Home Blog Page 105

Thousands protest in Bangkok after Thai parliament votes on constitutional reform

0

By Helen Regan and Kocha Olarn, CNN, Published Nov 19, 2020

(CNN) — Thailand’s parliament on Wednesday voted to move forward with two proposals on amending the constitution but stopped short of backing a motion that included monarchical reform, amid intensifying protests against the country’s military-backed government.

A youth-led movement has held regular demonstrations for the past five months, demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha — who seized power in a military coup in 2014 — the dissolution of parliament and changes to the constitution that they say entrenches the military’s power.

Protesters have also broken long-held taboos and risked lengthy prison sentences by calling for reform of the monarchy to curb the King’s powers and ensure he is accountable to the constitution. The movement is the biggest challenge to the establishment the country has seen in decades.

The vote came a day after the worst night of violence in the country’s five-month protest movement saw live ammunition used for the first time and left 55 people injured. Thousands of protesters on Wednesday again took to the streets of Bangkok.

Members of Thailand’s Senate and the House of Representatives on Wednesday voted on seven motions that included degrees of reform to the constitution put forward by the government, the opposition and one proposal from the people.

Among the reforms discussed was the undemocratic power of the Senate, of which all of its members — currently 245 — are handpicked by the Thai military and have the voting power to appoint the prime minister jointly with the lower house.

None of the six proposals included monarchical reform.

The seventh motion was brought by Thai social reform NGO iLaw and has received huge support from pro-democracy protesters. Their proposal would abolish the current constitution and pave the way to rewrite a new charter that would cover every chapter, including the monarchy.

That motion failed to win enough votes for approval, receiving only 212 votes from the joint sitting parliament of 732 members. It needed at least half the vote and at least a third of the Senate to pass.

Two proposals were adopted that would allow for discussion of constitutional change without affecting the monarchy. A drafting committee is to be set up after these motions are endorsed by King Maha Vajiralongkorn.

Protesters calling for constitutional reform rallied outside the parliament building in Bangkok on Tuesday, where they clashed with police and pro-monarchy groups in pitched street battles. Police used tear gas and water cannons with chemical-laced water to disperse protesters who had cut through wire barricades that separated them from police lines outside parliament.

At least two people were shot with live rounds during the protests, police confirmed on Wednesday. Police said one civilian was shot in the hip and a pro-democracy protester was shot in the left thigh.

Four others are believed to have sustained gunshot wounds, but police have not yet been able to talk to them so cannot confirm whether their injuries are from live rounds, according to police spokesman Maj. Gen. Piya Tawichai. They are all being treated in hospital.

Piya said the shots were fired after the police and fire brigade had withdrawn from the area and the two opposing factions had confronted each other just after 8 p.m. local time (8 a.m. ET).

Police denied using live rounds or rubber bullets, and said they are investigating the source of the shots.

“We didn’t apply measures deemed unnecessary. Measures used were matching with the protesters’ behaviors. Metropolitan Police Bureau would like to reiterate that, there were no rubber bullets. Rubber bullets were not used during our operation last night. And live ammunitions were certainly not used during our operation,” Piya said in a news conference Tuesday night.

The violence on Tuesday started when a group of protesters tried to cut through wire barricades surrounding the Thai parliament.

Protesters wearing multi-colored rain ponchos, goggles and hard hats threw smoke bombs and paint at police. Police responded by firing water cannon and water laced with a chemical irritant to push the crowds back. Some protesters carried inflatable yellow ducks and used them as shields against the water jets.

Fights also broke out between groups of pro-democracy protesters and royalist supporters, who wore yellow shirts and had been holding a counter-protest outside parliament. Pro-democracy protesters broke through police lines and the two sides began hurling stones and debris at one another — the worst confrontation between the two groups since the start of the protests.

Later in the evening, police retreated from their positions and protesters took over an abandoned water cannon truck, spraying it with graffiti. It is at this time that police said the live shots were fired.

As the chaos unfolded outside the parliament building, located next to the Chao Phraya River, several lawmakers left the area on boats.

The palace has not responded to the protests. But earlier this month, King Vajiralongkorn told CNN and Channel 4 that “Thailand is the land of compromise.”

