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DSWD delists 13.9k from 4Ps in region

Wednesday, January 31, 2018

THE Department of Social Welfare and Development (DWSD) in Davao Region has delisted 13,961 beneficiaries of the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) in 2017 after failing to meet its conditions.

DSWD-Davao public information officer Carmela Duron said that there were still families who had been found to have regular income, some provided false information, and there are those who pawned their cash cards and other observable behaviors.

“There are those who failed to attend activities in line with the program, such as the family development sessions and health services, and there are those who transferred to another place and cannot be located anymore,” Duron said.

Of the 13,961 delisted beneficiaries, 231 were for Grievance Redress System (GRS) ineligibility, 11,693 for no eligible for the Compliance Verification System, 352 had regular income, 356 for other concerns, 147 for fraud and 1,182 for waived.

As of the year 2017, the region has 231,864 Pantawid household provided with cash grants under regular Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) and 29,065 under modified CCT.

The 4Ps is a human development program that provides conditional cash support to families with children not more than 18 years old and who comply with specific conditions of sending children to school, keeping them healthy, and parents attending the monthly Family Development Session.

Published in the SunStar Davao newspaper on January 31, 2018.

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Protecting airports against bioterrorism

Published

By Minerva BC Newman

Cebu City–A team from the Philippine Center on Transnational Crime (PCTC) and Interpol NCB Manila secretariat winds up today its Operational Exercise on Bioterrorism Evidence Exploitation at the Mactan Cebu International Airport.

The team will hold its next exercise at the Davao International Airport.

Assistant Secretary Pelagio Samson Jr., PCTC deputy executive director, said in a forum Tuesday the exercise is part of the CBRNE Bioterrorism Prevention Unit Operation Orders Project VECTOR 2017.

Samson said Project VECTOR aims to get all agencies working together in one network to prevent bio-related crimes and reduce its risks in the country.

David Hargreaves, specialized officer of CBRNE Sub-directorate, said the exercise is designed to raise awareness on bioterrorism by focusing on biosecurity, bioterrorism prevention and the impact of the intentional smuggling of biological materials across borders.

Hargreaves said members of the interagency team must learn to work better together with experts.

He said the threat of bioterrorism in the country or in the world “is quite low but there are groups with growing interests in acquiring and trafficking biological materials via the Internet/technology, these are the things we are preparing for.”

Fanny Ewan of the Interpol Bioterrorism Prevention Unit CBRNE and Vulnerable Targets Sub-directorate said the Internet is a rich source for recipes, materials, knowledge and tutorials on bioterrorism, bio-warfare and biological crimes.

Identifying risks and triggers associated with biological crimes is very important in transnational operations, Ewan said.

The exercise in airports is a “preparedness” skill that includes identification of biological materials, agents and equipment and transnational cooperation as well.

The PCTC and Interpol team said the airport exercise teaches law enforcement agencies skills and techniques for identifying biological samples, collecting evidence from a biologically contaminated crime scene or border screening and the requirements for laboratory transport.

Police Supt. Efren Fernandez, PCTC officer-in-charge for the PH VECTOR Team assured the Philippines is still safe from bioterrorism. “Systems are in place and concerned agencies here are working closely with Interpol and transnational crime units in the world,” he said.

Samson said terrorism will never thrive if people and law enforcement agencies cooperate with one another.

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Ombudsman to defy Malacañang order to suspend Carandang

(UPDATED) Ombudsman Conchita Carpio Morales says the order is ‘not an inadvertent error but a clear affront to the Supreme Court and an impairment of the constitutionally enshrined independence of the Office of the Ombudsman’

Published 4:27 PM, January 31, 2018

Updated 7:50 PM, January 31, 2018

DEFIANT. Ombudsman Conchita Carpio Morales will not enforce the suspension order against Overall Deputy Ombudsman Arthur Carandang (left). Rappler file photo

DEFIANT. Ombudsman Conchita Carpio Morales will not enforce the suspension order against Overall Deputy Ombudsman Arthur Carandang (left). Rappler file photo

MANILA, Philippines (UPDATED) – Ombudsman Conchita Carpio Morales will not enforce the 90-day preventive suspension order issued by Malacañang against Overall Deputy Ombudsman Arthur Carandang.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, January 31, Morales cited the 2014 ruling by the Supreme Court (SC) declaring unconstitutional Section 8 (2) of Republic Act (RA) No. 6770 or the Ombudsman law, which previously gave the President the power to discipline the Ombudsman and her deputies.

“The Ombudsman cannot, therefore, seriously place at risk the independence of the very Office which she has pledged to protect on the strength of the constitutional guarantees which the High Court has upheld,” Morales said.

The 2014 ruling promulgated January 28 that year became final and executory on May 7 the same year, according to SC records.

“Like any government official, the Ombudsman has sworn to uphold the Constitution and the laws of the land. The Ombudsman will thus not allow herself to betray her sworn duty to uphold the Constitution by recognizing what is patently unconstitutional as ordained by the Supreme Court en banc in Gonzales III v. Office of the President (G.R. No. 196231, 28 January 2014),” Morales said.

After months of silence, Morales once again hit back at President Rodrigo Duterte.

“It has become clear that the act of the Office of the President in taking cognizance of the complaints against the Overall Deputy Ombudsman and ordering his preventive suspension was not an inadvertent error but a clear affront to the Supreme Court and an impairment of the constitutionally enshrined independence of the Office of the Ombudsman,” Morales said.

She added, “In a society founded on the rule of law, the arbitrary disregard of a clearly worded jurisprudence coupled with a confident stance that it will be changed should never be countenanced.”

Carandang was suspended for alleged illegal disclosure of bank details of the President and the first family. He leads the Ombudsman’s investigation into Duterte’s alleged ill-gotten wealth.

