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Farcical witness

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Editorial, Philippine Daily Inquirer / November 07, 2020

Where do they find these people? Not for the first time under this administration, another dubious character has stepped up to the public stage to testify against a perceived enemy or enemies of the state. This time around, that dubious character is one Jeffrey “Ka Eric” Celiz, while the targets seem to be not just certain folk in the arts and culture and entertainment field, but a broad swath of the industry itself.

Though he keeps his targets conveniently nameless, Celiz seeks to tar with an indiscriminate brush arts and media personalities, including two longstanding artist organizations and, it seems from his faulty testimony, two National Artists for Film.

Celiz was trotted out by the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-Elcac) at the Senate hearing on the “red-tagging” activities by its spokesperson, Lt. Gen. Antonio Parlade Jr. Parlade had posted online a veiled threat against young actor Liza Soberano after she took part in a web forum on violence against women organized by Gabriela Youth. Also mentioned in Parlade’s rant were outspoken personalities Miss Universe Catriona Gray and actor-activist Angel Locsin. Locsin’s sister, the general insisted, is a member of the New People’s Army, insinuating that the armed group is also Soberano et al.’s eventual destination if they persisted in their erroneous ways.

Incensed at this brazen, baseless public scolding that was deplored not just by the public, but even by Parlade’s superiors in Malacañang and the defense department, some senators convened a hearing to get at the truth of Parlade’s allegations, and to determine if the NTF-Elcac’s more than generous budget of P19 billion could be redirected to more beneficial ends, such as helping the victims of Typhoon “Rolly,” addressing the decades-old housing crisis, and augmenting the funds to be used in the battle against the COVID-19 pandemic.

This is where Celiz entered the picture, starring in an NTF-Elcac Facebook post where he described himself as a former communist rebel with nearly three decades of “revolutionary experience.”

Celiz was last in the public eye when he worked as spokesperson of then Iloilo City Mayor Jed Patrick Mabilog who was, in 2016, linked to illegal drugs by President Duterte. Celiz then disappeared, only to resurface a few days ago after four years during which, he claimed, he became part of the anti-communist campaign and is now a government consultant for peace and security.

What makes Celiz qualified as a witness on the so-called infiltration of the arts and entertainment field by communists? He claims he was a member of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army and used to head the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, a broad alliance of progressive organizations, in Panay Island.

But his bona fides as a commentator, much less an informant on the entertainment field, were quickly demolished by his very own farcical testimony.

First, Celiz accused two artists’ groups—the Concerned Artists of the Philippines (CAP) and the Musicians and Artists of the Philippines—of being “open organizations” the Communist Party uses as “recruitment grounds” to get more artists to join in the communist cause.

“Baseless, dangerous, and shameful accusations,” replied CAP secretary general Lisa Ito, who reminded everyone that the group was formed way back in 1983 “in protest against censorship during the Marcos dictatorship.”

Then Celiz testified that two film directors were supposedly involved with the CPP. Though he refused to name the directors, Celiz said their films included “Maynila sa Kuko ng Agila” and “Walang Himala.”

As netizens would say, LOL (laugh out loud). There are no such films in local film history. Was Celiz referring to Lino Brocka’s “Maynila sa mga Kuko ng Liwanag” (1975) or Augusto Buenaventura’s “Sa Kuko ng Agila” (1989)? “Walang Himala,” on the other hand, is a famous line from Ishmael Bernal’s “Himala” (1982). It must be noted that Brocka and Bernal, now both deceased, are National Artists for Film, “the highest national recognition given to Filipinos who have made distinct contributions in the field of arts and letters,” according to the government’s own Official Gazette.

With his incredible testimony, Celiz made himself the laughingstock of not just the artistic community, but also of the generations of Filipinos who immensely enjoyed and were moved by the films and artists he recklessly alluded to.

