The Filipino Express v28 Issue 02
Transcription
The Filipino Express v28 Issue 02
VOL. 28 w NO. 02 w NATIONAL EDITION w NEW JERSEY w NEW YORK w JANUARY 10 - 16, 2014 w (201) 434-1114 w $1.00 u Page 19 Barefoot devotees clamber over one another to touch the Black Nazarene during the ebony-hued wooden statue's slow procession from Manila's main park to a historic church in Manila on January 9, 2014. Millions of barefoot devotees packed the streets of Manila for one of the world's biggest Catholic parades, honoring a statue of Jesus Christ they believe has miraculous powers. AFP 35% bunkhouse kickbacks probed Scary Low-Pressure Area Lacson: Politician eyed in new scam By Christian V. Esguerra Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) weather forecaster Joey Figuracion points at the satellite image of the low-pressure area (LPA) located 1,400 kilometers east of Mindanao yesterday. If it intensifies into a typhoon and enters the country, it will be named 'Agaton' as the country's first storm this year. Local disaster officials in Albay are preparing for what they fear a 'Yolanda'-like super-typhoon. (Jacqueline Hernandez) Manila Bulletin Fil-Am appointed Utah attorney general Rehabilitation chief Panfilo Lacson (inset) has begun investigating reports of a possible “collusion” between contractors and “at least one politician” to pocket kickbacks of 30 to 35 percent in the construction of bunkhouses (shown in photo) for victims of Supertyphoon “Yolanda” in Leyte and Samar. Photo of Lacson from Inquirer file/AP photo/Achmad Ibrahim Rehabilitation chief Panfilo Lacson has begun investigating reports of a possible “collusion” between contractors and “at least one politician” to pocket kickbacks of 30 to 35 percent in the construction of bunkhouses for victims of Supertyphoon “Yolanda” in Leyte and Samar. Lacson, a former senator and Philippine National Police chief, has tapped the PNP Criminal Investigation and Detection Group to help gather evidence in the investigation he “quietly” u Page 6 Four to receive Carlos P. Romulo Award on Jan. 14 MANILA -- “In my blood runs the immortal seed … that flowered down the centuries in deeds of Loida Nicolas Lewis (contributed photo) and CHEd courage and defiance,” thus reads what may be then WASHINGTON, DC -- Filipino-American chairperson Patricia Licuanan (Photo from ched.gov.ph) United Nations General Assembly President Carlos Sean Reyes has been sworn in as state P. Romulo's most celebrated speech, “I am a attorney general of Utah, becoming the first Filipino.” Asian-American to hold a statewide post in And on his 115th birthday, a nongovernment that state. organization will bestow an award that Reyes, 42, is the son of immigrants with “remembers his legacy” to Filipinos who have Filipino and Spanish roots. Married with six proven that the same blood still flows. children, he was raised in Southern The United Nations Association of the California and received his law degree from Philippines (Unap) on Jan. 14 will accord the UC Berkeley in 1997. General Carlos P. Romulo (CPR) Award for At his swearing in, Reyes vowed “to International Achievements to four persons who restore public trust” in an office devastated “have put the Philippines on the world map.” by scandal, and “create a culture change” Manny Pacquiao (Inquirer file photo) and Foreign Secretary u Page 8 u Page 8 Sean Reyes Albert del Rosario (AFP file photo) January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 2 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS 9 senators realign P1.8 Billion pork By TJ Burgonio, Gil C. Cabacungan (From left to right) A. CAYETANO, P. CAYETANO, EJERCITO, ESTRADA, LAPID, RECTO, REVILLA, SANTIAGO, TRILLANES. INQUIRER FILE PHOTOS Nine senators who had their pork barrel totaling P1.8 billion realigned to projects and the calamity fund in the 2014 national budget were well within their rights to do so, Sen. Francis Escudero said on Wednesday. For instance, Escudero said, Sen. Jinggoy Estrada was doing his job when he introduced an amendment to allot his P200 million in Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) allocation to three local government units [including Manila where his father is the mayor]. This came ahead of the implementation of the P2.265trillion national budget, and hence, did not violate the Supreme Court decision striking d o w n t h e 2 0 1 3 P DA F a s unconstitutional, according to the chair of the finance committee. Even so, the final decision to release or not to release the fund allotted to the three local government units (LGUs) lay with the executive department, he said. “In accordance with the powers of Congress, all of us can introduce an amendment. That's our legislative power. If the President submits the budget, we can't skirt our duty to amend it. What are we, a rubber stamp?” Escudero said by phone, chuckling. As the pork barrel scandal roiled Congress, 15 senators opted to have each of their P200million annual PDAF allocation deleted from the 2014 budget, as did Vice President Jejomar Binay. That was P3.2 billion less than the House of R e p r e s e n t a t ive s - a p p r o ve d P2.268-trillion budget. In the end, both chambers approved a P2.265-trillion budget that President Aquino signed into law before Christmas. The other nine senators decided to realign their respective allocations. Cayetano et al. Escudero said Senators Alan Peter and Pia Cayetano, Ralph Recto, Miriam Defensor-Santiago and Joseph Victor Ejercito manifested to have their PDAF allocation realigned to the calamity fund. u Page 4 The Bureau of Customs (BOC) has been losing more than P5 billion a year due to the undervaluation of imported plastic manufacturing materials by a group led by “Ma'am T,” one of the big-time players in the Department of Finance-attached agency. Inquirer photo Customs losing P5-B a year to 'Ma'am T' et al. By Jerry E. Esplanada MANILA -- The Bureau of Customs (BOC) has been losing more than P5 billion a year due to the undervaluation of imported plastic manufacturing materials by a group led by “Ma'am T,” one of the big-time players in the Department of Finance-attached agency. This was revealed to the Inquirer on Wednesday by a newly appointed BOC official who said that at the bureau “Ma'am T is also known as Ma'am Tina,” which is short for “a certain Tina Yu.” “Many customs old-timers know who she is. Her influence, as well as her generosity, are common knowledge at the bureau,” the official noted. The source confirmed this paper's earlier report that underthe-table deals between corrupt examiners, appraisers and other frontline bureau personnel and players like Ma'am T were among the main causes of the BOC's failure to meet its revenue collection targets. “ B e c a u s e o f h e r, t h e importation of plastic resin products, mainly by front business firms or consignees being used by u Page 4 January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 3 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Bunkhouses built by government violate building code By Bong Lozada MANILA -- Architect Jun Palafox, who has worked in various rebuilding and rehabilitation programs in different countries, said that the bunkhouses built by the g ove r n m e n t a s te m p o ra r y shelters for people rendered homeless by Yolanda were substandard and undersized. In an interview with Inquirer Radio 990AM, the urban planner also said that the construction and design of the temporary shelters were “inhumane.” “I can confirm they (bunkhouses) were substandard and undersized,” said Palafox. International standards, he said, require bunkhouses to be at least 20 square meters and should have two bedrooms. “Daughters should not be sleeping with their fathers or brothers, it's a basic human requirement,” he explained. “What I saw there was so inhumane.” Palafox, who has worked with 38 other countries in rebuilding disaster-stricken areas, compared the bunkhouses that they built in Sri Lanka and Malaysia to the ones being built in Leyte. “I'm reminded of the saying, `We build monuments for the dead but we can't even provide decent housing for the living','' he said by phone when interviewed by the Inquirer. He added that the bunkhouses in Leyte have violated various laws in terms of building construction, saying that the spaces for the families are cramped and the materials used were fire hazards. “ Va r i o u s i n t e r n a t i o n a l organizations confirmed that they (bunkhouses) are cramped and are fire hazards; there is no privacy; it violates the building code… I would not put my family there,” Palafox said. “How can you put a family of five into a six to nine square-meter room while the materials used were onefourth plywood.” Palafox also said that the roofing, which were made with “dos aguas” galvanized iron sheets (two slopes) were the CLASSES RESUME. Rex Tismo, 5, is all smiles as classes in kindergarten and other levels resume at Manlurip Elementary School in Tacloban City, two months after Supertyphoon “Yolanda” destroyed schools and houses, and killed thousands on Nov. 8, 2013. Only about one out of three students enrolled at the school before the typhoon returned for the resumption of classes. NIÑO JESUS ORBETA Happy, sad as classes reopen in Tacloban By Joey Gabieta again, but she also felt sad 2013, came back for the because only 32 of her original resumption of classes that TACLOBAN CITY -- The 67 students showed up. started with the singing of the resumption of classes on “I just hope and pray that national anthem and ended with M o n d a y, J a n . 6 i n a r e a s they just left the city and nothing short physical exercises. devastated by Supertyphoon bad happened to them,” she said. “Yolanda” was a bittersweet So far, four students of Tent experience for Grade 2 teacher Manlurip Elementary School The Grades 5 and 6 students Arlene Restor of Manlurip have been confirmed dead. stayed at the 60-square-meter Elementary School here. Only 36 percent (137) of the tent donated by the United u Page 6 Restor was happy to return 383 pupils enrolled at the N a t i o n s C h i l d r e n' s F u n d to school and see her students elementary school before Nov. 8, u Page 7 January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 4 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Customs losing P5-B ... From page 2 her group, has become centralized. That is why importers of these products deal only with her,” said the source. INQUIRER FILE PHOTO 'Buddy R' tagged in rice import scam DAVAO CITY -- Amid reports about a David Tan being behind massive rice smuggling in the country and the search for who he really is, a militant organization that had been alleging widespread corruption in rice importation by the government said a bagman is operating in the agriculture department delivering rice import contracts to private traders and hundreds of millions of pesos in kickbacks to officials. The bagman, according to lawyer Argee Guevarra, president of the group Sanlakas, is “Buddy R.” Guevarra issued the statement amid the controversy over a David Tan allegedly controlling the smuggling of rice into the country, including in this port where two shipments of rice are currently on hold on suspicion of smuggling. Kickbacks from imports According to the Sanlakas statement, Buddy R “manages kickbacks” generated from the importation by the National Food Authority (NFA) of rice. The NFA imports rice as buffer stock after reports showed that the government is not likely to be able to meet its rice production targets this year. Buddy R, according to the Sanlakas statement, is a trader that corners contracts from the agriculture department to import rice and delivers commissions to officials involved in the rice importation deals. “Besides being involved in the illicit rice scheme, he is engaged in buying NFA properties at a very cheap price and selling or leasing the same at a higher cost,” said G u e va r ra i n t h e S a n l a k a s statement. Inquirer.net BIR needs 6,000 lawyers, CPAs to boost drive By Jun Ramirez MANILA -- The Bureau of Internal Revenue is hiring an additional 6,000 lawyers and certified public accountants to boost its tax collection campaign and hit this year's estimated P1.3 trillion target for the year. This was disclosed yesterday by BIR Commissioner Kim S. Jacinto Henares as the Department of Budget and Management approved the bureau's rationalization plan. Henares said graduates of commerce courses with at least 18 units in accounting may also apply as collection officers to be assigned in the provinces. The recruitment program will increase the personnel complement of the bureau from 12,000 to 18,000. Under the plan, the BIR will detail one collection officer per town or municipality to maximize the collection of taxes in the countryside. Many taxpayers in the provinces escaped payment of correct taxes, or pay no taxes at all because of the shortage of collection officers. Presently, three or four adjoining towns are covered by only one collection agent. Likewise, financial statements of many taxpayers in Metro Manila and other urban centers are not thoroughly assessed because of lack of manpower, thus the hiring of additional lawyers and CPAs. Records showed that the bureau has only about 3,500 personnel directly into the the tax collection job, a small number compared to other South East Asian Countries which have thrice or four times more. BIR insiders cited Vietnam which has more than 44,000 tax examiners despite the fact that its economy is smaller compared to the Philippines and its major industries under government control. Manila Bulletin www.realestateattorneynj.com Influence imports Like other players, Ma'am T can influence the volume of imports handled by the bureau, “either by withholding or bringing in more shipments to help the customs meet its monthly collection targets.” That is, if the mutually agreed on “tara,” or dirty money, to facilitate the release of the imports is met between them and their contacts at the agency, the official said. But a second source, a former 9 Senators ... From page 2 Escudero said Senators Ramon Revilla Jr., Lito Lapid and Antonio Trillanes IV decided to allot their PDAF to schools, hospitals and public works projects, while Estrada opted to have his allocated to the LGUs. Breakdown Based on data culled by the Inquirer from the 2014 General Appropriations Act, four senators allocated the funds to the following: EstradaManila, P100 million; Caloocan City, P50 million where Mayor Oscar Malapitan is a political ally; and Lla-lo, Cagayan province, P50 million, where an airport is being built to serve the Cagayan Special Economic Zone. LapidDepartment of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), P193 million; Department of Health (DOH), P5 million; and Department of Social Welfare and Development, P2 million. RevillaDPWH, P84.5 million; DOH, P75 million; and University of the Philippines, P35 million. TrillanesDOH-Office of the S e c r e t a r y, P 1 0 2 . 4 5 m i l l i o n ; Commission on Higher Education, P36.2 million; Philippine Army, P27.95 million; Philippine Navy, P22 million; Philippine National Police, P7.4 million; and Technical Education and Skills Development Authority, P4 million. Trillanes justification Sought for comment, Trillanes said he decided to realign his allocation to fund the scholarship programs of state universities and colleges, and support charity patients in public hospitals and the construction of barracks for soldiers affected by the abolition. “Deleting it from the national budget will not allow me to do this unless I will realign funds from the budget of other government agencies,” he said in a text message Wednesday night. In a text message, Budget Secretary Florencio Abad said the amount that Estrada realigned was approved by the Senate and adopted b y t h e b i c a m e ra l c o n f e r e n c e committee. “ T h ey we re i n t ro d u c e d a s amendments to the budget. As such, they will require a special budget request for their release,” said Abad. While Abad could not verify the other realignments made by Lapid, Revilla and Trillanes, he said these would also be subject to the same treatment as Estrada's realignments. customs official, said that like other players, Ma'am T had “on many occasions fallen prey to the so-called 'alert me, release me' scheme” practiced by some corrupt bureau personnel. Under the scheme, players are allowed to bring in undervalued imports. Upon their filing, however, of import entries and payment of duties based on the undervalued declarations, alert orders are issued against the goods. An assessment of the shipment's supposed real value is then made and the player makes additional payments to facilitate the lifting of the order and the release of the shipment.” “The additional payments, of course, are shared among all those involved in the scheme, and not the bureau,” said the official. Inquirer.net “We still have to find out where said PDAF allocations were realigned. And if indeed they were realigned, they are also subject to special budget request,” the budget secretary said. In the House, Bayan Muna Rep. Neri Colmenares said he was surprised about Abad's claim that the realignments would still need clearance from the Department of Budget and Management. Lump-sum items “The Supreme Court was not clear on whether lawmakers could realign the funds or not because it is clear that Congress has the power of the purse and has the prerogative where government money should be spent. What it was clear on was that lumpsum items should be discontinued and that everything in the budget should be itemized,” Colmenares said in a phone interview He said the House practically realigned P930 billion worth of items in the 2014 budget, including the pork barrel, because it wanted to ensure that all expenses were itemized and not carried as lump sums. “So why does the President have to give his clearance before releasing the funds realigned by the senators? This is still patronage politics, the PDAF was just converted into presidential pork,” he said. Approved in caucus Early on, all the senators agreed in a caucus “to respect what each senator wanted to do with the original PDAF allocation,” Escudero said by way of explaining the different modes taken by the senators in disposing of their pork barrel. “The decision was not to put it to a vote, and to just let the senators decide, and be responsible for it,” he said. The manifestations of the nine senators were carried out as amendments since the Senate did not follow the original House budget measure that realigned P25.2 billion in congressional PDAF, including the Senate's portion, to five departments, Escudero said. Not an insertion “I will contest the use of the word 'insertion,'” he said. “We've been very transparent with everything.” Escudero said Estrada's identification of the LGUs did not violate the Supreme Court ruling that d e c l a re d u n c o n s t i t u t i o n a l a l l provisions of the law that allowed legislators “to wield any form of postenactment authority” in the implementation of the budget. u Page 5 January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 5 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Metro Manila 'lechon' sellers face BIR roasting By Michelle V. Remo To be sure, lechon sellers raked in huge profits during the last holiday season. They can cut the celebration, because the taxman is planning a roast and may send for them to serve as the pig. Unknown to them, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) has been watching the industry and found it crispy enough to be served up at an investigation for tax evasion and under declaration of income. In its latest “Tax Watch” ad, the BIR says it has found that a third of the most popular lechon sellers are not paying taxes, while the rest are declaring “very low” income. For instance, the BIR says in its taxpayment performance of lechon sellers for 2012, Mila's Lechon reported an income tax payable for the year of only P5,099. “Mila's Lechon had P5,099 income tax due, which is less than the price of its 18-kilo lechon,” the BIR says. Sellers Three Little Pigs and Rico's Lechon declared that they had no income tax liability for 2012, the BIR says. Out of the 17 most popular lechon sellers in the country, six did not file income tax returns for 2012, it says. The BIR named the six as Sabroso Lechon, Elars Lechon, Hecky's Lechon, Jiro's Lechon, Cris Native Lechon and Aling Loring's Lechon. Top roasters The BIR lists 17 most popular lechon sellers, based on the published choices of online magazines Interaksyon, Choosephilippines.com and Spot.ph. 9 Senators ... From page 4 “His identification of the LGUs does not violate the Supreme Court decision. That's part of our function in Congress. It's well within our right to review and approve the budget. This is preenactment intervention,” he said. “With the 2014 budget, there was no post-enactment intervention,” he added, referring to old practices by lawmakers in identifying projects and beneficiaries of pork barrel while the budget was being implemented. Escudero said Estrada had “no say” at all in the implementation of the assistance to LGUs. “It's completely in the hands of the executive department, including the decision to release or not to release the fund, or to ask for a program of work. Completely, Jinggoy has no say in that,” he said. DAR advanced P300M to Napoles By Nancy C. Carvajal Besides Mila's Lechon, Three Little Pigs, Rico's Lechon and the six that did not file income tax returns, the other sellers in the top 17 are CnT Lechon (which declared the highest tax due of P465,270), Ulcing's Lechon (P123,255), Ping-Ping's Lechon (P93,456), Charlie's Pritchon (P67,282), Lydia's Lechon (P47,017), Zubuchon (P32,697), Jun & Jun's Lechon (P17,259) and General's Lechon (P5,594). They can start worrying, although the BIR earlier said the weekly “Tax Watch” was not making a conclusion that the businesses mentioned in it were tax evaders. But tax officials involved in the BIR drive against tax evasion said those businesses were among the establishments that the taxman had started to monitor closely. Should the investigation show that those businesses are violating tax laws, they would face charges, the officials said. Inquirer.net Special provision Assistance to LGUs used to be a lump-sum item in the national budget, Escudero said. In the 2014 budget, the Senate introduced a special provision specifying amounts for specific LGUs and requesting the Department of Budget and Management to provide data in cases where the recipient LGUs were not identified. As far as he could recall, the budget allotted for assistance to LGUs in 2014 was roughly P300 million, including the P200 million from Estrada's PDAF. As for the rest of the nine senators, the projects funded out of their allocations were itemized in the 2014 budget, the senator said. All the projects of the nine senators will be posted on the Senate website. “Because of the controversies involving Senator Estrada, that's why it's raising some alarm bells. But what happened in the past has not been proven yet,” he said. Inquirer.net Janet Lim-Napoles received an advance of P300 million from a P900-million request by the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) for assistance to victims of tropical storms in 2009, according to official documents supporting a plunder complaint in the Office of the Ombudsman. The documents were filed by the Department of Justice and the National Bureau of Investigation in the case stemming from the alleged misuse of the multibillion-peso Malampaya Fund representing the government share of proceeds from oil and gas production off Palawan province. According to the documents, the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) issued a notice of cash allocation (NCA) on Dec. 21, 2009, covering the request for the P900 million from the Malampaya Fund for assistance to agrarian reform beneficiaries affected by Tropical Storms “Ondoy” and “Pepeng.” Former Agrarian Reform Secretary Nasser Pangandaman. JESS YUSON But the papers said that Agrarian Reform Secretary Nasser Pangandaman had earlier authorized the release of P300 million from Land Bank of the Philippines to 12 nongovernment organizations (NGOs) controlled by Napoles even before the NCA was issued. Normally, the issuance of the NCA triggers the release by the DBM of the fund requested. According to the complaint, the P900 million ended up in ghost projects and kickbacks. Charged in the Malampaya Fund plunder case filed last October were former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita, Pangandaman and his undersecretary Narciso Nieto, Budget Secretary and now Camarines Sur Rep. Rolando Andaya Jr., his undersecretary Mario Relampagos, and 19 others. Also charged in the case was Napoles, the detained businesswoman who earlier was implicated in a P10-billion scam involving the alleged misuse of the Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) meant to ease poverty in the countryside. u Page 6 January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 6 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS 35% bunkhouse kickbacks ... From page 1 initiated last Dec. 13 during his first visit in the affected areas. “ T h e r e a f t e r, I r e c e i v e d information and allegations of possible anomalies and kickbacks involving at least one politician in the area colluding with contractors,” he told the Inquirer in a text message. “They talked of 30 to 35 percent commissions.” Lacson declined to elaborate on the politician, insisting he wanted “to be color blind