and Isabelle, played by Coco and Kim, respectively. Their love was tested by time, personal and political conflict. The soap also featured performances of Jake Cuenca, who recently won the Best Male Kontrabida trophy at the 4th Yahoo! Celebrity Awards, Julia Montes, Angel Locsin, Cherie Gil, Cherry Pie Picache, Tirso Cruz III, Ronaldo Valdez and more. The Kapamilya series, which is under the production of Dreamscape Entertainment Television, is directed by Malu Sevilla, Manny Palo, and Avel Sunpongco. The Filipino Express is only $40 (52 copies) for one year. That’s only 77 cents per copy and mailed right to your home ! For details, call us at 201-434-1114 or send an email to filexpress@aol.com. MANILA -- For Solenn Heussaff, settling down doesn't mean getting married. The 29-year-old actress was asked what age she intends to settle down with her boyfriend, Argentine businessman Nico Bolzico. "Settled down na naman ako, almost three years nagli-live in na kami. Pag may singsing, same, wala namang mag-iiba," she answered. On whether she still hopes to walk down the aisle, Heussaff added: "Hindi ako pressured. Siyempre naman, it's every girl's dream, but if it doesn't happen now, hindi ako iiyak." If she and Bolzico do get married, Heussaff said she would prefer to have the ceremony done outside the Philippines, with only close friends and family members in attendance. "Pag magkasal ako, sa abroad for sure, kasi gusto ko maliit 'yung wedding," she said. "Ayoko mag-invite ng mga hindi close. Kahit sa family ko, I'm not so close to Solenn Heussaff everyone, so gusto ko lang 60 people sa wedding. Thirty sa side ko, 30 sa side niya." Among the few celebrity guests, Heussaff said, would be Lovi Poe, Heart Evangelista, Rufa Mae Quinto, Michelle Madrigal, Bianca King, and Rhian Ramos, among others. Heussaff's preference to keep her relationship private extends to possible work opportunities with Bolzico, who was recently tapped as an ambassador of a watch brand. While she will not prohibit her boyfriend from endorsing products, Heussaff said it is unlikely that she will agree to work with him in a similar project. "Parang ayoko, kasi after, maraming intriga. You all know I hate intriga. He can do his own thing. Kung gusto niya, gagawin ko, pero choice ko lang, ayaw ko. His work is his work, mine is mine," she said. Meanwhile, the "Seduction" star said she is happy for her brother, food blogger Erwan Heussaff, and actress Anne Curtis, who have been a couple for four years and a half now. "Happy naman ako kasi love ko si Anne. Pag mangyayari ng something, susubukan kong... I'd hit my brother!" she quipped. "I love Anne so much, so I'm happy na sila parin. Strong naman 'yung relationship nila." August 22-28, 2014 Page 28 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Big names in billiards playing in tournament organized by Pacquiao By Aquiles Zonio Alekhine Nouri to train in the US for world chess championship. Facebook photo 8-year-old PH chess prodigy gets world-class training in US By Bert Eljera LAS VEGAS, Nevada -- An 8-year-old Filipino chess prodigy is seeking s p e c i a l i z e d c h e s s t ra i n i n g a n d instructions in the United States in a bid to contend in the World Youth Chess championships. Alekhine Nouri, a student at Far Eastern University-FERN, left August 10 for California to get world-class training at the North California House of Chess. “Yes, we are sponsoring his trip here, including the camp fees and lodging,” said Ted Castro, who owns the chess school, in a Facebook posting. While at the facility, Nouri will be tutored by a group of grandmasters and international masters that includes GM Enrico Sevillano and IM Ricardo de Guzman. He was accompanied by his father, NM Hamed Nouri, himself an accomplished chess player. “Gratitude is the memory of the heart. Thank you, Sir Ted Castro & North California House of Chess,” Alekhine posted on his Facebook page. “I'm so excited to see you.” NorCal House of Chess conducts chess camps for kids with grandmaster coaching, and many of its students have won national titles at the scholastic and junior levels. In addition to Sevillano and de Guzman, FM Ronald Cusi also teaches at the school. Former women's world champion Susan Polgar and Varuzhan Akobian, who is currently playing for Team USA at the Chess Olympiad in Tromso are also visiting teachers at the facility. “This kid needs all the support that he can get,” Castro said. He added that the boy's father solicited sponsorship, but could only get a little, not enough to sustain long training regimen for the