For deploying a charlatan like Celiz, Parlade is proving that not only is his campaign engaged in fake news and dangerous disinformation, it is also driven by ignorance so deep it is laughable. Senators should continue to hold the task force’s feet to the fire in calling out such odious methods and moving for deep cuts in its budget, so that the billions of taxpayer money otherwise wasted on preposterous characters like Celiz and the kind of useless “intelligence” paraded before the people could be put to much better use.#

Citizen Trump will face legal woes

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Reuters / November 08, 2020

WASHINGTON — Since taking office in January 2017, President Donald Trump has been besieged by civil lawsuits and criminal investigations of his inner circle.

With Democrat Joe Biden capturing the presidency on Saturday, according to all major U.S. television networks, Trump’s legal woes are likely to deepen because in January he will lose the protections the U.S. legal system affords to a sitting president, former prosecutors said.

Here are some of the lawsuits and criminal probes that may haunt Trump as he leaves office.

A New York prosecutor

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, who enforces New York state laws, has been conducting a criminal investigation into Trump and the Trump Organization for more than two years.

The probe originally focused on hush money payments that Trump’s former lawyer and self-described fixer Michael Cohen paid before the 2016 election to two women who said they had sexual encounters with Trump, which the president has denied.

Vance, a Democrat, has suggested in recent court filings that his probe is now broader and could focus on bank, tax and insurance fraud, as well as falsification of business records.

Republican Trump has called Vance’s case politically motivated harassment.

The case has drawn attention because of Vance’s efforts to obtain eight years of Trump’s tax returns. In July, the U.S. Supreme Court, denying Trump’s bid to keep the returns under wraps, said the president was not immune from state criminal probes while in office, but could raise other defenses to Vance’s subpoena.

Vance will likely ultimately prevail in obtaining Trump’s financial records, legal experts said.

The U.S. Justice Department has said a sitting president cannot be indicted. Vance is not bound by that policy because he is not a federal prosecutor, but he may still have been reluctant to charge Trump because of uncertainty over whether the case was constitutional, said Harry Sandick, a former prosecutor in New York.

“Those concerns will disappear when Trump leaves office,” Sandick said.

The investigation poses a threat to Trump, said Corey Brettschneider, a professor of political science at Brown University.

“The fact that they have issued the subpoenas and have litigated all the way to the Supreme Court suggests that this is a very serious criminal investigation of the president,” Brettschneider said.

Justice department probe?

Trump could conceivably face a criminal prosecution brought by the U.S. Department of Justice, led by a new U.S. Attorney General.

Some legal experts have said Trump could face federal income tax evasion charges, pointing to a New York Times report that Trump paid $750 in federal income taxes in both 2016 and 2017.

“You’ve got the stuff that has come out of the New York Times that has all kind of indicia of tax fraud,” Nick Akerman, a lawyer at Dorsey & Whitney and a former federal prosecutor.

Akerman cautioned that it is not possible to know for certain until seeing all of the evidence.

Trump has rejected findings from the Times report, tweeting that he had paid many millions of dollars in taxes but was entitled to depreciation and tax credits.

Such a prosecution would be deeply controversial, and the Justice Department could decide charging Trump is not in the public interest even if there is evidence of criminal wrongdoing.

Biden has approached that question very carefully, saying he would not interfere with his Justice Department’s judgment.

Biden told National Public Radio in August that pursuing criminal charges against his predecessor would be “a very, very unusual thing and probably not very – how can I say it? – good for democracy.”

A lawyer for Trump did not return requests for comment.

New York civil fraud investigation

New York’s Attorney General, Letitia James, has an active tax fraud investigation into Trump and his family company, the Trump Organization.

The inquiry by James, a Democrat, began after Trump’s former lawyer Cohen told Congress the president inflated asset values to save money on loans and insurance and deflated them to reduce real estate taxes.

The Trump Organization has argued the case is politically motivated.

The inquiry is a civil investigation, meaning it could result in financial penalties but not jail time.

Trump’s son, Eric Trump, an executive vice president for the firm, was deposed in October because of what the attorney general described as his close involvement in one or more transactions being reviewed.