all the way until I'm done with my rehabilitation job.” He said charges would be filed in the Office of the Ombudsman “once we gather sufficient evidence to warrant a formal investigation.” “We offer no second chance [for] people who cannot distinguish anymore between ordinary and extraordinary c o r r u p t i o n ,” L a c s o n a d d e d . “There's a word to describe that kind of a person - amoral.” Issue of overpricing Public Works Secretary Rogelio Singson on Monday promised to resign if the bunkhouses were found overpriced. He was reacting to an Inquirer report based on interviews with local officials and government engineers. “It is not overpriced. If it's overpriced, I will submit the following day my resignation to President Aquino,” declared Bunkhouses ... From page 3 same materials that were blown away during the onslaught of “Yolanda.” The architect said the builders should have opted for four slopes. They used the same materials that were blown away in the storm, and they just repeated what was there in the first place,” Palafox said. “You don't have to be an engineer or an architect to see it, it is a no brainer, maybe a first year Architecture s t u d e n t c a n t e l l yo u t h i s i s substandard,” he said. An international shelter group reported that the bunkhouses being developed by the Department of Public Works and Highways did not comply with internationally recognized standards and best practices. The Camp Coordination and Camp Management had raised concerns, including cramped spaces, lack of ventilation, risk of fires, and safety and security of the occupants. DAR advanced ... From page 5 Signatures of 97 city and municipal mayors for supposed projects to be funded from the Malampaya Fund were all fake, according to the documents. “The DAR issued 32 checks between Nov. 26 and Dec. 3, 2009, with a total amount of P300 million to Napoles' NGOs even before the DBM could actually release the money to the agency,” according to one document. Pangandaman, in a letter to Andaya dated Dec. 17, 2009, requested that the DBM issue an NCA for P900 million “for payment of current due and demandable Singson, who joined the regular Malacañang press briefing to address the allegation. He expressed doubt about the report that Lacson said he had received of alleged kickbacks of 30 to 35 percent, noting that many of the contractors got on board as “part of their humanitarian efforts.” “I don't know where that came from,” he said in Filipino, referring to the report on the purported commission. Singson noted that contractors had removed their “overhead and profit margins,” which were about “13 to 15 percent” of the project cost. “Where will the contractor get the 30 to 35 percent that he will distribute? He is already helping, and he will still be bitten? If I were the contractor, why will I go there?” Singson said. Still, Singson said he spoke with Lacson Monday morning and promised to address “specific” concerns raised by the rehabilitation chief. He said Lacson had told him that the report on the alleged kickback came from a “particular municipality in Samar.” “There is politics involved, that much I can tell you,” Singson said. “I suspect there's politics involved in Eastern Samar.” Substandard materials A 15-page report of an international shelter group, the Camp Coordination and Camp Management (CCCM), said the bunkhouses did not meet international standards. The CCCM operates in countries torn by civil Sen. Loren Legarda weighed in on the matter and said that if the government aimed for a resilient recovery, the structural integrity of homes, buildings and other structures “should not be compromised.'' “We need to rebuild communities with the confidence that we are not rebuilding the risks again. We need to ensure that construction of homes, even the temporary shelters, will be on safer ground following sound construction standards,'' said Legarda, chair of the climate change committee. After all, Yolanda has become the n e w b e n c h m a r k fo r d i s a s t e r prevention, and the country should raise the standard for building structures, she said. On top of concerns on the substandard bunkhouses, Lacson said he has begun investigating the possible collusion between contractors and a local politician to profit from the construction of bunkhouses. Inquirer.net obligations.” He said the total amount for the projects covered by amount had been fully spent by the time. The documents also showed that Andaya granted Pangandaman's request despite the objection by Nora C. Oliveros, then DBM director, b e c a u s e t h e a g ra r i a n re fo r m secretary's request did not have documentary support. In the NBI complaint, Arroyo was implicated for intentional or gross negligence in the use of and access to an essentially presidential discretionary fund, making possible the plunder of the fund. Former employees of Napoles, led by Benhur Luy, in their sworn statements said Pangandaman received a P75-million kickback from the transactions. Inquirer.net Bunkhouses are under construction in Barangay Caibaan, Tacloban City, for survivors of Supertyphoon “Yolanda.” NIÑO JESUS ORBETA conflicts and natural disasters. Lacson said he had secured “documents pertaining to the programs of work, bills of materials and specifications as well as the CCCM observations and recommendations.”He said he was still awaiting documents from the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) for comparison. Singson said he had been told by Lacson about complaints of “substandard” materials allegedly being used for the bunkhouses. He sought to distinguish between “overpriced” construction and that which did not follow “specifications” set by the DPWH. “Overpriced means that there are specifications detailed, given by DPWH and the unit prices of these bunkhouses are above what normally would be in the market placeI can tell you there's no overpricing here,” Singson said. “ S e c o n d , t h e re m i gh t b e possibilities that some of the contractors may have not followed the specifications and therefore we refer to them as underspecs,” he added. “If contractors did not follow specifications that we gave them, they will not be paid unless they correct or rectify to meet our standards,” he warned. “In some instances, I imagine, rather than retrofitting, because most of them have already mobilized, they will probably just donate some of these units rather than spend more.” Construction suspended Singson said the DPWH had completed 126 of the target 222 bunkhouses. But he said construction was suspended to allow the government to address concerns raised by international agencies and adjust specifications to meet international standards. The original bunkhouse design was supposed to include 24 units for as many families with three to four members each. Each unit had an area of 8.64 square meters (sqm). The new bunkhouses would now have only 12 families each, meaning they would enjoy a bigger unit of 17.28 sqm. “The comments coming from international agencies are that the one-room unit is too tight so we have made adjustments,” Singson said. “That is already acceptable [under] international standards.” But the adjustments would mean that the construction period would be extended by one to two months for all 222 bunkhouses, he said. Many experts “There are many experts coming from abroad saying [their] own piecesome of them about water, sanitation … All experts are on ground,” he said. “I have met at least 10 from different UN [United Nations] organizations giving their suggestions and so we're adapting. We' v e b e e n c o n s t r u c t i n g bunkhouses long before they arrived,” he said. Considering the extent of the devastation wrought by Yolanda (international name: Haiyan), Singson admitted the government's shelter program could not be completed in two years. “Nobody claimed that it can be finished in two years. I'm not claiming I can finish the shelter program in two years. We are telling you it cannot be done in two years with this scale of the devastation there,” he said. Inquirer.net January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 7 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS 2 young Fil-Ams raise over $100k for 'Yolanda'-ravaged town By Rose Paquette BERKELEY, California -- What started out as a hobby turned into a fulfilling dream for a 10-yearold Filipino-American student who, with the help of her 13-yearold sister, raised $102,160 to help survivors of Supertyphoon “Yolanda” (international name: Haiyan) in the Philippines. After raising $2,160 from selling colorful hand-made bracelets in December, fifthgrader Malaya David received $100,000 from an anonymous donorall to rebuild a school in Tanauan, in the province of Leyte, one of the towns ravaged by Yolanda. The relief money Malaya raised may have been the highest so far coming from the Fil-Am community in California. She was ecstatic after raising her first thousand. “I'm so excited!! I made a goal to raise $1,000 by the end of December and we did it in just four days! This is just our first-round goal… I am not done!” Malaya posted on h e r w e b s i t e http://haiyanbracelets.wordpre ss.com/ . “Maraming, maraming salamat!!!!! Thank you everyone for your support, your inspiring comments, your donations. Thank you to my family, thank you to all our friends. Your support has inspired me to keep going, the children in the Philippines need our support to rebuild school destroyed by Haiyan,” her post said. Happy, sad ... From page 3 (Unicef), while those in Grades 1, 2, 3 and 4 occupied the school buildings, which were covered with tarpaulin for a temporary roof. Yolanda (international name: Haiyan) blew off the roofs and destroyed the windows of all of the six buildings of Manlurip Elementary School, which United Nations Secretary Ban Ki-moon visited last Dec. 21. “We don't expect all students to come to school today, as we were informed that many of them left the city. Some went to Samar, to Cebu, to Manila. Only around 50 percent of them returned to school,” said school principal Elenita Montalban. Schoolbag from UN Walter Cahindo, 10, and a Grade 3 student, said he was happy to return to school. His schoolbag was full of supplies given by Ban during his visit. “I am looking forward to meeting my classmates again,” Cahindo said with a shy smile. “I'm now ready for classes.” Malaya David making bracelets for “Yolanda” fund-raising. PHOTO FROM WEBSITE How it began Amihan David, mother of Malaya who spearheaded the bracelet campaign, told INQUIRER.net: “The whole idea was cultivated during the weekend of Thanksgiving last year.” Malaya and her sister, 13year-old Tala, were watching a video in YouTube, of how balloons were made. The two had been making bracelets as a hobby, inspired by the message of the song “We Are the World.” Making colorful, braided bracelets has been a craze among the young who give them away as gifts to friends and loved ones. David encouraged her daughters to make and sell the “Haiyan bracelets” for $10 each. The bracelets come in small, medium and large sizes. Malaya drafted a list of friends and family members to tell them of their idea. Malaya and Tala started making bracelets and selling them during their free time. They drew help from about 200 people, including cousins, friends and various families. They sent them e-mails and got lots of responses. They also set up a website to support the campaign. The bracelets went viral among other young people who heard about itfrom her school in Berkeley, California, to Long Beach in Los Angeles and as far as Maryland and Seattle, Washington. Her website reports, for example, that “Rose and Lily” of Land Oaks, Florida, have started making bracelets inspired by Malaya. Malaya and Tala's experience In her young mind, Malaya felt sorry for the school kids in Leyte, “She said I have a school (to go to), why can't everybody have one?” her mother recalls. “So, raising money to benefit her countrymen inspired her to help the schoolchildren to further their education.” Malaya, her sister and cousins went to the San Francisco Parol Festival in Yerba Buena, and despite the cold weather, approached complete strangers to sell the Haiyan bracelets. “We brought all our Haiyan bracelets and sold them to as many people as possible,” Tala says. “After about one hour in the freezing weather, we sold about $ 1 2 0 w o r t h o f b ra c e l e t s , including donations. This was the first time we talked to people face-to-face about our project in public, we passed out beautiful flyers made by my godmother Jamie to help spread the word.” By the end of December, Malaya and Tala were able to raise $2,160 from selling the bracelets. Then a donor gave $100,000 after receiving an email sent by Malaya to a family friend. The donor declined to be named. “They're still gathering some donations,” their mother added. Malaya wants to keep raising more money for schools. Her goal is to raise $3,000 by June 2014. Two schools in Tanauan With advice from their grandfather, Amado David, and mom, Amihan, the children were eyeing building not only one school in Tanauan, but possibly another one. “We might even hit two schools and not just rebuild but we're looking into sustainability and wages of workers,” Amihan said. “Tanauan, like Tacloban, is also a devastated town and we feel some connection here in the Philippines,” David stressed, “Tacloban has got a lot of attention already.” Tanauan is one of the oldest towns in the province of Leyte, dating back to the year 1710. It is a second-class municipality with a population of 50,119. It is bounded on the north by the u Page 9 Officials led by a Department of Education (DepEd) director, Luisa Bautista-Yu, visited Dulag Central School in Dulag town, San Roque Elementary School in Tanauan town and Kapangian Central School in Tacloban City, all in Leyte province. Mercy Sarmiento, officer of the DepEd office in Eastern Visayas, said the three schools registered around 70-percent attendance. The students were happy and excited, and did not appear to have suffered trauma due to the typhoon, Sarmiento said in a phone interview. The three schools visited by Yu have about 500 students each, she said. S a r m i e n to s a i d t h e D e p Ed regional office had initially monitored about 100 students killed during the typhoon. At San Roque Elementary School, for instance, nine students were confirmed dead. Fate of many unknown Principal Maria Evelyn Encina said the fate of many others and their families remained unknown. “They could be in evacuation centers or u Page 9 TO ADVERTISE, PLEASE CALL 201-434-1114 Only $30 for 25 words (deadline is Wednesday noon) January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 8 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Fil-Am labor, gay activist elected to head Asian Pacific-American coalition By Mico Letargo LOS ANGELES -- Labor activist Gregory Cendana was elected chairperson of the executive committee of the National Council of Asian Pacific Americans (NCAPA), a coalition of 31 national organizations. The coalition's executive committee will spearhead its efforts in achieving greater policy presence and impact for AsianAmerican, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Hawaiian communities. Cendana is the executive director of the Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance (APALA). He is the first Filipino and the first openly gay NCAPA chairperson. Cendana and his fellow executive committee members were elected to their respective positions at the NCAPA's annual retreat early this December. They will serve two-year terms and are expected to lead the coalition in advancing Asian and Pacific Islander interests in America. “I [am] truly humbled to be elected as the next NCAPA chair,” Cendana told Asian Journal via email correspondence. “We, as a council, are in a unique political moment and are poised to make some major advancements for our community. With new resources, we have been building our capacity over the last couple of years and are ready to take it to the next level,” he said. Aside from Cendana, the executive committee includes Labor activist Gregory Cendana Asian Americans Advancing Justice Executive Director Mee Moua (vice chair of programs), Japanese American Citizens League executive director Priscilla Ouchida (vice chair of membership), National Asian Pacific American Women's Forum executive director Miriam Yeung (vice chair of communications and development), Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund executive director Jasjit Singh (secretary), and National Coalition for Asian Pacific American Community Development executive director Lisa Hasegawa (treasurer). Cendana, who has been part of at least one NCAPA Advisory Board, is expected to be fully engaged and participate in all NCAPA events, campaigns and conferences as the coalition's voice and leader. He is also expected to ensure that NCAPA is moving along with its strategic plan for the year and that they are able to identify strategic opportunities for NCAPA with various stakeholders. According to Cendana, his election to chairmanship means “there will be an additional platform to help connect the history, struggle and experience of the Filipino community with others in the AANHPI community.” Aside from the Filipino agenda, Cendana would also like to advocate for such critical issues as the comprehensive immigration reform, federal recognition of Native Hawaiians, increase in the minimum wage, and passage of the Employee Non Discrimination Act. A s t h e N C A PA i s a membership-based coalition of more than 30 national organizations, Cendana encourages Filipinos to engage in one of the member groups, like A PA L A a n d t h e N a t i o n a l Federation of Filipino American Associations. A full list of these groups can be found on NCAPAonline.org. Cendana's message to the Filipino community in America is simple: “We must unite to show our collective power to ensure our voices are heard.” “Let us take the spirit of bayanihan to build broad coalitions and advance a social and economic justice agenda. For the Filipino LGBT [lesbians, gays, bisexual, and transgendered] community, the message wouldn't be too different, but I'd add 'Mabuhayyy!' [sic] Kaya natin! Yes, we can!” he added. Inquirer.net Four to receive ... From page 1 Boxer and Saranggani Rep. Manny Pacquiao, Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) Chair Patricia Licuanan, Filipino-born American businesswoman Loida Nicolas Lewis and Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario will be conferred the award by President Benigno Aquino III in rites at Malacañang. Redemption victory Pacquiao, known as the “Pambansang Kamao,” redeemed himself in the boxing ring after a victory against American Brandon Rios in November. Licuanan is an academician and leading women's rights advocate in the Asia Pacific region. Lewis, on the other hand, is known to have taken over her American husband's multinational company after his death. Now chair and CEO of TLC Beatrice LLC, a family investment firm, she also leads a foundation named after her husband and is a known figure in the US AsianAmerican community. Del Rosario leads the Department of Foreign Affairs, which is hounded by issues on overseas Filipino workers in the Middle East and a territorial row with China, among other things. Fil-Am appointed ... From page 1 through internal, external and policy changes.” Utah Governor Gary Herbert, who appointed Reyes to the post after his predecessor resigned, said, “Reyes' rise opens a new chapter for the state and the attorney general's office, which persevere in the face of adversity. He has the right background and, most importantly, he has the right demeanor to take on what I consider a new beginning for the attorney general's office.” Ed Navarra, national chairman of National Federation of Filipino American Associations (NaFFAA) congratulated Reyes. “As Filipino-Americans, we are elated that one of our own has gained the distinction and honor of serving as Utah's top law enforcement officer,” Navarra said. “We wish him well as he undertakes a challenging responsibility, one that requires leadership and legal skills, high professional standards and strong commitment to public service.” Before taking over as Long deliberation In a statement to the Inquirer, Unap said the search committee “deliberated for so long” to come up with the names. It added that the awardees “have made Filipinos proud in their diverse achievements personally and professionally,” and, like CPR, “contributed to world peace and development.” The selection of the awardees was approved on Dec. 15, coinciding with the death anniversary of the Filipino icon, who has a Nobel Peace Prize nomination on his list of achievements. The event is “well guided and supported” by Beth Day Romulo, CPR's widow who will grace the event. Past awardees Past awardees include Lea Salonga, former Sen. Leticia Ramos Shahani and former President Fidel V. Ramos; the late Senators Jose W. Diokno and Lorenzo Tañada, and the late Chief Justice Claudio Teehankee. Unap, founded in 1947, is an organization that helps the country meet the ideals of the UN and “has b e e n o rga n i z i n g e d u c a t i o n a l activities with regard to UN days and observances, and environmental protection projects.” Inquirer.net attorney general, Reyes served as general counsel for a Utah media and technology company, eTAGz. He also served as a small claims judge, a partner with venture capital firm Accelerate Ventures, and a member of the boards of many non-profit institutions, including one conducting education against fraud. He was also involved with a National Commission established by former President George W. Bush to advise him on HispanicAmerican issues. Apart from his professional duties, Reyes devotes his time to community outreach programs. In 2008, Reyes was the first person to be awarded the title “Outstanding Young Lawyer of the Year” by the American Bar Association. Reyes ran for Attorney General of Utah in 2012 against John Swallow. He lost the primary election with a margin of 69 to 32 percent. Swallow resigned last December. T h e G O P S t a te C e n t ra l Committee then selected Reyes as one of three candidates on Dec. 14. Reyes, who will serve out the remaining two years of Swallow's term, will have to run for election i n N o v e m b e r t h i s y e a r. Inquirer.net TO ADVERTISE, PLEASE CALL 201-434-1114 January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 9 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS 2 young Fil-Ams ... From page 7 municipality of Palo, on the south by the municipality of Tolosa, on the west by the municipalities of Dagami and Tabon-Tabon, and on the east by San Pedro Bay. “Tanauan Mayor Pel Tecson said it will cost around P1.8 million to build the destroyed school,” Amihan David said, “and because there is enough money, it is possible to build one more.” The mayor has expressed appreciation for the David children's efforts when the news reached his office. Two days ago, Mayor Tecson apparently sent a word through the Davids' contacts in Tanauan, giving public recognition to Malaya and Tala and the David family for all their efforts in raising funds to build new schools. The David family is looking into the tentative rebuilding time frame to commence in March of 2014. Amihan Happy, sad ... From page 7 could have been taken in by their relatives in the mass evacuation that followed,” Encina said. “But we can't know for sure. We just want to let them know wherever they are that we are here waiting for them.” She lamented that only about 50 percent of the school's nearly 1,000 pupils were back. Mothers In the makeshift tents, mothers refused to leave despite appeals from teachers to let the children slowly resume their daily routine. What passes for a community learning center now are desks under a white tent donated by relief organizations. It sits about 50 meters from the sea, in an area that the government has officially dubbed a “permanent danger zone,” Encina said. “We need a more permanent structure for the longer term but in the meantime, this will suffice,” Encina said. Yolanda cut a vast swath of destruction with its powerful winds that topped 315 kilometers an hour. It also triggered storm surges, which swamped large areas, leaving nearly 8,000 dead or missing and nearly 30,000 others injured. It also displaced 4 million people, 1.7 million of them children, according to Unicef. Makeup classes Gorgonio Diaz, city schools David stressed that accounting for the money and how it is spent is very important. The bulk of the donation was p a i re d w i t h Fe e d t h e H u n g r y (Foundation), Philippine Chapter, because they covered a wide amount of the projects and they have engineers, she explained. Amihan reported that Feed the Hungry is placing a button on Malaya's website (Haiyanbracelets.wordpress) for people to make tax-deductible donations. “Large donations given under 501C (non-profit status) can get tax breaks, and my father and I are the authorized signatories for the account,” she said. “It's going to take years to build t h e re ( Ta n a u a n ) , we wa n t t o encourage people to make T-shirts or any other hobbies as we call everyone to action,” David said, “Get involved with what you like. You could massproduce those bracelets, create a circle of friends for fundraising.” Inquirer.net division superintendent for Tacloban City, said officials were still studying the possibility of conducting makeup classes or extending school days. Sarmiento said officials did not expect actual classes to start immediately, as they were still accounting for the students and even the teachers. Unicef, along with other groups, is leading a campaign to help some 550,000 children, teachers and daycare workers return to schools. “Unicef's objective is to ensure that children affected by Typhoon Yolanda return to quality learning as soon as possible,” said the group's officer in charge in the Philippines, Angela Kearney. 