Previous attempts by lawmakers to address the protesters’ demands have failed. An extraordinary session of parliament earlier this month didn’t produce any results to ease the political crisis; instead the formation of a national reconciliation committee was proposed.

This story was first published on CNN.com, “Thousands protest in Bangkok after Thai parliament votes on constitutional reform.”

Pfizer says final results show vaccine 95% effective

0

Nov 18, 2020, Agence France-Presse

WASHINGTON, DC, USA

Pfizer says the vaccine had no serious side effects and that the company will apply for emergency use authorization from US regulators ‘within days’

The biotech company Pfizer said Wednesday, November 18, that a completed study of its experimental COVID-19 vaccine showed it is 95% effective.

Pfizer said the vaccine had no serious side effects and that the company will apply for emergency use authorization from US regulators “within days.”

The announcement came as coronavirus cases are surging in the US and other parts of the world, and boosted hopes for an end to the pandemic that has upended life around the globe.

“The study results mark an important step in this historic eight-month journey to bring forward a vaccine capable of helping to end this devastating pandemic,” said Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla.

“With hundreds of thousands of people around the globe infected every day, we urgently need to get a safe and effective vaccine to the world,” he added.

Pfizer had said last week after a preliminary analysis that its product was more than 90% effective.

On Monday, November 16, another biotech firm involved in the race to develop a vaccine, Moderna, said its own vaccine was 94.5% effective, according to a preliminary analysis. – Rappler.com

Elijah still can’t believe it!

0

FUNFARE – Ricky Lo (The Philippine Star) November 17, 2020

Until or even after this interview, Elijah Canlas has been pinching himself to see that it isn’t just a dream that is, beating nine other nominees for Best Actor in the just-concluded Gawad Urian, the country’s credible awards given by the Manunuri (critics), including three veterans, Alden Richards for Hello, Love, Goodbye (said to be the all-time biggest Filipino box-office hit), Raymond Bagatsing for the critically-acclaimed historical film Quezon’s Game and director Joel Lamangan for Hupa.

“Some of them are my friends and I’ve watched their films,” said Elijah, referring to the six other contenders, Oliver Aquino (Jino to Mari), Louise Abuel (Edward), Royce Cabrera (Fucbois), Jansen Magpusao (John Denver Trending), Gold Azeron (Metamorphosis) and Gio Gahol (Sila Sila). “It was already an honor to be nominated for Gawad Urian. Dagdag pa ‘yung fact na nominated ako kasama ng mga mahuhusay na aktor. That’s why I really didn’t expect to win at all. It’s still unbelievable to me. I’m more than grateful for this blessing.”

Noted Gawad Urian head Butch Francisco, “It was a tough contest. Any of the 10 nominees was a deserving winner.”

Elijah won for his performance in Kalel, 15, as a student in a private school diagnosed to be HIV-positive, the same film that has also won him the same honor at the 17th Asian Film Festival (AFF) in Rome last August and a Best Director Award for Jun Lana at the 2019 Talinn Black Nights Film Festival (TBNFF) in Estonia. The movie was produced by Jun’s The IdeaFirst Company with his partner Perci Intalan.

“Will the two awards challenge me to prove not just to myself but to everybody that I deserve the honor? Definitely. I know that I am new in the industry and I still have a lot to learn and to prove myself,” said Elijah. “But at the end of the day, I act because I love doing it. Making films and telling stories are really a passion of mine. These awards are both an inspiration and a challenge. Alam ko that people now expect me to deliver not just a good performance but one that’s always better than my last one.

What’s ironic is that Elijah actually failed the first time he auditioned for the movie, only to land it in the long run. “First time I auditioned for Kalel was in 2014,” he recalled. “Sabi nga po ni direk Jun na it was a totally different film back then and they had cast somebody else. Actually, hindi nga daw po ako matandaan ni direk Jun mula sa mga nag-audition eh, hahahaha! But when I signed to be managed by The IdeaFirst Company back in 2018, direk Jun and direk Perci told me that they wanted to cast me in a film. I didn’t know that it was the same project I auditioned for four years ago until direk Jun gave me the script and offered the role. I remember na natulala ako when I realized na ako ang lead with Mr. Eddie Garcia and Ms. Jaclyn Jose as my co-stars no less!”