E. Jean Carroll

E. Jean Carroll, a former Elle magazine writer, sued Trump for defamation in 2019 after the president denied Carroll’s allegation that he raped her in the 1990s and accused her of lying to drum up sales for a book.

In August, a state judge allowed the case to go forward, meaning Carroll’s lawyers could seek a DNA sample from Trump to match against a dress she said she wore at the New York City department store.

A federal judge in Manhattan rejected a bid by the U.S. Justice Department to substitute the federal government for Trump as the defendant in the case. U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan in Manhattan said that Trump did not make his statements about Carroll in the scope of his employment as president.

Barbara McQuade, a law professor at the University of Michigan, said she expected Biden’s Justice Department to abandon the effort to shield Trump from the case

“It would seem unlikely for DOJ to continue to pursue what I see as a frivolous argument in a new administration,” said McQuade, a former federal prosecutor.

Summer Zervos

Trump also faces a lawsuit by Summer Zervos, a 2005 contestant on Trump’s reality television show “The Apprentice,” who says Trump kissed her against her will at a 2007 meeting and later groped her at a hotel.

After Trump called Zervos a liar, she sued him for defamation.

Trump said he is immune from the lawsuit because he is president.

The case has been on hold while a New York state appeals court reviewed a March 2019 decision that Trump had to face the case while he is in office. Trump’s immunity argument would no longer apply once he is out of office (Inquirer.Net)

Joe Biden elected 46th US president

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Reuters / November 08, 2020

WASHINGTON — Democrat Joe Biden captured the US presidency on Saturday, several major television networks said, as voters narrowly rebuffed Republican incumbent Donald Trump’s tumultuous leadership and embraced Biden’s promise to fight the coronavirus pandemic and fix the economy in a divided nation.

When the former vice president enters the White House on Jan. 20, the oldest person to assume the office at age 78, he likely will face a difficult task governing in a deeply polarized Washington, underscored by a record nationwide voter turnout in a fight to the finish.

His projected victory came after four days of nail-biting suspense over the outcome of Tuesday’s election, with the counting of votes in a handful of battleground states ongoing thanks to a flood of mail-in ballots.

Biden said on Friday he expected to win the race but stopped short of giving a victory speech. A Trump adviser acknowledged on Friday that the race had tilted against Trump, but said the president was not ready to admit defeat.

Biden had a 273 to 214 lead in the electoral college vote that determines the winner, having won Pennsylvania’s 20 electoral votes as of this reporting to put him over the 270 he needed to secure the presidency, according to Edison Research.

To secure the win, Biden faced unprecedented challenges. These included Republican-led efforts to limit mail-in voting at a time when a record number of people were due to vote by mail because of the pandemic, which has killed more than 235,000 people in the United States.

Both sides characterized the 2020 election as one of the most crucial in US history, as important as votes during the 1860s Civil War and the 1930s Great Depression.

For months, officials on both sides raised the specter of the United States not being able to pull off a fair vote.

In the end, however, voting at the polls proceeded with limited disruption as millions lined up patiently to vote. Thousands of election monitors from both parties worked for four days to ensure the votes were being counted.

The election drama is likely to play out for weeks, if not months. Trump, 74, is contesting the vote in the courts, but legal experts said his challenges had little chance of affecting the outcome.

Biden’s victory was driven by strong support from groups including women, African Americans, white voters with college degrees and city dwellers. He was more than four million votes ahead of Trump in the nationwide popular vote count.

Nation in turmoil

Biden, who has spent half a century in public life as a US senator and then vice president under Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama, will inherit a nation in turmoil over the coronavirus pandemic and the related economic slowdown as well as disruptive protests against racism and police brutality.

Biden has said his first priority will be developing a plan to contain and recover from the pandemic, promising to improve access to testing and, unlike Trump, to heed the advice of leading public health officials and scientists.

Biden also has pledged to restore a sense of normalcy to the White House after a presidency in which Trump praised authoritarian foreign leaders, disdained longstanding global alliances, refused to disavow white supremacists and cast doubt on the legitimacy of the US election system.