'Safe spaces' By reestablishing a daily routine, Unicef said it hoped to transform schools into “safe spaces” that provide some sense of normalcy. It said that with children back in school, parents would also have more time to rebuild their ruined homes. But with memories of the surging, towering waves still fresh, mother of six Milet Labrado, 42, was not taking any chances. “The school is just too near the sea and we survived by clinging to each other,” she said, while anxiously watching her youngest, a 6-year-old boy, mingle with his classmates. “I still see my neighbors being taken away by the waves in my dreams every day,” Labrado said. “I am not yet prepared to leave my boy and entrust him to anyone,” she added. Inquirer.net Jersey City Department of Health and Human Services Announces Sponsorship of the Federal Child Care Food Program JERSEY CITY -- The City of Jersey City's Department of Health and Human Services sponsorship of the Child Care Food Program. This program is designed to provide meals to children in after school enrichment p ro g ra m s s u c h a s p u b l i c schools, childcare centers, recreation programs, etc. Meals are available at no separate charge to children between the ages of 6 years -18 years and are enrolled in the Child and Adult Care Food Program and are served without regard to race, religion, color, national origin, age, sex, or disability. The Child and Adult Care Food Program is operated in accordance with USDA policy, which does not permit discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, sex, or disability in the meal service, admissions policy or use any Adult Food Program facility. The City of Jersey City and USDA are equal opportunity providers and employers. The Child and Adult Care Food Program is operated in accordance with the City of Jersey City and USDA policy, which does not permit discrimination on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, ancestry, age, sex, marital status, affectional or sexual orientation, disability or any other basis prohibited by the State of New Jersey and/or federal non discrimination laws in the meal service, admissions policy or use any Adult Food Program facility. To file a complaint of discrimination, you may contact the City of Jersey's O f f i c e o f E q u a l Opportunity/Affirmative Action at 280 Grove St. Room 103, Jersey City, New Jersey at (201) 547-5093 or at ext. 4533 or you may write to the USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington D.C. 20250-9410, or call, toll free, (866) 632 9992 (Voice), (800) 877 8339 (TDD) , or (866) 377-8642 (Relay Voice Users). For more information please contact 201-547-4836 or visit www.jerseycitynj.gov. - Jennifer Morrill, Press Secretary to Mayor Steven M. Fulop Women Connecting Women By Grace G. Baldisseri The Church of St. Francis of Assisi, 135 W 31st Street, New York, NY 10001. Travelguideline.net photo New York City -- A group of women with diverse cultures and different background met at St. Claire's Room of St. Francis of Assisi Church at 31st St. between 6th & 7th Avenue, New York, NY last Wednesday, January 8, 2014 with Fr. Julian Jagudilla OFM, our group adviser. Among the ladies who came despite the frigid and chilly wind were: Donna Samuel, Rosa Charles, Kathy Gunn, Dorothy Berman, Alexandra Barrau and Grace Baldisseri. During the meeting, it was agreed that the group will be called "Women Connecting Women" as there are a lot of issues that only women can talk about and resolve among themselves. Considering the realities of life in New York City, women have issues more than men in their social and economic conditions. More than these issues are the emotional and domestic problems that come with daily living in this city that never sleeps. After all the traffic, the noise and the high prices everywhere, who could really sleep? It is commendable to have one big hearted priest in the person of Fr. Julian Jagudilla OFM, who offers the venue of St. Francis of Assisi Church's Conference Room to bring together women of all colors for a Tea Party on February 12, 2014. The purpose is to have a place for women to connect with other women in New York City. Editorial & opinion January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 10 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Substandard The real issue in the case of the controversial temporary bunkhouses being built as transitional shelter for survivors of Supertyphoon “Yolanda” in several towns in Leyte and Eastern Samar is their alleged substandard quality. Internationally famous Filipino architect Felino Palafox Jr. described the bunkhouses under construction that he had inspected on Dec. 13 as “a fire hazard. There's no privacy. The materials are so flimsy.” More to the point, each bunkhouse was designed to fit 24 rooms in all, each 8.64 square meters in size. He added an unfortunate, melodramatic touch: “Would you want your family to live here?” Of course, the answer is No. But the point was unfortunate, because in fact the real question facing those Yolanda survivors whose houses were completely destroyed, or who have no means to repair houses that were partially damaged, is: Would you want your family to live here, or in the tents hurriedly set up in the wake of the storm? The bunkhouses are temporary housing, and by necessity's cruel logic must follow “lower” standards. But even by those standards, the bunkhouses seem to have come up short. Arjun Jain of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees told the Inquirer on Tuesday that “as far as the bunkhouses are concerned, we have received all assurances from the government that international specifications will be met, especially through the redesign of some of the bunkhouses.” That last clause signifies, not only that an agreement has been reached to redesign some of the bunkhouses, but also that a redesign was necessary. But what are the international standards that must be met, when it comes to temporary or transitional shelter? The answer is: It depends on which set of standards a humanitarian organization subscribes to. The closest to a benchmark we have is the set of specifications, now twice revised, outlined in the so-called Sphere Humanitarian Project. Sphere is a coalition of diverse humanitarian organizations and networks (which includes the biggest of them all, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies) which codified guidelines for effective and accountable humanitarian assistance into the Sphere Handbook, “Humanitarian Charter and Minimum Standards in Humanitarian Response.” This handbook, in the words of the Sphere website, “is one of the most widely known and internationally recognized sets of common principles and universal minimum standards in life-saving areas of humanitarian response.” One of the four life-saving areas is “shelter, settlement and nonfood items.” Under Minimum Standard No. 3, in Guidance Note No. 2, we read: “In the immediate aftermath of a disaster, particularly in extreme climatic conditions where shelter materials are not readily available, a covered area of less than 3.5m2 per person may be appropriate to save life and to provide adequate shortterm shelter. In such instances, the covered area should reach 3.5m2 per person as soon as possible to minimise adverse impact on the health and well-being of the people accommodated. If 3.5m2 per person cannot be achieved, or is in excess of the typical space used by the affected or neighbouring population, the impact on dignity, health and privacy of a reduced covered area should be considered. Any decision to Employment Authorization for Abuse Victims Under the Violence against Women Act (VAWA), battered spouses, children and parents of U.S. citizens and permanent residents may file an immigrant visa petition for themselves. The law allows them to self-petition for immigration benefits in order to seek safety and independence from the abuse. According to the draft policy memorandum released by the USCIS approved VAWA selfpetitioners are eligible for employment authorization based on the approval of the petition alone. Under the policy memo, to get an employment authorization document (EAD) a petitioner with an approved I-360 and who is residing in the United States must file Form I-765 along with the filing fee and required photos with the Vermont Service Center. Previously, they could obtain employment authorization only after being granted deferred action. Deferred action status means that an alien is a low priority for immigration enforcement or deportation and provides legal basis for employment authorization. When granted, the status is valid for 15 months, renewable in 12-month increments. VAWA self-petitioners who are spouses, children or parents of the U.S. citizen abuser are also eligible for employment authorization without need of deferred action and even before approval of the I360 self-petition, because they can file the I-485 adjustment application concurrently with the I-360 as immediate relatives. The policy memo however does not change the policy when it comes to the principal beneficiary's derivative children, who must still rely on a grant of deferred action in order to be eligible for an EAD. Under the new policy memo, battered spouses of A (ambassador), E(iii) (Australian specialty occupation worker), G (foreign government or international organization representative) and H (alien specialty occupation workers) nonimmigrants are also eligible for employment authorization. To be eligible for an EAD, the applicant must be the spouse who accompanied or followed to join a principal alien in the nonimmigrant category and he u Page 12 Old issues, new eruption 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: [email protected] Phone: 201-434-1114 Fax 201-434-0880 2711 John F. Kennedy Boulevard, Jersey City, NJ 07306 “Mad is he?” King George II once snarled about one of his aides. “Then, I hope he'll bite some of my generals.” It would also be daft if any official here tried to confiscate Korans from Filipino Muslims. Both law and practice buttress liberty of faith. The exact opposite unreels in Malaysia. The Islamic Religious Department (Jais) confiscated 300 bibles in Selangor State. In late 2009, it impounded 15,100 bibles printed in Indonesiawhere eight out of 10 are Muslims. Why? “Because they used 'Allah' referring to God,” BBC reported. Two Bible Society officials were briefly detained. “We were investigated for breaking a state law banning non-Muslims from using the word Allah,” said the chair. This is a new eruption of an old storm. At its vortex is Catholic weekly Herald editor Fr. Lawrence Andrew. He said Christians in Malaysia and other parts of the world used “Allah” in their prayer. The Federal Constitution did not ban such practice. Indeed, Bahasaspeaking Christians used “Allah” long before the formation of Malaysia in 1965. Kuala Lumpur then splintered from Singapore, over political and religious issues. Jais insists the Selangor Non- Islamic Religions Enactment of 1988 prohibits non-Muslims from using 35 Arabic words. These include: “Allah,” “nabi” (prophet), “injil” (gospel) and “Insha'Allah” (God willing). The gag applies to Sikh, Hindu and atheist. Article 11(3) of the The Federal Constitution does not permit an enforcement agency of one religion to have jurisdiction or purview over religions, the Malaysian Bar said Saturday. “Appalling,” snapped Jagir Singh of the Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism. Sabah and Sarawak churches, where Christians constitute a majority, protested. u Page 12 Page 11 January 10 - 16, 2014 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Manny could be Cinderalla with unhappy ending? CHICAGO (FAXX/jGLi) -- If Manny Pacquiao will not play his cards well, he might end up as a modern-day Cinderella. But minus his slippers and his golden carriage! In my phone interview Thursday (Jan. 2) with Manny Pacquiao's Top Rank promoter Bob Arum, Mr. Arum said he filed withholding taxes for Manny at 30% rate with the United States Internal Revenue Service (U.S. I.R.S.). Mr. Arum asked me to confirm the regularity of his filing withholding taxes with some tax authorities. A friend of mine from the City of Angels (Los Angeles), California, A n g e l Y. D a y a n (http://www.taxwork.com/), a Filipino American Certified Public Accountant, told me Mr. Arum underpaid the withholding taxes of Manny by 9.6%, an information confirmed to me by another CPA, Making life worth living Ellen Tordesillas At the Christmas Party of Metro Pacific Investment Corporation last month at J.W. Marriott Hotel in Hongkong, the company's chairman, Manuel V. Pangilinan (MVP) made special mention of Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario saying, “he will soon be rejoining us in the private sector.” MVP's remark intrigued other guests who asked each other, “Why, is he resigning?” (Del Rosario's statement on this article released in Malacañang: “In my talks with my trusted friend Manny Pangilinan, in December, he is fully supportive of my decision to continue in public service for as long as the President wishes for me to do so.”) J a m e s M a e r t i n (www.jamesdance.com), back East. Mr. Maertin said, “Yes, a nonresident alien has to pay tax on U.S. earnings. These would be considered effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business, so subject to the regular tax brackets. If the taxpayer's earnings are in excess of the highest bracket, then he will pay that rate only on the amount in excess of that bracket's threshold. The earnings below that will be taxed at each of the lower rates. Also, the personal exemption and any itemized deductions will first be deducted to come to taxable income.” Mr. Dayan also told me that if Mr. Arum remitted 30% to the IRS, Manny would have to pay the 9.6% difference when he pays his income tax to the IRS at the end of the year. If we are to believe some reports that Manny has an estimated $85 JGL Eye By JOSEPH G. LARIOSA (© 2014 Fil Am Extra Exchange) Million net worth, then, what is 9.6%, which is only $8.1-M? Mr. Arum insists that as a resident alien, Manny is not obliged to pay income tax as a Green Card holder (Permanent Resident) because he has not reached the threshold of his stay in the US to be penalized as “Green Card” taxpayer. “We are very careful on that,” Mr. Arum told me, adding that he did not allow Manny to train in the U.S. anymore because if he overstays in the U.S., the U.S. is going “to tax Manny's worldwide income.” Tricky 183-day rule I found out that an obscure regulation called “Treasury Regulations Under Code Sec. 7701(b) Definition of Resident Alien” enforced by the U.S. Treasury Department has been in the books in the 80's. It says if a resident alien stays in the U.S. for 183 days (six months and one day) or more in three years, he will be paying taxes as if he were a Green Card holder or a U.S. Citizen. This regulation says, under the Substantial Presence Test, if Manny doesn't want to pay his income tax as a Green Card holder, “each day of presence in the current year is counted as a full day. Each day of presence in the first preceding year is counted as one-third of a day and each day of presence in the second preceding year is counted as onesixth of a day. … (A)ny fractional days resulting from the above calculations will not be rounded to the nearest whole number.” Bottom line: An individual, like Manny, is not a “Green Card” taxpayer if he is “not physically present for more than 30 days during the current year, (and) the substantial presence test will not be applied for that year even if the three-year total is 183 or more d ay s . Fo r p u r p o s e s o f t h e substantial presence test, it is irrelevant that an individual was not present for more than 30 days in the first or second year preceding the current year.” Mr. Arum is right this is so convoluted. I suggest Manny look for a very good CPA! Just like Cinderella, who lost her glass slipper and her golden u Page 14 MVP's intriguing Christmas Party remark about Secretary del Rosario Actually, del Rosario had resigned twice in his almost three years as foreign secretary. (He served as ambassador to the United States during the time of Gloria Arroyo.) The first was in June 2012 after the standoff with China at Scarborough Shoal (also known as Bajo de Masinloc or Panatag shoal) which brought into the picture, much to the resentment of del Rosario, Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV. Sources close to Malacañang said President Aquino's reaction was,he was not acting on any cabinet resignations before the May 2013 elections. Del Rosario again offered to resign after he was told by another cabinet official that the President was displeased with his statement of concern over how Malaysia was maltreating Filipinos during the Lahad Datu, Sabah incident February last year when the followers of the late Sultan Jamalul Kiram III took a stand in the coastal village in Sabah asserting the claim to the territory. Aquino was more concerned about not displeasing Malaysia, which is brokering the peace talks with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, than protecting the human rights of Filipinos in Sabah, which the Philippines is also claiming to be part of its territory. It's not known whether the Malacañang official relayed Del Rosario's second offer to resign to the President. u Page 12 A happy President Aquino and Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario Most promising A friend has suggested that Energy Secretary Carlos Jericho Petilla (the new “best friend forever” of the power companies) should sue Public Works Secretary Rogelio Singson for copyright infringement. Singson has declared that he would submit a resignation letter to President Noynoy Aquino if it's proven that the bunkhouses that his department built for the victims of Typhoon Yolanda are overpriced. Assuming that any overpricing is conclusively proven, Singson still has the legendary trust and confidence of Aquino to fall back on, so that he gets to remain in his post. Except that the gimmick has already been used by Petilla, when he announced that he was also quitting (which Aquino wouldn't allow, naturally) because he had failed to restore power in Leyte and Samar. Meanwhile, reports of overpricing have gotten the attention of “rehab czar” Panfilo Lacson, who, as an ex-cop may have finally found something that he can sink his teeth into hey, an investigation! in his new job. Let's hope Lacson also gets around soon to burying the 1,400 rotting corpses in Tacloban City, as well, even if he was never an undertaker. *** President Noynoy Aquino's declaration that his administration has entered its “last two minutes” seems to have a strange effect on his transportation secretary, Joseph Emilio Abaya. Abaya, the “most promising” member of Aquino's Cabinet, seems to have taken the presidential announcement as a cue to unveil even more spectacular projects that he will never get around to completing, even if he stays 100 years in his position. The latest daydream to come out of Abaya's fevered imagination is a 900-kilometer Integrated L u z o n R a i lway c o n n e c t i n g Cagayan in the north and the Bicol Region in the south. This, from the head of a department that couldn't even manufacture license plates for newly-purchased cars or even print enough sticker tags for older vehicles a colossal failure that no government in the past was able to come even close to achieving. Abaya said feasibility studies for his Luzon-wide rail system and a 90-km “airport commuter railway” may be completed early this year. “If we get [the National Economic and Development Authority's] clearance on both the integrated Luzon railway and the commuter railway, we can bid that out early this year,” Abaya said. But Abaya showed that he is still somehow in touch with reality when he admitted that both rail projects could take five to six years to complete. “Hopefully the people who would replace us will find this a viable project,” Abaya admitted. The last “viable project” that I heard Abaya expound on was a subway system for Metro Manila. And after that, I never heard anything about this grandiose (and incredibly stupid) plan from Abaya ever again. Meanwhile, Abaya and his department still had not bid out the proposed Mactan-Cebu international airport terminal, supposedly one of the most important projects in the menu of the flagship public-private partnerships scheme of this administration. DOTC has not even purchased a single coach for any of the three existing and unbelievably crowded light rail transit systems in Metro Manila or approved a unified ticketing scheme for them. No one is debating the need for the transportation infrastructure that Abaya keeps promising. After all, a study conducted by the Japan International Cooperation Agency said the government needs at least u Page 14 January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 12 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS HCCC CBI and Hudson County Office of Minority and Women Business Enterprise Launch Innovative Program in six key management/organizational areas Free Business Management Program for Entrepreneurs January 9, 2014, Jersey City, NJ -- The Hudson County Community College Center for Business & Industry (CBI), in partnership with the Hudson County Office of Minority and Women Business Enterprise, is offering a free program for Hudson County Small Business owners. The program, “Hudson County Business Management Training,” has been designed specifically for business owners who have no formal business education, and is intended to provide an understanding of the importance of management in today's business environment, to enhance interpersonal skills, and to support collaborative learning and teamwork. The 39-hour program is being offered Tuesdays and Thursdays evenings, January 7 through February 18. CBI Executive Director Ana Chapman-McCausland said that the sessions will include lectures and the sharing of knowledge and experiences that will assist participants in attaining proficiency in planning projects, meeting deadlines, leading successful teams, and developing/strengthening organizational goals. Six primary, functional business areas will be explored: General Management, Project Management, MVP’s ... From page 11 Foreign Affairs is not one of Aquino's strong points. Thus, it is important that his foreign secretary is competent. He did not have that in the first year of his administration because his sisters, especially Pinky Abellada, insisted on retaining Gloria Arroyo's foreign secretary, Alberto Romulo, citing family friendship. The sisters' insistence of Romulo compelled the President to take back his offer (which was accepted) to be foreign secretary to former Trade Secretary Juan B. Santos, who settled for the chairmanship of the Social Security System. Provided with a golden parachute as MPIC board advisor, Romulo was finally let go in February 2011. Administratively, Del Rosario is doing well in the DFA. He is Leadership Skills, Team Building, Supervision Skills, and Workplace Diversity. Participants will work in teams to put into practice what they have learned, and they will create action plans to address real-time workplace concerns based upon the knowledge they have acquired in the sessions. While there is no charge to the business participants, registration is a must and may be secured by contacting the Hudson County Office of Minority and Women Business Enterprise Director Dr. Frances O. Thompson at 201-395-6267 or online at www.hudsoncountynjevents.org . credited for strengthening the career system especially in ambassadorial postings. The problem with Del Rosario is his blatantly pro-US and anti-China stand. His strategy of “shaming” China in regional and international arena (calling China “duplicitous”) thinking that it would pressure the economic giant into withdrawing from disputed territories has not been effective and has in fact adversely affected the country's trade, tourism, and labor. A q u i n o h a s re a l i z e d t h a t relations with China can't move forward with Del Rosario as foreign secretary. This must have been discussed among his closest advisers because immediately after the May elections last year, Budget Secretary Butch Abad asked Santos if he would be willing to transfer to the DFA. Santos said, “No.” Sources said the President is eyeing a career foreign affairs officer to be at the helm of the DFA. But even with these exploratory behind-the-scenes moves, as long as D e l Ro s a r i o wa n t s t o b e i n government,he will stay in the DFA. Aquino does not fire officials. A Malacañang source said it has something to do with the traumatic experience of his mother with the suicide of her then Finance Secretary Jaime Ongpin amid cabinet d i s a g r e e m e n t s . Don't expect any changes in the cabinet despite the involvement of some of them in the Jenny Napoles pork barrel scam. After the devastation of Yolanda and his satisfaction rating still “good”, why would Aquino rock the boat with cabinet changes? In fact he said he will be pressuring them less this year and give them “ a little