Elijah submerged himself so effectively in the character that you won’t see the greenhorn in it.

“I gave all the credit to direk Jun,” Elijah said in all humility. “Buong-buo na po si Kalel bilang karakter sa screenplay pa lang niya. We met several times for him to explain to me lahat ng kailangan niya sa akin. May powerpoint presentation pa po si direk Jun.

“He also explained why it’s important for him to make this film. And why it’s important for this film to be made. He also told me about the stories he got from people that he had interviewed. And siempre nagdagdag din po ako ng ambag ko by doing my research of my own on HIV and studying the story and character of Kalel to the smallest detail.”

Kalel’s story is real, according to Jun and Perci. The film presents real problems and sheds light on the stigma surrounding HIV. It should be taken seriously.

Added Elijah, “We should be more open in discussing this disease so that we will know what to do instead of judging with hate. We don’t talk about HIV enough and that’s why it isn’t going away. Kailangan natin itong pag-usapan at solusyonan.”

What was his parents’ reaction when he was offered Kalel and then the Boys Love series Gameboys (with Kokoy de Santos)?

“They are supportive in everything that I do. My mom almost cried when I was offered the role of Kalel because she was there when direk Jun gave me the script. Sobrang saya po nila when I get these kinds of opportunities. They always tell me how happy they are for me and how blessed I am that I get to do what I love to do.”

Elijah described himself as a very passionate person. “Whatever it is, I make sure to work the hardest I can to achieve it. Medyo I get awkward din po at mahiyain po ako minsan around people. Those who know me can attest to that. But when I’m around people I’m comfortable with and who I think I can trust, kaya ko nang mag-loosen up.”

Gameboys was a hit. Isn’t he afraid of being typecast in BL series?

“I’m not afraid of that at all. It was a huge honor and privilege to portray Cairo in Gameboys and that was genuinely a fun learning experience. It would be great to do it again as long as the project is right. But I’m always open to the challenge of portraying different characters. There are endless stories to tell out there.”

As early as when he was five years old, Elijah has been doing theater.

“I have learned to love acting and the art of telling stories. I even studied at the Philippine High School for the Arts to further improve my knowledge about theater and the arts. Then I studied Film at Mint College because I was obsessed with the art; I love watching movies. Up to now, I’m a student trying to pass and get good grades in my classes.”

Has showbiz changed his life?

“Well, not much. Siguro mas naging public lang po ang buhay ko at ng pamilya ko but other than that wala naman po masyado. I still attend my online classes at UP Manila while doing what I love to do most which is acting and telling stories. I couldn’t be more blessed.”

Pinoy power in the US beauty field

Fil-Am teen stunner from Hawaii KI’Ilani Arruda was crowned Miss Teen USA 2020 last week. She is the second winner from Hawaii and the second winner of the Miss Teen USA title of Filipino descent after Vanessa Minillo who won in 1998. The 19-year-old Kaui native had the best winning reaction ever. She was screaming and jumping all over.

Meanwhile, a lovely Mississippi lass was crowned Miss USA 2020 two days after Miss Teen USA in Graceland, Tennessee. Asya Branch emerged victorious at the culmination of the three-hour-long pageant. (Asya was a non-finalist at last year’s Miss America Pageant.) Narrowly missing the crown was Fil-American beauty Kim Layne of Idaho. Fans are requesting her to compete at next year’s Miss Universe Philippines pageant.

It is interesting to note that Miss USA 2019 Chelsie Kryst wore a stunning yellow gown by Michael Cinco during her final walk.

Another Pinoy behind the scene is California-based skin specialist Olivia Quido-Co who was chosen by the Miss Universe USA 2020 and Miss Teen USA 2020 pageants as their official skin care provider. She was also the official skincare provider during Miss Universe 2019. — Reported by Felix Manuel

Money and other life lessons from legendary Ulysses

0

FQ Corner – Rose Fres Fausto (Philstar.com) – November 18, 2020

Are you familiar with Ulysses? Not the typhoon that just devastated us, but the legendary Greek hero. His Greek name was Odysseus but he was known to the Romans as Ulysses.