Despite his victory, Biden will have failed to deliver the sweeping repudiation to Trump that Democrats had hoped for, reflecting the deep support the president enjoys despite his tumultuous four years in office.

This could complicate his campaign promises to reverse key parts of Trump’s legacy. These include deep Trump tax cuts that especially benefited corporations and the wealthy, hardline immigration policies, efforts to dismantle the 2010 Obamacare health-care law and Trump’s abandonment of such international agreements as the Paris climate accord and Iran nuclear deal.

Should Republicans keep control of the US Senate, they would likely block large parts of his legislative agenda, including expanding health care and fighting climate change. That prospect could depend on the outcome of four undecided Senate races, including two in Georgia.

Harris also makes history

Biden, set to become the 46th US president, mounted unsuccessful bids for the presidency in 1988 and 2008.

His running mate, US Sen. Kamala Harris, will become the first woman, the first African American and the first American of Asian descent to serve as vice president, the country’s No. 2 office.

For Trump, it was an unsettling end after an astonishing political rise. The real estate developer who established a nationwide brand as a reality TV personality upset Democrat Hillary Clinton to win the presidency in 2016 in his first run for elected office.

Four years later, he becomes the first US president to lose a reelection bid since Republican George H.W. Bush in 1992.

Despite his draconian immigration curbs, Trump made surprising inroads with Latino voters. He also won battleground states, such as Florida, where his pledge to prioritize the economy even if it increased the threat of the coronavirus appeared to have resonated.

In the end, though, Trump failed to significantly widen his appeal beyond a committed core of rural and working-class white voters who embraced his right-wing populism and “America First” nationalism.

Prior to the election, Trump had refused to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he lost to Biden—and he stuck to that approach. He falsely declared victory long before counting was complete.

Before Biden’s victory projection and with Trump’s reelection chances fading as more votes were counted, the president launched an extraordinary assault on the country’s democratic process from the White House on Thursday, falsely claiming the election was being stolen from him.

Offering no evidence, Trump assailed election workers and alleged fraud in the states where results from a dwindling set of uncounted votes pushed Biden nearer to victory.

“This is a case where they’re trying to steal an election,” Trump said on Thursday.

Urging patience as votes were counted, Biden responded on Twitter: “No one is going to take our democracy away from us. Not now, not ever.”

Legal challenges

Republicans are trying to raise at least $60 million to fund legal challenges brought by Trump over the election’s results, three sources familiar with the matter said on Friday.

Trump’s campaign has filed lawsuits in several states over Tuesday’s election as Biden edged closer to winning the White House.

“They want $60 million,” said a Republican donor who received solicitations from the campaign and the Republican National Committee (RNC).

Two other sources said the campaign wanted as much as $100 million for the joint fundraising committee it maintains with the RNC, a sign of the scale of the legal fight the campaign expects to mount.

All three sources spoke to Reuters about the requests for money on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter. The Trump campaign and the RNC did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The call for funds comes as the Trump and Biden campaigns gird for a potentially protracted legal battle.

Since voting ended on Tuesday, the Trump campaign has sent out email and text solicitations alleging foul play and seeking donations, although the fine print indicates that more than half of the money raised would go to paying down the campaign’s debts.

Trump, who started the race with a strong financial advantage, ended his campaign struggling to keep up with the Biden fundraising juggernaut.

A Trump adviser described the campaign’s litigation strategy thus far as chaotic, disorganized and a “disservice to the president.”

The adviser, who also asked for anonymity, said the Trump team appeared to have been caught off guard by the election results and had not been prepared to mount a legal fight.

The campaign has already lost court rulings in closely contested states, including Georgia and Nevada, but scored a win in Pennsylvania on Friday, when a court ordered election officials to set aside provisional ballots cast on Election Day by voters whose absentee or mail-in ballots were received on time.