more breathing room” for fear that they would suffer from burnout. Expect more of the same. Old issues ... From page 10 Critics “accuse government of tacitly condoning bible seizures to deflect anger against Prime Minister Najib Razak's government,” BBC reported. “Poor Malay Muslims are angry over subsidy cuts likely to force up electricity, petrol and sugar prices.” Najib's coalition barely squeaked through last May's elections. “It was the coalition's worst result in more than half a century in power. The United Malays National Organization u n d e r p i n s N a j i b' s b r i t t l e coalition. Has “religious intolerance gone intolerable” in Malaysia? Not on paper. “Islam is the religion of the federation, but other religions may be practiced in peace,” Malaysia's constitution says. Kuala Lumpur signed on to the UN Declaration of Human Rights. Article 18 undergirds the “freedom of an individual or community, in public or private, to manifest belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.” Malaysia has one of the world's strictest forms of media Employment authorization ... From page 10 must be maintaining status as a nonimmigrant. The applicant or the applicant's child must have been battered or has been the subject of extreme cruelty perpetrated by the principal alien spouse. The battered spouse of the nonimmigrant must file Form I765 along with the new supplemental Form I-765V with the Vermont Service Center, along with evidence of the qualifying nonimmigrant status of both the applicant and the abusive spouse; evidence of spousal relationship; and evidence of abuse such as police reports, court records, medical records, reports from censorship. That is the reality. G ove r n m e n t , fo r exa m p l e , censored BBC's and Al Jazeera's reports on rallies. Nearly a hundred moves have been banned in the past decade. All newspapers need an official yearly permit to print. The licensing system allows padlocking at will and pressures publishers to toe the line. The Star and Sin Chew Jit Poh, and two weeklies, The Sunday Star and Watan, were closed down for several months. The Star was the primary English newspaper that provided news in the opposition's p o i n t o f v i e w. T h i s w a s considered “treason.” A July 2013 report to the Malaysian Parliament tallied 6,640 websites blocked since 2008. Excuse: “The websites insulted Islam, the royalty, contained pornography or malicious content, or infringed copyrights.” In one year alone, 56 books were banned by the Internal Security Ministry. That included a Bahasa translation of Charles Darwin's “On the Origin of Species.” Works by Czech author Milan Kundera, Salman Rushdie, even Khalil Gibran, have been proscribed. social service agencies, and a protective order, if any. If the applicant is unable to provide documentary evidence of the nonimmigrant spouse's status, he must provide some identifying evidence such as name, place of birth, country of birth, date of birth, date of entry into the U.S., I-94 number, name of employer, etc. If the application is approved, the EAD will be valid for a period of time equal to the remainder of the applicant's current period of authorized stay or duration of status, if applicable. ( Ed i t o r ' s N o te : R E U B E N 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.) Substandard From page 10 provide less than 3.5m2 per person should be highlighted, along with actions to mitigate adverse effects on the affected population. Temporary or transitional shelter solutions may be required to provide adequate shelter for an extended duration, through different seasonal climates and potentially for several years. Response plans agreed with local authorities or others should ensure that temporary or transitional shelters are not allowed to become default permanent housing.” This Note tells us several things: The minimum covered area is 3.5 square meters per person, or 17.5 sq m for the typical Filipino family of five. Adjustments can be made, but emphasis must be given to dignity, health and privacy. Temporary shelter may be needed “potentially for several years.” Adverse decisions must be “highlighted.” By these and other such minimum requirements, the bunkhouses as inspected last December must be considered substandard. On Tuesday, Public Works Secretary Rogelio Singson said the 90-plus bunkhouses still under construction would be redesigned, to provide only 12 rooms. That's a good start; it would double the size of each room to almost the minimum that the Sphere Project recommends. Inquirer.net January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 13 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS The Gratitude and “Giving Back” Continues By Bill Applegate The Vietnamese-American community was one of the first to immediately mobilize and respond to aid the Filipino people affected by Typhoon Haiyan. Contributions sent to the US-Philippines Society from Vietnamese-Americans all over the United States have reached nearly $300,000. Donations have been sent to partner organizations to assist in relief and recovery efforts. Why this generosity? Bill Applegate talks about the inherent trait of Philippine hospitality and Vietnamese gratitude for assistance rendered by Filipinos during their time of need a generation ago. Two Cultures, One Heart. December 2013 Bill Applegate, Friends of the Philippines Council , San Francisco, CA Genuine hospitality is a natural and instinctive trait of the Philippine people. Genuine gratitude is a gracious and timeless virtue amongst the Vietnamese, especially those who have come to the U.S. The recent generous donation of $400,000 by the Vietnamese community in southern California for the Philippine victims of typhoon Haiyan is very much in character. Other Vietnamese communities in the U.S. are raising funds as this is written. In addition to donations from California, the US-Philippines Society has received contributions and pledges from VietnameseAmerican groups in the Washington, D.C. area, New England, and Louisiana totaling nearly $300,000, funds that are flowing to typhoon victims and their families. The two cultures are of one heart, born out of hospitality shown to refugees fleeing persecution years ago, and reflected in their immediate donation response to their first host country in time of need. Vietnamese are not the only people “giving back.” A KoreanAmerican foundation formed to aid children raised $40,000 for typhoon relief. In presenting their contribution, the group recalled Philippine support during the Korean War. The Philippines and Indochinese refugees In the final days before the fall of Saigon in April 1975, some 140,000 Vietnamese who were closely associated with the former South Vietnamese government were evacuated by air and sea from the country and eventually resettled in the United States. Some of these first evacuees arrived by plane in transit to the U.S. via Clark Airbase, a major U.S airbase in the Philippines. Some 30,000 arrived in Subic Bay on a number of Vietnamese Navy vessels that managed to escape. Shortly after the fall of Vietnam to communism in 1975, the Philippines graciously welcomed and accommodated over 300,000 Indochinese refugees over a 20 year period. Many of the refugees were Vietnamese “boat people” who attempted a treacherous South China Sea escape in search of freedom after the fall of South Vietnam in 1975. Once past the dragnet of communist guards and patrols, the fleeing refugees risked drowning or dying from thirst, hunger, and harsh elements. Terrifying pirate attacks were also a danger for those desperate and courageous enough to make the perilous sea journey. Some 200,000 Vietnamese “boat people” were presumed to have been lost at sea, while over 796,000 made landfall in South East Asia and several other countries. The 51,000 boat people who made it to the Philippines were lucky indeed. Most nations were initially less friendly, sometimes hostile. By 1979 the UNHCR and the US Department of State negotiated and organized a unique network of first asylum cooperation with ASEAN countries, plus Hong Kong, Japan, and Korea, for a more humanitarian response to the Indochinese refugee crisis. Bolstered by incentives encouraging rescue-at-sea, orderly departure, and limiting the push factor from Vietnam, this unprecedented initiative saved many lives and enabled the eventual resettlement of over 2 million Indochinese land and boat refugees to the U.S. and other countries. Part of this agreement also included the establishment of major refugee processing centers in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines. Philippine Foreign Secretary Carlos P. Romulo lead the way with an initial generous offer of safe-haven for Indochinese refugees in his country. The Philippines and WW II / post WW II refugees The Philippines has a history, almost a tradition, of being a refugee safe-haven for people fleeing tyranny, having welcomed grateful refugee groups from Germany and Russia years before the Indochinese refugee influx: During WWII the Philippine government under President Manuel Quezon literally came to the rescue of some 1200 Jews who fled Nazi Germany and gave them asylum and a new home in the Philippines. A recently released movie “Rescue in the Philippines: Refuge From the Holocaust” is a major tribute and testament of gratitude to the Philippines for its heroic and generous action. After WWII, in 1949 the Philippines gave refuge on Tubabao Island near Guiuan town, Eastern Samar to some 6000 White Russians fleeing the communist revolution in China. Unfortunately, Guiuan was totally devastated by typhoon Haiyan last November. In October of 2011 a 72-year old Russian folk singer living in the United States, Nikolai Massenkoff returned to Guiuan, to show gratitude for allowing him and the other Russians to stay there. He flew in from San Francisco to give a “Thank You, Philippines” concert. Philippine hospitality first asylum two stories An especially poignant story of genuine Philippine hospitality comes to memory. After a several harrowing weeks at sea, a badly battered boat with a couple dozen nearly lifeless Vietnamese refugees on board had drifted into Philippine waters near a coastal resort area in Batangas a few hours' drive from Manila. The unseaworthy craft's occupants were suffering badly from thirst, hunger, and exposure to the harsh tropical sun. They were rescued by local fishermen and were subsequently brought by authorities to a refugee transit center in Manila… all except for one very young infant who was so dehydrated, malnourished and weak that even the half day trip to Manila was not advised. During the later part of the sea crossing the child's mother had kept her child barley alive by mixing her own meager supply of breast milk with sea water. A local Filipino fishing family took the child in, and one of the women lovingly wet nursed the listless child back to full health. After a few months a fully recovered and healthy child was returned to its grateful parents. This touching incident is reminiscent of “gota de leche” (a drop of milk), a natural community response during u Page 14 January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 14 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS The gratitude ... Manny could be ... From page 13 From page 11 WWII when Philippine wet nurses lovingly kept many orphaned infants alive. Compassion was also evident on a Philippine beach farther South when even battle tested Philippine Marines assisting with the beaching of a refugee boat were moved to tears as a frail old man stumbled ashore and kissed the sand crying” tu do”! Freedom! carriage at the stroke of 12 midnight, Manny might also lose a fortune if he lets Uncle Sam turn itself into his wicked sister! The nasty thing about this regulation is that if Manny did not breach the 183-day threshhold, he could still be penalized if he was not truthful in filling up Form TDF 90-22.1 (Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts or FBAR). He could be fined not more than $500,000 and imprisoned for not more than five years “for failure to report or for false or fraudulent report.” There is even mentioned of a “civil penalty not to exceed $10,000 per violation” and up to “a civil monetary penalty equal to the greater of $100,000 or 50 percent of the balance in the account at the time of the violation.” Fortunately for Manny, I stumbled on a little-known “Income Tax Convention between the Philippines and the U.S.” that capped the remittance of a Filipino resident alien in the U.S. at 30%, just like what Mr. Arum ordered! Philippine hospitality The Philippine Refugee Processing Center, Morong, Bataan (19801995) With major contributions from the United Nations and the U.S. Refugee Program, the Philippines built a well planned and well administered center, a small city almost, on the Bataan peninsula, large enough to hold 18,000 refugees. From its opening in January 1980 until the early 1990′s, some 292,000 Indochinese refugees benefited from language instruction, cultural orientation and other skills programs in preparation for resettlement primarily in the U.S., plus Canada, Norway, Denmark, Australia, and France. The large Filipino presence at the center included administrators, social workers, and close to a thousand teachers. The teachers were well known and appreciated for their disciplined, yet friendly and caring manner. Countless letters from resettled refugees to teachers and social workers in the Philippines, and even long term friendships, attest to their immense gratitude for the for the compassion and concern shown them by Filipinos and others. The Bataan PRPC included many NGO administered programs, such as: English as a Second Language and Cultural Orientation (ESL-CO) run by The International Catholic Migration Commission (ICMC); other ICMC run programs included The Joint Voluntary Agency pre-resettlement and family reunification program ; and the coordination of critical dental care provided by 70 dentist volunteers from numerous countries under the auspices of Rotary International , with fully equipped dental facilities provided through the Brother's Brother Foundation out of Philadelphia. World relief Services ran a similar ESL program for children. Day care/ child care was provided by Caritas. Planning for the PRPC involved representatives from the U.S. government, The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Most promising From page 11 200 kilometers of railroad and over 100,000 kilometers of roads just to ease traffic congestion in Metro Manila alone. But the combined efforts of Abaya, the Department of Public Works and Highways and the PPP Center (the government agency which is always looking for ways and failing to pass on the responsibility of building public infrastructure to the private sector), have resulted in no significant projects getting done in the past three and a half years of Aquino. Even the only PPP project that got off the drawing board Nhan Vo, Chairman, International Central Committee of Vietnamese Scouting (ICCVS), in Tacloban on January 4, 2014. He is one of many who mobilized the Vietnamese-American Community to help Philippine typhoon victims. t h e P h i l i p p i n e g ove r n m e n t , religious groups, and NGO's. The Philippine planners were especially sensitive in their efforts to make sure the Bataan center design and operation was as hospitable and culturally appropriate as possible for the 6 months average stay of refugees from Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. experience for Boy Scouts from six countries.San Francisco Bay Area 2013 the gratitude and “giving back” continues Fast forward, 30 plus years later to the SF Bay Area which has one of the largest Vietnamese populations in the U.S. Here I regularly encounter resettled refugees who passed through the Bataan center, some as teenagers and young children, who are now business owners and professionals. We often develop an immediate bond, and many willingly share special memories, thankful for their time in the Philippines. Vietnamese run restaurants and small businesses abound, plus community centers, and Vietnamese Catholic churches and Buddhist temples. At St Patrick's Seminary and University in Menlo Park, Filipino and Vietnamese seminarians have a large presence. Last year the Vietnamese Community of Northern California organized an impressive “Thank You America” event, and is now planning a Vietnam memorial to honor both U.S. and Vietnamese veterans. The gratitude and “giving back” continues. Bataan and freedom a bonding experience The Bataan PRPC was located not far from the infamous WW II Bataan Death March route where thousands of Philippine POW's and hundreds of American POW's perished on a brutal forced march by the Japanese Imperial Army in 1942. The annual commemorative retracing of the Bataan Death March route organized by Philippine, American and Australian Boy Scouts also included Boy Scouts from the Bataan refugee center in the late 1980′s. One particular year, Vietnamese, Laotian and Cambodian Boy Scouts joined in on the hot and tiring 70 mile trek which took place in increments over a number of weeks leading up to April 9, Bataan Day. The refugee Boy Scouts had no hiking boots or special gear, but were in great spirits all the way wearing simple flip-flop sandals and carrying plastic water bottles, proudly wearing their Bataan Day commemorative t-shirts. At the conclusion of the trek, beneath the towering 300 foot Mount Samat Cross at the Bataan Memorial, U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines Nicholas Platt awarded each of the 100 Boy Scouts with a special Bataan freedom medal. Philippine WW II Death March survivors were also there. The Bataan freedom medal had a unique meaning for each group of recipients, perhaps most especially for the young refugees who had recently made arduous and dangerous escapes from war-torn homelands. It was great and meaningful bonding About the Author Bill Applegate is a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy and a three tour Vietnam veteran. He also spent twelve years managing refugee programs with the International Catholic Migration Commission in the Philippines. Related op-ed pieces he wrote for The Wall Street Journal, include “Manila's Refuge Makes It Pearl of the Orient.” (July 13, 1988). He is a founding director of the Friends of the Philippines Council, a San Francisco based organization set up earlier this year that promotes awareness, appreciation, and support of the Philippines among business, academia, diplomatic, and civic groups in the Bay Area. He can be reached at [email protected]. during this administration the piddling three-kilometer Daanghari extension is still years away from being finished. If a vote is ever held to elect the Aquino administration official who best personifies the growing belief that this government is all promises and no action, I would not hesitate for one second: Abaya is the perfect poster boy of the daang matuwid that never got built. As this administration shambles toward its final days, the propaganda is still as strident. But it keeps losing its already tenuous connection to reality because of people like Abaya, who love to talk a good game but who are never called out when they fail to deliver on their press releases. Now that we're in the last two minutes, my prediction that Aquino himself will not be able to point to anything significant that he's done when he steps down from office sounds more and more like a fait accompli. And it's people like Abaya who are to blame, not just their boss a President who has perfected the art of doing nothing and yet who keeps getting sick from overworking. This is why firing Abaya will not solve anything, even he does nothing except talk of the fantastic things he will get done. Abaya is just implementing Aquino's most important policy, like a good Cabinet secretary, PH-US Income Convention caps income tax at 30% US, 35% in PH This was signed in 1976 between Philippine Finance Secretary Cesar Virata and U.S. Treasury Secretary William E. Simon that reduced the statutory rates of 30 percent of withholding tax in the U.S. by a Filipino resident alien and 35 percent in the Philippines by a Green Card Holder or U.S. Citizen in the Philippines. This also allowed a Filipino resident alien to be present in the U.S. for less 90 days in a year to be exempted from tax payment for "personal services" when remuneration exceeds $10,000. This convention also allows the Philippines to collect “1% to 3%” worldwide income tax of Filipino resident alien” in the U.S. despite relief "from double Old issues ... From page 10 Until recently, the Internet, however remained unfettered. Not anymore. In August 2012, or specifically on Aug. 14, 2012, Malaysia Internet Blackout Day occurred. This series of coordinated protests was directed against a proposed amendment to Malaysia's draconian Evidence Act. The amendment of Section 114A “makes individuals and those who administer, operate or provide spaces for online community forums, blogging, and hosting services, liable for content published through its services.” This presumption of guilt goes against a fundamental principle of justice: innocent until proven guilty. It would hold publishers of websites accountable for seditious or defamatory postings even if they are not the actual authors. The 17th UN Commission on Human Rights in Geneva grilled Malaysia in its “Universal Periodic Review,” the second for Malaysia since 2009. Austria and others prodded Kuala Lumpur to allow the freedom to practice, even change, religions. taxation” that the convention was trying to accomplish. In other words, based on this convention, in his campaigns in the U.S. since 2006 when Manny fought Erik Morales and earned his first $2-M up to 2010 when he earned $25-M against Antonio Margarito and another $25-M against Juan Manuel Marquez in 2012, the Philippine government stands to collect “1% to 3%” from those Manny's fights in the U.S. Will the U.S. Waive its “39.6%” highest income tax rate for Manny to reconcile with the convention's 30% cap? This remains to be seen. I found out, however, the U.S. has been notorious for breaking some treaties and this PhilippineUS Convention, one of the 37 similar treaties that the Philippines signed with other countries, including China, may not be an exception. Hello? Did I mention China? Yes, Macau is in China, the last battleground of Manny! Perhaps, the BIR should review this treaty if the Philippines can ask Manny, Mr. Arum, Freddie Roach, etc. to pay income taxes from that fight. If not, it can ask the Philippine government to re-do terms of this treaty and other treaties with other countries to keep it in line with its treaty with the U.S.! In Medellín v. Texas, 552 U.S. 491 (2008), the United States Supreme Court held that even if an international treaty may constitute an international commitment, it is not a binding domestic law unless Congress has enacted statutes implementing it or unless the treaty itself is "selfexecuting." Also, the Court held that decisions of the International Court of Justice are not binding domestic law and that, without authority from theUnited States Congress or the Constitution, the President of the United States lacks the power to enforce international treaties or decisions of the International Court of Justice. My unsolicited advice to Manny: “Just tell the truth!” Keep your pledge to abolish the 1948 Sedition Act and the Printing Presses and Publications Act of 1984, the United States urged Prime Minister Razak. These laws leash media through permits. “The fear is Muslims will start practicing Christianity if both groups refer to God by the same name,” Waleed Aly wrote. Do Malaysian Muslims need a form of protect ion from t heir ow n ignorance? “Young, educated, urban Malays in particular, are deserting this brand of politics in droves. They're becoming increasingly skeptical of their own privileged status. Upwardly mobile, they are unlikely to be swayed by a Meccaoriented compass.” Not the “old guard Malays. They confront the fact that the privileged position they've held for the first 50 years of Malaysian independence won't hold for the next 50. Now they're lashing out, as if trying to resist the death throes of their own supremacy.” Did Waleed Aly write that in Malaysia? Of course, that would never see print there. But the Syd n ey M o r n i n g H e ra l d i n Australia published it. (E-mail: [email protected]) January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 15 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 16 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 17 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS EXPRESSWEEK January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 18 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Fil-Ams brave arctic cold to meet new NY mayor By Elton Lugay NEW YORK -- Newly sworn in Mayor Bill de Blasio opened his official residence at Gracie Mansion to thousands of city residents, including a dozen Filipino-Americans, who braved the frigid arctic weather on Sunday, Jan. 5. The 6'5” former Public Advocate towered over the FilAms, bending his neck as he beamed with them for photographs. He wore a black suit with a yellow tie. “He is so tall,” said beauty pageant director Erno Hormillosa. “They must have gotten rid of the old bed and brought in something more to his size.” Sally Nunez, president of RN Express staffing agency for nurses and healthcare workers, said, “Meeting him was surreal. It went so fast I didn't realize it was already over