youth championship. Castro said Nouri will attend the NorCal summer chess camp that usually last 10 weeks, but arrangement are being made for the boy to stay longer. This year's world youth championship will be in Durban, South Africa, Sept. 18 30. Next year, it will be held in Porto Carras, Greece. Nouri is following the footsteps of Wesley So, the Philippines' best player, who has decided to study in the United States and sought foreign coaching to improve his game. However, So's situation is in limbo because the NCFP, the chess governing body in the Philippines has not consented to his move to transfer federation to the United States. Inquirer.net Algieri not in Pacquiao's league - Roach By Nick Giongco There's nothing in Chris Algieri that turns Hall of Fame trainer Freddie Roach on. In the eyes of Roach, the 30-yearold Algieri is just an ordinary guy although he's “tall and got a lot of reach advantage,” said the Wild Card guru in an interview with fightnews over the weekend as he gets ready to whip Manny Pacquiao into form for the Nov. 23 clash in Macau with the unbeaten American of Italian and Argentine extraction. While Algieri caused Roach some pain following his victory over Ruslan Provodnikov, a one-time sparring partner of Pacquiao, Roach doesn't see anything special in the native of Long Island, New York. “He's not in Manny's class. He is jumping a little bit too soon,” said the 54-year-old former fighter. But before Roach and Pacquiao get reunited once again for the nth time since 2001, Algieri and his Filipino rival are going on a press tour of Macau and Shanghai and four cities in the US mainland beginning early next week. The kickoff event of the promo tour will be in Macau on Aug. 25 with The Venetian, site of the November showdown as host of the press conference. From the former Portuguese colony, Pacquiao and Algieri and their respective camps and the Top Rank team, will travel to Shanghai for another media gig there on Aug. 26 and head to the US for similar stops in San Francisco, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and New York City. Algieri stands 5-foot-10 and has a three-and-a-half inch advantage, possesses a longer reach and a pistonlike jab. Still, Roach is still being nice and diplomatic in assessing Algieri's overall skills. “He's a good boxer,” said Roach, who wants to set up training camp in General Santos City, and not in Metro Manila, where Pacquiao's basketball team Kia Motors will be headquartered in preparation for the opening of the PBA on Oct. 19. Manila Bulletin GENERAL SANTOS CITY -International billiards artists such as Mika Immonen of Finland, Thorsten Hohmann of Germany, Earl Strickland of the United States and Ralf Soquet of Germany, are coming to town in September, Sarangani Representative Manny Pacquiao said. Pacquiao told the Inquirer in a telephone interview on Friday these professional cue artists were among billiard players from 30 countries who will be competing in the fiveday International Open Double 10-Ball Tournament that he has organized. The P5-million tournament will be held at the Pacman Multi-Sports Gymnasium in the Tambler district of General Santos September 1 to 5. It will also feature other noted foreign players like Jason Shaw of Canada, Darren Appleton of the United Kingdom and American Rodney Morris. Rep. Manny Pacquiao. Inquirer photo “Top billiard players from 30 countries have already confirmed their attendance,” said Pacquiao, himself a billiards enthusiast. He said he himself would play alongside international pool champion Marlon Manalo during the tournament. Pairs of Filipino professional cue artists will also be playing during the Wo r l d P o c k e t B i l l i a r d s Association-sanctioned event. They include Nickoy Lining and Ramil Gallego; Jeff de Luna and Jeffrey Ignacio; Gaga Gabica and Israel Rota; Efren 'Bata' Reyes and Django Bustamante; and Dennis Orcollo and Carlo Biado. Pacquiao said the tournament was part of various activities lined up for the city's week-long Tuna Festival. The city will also be celebrating its 46th charter anniversary on September 5. But he said his main goal in inviting international pool players over was “to promote not just the image of Sarangani and General Santos but of the entire Mindanao.” “So, it's a great opportunity for us to prove to them that there's more to Mindanao than sensationalized reports of v i o l e n c e a n d c o n f l i c t ,” Pacquiao added. Pacquiao said that the tournament champion will take home $40,000 plus a trophy, while the first runnerup will pocket $15,000. Cash prizes