Trump campaign senior advisor David Bossie, a prominent conservative activist who leads advocacy group Citizens United, has been chosen to lead the postelection legal challenges, according to a source familiar with Trump’s campaign strategy. (Inquirer.Net)

Europe imposes new virus curbs as exasperation, anger grows

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Nov 2, 2020, Agence France-Presse

BERLIN, Germany

The virus has infected more than 46 million people worldwide, with close to 1.2 million deaths, and the acute outbreaks in Europe and America spark further alarm about the state of the already devastated global economy

Germany on Monday, November 2, led a further tightening of coronavirus restrictions in Europe that have triggered anger and frustration across the continent, while the COVID-19 crisis in the United States deepened.

The virus has infected more than 46 million people worldwide, with close to 1.2 million deaths, and the acute outbreaks in Europe and America sparking further alarm about the state of the already devastated global economy.

To curb the spike in Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel has ordered a round of shutdowns from Monday until the end of the month.

Germans will not be confined to their homes, but bars, cafes and restaurants must close, as well as theaters, operas and cinemas.

The sadness was palpable at the renowned Bavarian State Opera House in Munich as it prepared to close.

It is “a slap”, said baritone Michael Nagy, unable to hide his tears.

England prepared for fresh stay-at-home orders, following in the steps of Austria, France and Ireland, with many expressing anxiety about the economic cost of the 4-week shutdown due to take effect from Thursday.

Tighter lockdown rules were also set to kick in Monday for Belgium, which has the most COVID-19 cases per capita in the world. Portugal, too, has ordered a partial lockdown starting Wednesday.

And in France, Prime Minister Jean Castex said supermarkets would be barred from selling “non-essential” items from Tuesday to protect small shopkeepers who have been forced to close.

Spain has already imposed a nighttime curfew, and almost all of its regions have implemented regional border closures to prevent long-distance travel.

The Italian government is expected to announce new restrictions on Monday, according to news reports, with the health minister pushing for a countrywide lockdown.

Anger and protests

The threat of the virus was illustrated further Sunday when the head of the World Health Organization announced that he was self-quarantining after someone he had been in contact with tested positive.

“I am well and without symptoms but will self-quarantine over the coming days, in line with @WHO protocols, and work from home,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a tweet, stressing the importance of complying with coronavirus guidance.

But the ongoing tightening of virus rules and restrictions has sparked anger in people weary of confinement and the painful economic costs.

That frustration has led to protests in many parts of the world, especially Europe, with some leading to violent skirmishes with police.

Protesters in several Spanish cities clashed with security forces for a second night Saturday, police said, with vandalism and looting breaking out in some parts.

There has already been violence in several Italian cities, as well as Czech capital Prague recently.

The unrest over virus restrictions has not been limited to Europe.

Riots took place in several Argentinian jails on Saturday, as prisoners demanded the resumption of visits during the pandemic.

‘A whole lot of hurt’

The health situation is also deteriorating in the United States, which is gearing up for the election showdown between President Donald Trump and his Democratic rival Joe Biden on Tuesday, November 3.

It is the worst-affected country in the world with 9.2 million infections and more than 230,000 deaths, and the pandemic has been front and center during the bitter election campaign. With cases surging again, experts have warned of more devastation.

Top government scientist Anthony Fauci told the Washington Post in an interview that the US is “in for a whole lot of hurt.”

In Mexico, parades were cancelled and cemeteries closed on Sunday during the Day of the Dead festival, in which people normally deck their homes, streets and relatives’ graves with flowers, candles and colorful skulls.

Many remembered those who have passed in the privacy of their homes, as authorities urged people to avoid gatherings.

Janet Burgos decorated an altar with confetti, fruit and a photograph of her mother Rosa Maria, who died in June aged 64 from suspected Covid-19.

“Now I begin to see what the Day of the Dead really represents,” she said. – Rappler.com

Groups call on gov’t to protect journalists, end ‘lawfare’

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By: Cathrine Gonzales – Reporter, INQUIRER.net /November 02, 2020

MANILA, Philippines — Several media and human rights groups on Monday condemn violence against media workers in the country as they called out the government for adopting an “unwritten policy of lawfare” that they said boosted the climate of impunity.