Ulysses was a man who thought like a behavioral scientist. He was the brains behind winning the Trojan War. If you’re familiar with the term “trojan horse,” that was his big idea. After ten years of war between the Greeks and the people of Troy, the former pretended to have conceded and abandoned the conflict. They gave a giant wooden horse as a peace offering. The Trojans triumphantly brought the horse as their victory trophy inside their city. They didn’t know that Ulysses and his men were inside the horse. And so, at the appointed signal, the Greek soldiers came out and caught the Trojans by surprise. Ulysses and his men won the war right inside the city of Troy.

Today, “trojan horse” is known as a trick or strategy that causes a target to invite a foe into a securely protected bastion or place. Do you remember that malicious computer program that tricks users into willingly running it? This is where the name was derived.

Back to Ulysses. So, after winning the war, he sailed back home and they were going to pass by an island with treacherous sirens. These sirens were actually monsters pretending to be beautiful women with enchanting voices. They would assure sailors who pass their island that they just want to entertain them with their beautiful melodies, but what they really wanted was to kill them.

Ulysses, the strategist, came up with this plan. He told his men to fill their ears with wax so they won’t hear the beguiling voices of the sirens. However, he wanted to hear the sirens’ voices and still survive. He ordered his sailors to tie him firmly to the ship’s mast. He told them not to untie him even if he would order and plead to do so.

As expected, when they finally passed by the sirens’ island, Ulysses was so enamored by the enchanting voices of the sirens. He wanted to dive into the sea and swim to the island to embrace the sirens. He strained against the bonds that held him to the ship’s mast. He pleaded and ordered his men to set him free. But because his sailors were already warned about this, they ignored his orders and rowed harder. To the bewitched Ulysses, the sirens looked as beautiful as Helen of Troy, but to the sailors with wax in their ears and not hearing the deceptive voices singing, they appeared as they were – hungry monsters with vicious claws.

So, what can we learn from Ulysses when it comes to making decisions and actions on money and life in general?

1. Commitment device. Ulysses knew that he was going to be enamored by the sirens, so he thought of a way to protect himself and his men from the dangers of the enchanting creatures. He decided on this while he was still in what we call in Behavioral Economics as the “cold state” (rational state). He knew that when they would hear the sirens’ voices, they would do things that are bad for them.

If you know that you will end up not saving regularly because of the many things that you “have” to buy, “tie yourself to a mast.” Sign up for an automatic saving and investing plan. For your dream funds with specific use, incorporate a barrier to withdrawal. Giving a name to your fund somehow makes it harder for you to misuse it. Your emergency fund intended for real emergencies such as losing a job, unexpected repairs, getting sick with not enough medical insurance, etc. should be placed in short-term money market placements instead of your ATM account.

When it comes to healthy eating, take out the unhealthy choices in your fridge and pantry. Think of the “sirens” in your life – impulse buying especially during sale, lure of junk food, binge watching, mindless scrolling on social media, etc. and come up with commitment devices to make it hard for you to do things you will regret.

2. Trojan horse. What “trojan horses” have you let in our sanctuary that make it difficult for you to win the battles you are fighting in life – be it about saving for old age, being healthy, having wonderful relationships. Check what’s in your cellphone, your bedroom, your pantry, your calendar. Let’s all be careful with “free gifts” that we allow to invade our life.

3. Sirens. Aside from those mentioned in number 1, who are the other “sirens” in your life? Right now, I am thinking of the politicians who “sing those deceiving songs,” promising the moon and the stars during election campaigns. We systematically make mistakes when choosing the right leaders because we choose in our “hot state” (emotional state). Come next elections, why don’t we try to “put wax on our ears” during the campaign, and instead really study the candidates’ credentials and past performances. Before the senatorial elections, Ryan Yu came up with a simple platform that allowed us to evaluate the “sirens.” Here are the links – Online Quiz to Help You Choose Your Senators Rationally and FQwentuhan With Ryan Yu.

Other sirens are those who promise high and sure returns with no risk. Please remember, there is no such thing. They are sirens singing deceiving melodies but are actually hungry monsters with vicious claws, just like those seen by Ulysses’ soldiers.

Who are your sailors who tied you to the mast? We all need people around us whom we can trust so that when we start getting crazy, they are there to protect us from ourselves. They have to be strong, trustworthy family, friends, or even advisers.