until I got out of the receiving room.” Erno and Sally were among the Fil-Ams who came to Gracie Mansion in early morning and lined up in the icy weather condition so they could get in by 10 a.m. The opportunity to meet The Filipino delegation at Gracie Mansion with the author (extreme right). CONTRIBUTED PHOTO the mayor was the “first event of its kind in recent memory,” said the press release. A line snaked around the Carl Schurz Park where the historic federal-style residence sits, surrounded by A vast garden of camellias, dogwood bushes and other greenery. No one seemed to mind the bone-chilling temperature. People were patient, upbeat and chatting with each other, sharing expectations and thoughts of what to tell De Blasio during their split-second time with him. The guests came dressed in their warmest, some carrying umbrellas. Hot cider, coffee, and cocoa were made available to the guests, and heated tents welcomed the elderly who needed a respite from the cold weather. There was no sighting of Filipino Dentist Offers A Day of FREE Dental Care Navarro memoir to launch at Manhattan's Philippine Center on Thursday, January 16 N E W YO R K C I T Y - - T h e international launch of Nelson A. Navarro's memoir, “The HalfRemembered Past' will be held at The Philippine Center, 556 Fifth Avenue, New York City on Thursday, January 16, 2014 at 7:00pm. S p o n s o r e d b y N e w Yo r k business leader Loida NicolasLewis and the Alpha Phi Beta Fraternity Alumni Association of the East Coast USA, the affair is expected to draw prominent FilipinoAmerican personalities and friends of the Philippines from all over the United States. Published by Alphan Publishers, Inc of Makati, the memoir was given a “soft launch” in ceremonies headed by National Artist for Literature F. Sionil Jose, who wrote the book's introduction, on November 29, 2013 at the newly-opened Raffles-Fairmont Hotel in Makati. Exclusively distributed by ABS-CBN Publishing it is available at National Bookstores, Fully Booked and Powerbooks in the Philippines and online internationally at Amazon Kindle and the ABS-CBN Newsstand. Manila-based journalist, biographer and TV talk show host, Navarro lived in New York for 17 years as a political exile from the Marcos regime. He cofounded the anti-martial law Ningas magazine with Ms. Lewis and served as its editor-in-chief. He returned to Manila after the 1986 fall of Marcos and resumed his career in journalism. With 11 biographies or books to his credit, Navarro counts as one of the Philippines best-known and most prolific writers. Among his recent publications are acclaimed biographies of Vice President Emmanuel Pelaez, and journalism legend Maximo Soliven. He edited the bestselling and very controversial 2012 memoir of Juan Ponce Enrile. Due for release is “Maverick; The Rise of Jejomar De Blasio's family including first lady Chirlane McCray, daughter Chiara and son Dante. The press was supposed to be escorted in batches. I made a request to remain with the Filipino delegation so I could take their photos. The mayor's team granted my request. When our turn came, one by one we shook the mayor's hand. No conversation was exchanged. All guests just smiled nicely with the mayor for the cameras. For some reason I missed his predecessor, Mike Bloomberg. The Sunday open house concluded a week of inaugural events. The mayor's office said it reflected an “unprecedented level of access and transparency” that would become the hallmark of De Blasio's leadership. “I'm thrilled to welcome New Yorkers from across the city into the People's House,” said the 109th mayor of New York. “It's been a pleasure sharing the inauguration with residents from all five boroughs, and I can't think of a better way to end the week than by spending it with New Yorkers.” Attendees were greeted by musical entertainment provided by Make Music New York and the NYCHA Youth Chorus. Musicians from Make Music New York included Grammy-nominated opera singer Christopher Dylan Herbert, jazz musician Jonathan Batiste, electric guitarists led by Patrick Grant. Bronx's BombaYo a n d B ro o k ly n' s E l P u e n te provided traditional Afro-Puerto Rican Bomba music. Inquirer.net Nelson A. Navarro C. Binay,” on the nation's Vice President who is the frontrunner in the upcoming 2016 presidential elections. “The Half-Remembered Past” consists of autobiographical essays on the author's growing-up years in Mindanao, his tumultuous years in the University of the Philippines Diliman during the Golden Sixties as editor-in-chief of the Philippine Collegian, his high-profile role in the First Quarter Storm of 1970 which led to subversion charges and extended U.S. exile as well as postEDSA coverage of Philippine and international affairs as a Manila columnist and TV commentator. He was particularly active during the Cory Aquino, Fidel Ramos and Joseph Estrada years, covering state visits, serving in public affairs panels and political analyst for CNN, BBC, and NBC News. Born in Manila and raised in Malaybalay, Bukidnon, he is an alumnus of UP Diliman (B.S. in Business Administration) and New York's Columbia University (M.A. in International Affairs). He was a reporter for the Trenton Times, New Jersey's leading newspaper, and covered the international social development programs of the United Methodist Church in the USA during his exile years. Tappan, NY -- Dr. Mariliza Lacap, her husband Dr. Darren Tong and their dental team will provide a day of free preventive and emergency dental care for underprivileged children ages 16 and younger as part of the National Children's Dental Health Month. This will be their eighth year in providing this most needed service. Last year they provided more than $35,000 worth of dentistry to adults and children in the Bergen County area. True to their image, Washington Dental Associates and Smile More Dentistry has been known by the Filipino community as the Dental Office with a Heart. The program, called “Give Kids A Smile”, will be held on February 7 (Friday) 9:30 am - 4:30 pm at their 2nd location Smile More Dentistry at 140 Oak Tree Road, Tappan, NY. Our office is u Page 19 January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 19 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Black Nazarene devotees pray not for wealth but for 'Yolanda' victims By Kristine Angeli Sabillo FIERCE DEVOTION. Procession marshals (zoomed-in, lower left of composite photo), known as 'hijos' who protect the image of the Black Nazarene, fight for order amid the weight of millions of devotees surging all in the direction of the float carrying the highly-revered image of Jesus Christ during the 'traslacion,' its travel from Quirino Grandstand back to Quiapo Church in Manila, yesterday. (Rolan Garcia) Millions join Black Nazarene procession By Nestor Corrales MANILA -- Around 12 million devotees are in attendance to the day-long procession of the Black Nazarene, the Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) said late Thursday, Jan. 9. MMDA said around 90,000 devotees are still joining the ongoing procession, which is about to reach the Quiapo Church before midnight. In Plaza Miranda in Quiapo, 200,000 devotees are crowding the area in anticipation for the arrival of the Black Nazarene, according to the National Capital Region Police Office. Inquirer.net MANILA -- Romano Almariego admits he does not have much in life. But when the Black Nazarene reaches Quiapo Church later, he will pray not for wealth but for the well-being of his family and the victims of Supertyphoon “Yolanda.” “Yung nangyari (noong) 2013, (yung) Yolanda, hindi na data mangyari iyon,” he told INQUIRER 13 hours after the Black Nazarene left Quirino Grandstand. Almariego, 31, sells vegetables beside Quiapo Church. “Kasi batang Quiapo kami (We're Quiapo boys),” he said, explaining how he became a Black Nazarene devotee. He pointed to the other vendors who were all wearing “Nazareno” shirts. Almariego said he first started his “panata” when he was 13 years old. “Para sa akin, mas maganda na iyon kaysa magbisyo (For me, it's better than getting into vices),” he said. The vegetable vendor said he has always been praying for his family to remain together and to have good health. He said they are also praying for the rest of the Filipinos, especially after the devastation of “Yolanda” that left at least 6,000 people dead and hundreds of thousands homeless. “Importante wala nang kalamidad (What's important is there shouldn't be any more calamity),” he said. Rebeccah Dela Peña, a volunteer collector at the Quiapo Church, said they have noticed more people were going to mass after the “Yolanda” struck Eastern Visayas and nearby provinces last November 8. In fact, it seems that for the past months our second collection allotted for donations to “Yolanda” victims has surpassed the amount of money given during the first collection, she said. “Kaya sinisipagan namin yung second collection,” she said, hoping that they could at least contribute to the rehabilitation efforts in typhoonhit areas. For Almariego, his contribution lies in his devotion for the Black Nazarene. Every year, he and his companions greet the life-sized sculpture of Jesus Christ on its way back to Quiapo Church. As part of tradition, they struggle to bear the ropes pulling the Black Nazarene's carroza (carriage) over the right and then the left shoulder until they have done this thirteen times. Afterwards, they attempt to climb the carroza and touch the relic. But not before they help the women in their group. “Sa ibang tao naghihimala pero sa atin…darating sa atin yun (For other people it performs miracle…for us it will arrive soon),” he said with certainty. “Basta tuloy-tuloy lang, wag tayong magmadali. Kasi darating sa atin yung ginhawa. Hindi lang sa isang tao kundi sa buong Pilipinas (What's important is we continue [to believe], no need to hurry. The good things will come, not only for one person but all over the Philippines),” he said. After the procession, Almariego will return to his stall, hoping to earn at least P1,000 to pay his dues and to feed his family. Inquirer.net Volunteer Performers and Supporters Present Please join San Francisco First Lady Anita Lee, District Attorney George Gascon, Fabiola Kramsky and Bay Area Women’s Groups at a Fundraising Gathering in Solidarity with Filipina Women and Girls " THANK YOU, AMERICA " CONCERT For TYPHOON YOLANDA VICTIMS IN THE PHILIPPINES Thru American Red Cross Please join San Francisco First Lady Anita Lee, District Attorney George Gascon, Fabiola Kramsky and Bay Area Women’s Groups at a Fundraising Gathering in Solidarity with Filipina Women and Girls January 25, 2014 at 4 pm (snow date - February 1,2014) Our Lady of Consolation School Gym 1799 Hamburg Turnpike, Wayne,NJ 07470 Featuring: Gloria Frances School of Performing Arts Thursday, January 23, 2013 l 5:30 - 7:30 PM CREDO l 360 Pine Street l San Francisco GNGR Band RSVP at http://WomenForTacloban.eventbrite.com Filipino dentist offers ... From page 18 one of the few offices in the Bergen County and Rockland area participating in this program. Last year more than 48,000 dental team members nationwide participated in “Give kids a Smile”. It's heartbreaking to see a child's smile destroyed by severe tooth decay. Imagine not being able to eat, sleep or pay attention in school because you have a mouthful of toothaches. It's tragic. Nearly 1 in 4 children, aged 2 to 11 years old have untreated cavities in their baby teeth, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). While poor diet and oral hygiene certainly play a role, cavities are actually caused by a disease called caries, which is five times more common than asthma. “Giving back to the community that has supported our office is very important to us. We are hoping to help children whose parents cannot afford to provide dental health care to their children. Sometimes people need a helping hand....this is our way of showing we care. All team members and Doctors from this office volunteer their services and time on this special day. We are an office who believes in providing dentistry from the heart” said Dr. Lacap. “This program will touch the lives of so many of New Jersey's children who need oral healthcare and instruction. I am proud to be a part of it. Our focus this year is giving back more to our surrounding community.” said Dr. Darren Tong, a Columbia University Alumnus who has been practicing dentistry for over 20 years with his wife, Dr. Mariliza Lacap. Qualified children whose parents are out of a job, struggling financially or just need a helping hand should call and make an appointment. The office plans to see at least 60 children. “These appointments fill up quickly. We usually have to turn people away,” says Larni, the front office manager. The children will receive a comprehensive dental exam, any emergency treatment, oral healthcare instruction, fluoride treatment and free dental hygiene material including toothbrush, toothpaste and floss. If your children or any children you know qualifies for this program, please call their office at (845) 359-1763 and mention the “Give Kids a Smile” progam. They are also looking for more dentists, dental assistants or hygienists to volunteer their time on this special day of giving, please give them a call or visit their website at TappanDentist.com and click on “Giving back to the Community” Lakeland Youth Symphony Strings of Lakeland Youth Symphony Orchestra (LYSO) conducted by Debra Seftel The Students of Shahla Nikfal Ammie Dumalagan - member of Our Lady of Consolation choir Jade He - from the Rhino Theatre's "Les Miserables" Nicole Pinuela - a vocalist from Mary Help of Christians Academy Joshua Stokem - member of the Lakeland Chorale and Our Lady of Consolation Youth Group Agustin Zamora - a hip hop performer,parishioner at Our Lady of Consolation Church and many more... Tickets are $10 each. Please make checks payable to: "American Red Cross" include "Typhoon Appeal" on memo. For tickets please contact one of the performer /groups above or Annie Lopez at (862)377-1464 or email [email protected].; [email protected]; [email protected];[email protected];[email protected];[email protected] ; [email protected] *This concert will donate 100% of sales to support American Red Cross Typhoon Appeal to help people affected by the Pacific Typhoon,which includes relief efforts in the Philippines. On those rare occasions when donations exceed American Red Cross expenses for a specific disaster, contribution are used to prepare for and serve the victims of other disasters. The American Red Cross name and emblem are used with its permission ,which in no way constitutes an endorsement ,express or implied,of any product,service, company,opinion or political position.The American Red Cross logo is a registered trademark owned by the American Red Cross. For more information,please visit www.redcross.org. BUSINESS & ECONOMY January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 20 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS The world braces for Toyota invests P500 Million in PH plant retirement crisis Japanese automotive giant to increase local content of Vios Associated Press By Amy R. Remo A global retirement crisis is bearing down on workers of all ages. It will play out for decades, and its consequences will be farreaching. Many people will be forced to work well past the traditional retirement age of 65. Living standards will fall and poverty rates will rise for the elderly in wealthy countries that built safety nets for seniors after World War II. In developing countries, people's rising expectations will be frustrated if governments can't afford retirement system to replace the tradition of children caring for aging parents. The problems are emerging as the generation born after World War II moves into retirement. “The first wave of underprepared workers is going to try to go into retirement and will find they can't afford to do so,” says Norman Dreger, a retirement specialist with the consulting firm Mercer in Frankfurt, Germany. The crisis is a convergence of three factors: a) Countries are slashing retirement benefits and raising the age to start collecting them. These countries are awash in debt since the recession hit. And they face a demographics disaster as retirees live longer and falling birth rates mean there will be fewer workers to support them; b) Companies have eliminated traditional pension plans that Toyota Motor Philippines Co. is set to invest nearly P500 million this year to raise the production output of its facility in Sta. Rosa, Laguna, and further increase the local content of the Vios, which is being produced here. This planned investment is way above the P40-million capital outlay initially planned for this year by TMP, company president Michinobu Sugata said in an interview.“This year, TMP will have to increase the production capacity of its Santa Rosa Plant by installing two additional painting robots to catch up with the market expansion. TMP will aim at the production volume of nearly 40,000 [units] as compared to 35,481 units last year,” Sugata told the Inquirer. “On top of that, in the middle of this year, we will localize 15 more stamping parts for the new Vios at the press shop of our Santa Rosa Plant. The total investment amount will be nearly P500 million,” he added. TMP is bullish on its prospects for 2014 given the company's robust sales performance last year. This was despite challenges such as the devastation wrought by natural calamities, as this affected not only the vehicle sales of TMP, In this Sept. 9, 2013 photo, Dong Linhua, 59, works at his workshop in Shanghai. “I heard that the authorities might postpone the age of the retirement, but I sure hope not, since I've already worked for almost 42 years,” says Dong. AP/Eugene Hoshiko guaranteed employees a monthly check in retirement; and c) Individuals spent freely and failed to save before the recession and saw much of their wealth disappear once it hit. Mikio Fukushima, who is 52 and lives in Tokyo, worries that he might need to move somewhere cheaper, maybe Malaysia, after age 70 to get by comfortably on income from his investments and a public pension of just $10,000 a year. People like Fukushima stand in contrast to many who are already retired. Many workers were recipients of generous corporate pensions and government benefits that had yet to be cut. Under siege Germany established the world's first widely available state pension system in 1889. The United States introduced Social Security in 1935. In the prosperous years after World War II, governments expanded pensions. Companies began to offer pensions that paid employees a guaranteed amount each month in retirement socalled defined-benefit pensions. The average age at which men could retire with full government pension benefits fell from 64.3 years in 1949 to 62.4 years in 1999 in the relatively wealthy countries that belong to the Organization for BACOLOD CITY -- The first English-Ilonggo storybook application to teach a child Ilonggo, the language of O c c i d e n t a l N e g re n s e s , wa s released worldwide on the iTunes app store on December 19. The app for iPads was created by brothers Robin and Jay Abello of Negros Occidental. Robin, 43, is a software expert based in the state of Maryland, USA, while Jay, 42, is a filmmaker based in the Philippines. The “Esturya for Kids” app that makes learning fun for 6- to 8year-old children features the story of “Cowboy Inting and the Carabao Butud,” written by Negrense actor and writer Dwight Gaston, Robin said in an e-mail interview. “The idea of the app came about last June when I was thinking of writing an app for our kids,” said Robin, who has three children aged 4 to 10 years, who live in the United States. BROTHERS Robin (left) and Jay Abello, the inventors of Esturya for Kids app (below). “I thought, why not write a language app that can help our kids learn Ilonggo. So I discussed it with Jay and he loved the idea and we collaborated on it,” he said. Aussie telco cited for PH outsourcing jobs u Page 21 The Esturya for Kids app on iTunes store By Carla P. Gomez but that of the whole industry as well. According to Sugata, TMP even managed to surpass its sales target in 2013. “[The company has] successfully finished [2013] with its record sales, more than our target of 75,000 units. The official number will follow soon. This can be attributed to stable supply and the introduction of new models such as new Vios, which will definitely be the best-selling vehicle in the Philippines,” he said. For 2014, TMP wants to challenge its set target sales of 90,000 units through the introduction of new models. The company's sales projection took into account the forecast increase in the sales of the Philippine automotive industry. Based on the official market forecast of the Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines, vehicle sales by its member firms are expected to increase by 10 percent to 231,000 units this year, due largely to the “expected stable GDP (gross domestic product) growth and the [increased] confidence in consumer spending.” Campi's target sales for 2013 stood at 210,000 units. The final tally is expected to be released within the week. Inquirer.net Jay, who travels between Bacolod and Manila, brought in everyone to the creative side from Dwight Gaston, who did the story and the illustrations, to many other members of his team from Seventh Films, which did the editing and voice and sound recordings, Robin explained. Robin said the team from his firm called Akubo did the software and the graphic design for the app. “The app is designed to work on an iPad. We are releasing it in Ilonggo and we hope to add Tagalog and Cebuano translations early next year. And we're looking into adding other stories, hopefully by other Negrense writers as well,” Robin said. “As you're reading the story in English, some words change to Ilonggo as you move up levels and, on level 4, the entire story is in Ilonggo. You can touch the Ilonggo word and hear its translation in English,” he added. Robin said the website for the Esturya for Kids app is www.esturya.com. Inquirer.net Pasig City Rep. Roman Romulo has cited an Australian telecommunications and information-technology (IT) company for stepping up the recruitment of college-educated Filipinos for its Philippine contact center operations. “We welcome TPG Telecom Limited's decision to increase hiring of contact center staff. This will help provide additional gainful employment opportunities to our college graduates who are still without work,” said Romulo, chairman of the House committee on higher and technical education. T P G Te l e c o m' s i n - h o u s e outsourcing subsidiary in the Philippines, Orchid Cybertech Services Inc., is enlisting more contact center personnel for sales, customer service and technical support. Orchid Cybertech runs a contact center in Ortigas Center, Pasig that already has more than 1,000 employees. “Since Australia and the Philippines are in the same time zone, the contact center employees here work by day and sleep at night. This is what is different about contact center services for an Australian firm dealing with consumers based in Australia,” Romulo said. At present, the bulk of contact center services that have been outsourced to Philippines cater to US corporations handling American consumers. Thus, the contact centers run mostly at night in the Philippines, when it is daytime in America. Romulo earlier said he is counting on the business process outsourcing (BPO) industry to produce roughly 124,000 new fulltime jobs in 2014. A previous survey by Pulse Asia Research Inc. showed that “creating more jobs” is one of the top five urgent concerns of Filipinos, along with fighting official corruption, controlling inflation, improving the pay of workers, and reducing poverty. R o m u l o' s c o n g r e s s i o n a l district of Pasig is home to 16 Philippine Economic Zone Authority-registered IT parks that host a growing number of BPO firms. Romulo is also author of the Data Privacy Act, which has helped to attract global corporations to either establish new in-house outsourcing units here in Manila, or to convey their non-core, business support activities to independent BPO firms operating here. The law mandates all entities, including BPO firms, to safeguard January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 21 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Cebu Pacific acquires Funds to improve Tigerair Philippines business climate By Miguel R. Camus MANILA -- Cebu Air Inc., the operator of the country's biggest budget airline Cebu Pacific, has sealed a strategic alliance with Singaporean low-cost carrier Tiger Airways Holdings in a deal it claims would create the biggest network of flights to the region, according to a disclosure submitted to the P h i l i p p i n e S t o c k E xc h a n g e Wednesday. The transaction, which includes Cebu Pacific's acquisition of 100 percent of Tigerair Philippines for $15 million, further cements Cebu Pacific's leading position in the domestic market, the disclosure said. It also gives Cebu Pacific, a unit of the Gokongwei clan's JG Summit Holdings, access to valuable slots in Manila's congested international airport, one of two hubs where Tigerair Philippines operates. The deal is still subject to re g u l a to r y a p p rova l , wh i c h includes the Civil Aeronautics Board and the Securities and Exchange Commission. In its PSE filing, Cebu Pacific said the alliance with Tiger Airways will jointly operate common routes to and from Singapore and the