In a statement coinciding the 2020 International Day to End Crimes of Impunity Against Journalists, the Committee for the Freedom of Leila De Lima said it is joined by the Cebu for Human Rights, College Editors Guild of the Philippines, Consortium on Democracy and Disinformation, and the Asian Center for Journalism in “condemning all the killings, violence and attacks against journalists and media workers.”

“We likewise call out the government for adopting an unwritten policy of lawfare – the weaponization of the law and legal processes against democratic dissent and other fundamental freedoms – that has further engendered the climate of impunity, and largely enabled the continuing media repression in the Philippines,” they said.

“We urge the government to guarantee justice for the crimes and abuses against journalists. We further call upon the Philippine government and other States – including various sectors and organs of society – to promote an enabling environment for journalists to perform their work independently and in safety,” they added.

In making this call, the groups pointed out that democracy relies heavily on the ability of journalists to transmit information, report abuses, and contribute to public debate.

“When journalists are unable to do their work in safety, we ultimately lose our defense against propaganda, disinformation and misinformation. Killings and other crimes of impunity – which seek to silence journalists – are a serious threat to press freedom and free expression. These have to end if democracy is to survive,” the groups said.

They also noted that in the country, the recent years have seen the “unabated rise” in the number of killings, attacks, threats of violence and varied forms of intimidation and harassment—both online and offline—targeting journalists and media outlets. They also said female media practitioners were affected more severely.

With this situation in view, the groups said there is no wonder that the Committee to Protect Journalists’ 2020 Global Impunity Index ranks the Philippines seventh among countries where journalists are killed and their killers go free.

“Impunity emboldens other perpetrators and their masterminds. It further erodes the people’s trust in the legal and judicial systems, while indicting the government’s basic ability to support democracy and maintain peace and order in society,” they added.

Filipino stars rally behind donation calls for areas affected by Typhoon Rolly

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Nov 2, 2020, Rappler.com

MANILA, Philippines

Stars draw attention to groups and organizations raising funds and collating supplies for those hit by the super typhoon

Filipino celebrities took to social media to call for donations for areas affected by typhoon Rolly (international name Goni), which hit the Bicol region and CALABARZON on Sunday, November 1.

As of November 2, 16 people have died and a total of P1.1 billion in crops and rice were damaged by the typhoon. (#ReliefPH: Help communities affected by Super Typhoon Rolly)

Here is a list of call-outs from celebrities:

Miss Universe 2018 Catriona Gray, who traces her roots to Oas, Albay posted a call from the Philippines Red Cross, where she is one of its national ambassadors.


As you may know, the Philippines is currently being hit by the strongest storm in the world so far this year, known as Typhoon Goni (local name Rolly). On top of that, another tropical storm, Siony, is closely tailing Typhoon Goni.

The Philippine Red Cross through the leadership of Chairman Richard Gordon, has alerted all chapters, 143 volunteers, and deployed a Disaster Management Team from the National Headquarters for rescue and relief operations to Bicol, my hometown, and other affected areas.

In order to continue serving the most vulnerable and affected communities, I am calling all kind-hearted donors and humanitarian partners to help support the Red Cross in all of their current response operations.

You may check https://book.redcross1158.com/index.php/donate/ for more information on ways to donate.

?❤ Your 100 pesos can help the Red Cross in preparing for food and hygiene kits for evacuees, contribute in building homes, or provide cash assistance to the affected families. ❤?

Help us make a difference, the Red Cross needs you now!


“The @philredcross has alerted all chapters, 143 volunteers, and deployed a Disaster Management Team from the National Headquarters for rescue and relief operations to Bicol, my hometown, and other affected areas,” she said.

“In order to continue serving the most vulnerable and affected communities, I am calling all kind-hearted donors and humanitarian partners to help support the Red Cross in their response operations.”

She also posted a call from Love Yourself Philippines, another organization that she supports.