Typhoon Ulysses lesson. Preparedness is what we should all take away from the typhoon and the Greek hero. We always have typhoons visit our country, year in and year out, and we can only expect things to worsen because of climate change. There is no reason why we should be caught by surprise every single time a typhoon visits us. On the one hand, disasters like Ulysses are opportunities to see how resilient and helpful Filipinos are. But on the other hand, they should also be wake-up calls for us to demand more from our government. Both the national and local government should already have things in place like clockwork, because these disasters are already expected.

I hope the above Ulysses stories remind us of our weaknesses and also our ability to do something about them.#

Filipinos forced back home by pandemic top 254,000 — DFA

0

(Philstar.com) – November 17, 2020

MANILA, Philippines — The Department of Foreign Affairs on Monday said it brought home another 8,831 Filipinos from overseas last week. 

This brings the total number of migrants repatriated by the agency due to the novel coronavirus crisis to 254,785. 

“More than 87% or 7,715 of [last] week’s repatriates arrived from the Middle East,” the DFA said in a press release. 

It added that another 611 Filipinos returned from Asia-Pacific, trailed by 503 repatriates from Europe and two from the Americas. 

“[T]he DFA chartered a Philippine Airlines flight to Guangzhou, China, which brought home 86 distressed overseas Filipinos from various regions in China, including a medical stretcher case,” the agency said, adding that these repatriates arrived safely in Manila last Wednesday. 

Meanwhile, 151 deportees from Malaysia landed in Zamboanga last Thursday, the department said. 

“Three [overseas Filipinos] with chronic illness were also medically repatriated from [the United Arab Emirates], Bahrain, and Oman. Finally, our various Foreign Service Posts helped in the return of overseas Filipinos from Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Vietnam, and Japan,” DFA added. 

On Monday, two DFA-chartered flights from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and Dili, Timor-Leste were scheduled to bring home around 370 “distressed” Filipinos from the two countries. 

The department said it expects to repatriate another 90,000 Filipinos before the year is out.

Latest data from the agency shows that more than 11,500 Filipinos have contracted coronavirus overseas, over 800 of whom died. — Bella Perez-Rubio

What went wrong during Typhoon Ulysses?

0

Was there a lapse in protocol, gaps in communication, or both? Who should have taken the lead?

Nov 16, 2020, Lian Buan

Super Typhoon Rolly (Goni) has been the  strongest tropical cyclone to hit Earth so far this year, yet it was the 3rd storm after that, Typhoon Ulysses (Vamco) that had the worse impact: at least 67 dead as of Monday, November 16.

Cagayan saw its worst floods in years, with Filipinos traumatized by images and sounds of residents who could not be rescued late Friday night, November 13, when information was scarce.

In Marikina, river waters even breached the level of tropical storm Ondoy (Ketsana) that submerged the metro in nightmarish floods in 2009, even though Ulysses dumped much less rain (150 millimeters compared to Ondoy’s 445 millimeters).

What went wrong? Was there a lapse in protocol, gaps in communication, or both? Who should have taken the lead?

Disaster communications

The national government swears it prepared sufficiently. “We were not actually caught flat-footed in this event,” said Office of Civil Defense Deputy Administrator Casiano Monilla in a press conference Thursday, November 12.

But Monilla said it was a classic case of residents not immediately – or not at all – heeding evacuation orders of their local officials, saying that “minsan kasi nagre-rely tayo sa ating nararamdaman (sometimes we rely on our feelings),” rather than the forecast of PAGASA.

It has to be noted though that there was bound to be desensitization, because Ulysses was already the Philippines’ 6th tropical cyclone in the past month.

For the past tropical cyclones, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) blasted siren sounds from mobile phones warning of heavy rain and heavy floods, but they turned out to be mild.

“Tatlong sunud-sunod na typhoon na ginigising ka nang maaga ng alert eh magkakaroon ng desensitization, and sa disaster science community, ang tawag doon ay cry wolf effect, so we must be able to address that, we should address that,” said Dr Mahar Lagmay, executive director of the UP Resilience Institute.

(For 3 straight typhoons, alerts woke you up, there was bound to be desensitization, and in the disaster science community, we call that the cry wolf effect, so we must be able to address that, we should address that.)