Philippines. Both airlines are likewise going to brand themselves as partner of the other airline. Tigerair Philippines will The world braces ... From page 20 E c o n o m i c C o o p e ra t i o n a n d Development. As the 2000s dawned, governments - and companies looked at actuarial tables and birth rates and realized they couldn't a f fo rd t h e p e n s i o n s t h ey ' d promised. T h e ave ra g e m a n i n 3 0 countries the OECD surveyed will live 19 years after retirement. That's up from 13 years in 1958. The OECD says the average retirement age would have to reach 66 or 67, from 63 now, to “maintain control of the cost of pensions” from longer lifespans. Compounding the problem is that birth rates are falling just as the bulge of people born in developed countries after World War II retires. Populations are aging rapidly as a result. The higher the percentage of older people, the harder it is for a country to finance its pension system because relatively fewer younger workers are paying taxes. In response, governments are raising retirement ages and slashing benefits. In 30 high- and middle-income OECD countries, the average age at which men can collect full retirement benefits will rise to 64.6 in 2050, from 62.9 in 2010; for women, it will rise from 61.8 to 64.4. In the wealthy countries it studied, the OECD found that the in Philippines up A Cebu Pacific plane on the tarmac of the Puerto Princesa int’l airport initially continue to retain the Tigeriar brand, Cebu Pacific said, while their websites will be used as sales and distribution platforms to market all their routes. The carriers also expect to collaborate on other common destinations in Asia. “This strategic alliance will allow both Cebu Pacific and Tigerair to leverage on our extensive networks spanning from North Asia, ASEAN, Australia, India, all the way to the Middle East. Our customers can expect an even wider range of travel options, and seamless travel connections while enjoying our trademark low fares,” Cebu Pacific CEO and president Lance Gokongwei said in the statement. “Tigerair and Cebu Pacific share a vision for both airlines to join forces and compete more effectively in the regional market. Through this strategic alliance, we aim to establish a win-win partnership to forge a more competitive Tigerair,” added Group CEO of Tigerair Koay Peng Yen. The deal will expand Cebu Pacific's market share of about 50.8 percent of domestic flights during the January to September period last year data from the CAB showed. Tigerair Philippines cornered 4.7 percent during the period. Tigerair Philippines currently operates an average of 102 flights per week with five aircraft to 12 do m e st i c a n d i n te rn a t i o n a l destinations. Cebu Pacific, with 48 planes, operates 2,200 flights per week to 24 international and 33 domestic destinations. Inquirer.net pension reforms of the 2000s will cut retirement benefits by an average 20 percent. T h e fa te o f g ove rn m e n t pensions is important because they are the cornerstone of retirement income. Across the 34country OECD, governments provide 59 percent of retiree income, on average. Traditionally, Chinese and Koreans could expect their grown children to care for them as they aged. But newly prosperous young people increasingly want to live on their own. China pays generous pensions to civil servants and urban workers. They can retire early with full benefits at 60 for men and 50 or 55 for women. But the elderly are rapidly becoming a bigger share of China's population because of a policy begun in 1979 and only recently relaxed that limited couples to one child. Financial crisis makes things worse The outlook worsened once the global banking system went into a panic in 2008 and tipped the world into the worst recession since the 1930s. Government budget deficits swelled in Europe and the United States. Tax revenue shrank, and governments pumped money into rescuing their banks and financing unemployment benefits. All that escalated pressure on governments to reduce spending on pensions. The Great Recession threw tens of millions out of work worldwide. For others, pay stagnated, making it harder to save. Because government retirement benefits are based on lifetime earnings, they'll now be lower. The National Institute on Retirement Security estimates that Americans are at least $6.8 trillion short of what they need to have saved for a comfortable retirement. For those 55 to 64, the shortfall comes to $113,000 per household. The Asia challenge In Asia, workers are facing a different retirement worry, a byproduct of their astonishing economic growth. End of traditional pensions Corporations are cutting pension costs by eliminating traditional defined-benefit plans. They've moved instead to so-called defined-contribution plans that shift responsibility for saving to employees. But people don't always enroll. They don't contribute enough. They dip into the accounts when they need money. Several countries are trying to coax workers to save more. Australia passed a law in 1993 that makes retirement savings mandatory. Employers must contribute the equivalent of 9.25 percent of workers' wages to such retirement accounts. In 2006, the United States encouraged companies to require employees to opt out instead of choosing to opt in. That means workers start saving for retirement automatically if they make no decision. Inquirer.net The British government plans to fund in 2014 projects that will help promote transparency and efficiency in business registration in the Philippines, as well as increase the government's capacity to regulate noncompetitive business practices. In a posting on its website, the British Embassy in Manila said it was seeking project proposals that can qualify under the South East Asia Prosperity Fund. The Philippines is among t h e c o u n t r i e s t h a t a re benefiting from the South East Asia Prosperity Fund, the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office's (FCO) technical cooperation program aimed at creating the conditions for global growth among countries in Southeast Asia. The program has so far supported over 90 policy projects, valued at £3.4 million, which were implemented in the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Burma, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. Based on the Prosperity Fund Strategy and Guidance for the Philippines 20142015, among the projects that may qualify include those that deepen private sector involvement in the economy; encourage closer global and regional economic integration on a nondiscriminatory basis; break down barriers to cross border trade and investments; and those that push for transparency and a rules-based economic system in Southeast Asia. The target is for the projects to begin by May 2014 and completed by March 2015. Inquirer.net DESTROYED houses brought by Supertyphoon “Yolanda” in Tolosa, Leyte Give investors a break - lawmaker MANILA -- A lawmaker on Saturday said the government should entice the private sector to invest in infrastructure and programs that promote resiliency by giving them incentives for undertaking such measures. Western Samar Rep. Mel Senen Sarmiento, a member of the Parliamentarians Advisory Group of the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, said it would be better to focus on programs that would prevent calamities from becoming fullblown disasters, and the government must not be alone in the endeavor and should get businesses and individuals to invest in them as well. Sarmiento also supported plans for a Calamity Resiliency Fund that would be used to strengthen vulnerable infrastructure and communities to help them withstand calamities. The government could provide incentives such as tax breaks or preferential loan rates to businesses investing in buildings that could withstand the onslaught of nature, for instance, Sarmiento said. While the country's finance managers may balk at the loss of revenue from such a plan, he said that in the long run, the government would spend less to rebuild damaged infrastructure, and there would also be less damage to the economy. He noted that in some countries, the banks offered preferential interest rates to developers who u n d e r t a ke d i s a s t e r - r e s i l i e n t projects. Inquirer.net January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 22 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Man of still, steal or steel? By Efren Ll. Cruz Question: The US markets started 2014 on a negative note. While doomsayers are not that plentiful, nobody is overly bullish about the prospects of the New Year, not like with the start of 2013. Some, from analysts to fortune tellers, are even raising caution. Do you think the prospects for investing in the Philippines will not be good for 2014? Posted on PFA's “ask a friend, ask Efren” service at www.personalfinance.ph Answer: Nobody or nothing is exempted from risks, and that includes investing in the Philippines in whatever year. Risk is inextricably woven into investing. Volatility in asset prices is not the new normal. It has always been part of what is normal. It is in what people do with that risk and price volatility that makes them great investors. Put another way, without risk, there would be no great investors to speak of. The question is, what do you intend to do in the face of all the risks? Well, you could cower in fear and just place your money in “safe” instruments or by being a man of still. But do remember that the cardinal rule in investing is never broken: high risk, high (potential) return; low risk, low (potential) return. Investing in low risk instruments may seem easy. H o w e ve r, i f t h e i r corresponding returns are below the inflation rate and/or are not aligned with what you need to earn to achieve your financial goals then you are just setting yourself up for disappointment. I am heartened, however, by developments in the Philippines in the last decade. There is an increasing number of Filipinos, both here and abroad, who are now more open to taking on risks to grow their wealth better. This is evidenced by the growing number of people, especially from the younger generation, who are talking about personal finance in Yahoo groups and Facebook groups. Many newspapers and magazines now have a section on personal finance. There is now a proliferation of seminars and trainings on personal financial planning and offered to both professionals and the average Juan. There is even a growing number of couples who consult us now on how to fund their married life from the wedding and raising a family down to retirement You can also face the risks by cheating your way to growing your wealth or by being a man of “steal.” Examples of taking shortcuts to growing wealth are going after the one time/big time gains (remember the cardinal rule in investing), doing the opposite of being a man of still by falling prey to pyramiding and Ponzi scams, and borrowing heavily to invest and (much worse) to acquire nonearning assets. On the matter of borrowing heavily, we stress at our EnRich™ training the importance of human capital or the financial worth of a person's remaining productive years. Human capital can amount to millions. Unfortunately, many fail to see the value of their human capital and instead mortgage their future to the hilt. The best option is to be a man of steel. Everyone, without exception, has the capacity to be a great investor. Ride the risk. The sooner you do it the better. But don't do it blindly. Here are some ways to properly ride the risk: 1.) Protect your downside by getting life insurance first. Nothing is guaranteed in investing. Life insurance is there to ensure that you will leave something to your family should you be called from this life early at a time when you are still building up to your target wealth. 2.) Invest only in what you need. The only way you will know what you need to earn is by quantifying your goals. You can then compare your goals with what you currently have and what you can prospectively add to determine what amount of investment return you will need. Know also that each level of return comes with a corresponding level of risk. If you are not comfortable with the level of risk then you should rethink your goals. 3.) Apply A.S.K., the 2,000 yearold formula for growing wealth. “A” stands for asking for divine guidance. “S” stands for seeking through in-depth study. And “K” stands for knocking or committing to action. 4.) Diversify your investments. Spread your money over different a s s e t c l a s s e s , g e o g ra p h i c a l locations, currencies, industries, sectors and even time frames. Peso cost averaging or investing fixed peso amounts periodically is a way of diversifying your investment over different time frames. 5.) Have a portfolio dashboard. Monitor your investment performance in terms of return and risk vis-à-vis your goals p e r i o d i c a l ly. M a ny p ro d u c t providers report their performance in print media, SMS, the Internet and e-mail. Some have gone as far as incorporating personal finance tools. So what do I think about the prospects of investing in the Philippines in 2014? Investing in the Philippines is always good no matter the year, if you are a man of steel. If you want to learn more about being a man of steel, please visit www.personalfinance.ph. You will find a lot of free useful resources there. (Efren Ll. Cruz is a registered financial planner of RFP Philippines, personal finance coach, seasoned investment adviser and best selling author. Inquirer.net The program is hosted by renowned immigration attorney Lourdes Tancinco and TV director and actor Eric Quizon GMA Pinoy TV wins MAM Award for Best Television Journalism GMA Pinoy TV's Pusong Pinoy sa Amerika garnered the Best Television Journalism Award for the TV (Regular) category at the 2013 Migration Advocacy and Media (MAM) Awards. Pusong Pinoy sa Amerika (Into the Hearts of Filipinos in America) is a Filipino language talk show that aims to enlighten viewers on the complexities of immigration. Now on its 10th season, Pusong Pinoy sa Amerika goes beyond navigating the ins and outs of immigration laws and policies by tackling a broader scope of issues that are relevant to Filipino immigrants in America. The program is hosted by renowned immigration attorney Lourdes Tancinco and TV director and actor Eric Quizon. T h e M A M Awa rd s acknowledges media outlets, institutions and practitioners in the fields of print, radio, movie and television, advertising and the internet who have “raised public awareness on issues on Filipino migration, advocated the cause of Filipinos overseas and promoted a positive image of Filipinos overseas, and migration and development.” It was conceived in 2011 to coincide with the celebration of the Month of Overseas Filipinos and International Migrants Day in the Philippines in December every year. The MAM Award is the third honor bestowed on the program after winning a Bronze Telly in the Information category for Film and Video in the 34th Annual Telly Awards, and receiving the 2013 News America Media (NAM) Ethnic Media Award in the Broadcast category for Outstanding Reporting on Civil Liberties Issues in Ethnic Communities earlier this year. “ We a r e p r o u d o f t h e achievements that Pusong Pinoy Abroad has attained this past year,” expresses GMA Network VP and Head of International Operations Joseph T. Francia. “These awards validate the thrust of this program, which is to help our kababayans abroad in understanding immigration and other relevant issues.” The awarding ceremony took place on December 18, 2013 at the SSS Auditorium, SSS Building, Diliman, Quezon City. GMA Pinoy TV is the flagship international channel of GMA Network, Inc. For more details and program information, visit the GMA International website www.gmanetwork.com/internati onal, Facebook pages www.facebook.com/GMAPinoyTV www.facebook.com/gmalifetv, www.facebook.com/gmanewsinte rnational, and Twitter pages @ G M A P i n o y T V a n d @GMA_LifeTV. (30) Aussie telco cited ... From page 20 TPG Telecom is the fourthlargest Internet service provider and the biggest mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) in Australia. An MVNO is a wireless communications services provider that does not own the wireless network infrastructure over which the MVNO provides services to its customers. An MVNO enters into a commercial agreement with an actual mobile network operator to obtain bulk access to network services at wholesale rates, and then provides retail services and sets prices independently. At the close of 2013, TPG Telecom reported nearly 1.4 million high-speed Internet, landline and mobile phone subscribers. TPG Telecom's shares of stock are publicly traded on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX). the confidentiality of personal information collected from clients and stored in IT systems, in accordance with rigorous international privacy standards. The Philippines' highly laborintensive, BPO and IT-enabled services industry includes contact center services; back offices; medical, legal and other data transcription; animation; software development; engineering design; and digital content. The IT and Business Processing Association of the Philippines sees the industry yielding up to $27 billion in annual revenues and directly employing some 1.3 million Filipinos by 2016. ENTERTAINMENT January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 23 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Marian Rivera ready for 'Carmela,' focused on Adopt-A-Banca project By Walden Sadiri M. Belen Actress Marian Rivera is ready to take on her latest teleserye character while also focused on her Adopt-ABanca project for the fishermen victims of super typhoon Yolanda in Cebu. Marian said GMA Network made a survey on who and how many were truly in need of fishing boats in the coastal areas. “Para maiwasan na makaisip pa silang gumawa ng masama just to survive, we will try to raise funds for 1000 bancas for the affected registered residents ng Cebu. Each Banca will cost P35,000, and they will be made in Cebu by the residents themselves. So kahit hindi ka pa recipient ng banca, puede ka na kumita!” Marian is excited over the project. “Matagal-tagal din na trabaho ito kasi 1000 na bancas ang gagawin. Nakita kasi namin na after the relief-giving stage, mayroon pang malaking pangangailangan ang mga tao doon. Kailangan nila ng hanapbuhay na alam nila at yun ay ang pangingisda.” As for the teleserye “Carmela,” which us about a May-December love affair, Marian will be paired for the first time with Alden Richards, who's being primed as the new Kapuso Network's Dramatic Actor and GMA Artist Center's Prime Leading Man. “Carmela” is directed by Dominic Zapata, who said that with Marian and Alden in the lead roles, “viewers will see something fresh and interesting…” Asked if in real life she could fall for Patti Austin with Martin Nievera, Roni Tapia-Merk and Beth Pastrano and other Filipino friends At her Solaire concert, Patti Austin commends resiliency of Filipinos By Crispina Martinez - Belen Marian Rivera a younger man, Marian said, “Depende, kasi may mga bata naman na mature na sa pakikipagrelasyon at mayroon din namang mga matandang immature sa relationship…” “Carmela” is an original concept with Marian giving her inputs into the project. Asked what she can say about a May-December love affair, her answer was “Walang masama. As long as nagkakasundo sila.” Carmela is a very beautiful woman who has gone through a lot in life. When she falls in love with a man who despises her mother, she will be forced to choose between the man she loves and her mother who sacrificed her life to save her. “Carmela” is set to start airing end of January. Manila Bulletin There are always angels among celebrities especially among international entertainers, and we would like to mention in particular Ms. Patti Austin, our very own Lea Salonga, Martin Nievera, and of course Richard Merk. The “Brand New Day” benefit concert, headlined by Ms. Patti Austin, was held at the Grand Ballroom of Solaire Resort & Casino, with the proceeds intended for the survivors of super-typhoon “Yolanda,” through Habitat for Humanity Philippines (HFHP). “When I saw on CNN the images of destruction wrought by 'Yolanda' in Tacloban City, I was shocked and stunned,” Ms. Austin said when she started the concert. “I must be able to do something to contribute for the rehabilitation of the survivors, though how small that contribution might be. What matters most is that I must give.” So, she flew in to the Philippines upon the invitation of Ms. Roni Tapia-Merk who organized a concert for her, with her singing talent as her biggest contribution, and people who were similarly touched by the unprecedented destruction in Tacloban City trooped to the concert to contribute. It was a successful concert, and we understand that Ms. Austin will also design the furniture to be used in the houses which will be constructed by HFHP in Tacloban City. Ms. Austin also staged another concert on New Year's Eve at Fairmont Raffles Hotel in Makati, also for the survivors of typhoon “Yolanda.” Ms. Austin also commended the resiliency of the Filipino, saying that the victims, even long before they received any assistance from the government, were already bouncing back. “The victims of the superstorm 'Katrina' in New Orleans were resilient, but I found that the victims of 'Yolanda' are even more resilient,” she stressed. “The Filipinos are the winners, but let us not have that kind of competition anymore.” Manila Bulletin 'Clarity' singer delivers one best-night ever concert 'The Voice' Alumnus Donates Russian-German disc jockey (DJ) and electronic music producer Zedd gave Filipino fans a best-night ever concert experience recently. Presented by Globe Telecom, hardcore music fans and party afficionados filled the SMX Convention Center to the brim last month in celebration of the return of the “Clarity” and “Stay the Night” hitmaker to Philippine shores. New Globe subscribers who availed of the Blackberry Z10 and BlackBerry Q10 mySuperPlan promo bundles were granted free VIP tickets to see the much-awaited “Moment of Clarity World Tour” in Manila, alongside exclusive perks and privileges in Hyve, one of the metro's newest party destinations. Prior to his concert, Zedd announced on Twitter that concert proceeds were to be donated for the rehabilitation efforts in Visayas after the onslaught of typhoon Yolanda. His management also reserved free tickets to the first 500 individuals who brought canned goods and inkind donations. “Charity is clarity,” he tweets. With opening act 19-year old French DJ Madeon pumping up the Toys To 'Yolanda' Survivors By Crispina Martinez - Belen DJ Zedd party and Zedd gripping the crowd to stay the night with his vertiginous crescendos and heart-stopping drops, celebrities, VIPs, and partygoers alike agree that it was truly the best night ever. Manila Bulletin Darryl Shy, one of the finalists on the recently concluded “The Voice of the Philippines,” his wife Ann Angala (a talent manager) and their children donated recently to the toy drive of the Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship International (FGBMFI) Philippines and SEAOIL Foundation. FGBMFI, a worldwide body of businessmen and professionals who ministers to the spiritual needs of its m e m b e r s , i s a n interdenominational group with no political affiliation. With chapters in key areas of the Philippines, FGBMFI, although primarily spiritual in orientation, responds to emergencies and its members get involved in relief and rehabilitation support. It was one of the first to respond when Baguio was hit by a strong earthquake in 1991. FGBMFI gave initial Photo shows Darryl Shy (center, seated), his wife Ann and their children, members of the FGBMFI and their spouses. Darryl is the first and only alumnus of the first-ever 'The Voice of the Philippines,' to join the roster of recording artists of Star Records assistance to survivors of super-typhoon “Yolanda” by distributing badly needed food to the devastated towns of Basey and Marabut in Samar. Now that the rehabilitation phase has begun, the Christian fellowship has opted to focus on children in the affected areas who have been traumatized by the experience the death, the destruction, especially those who've lost loved ones and properties, not to mention the disappearance of entire communities. It launched a used toy donation campaign to bring Christmas cheer to children who survived the super-typhoon. The FGBMFI team will also do stress debriefing and counseling early this year in Northern Cebu, Samar, Leyte and Panay, and will bring the toy donations with them. Manila Bulletin January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 24 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Kris Aquino stays Kapamilya By Pau Aguilera Kris Aquino has renewed her contract with ABS-CBN. Kris took to her official Instagram account @krisaquino214 on Monday night to announce her latest career move, finally dousing rumors of a network transfer. In her latest post on the photo-sharing site, where she posted the ABS-CBN logo, she related that her manager, Deo Endrinal “continued talks w/ our ABS bosses during the Christmas break & it is w/ much joy that I share w/ you that we have RENEWED my ABSCBN contract.” Kris pointed out that she has been with the network for “18 years & like any other family we've had our ups & downs and sometimes unavoidable “tampuhan”- but we remain FAMILY…” The 42-year-old actress-TV host and one of the country's