will also be given even up to the 16th placer, he said. Inquirer.net August 22-28, 2014 Page 29 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Hibla’ exhibit ... From page 16 When the exhibit moved to its permanent location, Sonja Villarica Garcia discussed the crafts of the Bagobo Tagbawa ethnic group. A Bagobo master weaver, an inabal weaver and an abaca fiber dyer were with her to show their skills. In celebration of Women's Month last March, the museum hosted “Abel Ilokana: Celebrating Women Weavers from Ilocos Sur, La Union, Ilocos Norte and Abra.” Showcased then were the traditional occasions where abel cloth was used, such as childbirths, weddings and funerals. More modern uses of abel cloth such as those in fashion were also featured. Legarda recalled that aside from lectures on traditional textiles, the museum also makes an effort to invite weavers from different provinces like Laguna and Aklan as well as dye-makers like the Talaingod from Mt. Apo in Davao. Shortage of materials More than the fear that traditional textile making would stop, the senator expressed concern over how climate change would affect the supply of indigenous materials used to create the fabrics. As it is, the shortage of raw materials is already cause for concern. “Our indigenous textiles are very dependent on raw materials. The threads they use are made of abaca, piña, cotton and silk; while the dyes they use come from local plants and herbs,” she pointed out. Legarda said the Philippine Fiber Industry Development Authority and the Philippine Textile Research Institute have already raised concerns on the frequency and strength of heavy rains and typhoons, which affect the quality and quantity of fiber raw materials available for local textile producers. In the meantime, more effort would be exerted to ensure that people would remain aware of traditional fabric making. “This exhibit and the issues surrounding it may not be a priority of politicians because this is not a matter of political savvy. We just don't want a textile exhibit, we want interactive learning and continuous education in textiles,” she stressed. For now, Legarda said the National Museum hosts quarterly lectures on indigenous textiles and traditional knowledge. “These are things to engage people. We are starting it by lighting a fire, and we hope it would ignite a passion and this fire would really germinate so every school perhaps or local government unit would have local museums or contemporize the way they present these. I hope this exhibit sets an example to inspire others,” Legarda said. Inquirer.net EXPRESS SUDOKU HOW TO PLAY: Place a number from 1 to 9 in each empty cell so that each row, each column and each 3x3 block contains all the numbers from 1 to 9 Solution to Issue 33 Sudoku Solution to Issue 33 Crossword Why they are coming home ... From page 15 country was at the top of the heap regionally when I left, and in just 30 years it had sunk to the bottom. “I returned, rather disillusioned, to New York City, but family considerations got into the picture and I'm back in Manila. Retirement was premature and unplanned, but my dad's death and the circumstances around it forced the issue, and I realized family matters meant so much more to me now as well as my other health advocacies for which I've all but given up my medical practice. Aurora Noriega, MD “Six months before my retirement, I started having back problems and feeling homesick at the same time. I had lived in the US from 1966 to 2000. I did a yearlong internship in Philadelphia, another year in Ohio, another four years back in Philadelphia before settling down to OB-GYN practice in New Jersey. “Mostly I missed family, my sister's grandchildren, old friends, and the good old Filipino ways. I missed the food, too. It's also cheaper to live here in retirement. After living more than half of my life in the US, I realized I h a d l e f t my h e a r t i n t h e Philippines. I've been back and never had second thoughts about it. But I have also left many friends, as well as a part of me, in the States. But, again, I brought home with me lots of good memories.” “It was only in the year 2000, after we had set up Ascott Manila, Discovery Suites, Enterprise Center and Food Park, that I was able to tell myself that we had done the right thing.” Annabelle Wisniewski “Destiny - that's what brought us, my Polish-American husband Tom and I, back to the Philippines. N o t h i n g wa s c l e a r i n t h e beginning. Tom and I had met in Cornell University and settled in San Francisco after living in Subic, where Tom