The missing link was a hazard and area-specific warning, said Luigi Toda who handles climate and disaster resilience at the Arup International Development East Asia Region.

“When we had Project NOAH back then, providing timely information and easily understood maps that identify areas at risk of impending floods, I thought somehow, it helped close some of the gaps and information and communication,” Toda told Rappler.

The government stopped funding Project NOAH in 2017 due to budget constraints. Project NOAH is still a program at the UP Resilience Institute.

“Very specific (ang advisories ng NOAH), in fact, meron pang maps na nag- i-inundate, na live, habang tumataas ang tubig, ano ba ‘yung mga binabaha na,” Lagmay told Rappler.

(It’s very specific, there were live maps that showed inundation while water levels were rising, showing which areas were getting flooded.)

“(For example) dito malakas ang ulan, ganito kadami ‘yung ulan, and if you look at it in more detail, and if there has been previous work in that area, and if you use the technologies, kaya mong i-predict how many hours and what levels of flood will happen,” said Lagmay.

(For example, there will be heavy rainfall here, it will rain by this much, and if you look at it in more detail, if there has been previous work in that area, if you use the technologies, you can predict how many hours and what levels of flood will happen.)

Dam protocols

Magat Dam is under scrutiny for the massive floods it caused Cagayan and Isabela, because for two days at the height of the typhoon – November 12 and 13 – 7 gates were opened, releasing water equivalent to 18 meters high.

Experts said that according to the Magat Dam protocol, there should be a drawdown of 2-3 days before the expected landfall.

“Kaya naman ng simulations ‘yun eh na ma-predict at ma-forecast ‘yun, given that kind of forecast, you should be able to know and anticipate ito ‘yung amount of water that will be delivered and that can be converted to the amount of water level sa dam, so if you know that, dapat 3 days in advance pa lang nagre-release ka na, para hindi sudden,” said Lagmay.

(There could have been simulations to predict and forecast that, given that kind of forecast, you should be able to know and anticipate that this is the amount of water that would be delivered and that can be converted to the amount of water level in the dam, so if you know that, you should have released water 3 days in advance, so it’s not sudden.)

Ulysses hit land on November 11. The National Irrigation Administration-Magat River Integrated Irrigation System (NIA-MARIIS) said in a statement they warned residents of a pre-release November 9, or two days before Ulysses made landfall on November 11.

“Drawdown should have commenced 3 days prior to landfall, which was November 8,”  former lawmaker Terry Ridon, presently the convenor of think tank Infrawatch PH, told Rappler.

Ridon also pointed out that based on data from state forecaster PAGASA, Magat Dam was kept viable at 165-175 meters from July to September, yet the dam was at 188-191 meters “in the last two-and-a-half weeks, knowing that there were 5 typhoons entering Luzon.”

NIA said Magat’s spilling level is 193 meters.

Ridon said that the oversight amounts to a criminal offense.

Vice President Leni Robredo has backed calls to investigate the protocol that was followed with Magat Dam. Talks of suing have surfaced not only in Cagayan, but also in Marikina.

Over saturation

Because of the previous tropical cyclones that preceded Ulysses, mountain ranges were not able to absorb as much rainfall as they could have, resulting in a “direct runoff,” meaning water directly flowed to the reservoir.

Ang nangyari direct runoff, pagpatak ng ulan sa lupa, dahil saturated na, diretso na sa ilog, at ang ilog na ‘yun diretso na sa reservoir, di katulad dati na nanggaling sa hindi pa masyadong saturated, pag ulan ina-absorb ng lupa eh, it takes time para makarating sa reservoir,” state hydrologist Ed Dela Cruz told Rappler.

(What happened was a direct runoff, when the rain hit land, because it was already saturated, it directly flowed into rivers and into the reservoir.  Unlike before if it’s not saturated, the soil absorbs the water and it takes time before water flows to the reservoir.)

“We knew that [the mountain ranges were] saturated. That cannot be an excuse, that cannot be an explanation, because everybody knew [they were] saturated,” Lagmay said.

Marikina Mayor Marcelino “Marcy” Teodoro admitted in an interview with GMA News that they only expected the river to reach 18 meters. It reached 22 meters, breaching Ondoy’s 21.5 meter level.