top endorsers thanked her “ABS CBN bosses, Sir Gabby (Lopez III), Ma'am Charo (Santos), and tita Cory (Vidanes) for the trust, value & importance they have given me.” “What I have become as a host, entertainer & producer came about because in 1996 FMG who was then president of ABS CBN told me, 'Come back home,'” Kris added. She also acknowledged Kris is currently in London with her sons Bimby and Josh Vidanes “for being an inspiring boss who has not only my respect, but my love”; Endrinal “for the patience to work out all the details & have a deal where we are all winners”; her close friend Boy Abunda “for his unwavering faith”; and her “Kris TV” family “because I couldn't imagine a show of mine w/o you because we've learned to love each other unconditionally.” But most importantly, Kris expressed her utmost gratitude to “all the KAPAMILYA viewers, thank you for watching me, enjoying me & making me part of your daily viewing. Because of your support I get to continue a job I love & I am also able to provide well for Kuya & Bimb… From my heart, MARAMING S A L A M AT K A PA M I LYA ! ! ! ” The Queen of All Media also clarified that she has “never met w/ any GMA officials but I am grateful to them for the generous coverage they gave 'My Little Bossings,' primarily because of their longstanding partnership w/ Vic Sotto & the 'Eat Bulaga' family,” although she admitted having “met w/ MVP (Manny Pangilinan) in October & again Dec 23” last year. Manila Bulletin Vice Ganda and Kris Aquino are good friends Vice Ganda refutes tension with Kris By Marjorie S. Duran V i c e G a n d a c l a i m s to b e unaffected over the deemed contest between him and Kris Aquino as their respective films race to emerge as top box-office draw in the 2013 Metro Manila Film Festival (MMFF). “Walang ganun… sobrang close nga namin ni Kris,” he said on “Buzz ng Bayan.” The “It's Showtime” host plays lead in “Girl Boy Bakla Tomboy” while Kris co-produced and stars in “My Little Bossings.” Vice counts Kris among his closest friends in show business and that “may relasyon kami ni Kris na maayos, na maganda.” He fondly recalled their exchange at the MMFF Awards night, during which, prior to the awarding of the top plums, Kris playfully told Vice, “Beh, talo ka ni Robin, siya ang mag-be-Best Actor …feeling ko (siya ang mananalo).” Referring to the incident, Vice said, “Kami ba, kung hindi ba kami ganun ka-close, (ay) mag-ga-ganunan kami?” Learnings Vice has learned so much from his struggles in 2013. Without going into details, the box-office star said that “tuwing nagkakamali ako, ang pinakamahusay at pinaka-madaling paraan l a n g e h t a n g g a p i n m o' y u n g pagkakamali mo at humingi ka ng paumanhin sa tao kung kanino ka man nagkamali, kinakailangan man o hindi… “…Kasi 'yung pagkakamali ko, hindi ko naman nagawa 'yung mga pagkakamali na 'yun ng first time, nagawa ko na rin dati at lahat naman tayo nakagawa na ng pagkakamali na nauulit pa rin natin.” He turns to God during his low points. “(Kapag nasasaktan) ako iiyak ko 'yan kasi hindi talaga ako nagtatanim ng sama ng loob o ng lungkot, (pero) 'pag hindi ko na talaga kaya, i-si-simba ko 'yun,” he shared. Vice added that “iyak and samba” is the same advice he gave his best friend, Anne Curtis, when she encountered challenges. u Page 26 Andi hurt over Mayor Erap's statement Andi maintains she and Jake are not a couple (Courtesy of Andy's Instagram account) By Michael Joe T. Delizo Manila Mayor Joseph “Erap” Estrada has opted to keep his opinions to himself regarding his son Jake Estrada's affairs. Asked if he accepts Andi as Jake's lady love, the veteran politician curtly said, “No comment.” Andi, who is romantically linked to the Estrada scion currently pursuing his college degree in London, expressed hurt over the recent statement. “Masakit kasi nakakapanliit siya tsaka parang medyo judgmental po 'yung dating,” Andi said of Erap on “Buzz Ng Bayan.” “ Wa l a n a m a n p o a ko n g magagawa eh. Kailangan ko pong respetuhin kung ano po 'yung sinasabi nila kasi sila po 'yung magulang ni Jake,” she added. The “Galema” star acknowledged, “They u Page 27 January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 25 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS The Red Hot Chili Peppers will rock Clark music fest By Joseph R. Atilano This July 31, 1964 file photo shows The Everly Brothers, Don and Phil, performing on stage. Everly, who with his brother Don formed an influential harmony duo that touched the hearts and sparked the imaginations of rock 'n' roll singers for decades, including the Beatles and Bob Dylan, died Friday, Jan. 3, 2014. He was 74. Everly died of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease at a Burbank hospital, said his son Jason Everly. (AP Photo, File) Phil Everly, half of pioneer rock duo, dies at 74 Associated Press LOS ANGELES -- Phil Everly, who with his brother Don formed an influential harmony duo that touched the hearts and sparked the imaginations of rock 'n' roll singers for decades, including the Beatles and Bob Dylan, died Friday. He was 74. Everly died of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease at a Burbank hospital, said his son Jason Everly. Phil and Don Everly helped draw the blueprint of rock 'n' roll in the late 1950s and 1960s with a high harmony that captured the yearning and angst of a nation of teenage baby boomers looking for a way to express themselves beyond the simple platitudes of the pop music of the day. The Beatles, early in their career, once referred to themselves as “the English Everly Brothers.” And Bob Dylan once said, “We owe these guys everything. They started it all.” The Everlys' hit records included the then-titillating “Wake Up Little Susie” and the universally identifiable “Bye Bye Love,” each featuring their twined voices with lyrics that mirrored the fatalism of country music and a rocking backbeat that more upbeat pop. These sounds and ideas would be warped by their devotees into a new kind of music that would ricochet around the world. In all, their career spanned five decades, although they performed separately from 1973 to 1983. In their heyday between 1957 and 1962, they had 19 top 40 hits. The two broke up amid quarrelling in 1973 after 16 years of hits, then reunited in 1983, “sealing it with a hug,” Phil Everly said. Although their number of hit records declined in the late 1980s, they made successful concert tours in this country and Europe. They were inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in 1986, the same year they had a hit pop-country record, “Born Yesterday.” Don Everly was born in 1937 in Brownie, Kentucky, to Ike and Margaret Everly, who were folk and country music singers. Phil Everly was born to the couple on Jan. 19, Filipina immigrant worker Rose “Osang” Fostanes continues to stun audiences abroad as she moves closer to becoming the first “X Factor Israel.” The 47-year-old caregiver from Taguig City secured her spot in the next round, the Top 5, after getting the nod of judges and voters. Fostanes pulled off a superb r e n d i t i o n o f Q u e e n' s p o p u l a r “Bohemian Rhapsody,” for which judges Rami Fortis, Shiri Maimon and Ivri Lider gave a standing ovation while the audience chanted her name. Judges agreed that the performance was “wonderful” and “amazing.” “I know how good you are as The Red Hot Chili Peppers are a big deal! They brought the Funk, the thumping bass, the infectious energy, and their signature style If there is one foreign band that I know of that is in almost everyone's wish list to see perform here in the Philippines, the Red Hot Chili Peppers would be high up there. to their music. They are one of the easiest bands to identify bands at first glance. There is no other band currently active that is completely like them in many aspects such that when you say this band's name, you really can't think of any other band. The Red Hot Chili Peppers h ave b e e n m a k i n g m u s i c together for more than three decades already. While each fan of the band has his own distinct and fond memories as to when they first got introduced to their music, I think it would not be hard to remember the first few songs he had first heard of the Red Hot Chili Peppers. As for me, it was their song “Under The Bridge” that I knew it was their music I was listening to. It was through local radio stations that not only played but also promoted a wide variety of Rock music back in the 90′s that young listeners were afforded the chance to get acquainted with the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Their songs like: “Under The Bridge”, “Give It Away”, “Higher Ground”, “Californication”, “Around the World”, “By The Way” and “Dani California” just to name some of their songs come right off the top of my head as I type this. They just have so many quality hits to choose from and this fact is a plus factor for the fans since you wouldn't really be sure what songs could be included in their set list when they hit the stage with what undoubtedly will be the most awaited performance in the 7107 International Music Festival. Aside from their popular hits which a good bulk of them are now classics, it is the individual personalities that the original members of the Red Hot Chili Peppers that really captures the imagination of music aficionados to this day. u Page 26 Fil-Jap model-actress stars in 'Rurouni Kenshin' sequels u Page 27 Pinay 'X Factor Israel' contender now in the Top 5 By Michael Joe T. Delizo This will happen in the 7107 International Music Festival on Feb. 22-23 at Global Gateway Logistics City in Clark, Pampanga. From purely a fan's perspective, this is big, big news. The significance of their coming will be a dream come true for their followers. For those who aren't fully aware of who exactly are the Red Hot Chili Peppers, you just need to know two immediate things about them. They are members of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and they are one of the most influential American Rock bands ever in the history of popular music. This legendary band was one of the main reasons why the music scene of the 90′s was so cool in the first place. I still remember that as a young teenager I would watch bootleg VHS copies of their concerts with some of my cousins at home. Anyone in his right mind can't ignore the many valuable contributions the Red Hot Chili Peppers have made to the music industry. They have become one of the most respected and beloved bands in Rock communities around the world and there isn't really a band like them in the way they perform, and in how they are ranked among the all-time greats in the annals of Rock and Roll. a singer and as a person. I want everyone to know that,” said Maimon of her menteee. The Filipina breadwinner dedicates her fight to her family. “All my life, nobody take care of me… I'm a person who likes to take care of everybody. I don't care of myself. All my life, I want to support them (my family). Even the last penny that I have, I have to give it to my family,” Fostanes said. The foreign contender was joined in the Top 5 by Uri Shakib, Inbal Bibi, Eden Ben Zaken and the Fushion group. Fostanes, who celebrated her birthday recently, appeals to her kababayans to continue voting for her. Manila Bulletin By Pau Aguilera Coinciding with the announcement of the live-action “Rurouni Kenshin” two-part sequel is the introduction of FilJap model-actress Maryjun Takahashi, who will portray character Yumi Komagata in the film's forthcoming installments. This casting news was reported by an unofficial Facebook fan page dedicated to the Japanese manga series, which cited an entry in the official website of Warner Bros. Japan. “Rurouni Kenshin: The Great Kyoto Fire” is scheduled to premiere in Japan on Aug. 1this year, to be followed shortly by “Rurouni Kenshin: The End of a Legend” on Sept. 13. In “Rurouni Kenshin,” also known as “Samurai X,” Komagata is depicted as the ardent lover and supporter of assassin Shishio Makoto (to be played by Tatsuya Fujiwara) the primary Maryjun Takahashi as Yumi Komagata (Photo by Warner Bros. Japan) antagonist of the series' Kyoto arc and his intent of overthrowing the Meiji government . A burnt and bandaged Makoto, along with members of his elite attack force Juppongatana, was recently shown in a teaser a production still for the upcoming sequels on the official website of the liveaction film. Takahashi, who was born to a Japanese father and a Filipino mother, entered the world of modeling in 2003, after winning the Yokohama Shonan Audition beauty contest, which was shortly followed by her contractsigning with Japanese fashion magazine CanCam. The 26-yearold has also appeared in several music and variety shows, and TV commercials for various fashion brands. In 2012, Takahashi played a F i l i p i n a c h a ra c t e r i n t h e Japanese TV drama “Jun to Ai.” Manila Bulletin January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 26 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Boots Anson-Roa in love again By Walden Sadiri M. Belen Veteran actress Boots AnsonRoa was in the news recently having found love again after she was left a widow when her husband Pete Roa died several years ago. The actress who is also the executive director of Mowelfund, and her beau, Atty. Francisco “King” E. Rodrigo, former consul g e n e ra l o f t h e P h i l i p p i n e Consulate in New York, USA, announced recently in a press conference their engagement and impending marriage in June 2014. It was a brief but intense courtship, they revealed. The announcement of their love affair has made them more open now with their relationship. Their friends and family (both have grandchildren all of whom they intend to enjoy as they progress in their relationship) agree that the couple deserve each other. Boots' resume is definitely very impressive, enough to intimidate any man, but King said “I'm not intimidated by her, I'm attracted to her!” King's academic background is impressive. He took up Bachelor of Laws at the Ateneo de Manila University, was admitted to the Philippine bar in 1965, and also to the New York Bar in 1980. In 1982, he became Staff Attorney at the Housing Litigation Bureau of the City of New York. In 19861988, he became Consul General Boots Anson-Roa of the Philippine Consulate in New York. He later became partner in some law offices, specializing in litigation, property development, m e rg e r s a n d a c q u i s i t i o n s , administrative law, family law and special projects. As for Boots (full name: Maria Elisa “Boots” Anson-Roa), her credentials are truly “ i n t i m i d a t i n g .” At 6 8 , s h e continues to shine in her career and as a wholesome personality who is respected and emulated by her countless fans. Beautiful and talented, she has maximized her potentials in education, media and public service. A product of the University of the Philippines Speech and D ra m a D e p a r t m e n t , B o o t s pursued various courses in developmental programs, journalism, public and media relations, and film and television locally and in the US, the netherlands, France and Italy. When her husband died in 2007, Boots established PRIME (Pete Roa Integrated Media Endeavors) Foundation, Inc. with continuing broadcast education, rehabilitation of Mowelfund stroke patients and the propagation of devotion to St. Pio as its main thrust. Most notable in Boots' resume is her employment as Press Attaché/Cultural Officer/Special Assistant to the Ambassador at the Philippine Embassy in Washington DC in the 80s. Her job entailed liaison and coordination with US and international media agencies, the Filipino-Ametican community in the entire United States, International Cultural Agencies and US Congressional offices. A s e d u c a t o r, s h e w a s lecturer/trainor in Philippine Language, Culture and History at the Georgetown University's Center for Immigration Studies, presently, Ms. Boots teaches Mass Communications at the Ateneo de Manila University, the University of the Philippines, and the Manila Times School of Journalism. She also heads the Performing Arts Division of the Asian Academy of Television Arts. Manila Bulletin Charice Pempengco (right) with her mom Raquel (Photo from Instagram) Mom 'understands' Charice's decision, still wants her home By Michael Joe T. Delizo “Mayroon kaming konting hindi pagkakaintindihan hanggang Charice Pempengco's mother ngayon,” Raquel said of her mom, has moved on from her daughter claiming that “kapag hindi ko leaving home last year to be with her naibibigay 'yung gusto niya… partner whom the former doesn't sisiraan niya ako.” approve of. While Raquel and Charice did not “Kung talagang mahal niyo 'yung see each other over the holidays, isang tao, matututo kang magbigay they did communicate via email. kahit masaktan ka,”said Raquel on Charice is welcome to home, the the matter via “Buzz Ng Bayan,” mom added. Sunday. “Wala akong kailangang ibigay She claims to understand her na patawad kay Charice kasi hindi daughter's choice to be happy and siya nagkamali sa akin, ipinaglaban live with her “pangalawang pamilya.” niya lang 'yung naramdaman niya. The mother reiterated that she's “Naiintindihan ko…as long as always accepted Charice's sexual maligaya siya, naiintindihan ko kung orientation and had even supported hindi siya uuwi sa akin.” her previous homosexual Raquel appeals to Charice's relationships. partner, Alyssa Quijano, to heal the Raquel dismissed Charice's family. rumored suicide attempt supposedly “Kung mahal niya si Charice, due to financial difficulty, which bubuuin niya ang pamilyang winasak Charice's grandmother talked about niya,” Raquel said. Manila Bulletin in an interview on “Showbiz Police.” The Red Hot ... From page 25 Their bassist dubbed as “Flea” is like a ball of energy on stage. He is as charismatic as they come and he has inspired countless others to imitate his stylenamely, in how he handles his bass guitar onstage. Even his hairstyle was his own signature look. And “Flea” was also infamously known to perform totally nude on occasion in concerts, with just his bass guitar on hand. Definitely, “Flea” was and will always be one of the most “colorful” musicians ever! Their lead vocalist Anthony Kiedis, who has been the voice of the band for more than three decades, already has become the cornerstone to the band's long, long, enduring existence in the music scene. Vice Ganda ... From page 24 Top supporter Vice is still in a romantic relationship with someone he did not name. “Masaya (ako),” was all he said. He wants to keep their relationship private for the sake of his partner's family. “Ang dami naman ng alegasyon, ang daming lumalabas na pangalan pero wala akong ki-nonfirm, bayaan mo na silang mag-isip, bayaan mo na silang magbato ng pangalan pero wala akong kino-confirm,” he said. Vice added that “ang gulo na naman Anthony Kiedis is also responsible for composing some of the band's biggest hits. To me, “Flea” and Anthony are the two most important, and take note, active original members of the RHCP. From their days as an underground band in the 80′s, to them being one of the hottest acts in the 90′s, to now RHCP being the cool respected elder statesmen of Rock in the 2000′s, their existence to this day is nothing short of a miracle. The Red Hot Chili Peppers is one of the greatest bands ever! No decade, no era, and not even Father Time, could stop this band from continuing to make music together. When I think of it… it is amazing that in the year 2014, we will finally have the RHCP perform here in the Philippines. As the old saying goes, better late than never. Inquirer.net ng buhay ko, natatakot ako na magugulo siya at 'yung buhay ng pamilya niya.” He finds their situation challenging and “sobrang hirap.” In fact, they don't go out, he said, not even in a group. Vice's partner never fails to make the comedian feel appreciated. Vice read the text message sent by his partner over the New Year celebration: “Kahit wala na akong buhok, kahit hindi na ako nakakatakbo, ako pa rin ang magiging number one supporter mo na tahimik lang “Hindi ko kailangang sabihin sa buong mundo, ang importante (ay) nasabi ko sayo.” Manila Bulletin January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 27 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Metro Film Fest awards Ate Vi to Toni: 'Bakit mo selections explained binasted ang anak ko?’ By NR Ramos Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) Chairman Francis Tolentino has explained the selection process of nominees and winners at the recently concluded 39th Metro Manila Film Festival (MMFF) awards, this, amid continued criticisms. The MMDA chief explained that entries to the festival are not assured of n o m i n a t i o n i n a n y c a t e g o r y, maintaining that certain “criteria” have to be met to earn consideration. “'Yun po 'yung (isa sa) mga binago natin nung tayo'y unang nanungkulan diyan. Dati rati kasi, pagka top-grosser ka na, Best Picture ka eh. Inalis po natin 'yun para mapagbigyan po 'yung aspekto ng merit, 'yung quality, 'yung value ng isang pelikula,” Tolentino said as quoted in an ABS-CBNnews.com report. Tolentino clarified that he and the rest of the festival executive committee had nothing to do with the selection process of the festival winners; that a b o a rd o f j u ro r s re s p e c t a b l e individuals competent enough to judge the films, the chairman noted is responsible for scoring each film based on merits. The board includes directors Emmanuel Borlaza and Laurice Guillen, veteran cinematographer Romeo Vitug, National Commission for Culture And The Arts (NCCA) chairman Felipe de Leon Jr., film editor Edgardo “Boy” Vinarao, Cinema Eva l u a t i o n B o a rd ( CE B ) c h a i r Christine Dayrit, Colegio de San Juan de Letran College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Dean Rowena Capulong- Reyes, Ateneo de Manila University vice-president for Alumni Affairs Fr. Tito Caluag, parish priest Fr. Jacinto Padua of the Sto. Niño de Tondo, Miss Universe 3rd runner-up Ariella Arida, Theaters Association representative Maan Lopez, housewife Romilda Amago, student Lorna Luna, teacher Rex Ado and driver Larry Anido, all of whom underwent training on film appreciation. To f u r t h e r u n d e r s c o re t h e credibility of the process, Tolentino added that nobody among them knew the results of the judging even as the jurors themselves were not privy to the scores each gave to the participating films. “Secluded po sila (judges) sa isang lugar. Nag-uusap sila (at) nagbebrainstorm sila before they jot down 'yung score. Then, kapag nakuha na po 'yung score, hindi alam ng ibang judges 'yung score ng katabi niya,” Tolentino said. He cleared that an independent auditing firm validated the results prior to sealing it in an envelope that was opened during the awards night itself. “So wala pong nakaalam in advance, wala pong may alam (ng results). Ang may alam lang po 'yung auditing firm.” Tolentino's explanation came after producers of entry “Kimmy Dora: Ang Kiyemeng Prequel” made public their disappointment over the deemed snub of their film during the 39th MMFF awards night. There are also those who criticize the Best Actress win of Maricel Soriano for her role in “Girl, Boy, Bakla, Tomboy.” Manila Bulletin Phil Everly ... From page 25 1939, in Chicago where the Everlys moved to from Brownie when Ike grew tired of working in the coal mines. The brothers began singing country music in 1945 on their family's radio show in Shenandoah, Iowa. Their career breakthrough came when they moved to Nashville in the mid-1950s and signed a recording contract with New York-based Cadence Records. Their breakup came dramatically during a concert at Knott's Berry Farm in California. Phil Everly threw his guitar down and walked off, prompting Don Everly to tell the crowd, “The Everly Brothers died 10 years ago.” During their breakup, they pursued solo singing careers with little fanfare. Phil also appeared in the Clint Eastwood movie “Every Which Way but Loose.” Don made a couple of records with friends in Nashville, performed in local nightclubs and played guitar and sang background Andi hurt ... From page 24 know what's best for their son. Sila ang nagpalaki so dapat naman po sila ang masusunod.” The 23-year-old single mom also said, “But at the same time, nandito po ako para naman ipakita na hindi ako dapat i-dislike for their son kasi una sa lahat, totoo naman po 'yung nararamdaman ko para sa kanya. Pangalawa, hindi naman po akong masamang tao.” By Pau Aguilera Toni Gonzaga was caught off guard by Gov. Vilma Santos query on the former's almost-romantic involvement with Luis Manzano in the past. Toni was filling in for Luis as guest host on “Minute To Win It” with the actor-TV host stepping in at the game show's 60-minute circle as a contestant during its New Year episode when Gov. Vi put her on the hot seat. The 60-year-old multiawarded actress was wishing her son luck in a surprise phone interview, when she suddenly turned to Toni and blurted, “Bakit mo binasted ang anak ko?,” eliciting cheers from the studio audience. Without missing a beat, Vilma continued, “Toni, are you listening? Alam mo nung nililigawan ka ni Lucky, tapos binasted mo siya, alam mo bang masyadong naapektuhan ang anak ko?” Toni, who was seemingly at a loss for words, answered, “Naku! Pasensya na po kayo, hindi ko sinasadya! Bata pa po ako noon!” vocals on recording sessions. Don Everly said in a 1986 Associated Press interview that the two were successful because “we never followed trends. We did what we liked and followed our instincts. Rock 'n' roll did survive, and we were right