managed the Officers Club. All our three sons were born in Makati Medical Center. “One day in 1994 I got an offer to be a consultant to the Ascott group in Singapore, an offer I could not refuse. Singapore was close enough for me to visit the Philippinesmy mom was still very much aroundotherwise I'd be constantly calling Tom in tears from the then boring and unexciting Singapore. We opened Ascott Jakarta, Ascott Mayfair London, Ascott KL, and, finally in 1996, Ascott Manila. “From being employed and being made partners, no matter how big our partners were or how well-compensated we were, Tom and I decided in the long run that we'd be better off setting up our own business here. Thus Raintree, our family corporation, was born. Tom came home in 1998. One by one our children, all schooled and gainfully employed and on their own in the US and Europe, started coming home. Tom Wisniewski “More than Annabelle, it was I who wanted to live, work and grow old here. She could have settled anywhere. We had lived here in the early part of our marriage when I managed the Officers Club in Subic. And I was hooked. I loved the lifestyle and the close family ties. “It's hard to believe how things worked out for us. I thought the US would be our permanent home. We now live in the house of my late mother-inlaw, the same house my three boys stayed in as children and where Annabelle hosted classmates and friends since even before my time. But such is life hereties run deep. “My wife is not bothered by politics, the only negative side of living here, which seems to consume everybody else, although now and then she can still feel aghast at some of the shenanigans. But it won't get in the way of what she has set out to do for the day. She'd say, instead of complaining about the darkness, people should light a candle. I'd like to think we've come home to do just that - light as many candles in as many places as we can.” Inquirer.net EXPRESS CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Honor 6. Garments of goat hair 10. Blackthorn 14. Bushbaby 15. Start over 16. Distort 17. Nutritious 19. Therefore 20. Pass by 21. New Zealand parrot 22. Quaint outburst 23. Seminal fluid 25. Redress 26. Catholic church service 30. Fit for farming 32. An abusive word or phrase 35. Brown coal 39. High regard 40. Complex in design 41. Hopelessness 43. Noblewoman 44. Layers 46. Rice beer 47. Foundation 50. Type of vacuum flask 53. Historical periods 54. Knight's title 55. Flower part 60. Defeat decisively 61. A disorder of memory 63. Feudal worker 64. At the peak of 65. Tumbler 66. Rip 67. Arid 68. Wash out with a solvent DOWN 1. Wings 2. Water source 3. Dogfish 4. Backside 5. Put on clothes 6. Paintings 7. A chemistry cup 8. An endocrine gland 9. Kind of bean 10. Enticements 11. Very slow in tempo 12. Keyboard instrument 13. Lyric poem 18. Born as 24. A thick flat pad 25. Seaweed 26. A fitting reward (archaic) 27. Church alcove 28. Seats oneself 29. Daughter of a step-parent 31. Remain 33. Warms 34. Arab chieftain 36. Bright thought 37. Chore 38. If not 42. Emit 43. Animal foot 45. Panic 47. Type of cap 48. Got up 49. Steam bath 51. Supply with weapons 52. Cooktop 54. Resorts 56. Mobile phone 57. Brother of Jacob 58. Fog 59. Leisure 62. Gorilla August 22-28, 2014 Page 30 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Rentals u Help Wanted u Jobs u Personal u Services We place: Nannies-Housekeepers-Companions NATIONWIDE PLACEMENTS Live in Live Out Full Time Part Time MANDATORY SCREENINGS TOP SALARIES Complete your online application today! www.householdstaffing.com 610-664-5233 PROPERTY FOR SALE CONDO FOR RENT Property 4 Sale on Well furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo in Makati City for rent. EAGLE ROCK GOLF COURSE PENNSYLVANIA 32 Free Rounds Free Skiing Lot on 14th Green Reduced $62,500/BO Accessible to church, shopping malls and entertainment. Weekly, Monthly and Six Months rates reasonable. Please call Call 6098121940 917-379-4478 MED-TECH WANTED The Filipino Express is only $40 (52 copies) for one year. That’s only 77 cents per copy and mailed right to your home ! Wanted Med-Tech with experience. Part time (10 am to 6 pm) in 33 Bowery, Chinatown, NY 10002. Please call 917-578-4260 Email: Cplab33@Yahoo.com For details, call us at 201-434-1114 or send an email to filexpress@aol.com September 30, 2014 September 30, 2014 August 22-28, 2014 Page 31 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS August 22-28, 2014 Page 32 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS
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