Lagmay said even water level at the river can be “simulated by powerful computers.”

Who should have taken the lead?

Monilla passed the buck to the local government units (LGUs), saying they cannot “micromanage” LGUs.

“‘Yungpag-a-alarm po o pagbibigay ng abiso sa ating mga kababayan, nakasalalay po ‘yan sa ating mga local government units because they have prepared this contingency plan,”Monilla said.

(Warning residents is the responsibility of local government units because they have prepared this contingency plan.)

But LGUs have been at the front line all yearlong, responding to back-to-back crises such as the pandemic and the previous storms.

“Local frontliners can only do so much,” said Toda.

“This is when our national, regional, provincial, and Disaster Risk Reduction Management (DRRM) councils or offices should come in and take lead,” said Toda.

Former senator and now Sorsogon Governor Francis “Chiz” Escudero said the “national government should step up.”

“Sorry, but the National Government should step up to the plate on disaster response and should show more empathy to the victims of recent calamities,” Escudero said in a Facebook post.

President Rodrigo Duterte has floated a plan of creating a disaster task force, but the proposed member agencies are the same as the existing NDRRMC. A separate and independent Department of Disaster has been proposed too.

“It is worth studying, do we really need a separate agency?” Robredo said on ANC’s Headstart.

“Baka nagki-create lang tayo ng unnecessary layers in the bureaucracy, na meron namang existing, baka it would be worth studying the existing agency ano nga ba kakulangan nito,” Robredo said.

‘Do not fight nature’

But all of these Ulysses-specific problems still deal with response, when the concept of DRRM is about prevention and mitigation.

Lagmay said “we are still far” from a level of infrastructure where towns would not be flooded at all, as communities continue to be built in disaster-prone areas.

Monilla said the dense population is a persisting problem, but Toda said that is a reality we cannot change.

“In the long run, we need to invest in nature-based solutions as part of our disaster prevention and mitigation measures. By this we mean we need to start preventing any further attempts of deforestation for instance, and strengthen efforts to protect our watersheds, particularly in Sierra Madre mountain range, which is home to the Upper Marikina river basin,” said Toda.

Lagmay said “do not fight nature.”

“Plan well, identify the places that are hazardous, huwag mo labanan ang nature head on (don’t fight nature head on), try to identify the problem, see where nature is weak and not where nature is strong,” said  Lagmay. – Rappler.com

‘Act now or step down’: Ateneo students sign mass student strike, protest gov’t response to Ulysses, COVID-19

0

(Philstar.com) – November 14, 2020

MANILA, Philippines — Amid harrowing scenes of destruction on social media, over 150 students of Ateneo de Manila University vowed Saturday not to submit any academic requirements starting Wednesday, November 18, in protest of the national government’s response to the recent string of typhoons amid the coronavirus pandemic. 

Per The GUIDON, the school’s official student publication, students co-signed a statement in solidarity with other victims directly affected by the spate of destructive weather and called on the university community to focus its efforts on initiatives helping the most vulnerable in the aftermath of Ulysses. 

In response to the news, students of other universities called on other institutions to do the same.

“We believe that things cannot continue business as usual. We can no longer stomach the ever-rising number of deaths due to the state’s blatant incompetence. We cannot prioritize our schoolwork when our countrymen are suffering unnecessarily at the hands of those in power,” the petition read. 

“We assert that the Ateneo community must, at the moment, concentrate all efforts into helping the most vulnerable citizens of the Philippines, such as those in Cagayan, Isabela, and the Bicol Region,” it also said, pledging to withhold the submission of any school requirements “until the national government heeds the people’s demands for proper calamity aid and pandemic response.”

As of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council’s latest tally, 33 have died in the aftermath of Ulysses, along with 20 injuries and 22 others who are still missing. The national police’s tally stands at 43.

In the wake of the typhoons, a number of universities, including Ateneo, declared suspensions of work and classes, including requirements for online learning.

INTERAKSYON: Extension of deadlines urged to help students, teachers recover from ‘Ulysses’

For those in Cagayan, Isabela and the Bicol Region, the worst has not yet passed. Cagayan province, among the areas hardest-hit by Ulysses, has since declared a state of calamity with thousands still seeking shelter and assistance.