about that. Country did survive, and we were right about that. You can mix the two but people said we couldn't.” In 1988, the brothers began hosting an annual homecoming benefit concert in Central City, Kentucky, to raise money for the area. Inquirer.net Despite being vocal about her feelings, Andi maintains that her relationship with Jake has no label. “I really care for him a lot but he's not based here. Ayaw po naming ipilit ang mga bagay na hindi naman po puwede. I've always been honest about my feelings for him naman,” she stressed. In a separate press interview, Erap advised his son to “concentrate” on his studies first, following rumors that the erstwhile couple has rekindled their disrupted romance. Manila Bulletin Gov. Vi playfully pressed, “Eh, papaano ngayon, mature ka na?” The veteran actress touted Star for All Seasons eventually p o i n t e d o u t t h a t To n i i s “unfortunately taken,” by her longtime boyfriend, filmmaker Paul Soriano. Luis, in a 2012 interview, admitted that he courted the 29year-old actress-TV host during their “Crazy For You” days, his first acting stint with Toni in 2006, before teaming up in several Kapamilya projects as cohosts and co-actors (“This Guy's In Love With You Mare”). In the special episode of “Minute To Win It” aired Friday, Luis went on to win P500,000 for the benefit of the typhoon “Yolanda” survivors. Manila Bulletin Key MMFF questions posed and answered By Nestor U. Torre Guitarist Phil Everly. AFP PHOTO/VALERIE MACON Luis Manzano and Toni Gonzaga Every MMFF entry poses a key question in viewers' minds: Fo r i n s t a n c e , t h e m a j o r consideration in Vice Ganda's starrer, “Girl, Boy, Bakla, Tomboy,” is how well he's able to rise up to the huge challenge he's set for himself to depict all four “genders.” In “Boy Golden,” will director Chito Roño come up with a period action-drama that is not just full of grand, diverting conceits, as most Jeorge Estregan starrers are, but is also a good, integral production? And, in “My Little Bossings,” will tyro movie child actors, Ryzza Mae Dizon and Bimby Aquino, pass muster as the local screen's newest juvenile leads? L e t ' s a n s we r t h a t l a s t question first: In Marlon Rivera's comedy-drama, Ryzza connects with moviegoers due to her masa looks and appeal, but her character is developed only in erratic snippets, one joke or sight gag at a time, so the result isn't a totalized performance. We'll have to wait for another, more focused screen portrayal to see if the gung-ho girl has it in her to measure up to the fuller and richer portrayals that Snooky Serna or Aiza Sequerra turned in as child stars. As for Bimby, his tyro p e r fo r m a n c e i s eve n l e s s winning, because he doesn't appear to be all that enthusiastic about being a screen actor. He's game enough and dutifully does what he's told, but his heart and zest don't seem to be in it. He could learn to enjoy himself more in follow-up films, so here's hoping. Spicy humor Having said which, we should note that the lightbulb idea of “pitting” “poor” Ryzza and “rich” Bimby “against” each other is an inspired brainstorm that results in scenes strong on point of comedic conflict, the stuff of which potentially spicy humor is made. Unfortunately, their lack of buildup and climax frustrates the attainment of those comedic peaks, and the kiddie characters stop squabbling and become friends much too easily for comfort and delight. The fact that “My Little Bossings” is doing so well at the tills indicates that at least one follow-up costarrer for Bimby and Ryzza may be in the cards. Should that encore engagement materialize, we hope that it focuses more fully on their characters' relationship, and keeps adult characters from upstaging them. If the kids' participation is the main reason why their first film is a runaway hit, they should hold stage center in their followup costarrer, to show what they can really do. It's also instructive to note that the most exceptional portrayal in “My Little Bossings” DIZON AND YAP. The lightbulb idea of pitting “poor” Ryzza and “rich” Bimby “against” each other is an inspired brainstorm. is turned in by former child star Aiza Sequerra, as Ryzza and Vic Sotto's initially mysterious relative. It isn't clear until the movie's final third section exactly how they're related, and once it's revealed, viewers finally understand why she's been so glum and conflicted all the while. To her credit, Aiza manages the surprising shift without turning it into an over-the-top, heavingly “emotional fireworks” d i s p l a y, a n d h e r a r t i s t i c discretion makes her portrayal truly exceptional. Aiza is also able to do both comedic and dramatic scenes in equally convincing interplay, which is no mean feat on the local movie screen. Clearly, she's learned her thespic lessons well. Which is why we pray that Ryzza, this TV season's new star, will follow her fine example and u l t i m a te ly a l s o b e c o m e a creditable and versatile seriocomic talent whose performing career will productively and profitably extend into adulthood! Inquirer.net SPORTS January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 28 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Fil-Japanese wrestler It's all about money for in Manila this month Manny now - Koncz By Walden Sadiri M. Belen By Nick Giongco Manny Pacquiao has already been briefed about the pros and cons of fighting Tim Bradley or Ruslan Provodnikov and the Filipino star's adviser yesterday said his boss is weighing all the options to maximize their earning potential. “It's all about the money now,” said Koncz from Los Angeles a day after conferring with Top Rank chief Bob Arum as they finalize the details of Pacquiao's ring return possibly at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Arum has booked an April 12 date for Pacquiao, who Koncz said “got back in the driver's seat after his impressive performance in Macau” against Brandon Rios last year. Koncz said “we are exploring all options” and Pacquiao is expected to regain his former stature as a drawing power in the US when he headlines another HBO pay-perview presentation. Bradley is seriously being considered as he and Pacquiao have an unfinished business following the American's controversial split decision win in June 2012. A rematch with Bradley has the makings of a PPV success as Pacquiao is a certified hit, while Bradley has started to gain inroads following his slambang bouts with Provodnikov and Juan Manuel Marquez. Provodnikov also entered the scene as the Russian banger is a certified crowd-pleaser but since he is also being trained by Freddie Roach and the fact that he is an untested commodity in pay-perview, Bradley has the edge in landing the Pacquiao lottery. Still, Koncz said Pacquiao will carefully study the proposals that have been laid out before making a decision. Marquez was ruled out as a possibility as the Mexican maestro has publicly declared that a mouthwatering fifth fight with Pacquiao doesn't motivate him anymore even if he is offered a hefty purse. Koncz said he expects Pacquiao to earn a paycheck that he used to make before his unfortunate run-in with Marquez in late-2012. “Had Manny lost against Rios, it would have been a different story but Manny put on a very good performance against Rios so he's back,” added Koncz. Manila Bulletin UK bet Sukie Robertson (third from left) celebrates with the top finishers in the Freestyle: Tricks and Kite Stunts category of the first ICTSI Philippine Kiteboarding Tour in Boracay Local bet, Swede Ace top Kiteboarding Louie Fernando and Swede ace Atte Kappel lorded it over the elite field in the Twin Tip Racing: Circuit Race to lead the winners in the first ICTSI Philippine Kiteboarding Tour in Bulabog Beach, Boracay, Aklan last Sunday. Fernando, a Cabrinha team rider, bested an international field of 84 k i t e b o a rd e r s f ro m Au s t ra l i a , Switzerland, Estonia, Sweden, Russia, United Kingdom, Ukraine, Germany and Norway and Manila, Boracay, Palawan, Davao, Puerto Galera and Caliraya to rule the Twin Tip Course Race. Kappel, on the other hand, topped the Masters class of the Twin Tip Course Race while German Kathrin Borgwardt dominated the women's side of the three-day event sponsored by International Container Terminal Services, Inc. Ukrainian champion Andrey Salnik bucked the wind and ruled the Freestyle: Tricks and Kite Stunts category with his high-wire acts while stunning UK bet Sukie Robertson emerged as the top lady freestyler in the event which served as the kickoff leg of the four-stage circuit organized by the Philippine Kiteboarding Association headed by president Jay Ortiz. Russian Sergey Belmesou also wowed the crowd and earned the nod of the judges with the best hangtime act of more than six seconds in the 18 knots windy condition as he topped the highlight Cabrinha Hangtime Challenge in the event staged to showcase Filipino kiteboarders' talent and skills. B o ra c ay - b a s e d h a l f - I t a l i a n Stefano Ganugi, meanwhile, upstaged a field of 14 aged 16-and-below to reign in the special kids category of the event backed by Boracay Greenyard, the official distributor of Cabrinha equipment, Stoked, Dakine, Aloha Boardsports, and supported by Tanduay Ice, Colt 45 and Summit Water. Island major sponsors were Aqua Boracay, Blue Marlin Boracay, Kasbah Boracay, and Freestyle Academy Wrestling fans in the country can look forward to the first ever wrestling tournament on Jan. 25 at the Ynares Sports Arena in Pasig City. Making the sport event even more exciting is that one of the participants is Filipino-Japanese professional wrestler Syuri Kondo a.k.a. KG (for Karate Girl). In a recent visit to the country, Syuri expressed determination to change the landscape of the local combat sport arena by introducing professional wrestling in the country. Wrestling is a popular combat sport in the US and Japan where she was born and raised, and it also has immense following in the Philippines. Syuri knows the sport is not played professionally here, a fact that prompted her to come over. Interestingly, Syuri has had stints in modeling for fashion magazines and also played bit roles in movies after graduating from high school. Later, in between championship fights in wrestling and kickboxing, she dabbled in music, working with the female singing group Apple Tale on a collaboration titled ” Apple Tale With Syuri.” Their debut album titled “Chouzetsu Otome: Musha Shugyou Hen” was released on Jan. 12. But fate had something else for Syuri. She could sing and act but it was her skills in karate that was noticed by a talent scout during an entertainment audition that she joined in Tokyo when she was 19 (Syuri is now 24 years old). She passed the auditions conducted by a big talent agency but she was convinced instead to try her luck in combat sports, particularly wrestling. A professional wrestler for several years now, Syuri is also a shoot boxer and kick boxer. As kick boxer, she has had seven fights and seven wins so far. She fights once every three months. As a wrestler, Syuri has a fight every week and is also seen on Sports TV Japan regularly. She currently plays for the Wrestling New Classic (WNC) Promotion where she is in her second reign as WNC Women's Champion. In 2009, Syuri joined a new promotion called Smash using the one-word ring name Syuri. She lost in her first three fights with Smash but on her fourth, she won over a formidable opponent named Kana in the main event Smash.4. That ended her losing streak. It was also the biggest win in her career as a professional wrestler. In 2012, after retiring the Smash Diva Championship, Syuri joined WNC. On Nov. 18, WNC and Reina Women's World Championship announced that Syuri had signed a dual contract with the two promotions, making Syuri Kondo a.k.a. KG her the first female wrestler to hold such a contract and distinction. Ankei Tamashiro, president of RWWC, said that they intend to put up a training center for professional wrestling in the Philippines. And this project will kick off with the first ever wrestling tournament in the country at the Ynares Sports Arena. Incidentally, when Syuri and the RWWC group came over in November, they also turned over a donation she solicited from colleagues in Japan for the survivors of super typhoon Yolanda. The donation was coursed through the Rotary Club Southern Pampanga District 3790. Manila Bulletin January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 29 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS Fearless forecast in 2014 By Grace G. Baldisseri Jersey City, NJ -- This year, it is knowing what is in store for 2014 that matters to many Filipinos all over the world. With the tragedy brought about by last year's killer quake in Bohol and Cebu and the millions affected by super typhoon Haiyan, I am one in hoping for the best to come. I do not believe in card reading especially those who charge money to tell you something you already know and scare you of horrible things that will happen in the future. It is partly because of my Christian orientation that stops me in believing predictions for only God knows what is to come. Then I read of Feng Shui, a Chinese philosophical system of harmonizing the human existence with the surrounding environment. I searched the web for an expert and boom! I found one in Jersey City, not far from where I live. I called up to set an appointment for a possible interview with this Feng Shui Master. On the day of the interview, I had prepared a lot of questions on my index cards but I discarded them as I was there to know what this coming year is all about; how would it affect our environment, our health and the economy. Ms. Patricia Chee studied Feng Shui in China. She has been practicing Feng Shui for almost two decades and last year, she was able to predict the huge devastation that occurred in the Philippines. I conveyed to her my interest to share whatever she is going to tell me about her predictions for this year. She agreed and here is an account of my interview with her: The Filipino Express: Ms. Chee, it is my privilege to meet you and to find out what is in store for 2014. PatriciaChee: The Year 2014 is the year of the Wood Horse or Fire Horse in the Hsia calendar. This year represents two elements with wood sitting on top fire. According to the cycle of birth and destruction which governs the inter-relationship between the elements, wood produces fire and so they are on the productive cycle and have supportive relationship. In 2014, the nature of the elements is not that peaceful .Yang wood symbolizes a tree which is stubborn that sticks to principles and hard to compromise. The Horse is a very powerful element of fire energy that will trigger big explosions, gun fire and war. TFE: Does it mean to say that there will be chaos this year? PC: Oh yes, with such elements we cannot expect 2014 to be peaceful. The stubborn yang wood shows a n u n comp romisin g attitude and makes it hard to reach an agreement between conflicting interest. There will be more international conflicts and struggles leading to fierce fighting and battles. In the month of June in the Western calendar which is peak summer, the fire energy is very p owe r f u l . We s e e t h e f i re flickering, emotional and unstable, which will bring about explosions and fire disasters. With fire burning wood from the underneath, the wood will be very dry and unhealthy as wood symbolizes trees and the environment. The Wood Horse Ye a r w i l l b r i n g s e r i o u s environmental disaster, such as forest fire, serious air and sea pollution and oil leakages. Strong fire also attacks metal which affects the breathing organ, lung and skin. Horse Year also creates bad air in the atmosphere and this will result to virus infection and epidemic spreading. In 2014 the flying star #4 is in the center and it is the Rooster. It will 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 01 Sudoku Solution to Issue 01 Crossword Ms. Patricia Chee in her store at Hudson Mall in Jersey City. Photo by Enrico David not be surprising if there will be another scare of chicken flu. The Horse is also Peach Blossom or flower of romance. This is more beneficial to the entertainment and glamour industries such as beauty, advertising and media. The negative aspect of peach blossom will be sensational sex scandal. The yang wood sitting on a Horse is also a star called "Red Charm" which describes a woman of stunning beauty that easily attracts men. TFE: Can you tell us something about the economy this year? PC: For the world economy, the fire element is often the driving force behind the stock market. As such, Fire Year often generates optimism and drive up the stock market. The Year 2014 will show substantial improvement in the economic atmosphere and the stock market will continue to be very active p a rt icu la rly in sp rin g a n d summer. TFE: Thank you so much for sharing our readers a glimpse of 2014. If they want to know more about Feng Shui, how do they contact you? PC: For those who want to see me, please call 201-332-3688 or come visit us at Good Fortune Store at Hudson Mall. Route 440, Jersey City, New Jersey. And as we shook hands, I began to understand there is a reason why this article has to be written and why it has to be shared. EXPRESS CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Work hard 6. Sweet gritty-textured fruit 10. Matured 14. Excuse 15. Backside 16. Barbershop emblem 17. Stinky 19. Damson 20. Not awake 21. Explosive 22. Start over 23. Sedate 25. Seminal fluid 26. Spar 30. Picturesque 32. Let loose 35. Emit 39. Dishevel 40. Scanty 41. Shreds 43. A cowboy movie 44. Ring around the nipple 46. Feudal worker 47. Decree 50. Stratum 53. Connects two points 54. Carpet 55. Die 60. Savvy about 61. Detestable 63. South American country 64. Blackthorn 65. Negatively charged particle 66. God of love 67. Confined 68. Enumerates DOWN 1. Tibetan monk 18. Choose 2. "Oh my!" 24. Residue from a 3. Tab fire 4. Double-reed woodwind 25. Factions 5. Carnival attractions 26. Mongrel 6. Average 27. Dwarf buffalo 7. Arousing 28. A promiscuous 8. Apart woman 9. A musical pause 29. Possessing a hard 10. Be grateful for shell 11. Automaton 31. What a person is 12. Avoid called 13. An evil 33. Watchful supernatural being 34. Arid 36. How old we are 37. Small slender gull 38. Sea eagle 42. Dissolvable 43. Direction 45. A body of water 47. Run away to wed 48. Restaurant 49. Foreword 51. Upon (prefix) 52. Kidney-related 54. Coarse file 56. Hindu princess 57. Nile bird 58. Notch 59. Female chickens 62. Got together ACTION CLASSIFIED Rentals CNC operators for busy stone fabricator. Experience helpful but we'll train right person with some CAD skills. Work Permit a must. Call 201-527-6199 Rich CONSTRUCTION Helpers and Foreman. Experience helpful. Good pay, FULL TIME. Work Permit a must. Ridgefield Park, NJ 07660. Call 201-527-6199 Rich Cleaning Person Wanted for Motel in Southampton, New York Full Time Must speak English Start March 15 Please send resume/references to: TO ADVERTISE, PLEASE CALL 201-434-1114 Page 30 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS u Help Wanted u Jobs u Personal u Services 20 Companies Hiring In January JOBS AVAILABLE GRANITE, MARBLE fabrication workers, polishing, installations. Insurance, good pay. FULL TIME only. Work Permit a must. Call 201-527-6199 Rich January 10 - 16, 2014 These employers are staffing up now. Posted by Patch Staff, January 08, 2014 Written by Debra Auerbach, AOL Jobs As 2014 starts, people everywhere are vowing to go to the gym more often, eat healthier and save more money. New Year's resolutions such as these can be easy to make, but they're not always so easy to keep. If your resolution this year is to get a new job, you hopefully will be able to see this one through, if you take a look at the following 20 companies that are hiring this month. Start your New Year off right by applying to one of these great companies that are hiring across different industries, levels and job functions: 1. Advanced Resources Industry: Office/clerical, finance/accounting, technical, health care and human resources Sample job titles: Senior accountant, tax manager, receptionist, Web developer, human resources manager. Location: Greater Chicago area 2. Advanced Tech Support Industry: IT, call center, sales Sample job titles: Sales executive - inside sales - inbound sales (call center/IT sales), inside sales representative (IT sales call center). Location: Boca Raton, Fla. 3. Aerotek Industry: Recruiting and staffing services Sample job titles: Software engineer, medical coder, welder, industrial engineer, project manager, clinical research associate, chemist, architect. Location: Nationwide 4. Atria Senior Living Inc. Industry: Health care Sample job titles: Resident care director, sales director, executive director, activities director, licensed practical nurse. Location: Alabama, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia 5. Children of America Industry: Child care Sample job titles: Pre-kindergarten teacher, infant teacher, bus driver, lead teacher, assistant teacher, substitute teacher. Location: Pennsylvania, Virginia, New Jersey, Illinois, New York, Massachusetts, Ohio, Wisconsin, Delaware, Indiana, Maryland, North Carolina 6. Edge Systems Industry: Medical equipment Sample job titles: Sales representative, regional trainer, administrative assistant. Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, Illinois, Arizona, Colorado Location: Georgia, California, New Jersey, Virginia, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, 7. EVO Payments International Industry: Sales and IT Sample job titles: Sales representative, technical support operations supervisor, business system analyst, director of treasury, financial analyst, great plain/business intelligence, staff tax accountant. Location: Moorestown, N.J.; Melville, N.Y.; Denver; Phoenix; San Antonio, Texas; Boston; Columbus, Ohio; Jacksonville, Fla. 8. Home Instead Senior Care Industry: Home health care Sample job titles: Caregiver, home health aide, certified nursing assistant. Location: Nationwide 9. Insight Global Inc. Industry: Information technology Sample job titles: Entry-level recruiter, Java developer, cable tech Wi-Fi installer, software engineer, helpdesk. Location: Atlanta; Dallas; Chicago; Los Angeles; San Francisco; Charlotte, N.C.; Seattle 10. Kavaliro Industry: IT staffing Sample job titles: Software developer, project manager, project coordinator. Location: Orlando and Tampa, Fla.; Washington, D.C.; Chicago; Charlotte, N.C. 11. Langan Engineering & Environmental Services Industry: Engineering and environmental consulting Sample job titles: Geotechnical engineer, environmental engineer, civil engineer, environmental compliance manager, GIS programmer, network engineer, survey technician, laser scanning technician, accounting compliance manager, senior accountant, marketing coordinator. Location: New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Florida, North Dakota, California 12. Mattress Firm Industry: Retail Sample job titles: Sales manager, sales manager in training, sales associate, warehouse manager. Location: Nationwide 13. Real Estate Mortgage Network Inc. Industry: Mortgage Sample job titles: Mortgage loan officer, branch manager, area manager. Location: Nationwide 14. Related Management Industry: Real estate Sample job titles: Regional manager, property manager, concierge, maintenance technician, maintenance superintendent, leasing consultant, administrative assistant, multi-site property manager, accounts receivable associate, administrative manager. Location: New York, Illinois, Massachusetts, Connecticut, California, Texas, New Jersey, California, North Carolina, Colorado, Virginia 15. Roche Bros. Supermarkets Industry: Food industry Sample job titles: Assistant kitchen manager, assistant meat manager, meat cutter, cook, line cook. Location: Boston and surrounding areas 16. South Bay Mental Health Industry: Mental health Sample job titles: Early childhood educator, speech and language pathologist, mental health clinician/clinical social worker, occupational therapist, social worker. Location: Brockton, Worcester, Lynn, Boston, Plymouth, Dorchester, Lowell and Swansea, Mass.; Hartford, Conn. 17. The Community Builders Industry: Nonprofit/housing Sample job titles: Property manager, maintenance technician, development project manager. Location: Boston; Chicago; Cincinnati; Worcester, New Bedford and Holliston, Mass.; Tory and New York City, N.Y.; Coatesville, Pa.; Washington, D.C. 18. ULINE Industry: Shipping and packaging - office supplies - equipment, packaging, retail Sample job titles: Customer service, distribution manager, director of talent acquisition, inside sales, IT, marketing, recruiter, supply chain, warehouse. Location: Nationwide 19. Ultimate Staffing (part of Roth Staffing Companies) Industry: Staffing for administrative, customer service, call center and human resources Sample job titles: Administrative assistant, customer service representative, call center representative, human resources representative. Location: Nationwide 20. Virtustream Industry: Cloud technology Sample job titles: Storage engineer, .Net engineer, software sales. Location: Bethesda, Md.; Atlanta; Vienna, Va.; Dallas, Texas; Tampa, Miami and Jacksonville, Fla.; Chicago; Denver; Phoenix; Las Vegas January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 31 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS January 10 - 16, 2014 Page 32 THE FILIPINO EXPRESS
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