Actress Angel Locsin, who has been active in several relief operations in the past, also took to social media to post the call from the Philippine Red Cross.

Angel also announced on her social media accounts that they will be providing help through the Typhoon Rolly Assistance Initiative Facebook page.


Typhoon Rolly Assistance Initiative In our small way, we want to reach out to our countrymen who were victimized by Typhoon Rolly thru GCash. Pebble we would like to reach out to everyone who is in need, our resources are limited and can only accommodate the first 1,000 valid requests. Each request will receive Php1, 000. Valid only from Nov 2-3, 2020. Here are the instructions that need to be followed: • Make a video of yourself no more than 2 minutes. • Mention full name and your place at the start of the video. • Show your status in the video. • Send this as private message to Typhoon Rolly Assistance Initiative Facebook page. All those who will send a video are confidential and will not be released. Important!: • Need a Gcash account for transaction. • Be sure that the name mentioned in the video and the Gcash account to use is the same. • In case you use another Gcash account, please include the owner of the account to use and mention the name. • You won’t accept sending a video that you don’t own or in the video. • One message per entry. We will not accept the flooding of messages. • You won’t accept those who will send other messages except the video requirement to fix the system. Reminder!: We will not use any other number or other way to communicate except Typhoon Rolly Assistance Initiative Facebook page. Beware of scams. Please say: Don’t abuse and give it to those affected by Typhoon #Rolly. https://www.facebook.com/Typhoon-Rolly-Assistance-Initiative-102046825050526/ #RollyPH


TV host Bianca Gonzalez-Intal and Gary Valenciano shared details of ABS-CBN’s Sagip Kapamilya donation drive.

Host and volleyball player Gretchen Ho shared details of donation drives from World Vision Philippines and Ateneo de Manila.

GMA actress Janine Gutierrez shared details from the Tanging Yaman Foundation on her social media accounts.

Enchong Dee, a Bicolano, shared on his Instagram Stories donations they’ll need for those affected by the typhoon.

Miss Philippines Earth-Fire 2020 Shane Tormes, who represented Antimonan, Quezon and whose family hails from Bicol region, also shared details on how to donate. Rappler.Com

‘Preposterous and shifty’

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Editorial, Philippine Daily Inquirer / October 30, 2020

Lt. Gen. Antonio Parlade Jr. did not do himself, much less his fervent anti-insurgency cause, a favor when he went on social media last week to “warn” popular actress Liza Soberano against associating herself with the progressive Gabriela Youth group lest, he warned, she end up dead, just like activist Josephine Anne Lapira, a UP Manila student who was killed in a firefight in Batangas between government troops and suspected members of the New People’s Army.

Parlade’s harangue, which also targeted 2018 Miss Universe Catriona Gray and actress Angel Locsin, ignited a firestorm of protest, with much of the public perceiving it as a veiled threat against Soberano and yet another example of government red-tagging. Even Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana found reason to caution Parlade, telling him to produce evidence or “otherwise just keep quiet.”

But, instead of standing down, Parlade, chief of the Southern Luzon Command of the Armed Forces of the Philippines and spokesperson of the controversial National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-Elcac), simply ratcheted up his verbal attacks. Within days, the poster boy of the government’s anti-insurgency campaign accused Manila Mayor Francisco “Isko Moreno” Domagoso of “welcoming” communist rebels because he ordered the removal of anti-communist tarpaulins that suddenly sprouted all over Manila. Then Parlade went on television to declare Gabriela and the Makabayan bloc in Congress “violent people” and “card-carrying members of the CPP.”

At least one local government official publicly stood up against Parlade’s McCarthyism (and, mystifyingly, it wasn’t Domagoso, who made no effort to chide his accuser). Cavite Gov. Jonvic Remulla denounced Parlade’s actions—“Ok ka lang, Parlade? Your train of thought and reasoning are preposterous and shifty”—and said the military officer “should be ashamed of himself” for accusing personalities and organizations without the requisite evidence.