Ateneo students in the petition pointed out that many students were part of “initiatives that address what the Duterte administration has not been responsive to.” 

“We strike in solidarity with the students who are victims of calamities and of COVID-19, who cannot be expected to catch-up with their studies within three to five working days. From the beginning, no student should have been left behind,” they said.

“We acknowledge the university’s efforts in attempting to close the disparity between those who can afford to go on with schooling and those who have trouble doing so. However, we see that it is not enough in these times of turmoil to simply proceed with academic affairs as though normal.”

All this also comes against the backdrop of the still-worsening coronavirus pandemic, which has caused over 404,000 infections in the Philippines. 

It has been 242 days since the initial enhanced community quarantine was hoisted over Metro Manila, and the Philippines is still under the world’s longest quarantine. Over eight months since the community quarantines have been imposed, the national government is still struggling with curbing the spread of the pandemic, recording thousands of cases per day. 

“We cannot sit idly by and do our modules, ignoring the fact that the Philippine nation is in shambles. We sacrifice what we have (that is, our access to education) for those who do not share our privileges,” the students’ petition read.

“We go down the hill to help and empower those in need, as we have been taught in our classes. We fight back against inhumane and unjust systems that favor the elite few over the lives of the many,” it also said. 

“The national government must act now or step down from their positions. No compromises.”

— FrancoLuna 

De Lima questions DOJ’s move vs her lawyers: They’re just disclosing facts

0

By: Gabriel Pabico Lalu – Reporter, INQUIRER.net/ November 16, 2020

MANILA, Philippines — Senator Leila de Lima has questioned the move of the Department of Justice (DOJ), which asked the court to cite her lawyers in contempt for making public some developments that occurred in court proceedings related to her case.

De Lima was referring to DOJ Prosecutor General Benedicto Malcontento’s statement last Wednesday wherein the latter accused her lawyers of violating the sub judice rule, which bars disclosure of certain details in a case.

But the opposition senator, who is facing drug-related charges which she supposedly committed during her stint as Justice Secretary in the previous administration, maintained that there was nothing wrong about what her lawyers did as she authorized them to reveal materials and declarations from the hearings.

“What my lawyers, particularly Atty. Boni Tacardon, the spokesperson of my legal defense team, have been sharing with media and the public as to the developments in my cases, are FACTUAL,” De Lima said in a handwritten note from her detention cell in Camp Crame, dated November 13.

“Wala pong sinungaling sa kampo namin. As their principal, I authorized my lawyers to disclose to the public material and significant particulars from witnesses’ declarations during the hearings, and other case developments, in the interest of truth and transparency,” she added.

Malcontento was referring to recent news releases issued by De Lima’s camp in which some happenings during the court hearings were revealed. These issues include the development when a witness recanted his earlier testimonies against the detained senator.

Specifically, on November 6, De Lima’s team disclosed that prosecution witness Vicente Sy, a convicted drug lord, has said under oath that he neither met De Lima nor gave money for the senator’s candidacy in 2012.

“Si Vicente Sy ay tumestigo noon at sinabi niya na nag-ambag daw siya ng halagang P500k para daw sa kampanya ni Senator De Lima noong 2012,” Tacardon had said.

(Vicente Sy testified before and he said that he contributed P500,000 for Senator De Lima’s campaign in 2012.)

“Pero sa aming pagtatanong kanina, sinabi niya na kailanman ay hindi siya nagbigay ng pera kay Senator De Lima at sinabi rin niya na hindi niya kilala si De Lima,” he had also said.

(But with our questioning a while ago, he said that he has never seen Senator De Lima, and he said that he does not know Senator De Lima.)

But Malcontento insisted that no recantation happened.

According to De Lima, her case has become public interest as she believes these are trumped-up charges that stem from her scathing criticisms of the Duterte administration.

“There is no denying that the trial in my trumped-up drug cases is of high interest to the public. Hence, the public’s right to know what’s going on in these cases cannot be stifled,” she asserted.

De Lima has insisted several times that she is not a drug suspect, rather, the cases were filed to silence her as she was leading a probe on extrajudicial killings under President Rodrigo Duterte’s term.  However, Duterte claimed that De Lima is not a prisoner of conscience, but a prisoner of lust.#