“Threatening progressive and outspoken women who want to encourage a stronger feminist culture? That does not make them co-conspirators nor allies of the left-wing,” reminded Remulla. He also took up the cudgels for Domagoso, and declared that he too would forthwith remove any anti-insurgency posters in his province.

Even Malacañang must have found the guy’s methods too much, because presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said President Duterte was siding with Lorenzana in this matter. And, over in Congress, Speaker Lord Allan Velasco defended the Makabayan bloc, saying he was “deeply concerned over the continuous red-tagging of some members of the House of Representatives by Parlade that endangers the lives of these duly-elected officials.”

Suddenly, the brash Parlade, who must have imagined himself being hailed by his superiors as the latest fire-breathing scourge of the hated communists, found himself increasingly isolated and shunned. If hard evidence of his accusations were to be demanded, moreover, he might have little to pass off, especially after prosecutors of the Department of Justice recently dismissed cases against members of the Makabayan bloc and progressive youth organizations for alleged links to the underground revolutionary forces.

Specifically, the prosecutors said in their Oct. 15 resolution that the complainants, backed by the NTF-Elcac, “failed to prove that Anakbayan is an armed force or that members thereof used children to participate in hostilities… As it appears in the evidence presented, Anakbayan is just a comprehensive national mass organization of the Filipino youth that is advocating for jobs, land reform, education, rights, and justice.”

And there, in a nutshell, is the idea Parlade’s brain can’t seem to comprehend, for all his supposed expertise on the long-running Philippine insurgency (he wrote a book called “Analysis of the Communist Insurgency in the Philippines”). The enduring war in the countryside is fueled and nourished not so much by ideology, as by the monstrous social inequalities and injustices that have bedeviled Philippine society and consigned much of the populace to poverty for generations. Someone like Remulla partly gets it: “Roads, water, education, connectivity, modernity and economic prosperity,” he said, “are far more powerful than any propaganda tool” for communism, which “is a failed ideology that has become irrelevant in today’s modern world.”

Doesn’t the military say the same thing—that the insurgency is pretty much a spent force? And yet Parlade’s reckless, counterproductive moves only suggest panic and desperation.

The last the public heard from Parlade, he was on TV bleating against Remulla’s rebuke, protesting the unfairness of it all: “Why accuse me? That’s not fair… Tini-threaten niya ako.” Angel Locsin had the perfect riposte: “O badtrip diba? (smiley) Thank you Gov. Remulla for giving him a dose of his own medicine.”#

Over 111-K overseas Filipinos still expected to return to PH by December — DFA

By: Neil Arwin Mercado – Reporter, INQUIRER.net / October 29, 2020

MANILA, Philippines — More than 111,000 Filipinos abroad are still expected to be repatriated to the Philippines by December this year as nations continue to grapple with the coronavirus pandemic, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said Thursday. 

During the House committee’s online hearing on overseas workers’ affairs, DFA Undersecretary Sarah Lou Arriola said there are still 111,258 overseas Filipinos who are expected to return home by year-end. 

“This might still increase, considering the amnesties in the countries of destination will lapse this November and December. Definitely, for Bahrain, it will lapse on December 31 and I think for UAE, it’s this coming November,” Arriola said. 

For November, Arriola said DFA had scheduled chartered flights from Guang Zhou in China, Dili in Timor Leste, and Riyadh and Dammam in Saudi Arabia to bring home overseas Filipinos. 

There will also be flights coming from Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates, Algeria, and Thailand.

Arriola said DFA has so far repatriated 233,742 overseas Filipinos, 76,556 are sea-based OFWs while 157,186 are land-based.

As of October 28, a total of 11,224 Filipinos abroad have contracted the coronavirus disease (COVID-19). Of this number, 7,254 have recovered, 3,153 are undergoing treatment, and 817 have died. 

Most of the cases are in the Middle East and Africa at 7,380; followed by the Asia Pacific Region at 1,798 cases; Europe at 1,230 cases; and Americas at 816 cases. #