Legal experts said Carandang or the Office of the Ombudsman could challenge the order before the SC, but that would open the door to a reversal of the ruling. The ruling before was 8-7.

Of the 8 votes, only Associate Justices Presbitero Velasco, Teresita Leonardo-de Castro, Lucas Bersamin, and Marvic Leonen are sitting justices.

Of the 7 dissenting votes, Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno, Senior Associate Justice Antonio Carpio, and Associate Justices Diosdado Peralta, Mariano del Castillo, and Estela Perlas-Bernabe remain in the SC.

Malacañang has repeatedly said it is confident that the High Court will reverse the decision.

It is unclear at this point if Morales is taking the matter to the SC or if she’s simply holding her ground in refusing to enforce the order.

In response, Malacañang said it will first wait for Carandang’s written reply to the order before taking further action. Carandang has 10 days to reply.

But Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Salvador Panelo said Morales could face sanctions for defying the Palace order. – Rappler.com

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‘Probe Benham Rise research deal’

MANILA, Philippines — Seven leftist party-list lawmakers belonging to the Maka­bayan bloc want the House of Representatives to look into the government-approved Chinese maritime research in Benham Rise.

The seven, led by Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Zarate, suggested that the House committee on foreign affairs conduct the inquiry.

In Resolution No 1623, Zarate and his colleagues said the United Nations Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf awarded Benham Rise, renamed Philippine Rise, to the Philippines in 2012.

“Despite the Chinese government’s adverse view on Philippine Rise, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) granted China a permit to conduct maritime research in the eastern seaboard of the Philippines starting Jan. 24,” they said.

According to Rep. Gary Alejano of Magdalo, who blew the whistle on the DFA’s approval of China’s application, the “research” will last for a month up to Feb. 25.

Makabayan noted that various groups and individuals have aired opposition to the Chinese expedition “as it appears to be a repeat of China’s ‘modus operandi’ used in 2005 under the Arroyo-era joint marine seismic undertaking (JMSU) that jeopardize our claims in the Recto (Reed) Bank.”

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“Under the JMSU that the then Arroyo administration entered into with China, the latter was able to discover and confirm the enormous reserves of natural gas in Recto Reed Bank, where one field already holds about 2.7-3.4 trillion cubic feet of the valuable resource,” the lawmakers said.

They said China did not share with the Philippine government the information it gathered in the joint marine seismic study.

They claimed that China “is now very zealous in taking over these rich natural gas deposits as evidenced by its aggressive stance, even constructing islands and placing missile systems to control the area.”

They noted that the National Mapping and Resource Information Authority of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources already conducted a survey of Philippine Rise between 2004-2008 and produced a highly detailed 3D digital bathymetric model done by Filipino scientists.

Another state agency, the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) of the Department of Agriculture, has also been conducting annual fisheries research and experimental fishing expeditions in Philippine Rise to determine the tuna fishery potential of its waters, Zarate and his colleagues said.

The UP National Institute for Geological Sciences (NIGS) and UP Marine Science Institute (UPMSI) have also been collaborating with counterpart institutions from Korea and Japan since 2016 to begin initial exploration of the seabed in the Philippine Rise, they said.

Local scientists capable

They said other Filipino marine geologists and biologists have produced academic papers and analyses for policy considerations and have been analyzing samples and observations gathered from research cruises and have made interesting findings and potential discoveries.

“The Philippines, in fact, already has a deep-sea research vessel, known as BRP Gregorio Velasquez, that can conduct its own study,” they added.

They pointed out that contrary to the claims of the Duterte administration, the Philippines does not have to rely on China to study the Philippine Rise.

Alejano earlier revealed the arrival of Chinese vessel Ke Hue Hao in Philippine waters on Jan. 22, or two days ahead of its supposed month-long research.

He said the Chinese ship was located northeast of Palanan, Isabela yesterday.

Alejano reiterated its appeal to the DFA and other concerned agencies, including the University of the Philippines, to closely monitor activities in the Philippine Rise.

“What we should make sure now is compliance of China with all the requirements demanded by the Philippine government as conditions to the permit issued. In particular, we should be wary on the sharing of information that will be culled from the expedition. Filipino scientists on board should be given equal access to all results of the research,” he said.

Alejano also chided administration officials for saying Filipinos alone could not do research in Philippine Rise because of the huge cost involved.

“It is not because our scientists do not have the ability to conduct research, it is because our government does not allot sufficient funding for it. In fact, there have already been expeditions there by Filipinos to support our claim over Benham Rise before it was awarded to us in 2012,” he said.

He said the BFAR had proposed funding for a research facility in Benham Rise during last year’s budget deliberations, but Congress rejected the proposal.

“This administration has shown no interest and support on strengthening our presence in Benham. Thus, it has no ascendancy to say that Filipinos cannot conduct research in the area given its lack of support,” he said.

Zarate criticized the DFA for its “precipitous claim” that the Chinese “research” in the Philippine Rise would benefit the Philippines.

“If we are to study recent history of Chinese marine studies, like the joint marine seismic undertaking (JMSU) during the Arroyo administration, it can be seen that it is China that rakes in most of the benefits. In contrast, what we got are just useless blurry pictures,” he said.

He said China discovered the location of rich marine resources in Philippine waters through the joint marine seismic study.

“The Chinese did not share the information they gathered with the Arroyo government,” he said.

Zarate recalled that Bayan Muna challenged the marine seismic study before the Supreme Court.

The case forced then president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to no longer renew the marine seismic study agreement, he said.

“China became more aggressive after confirming the presence of resources through the information it gathered via the JMSU. Chinese ships aggressively cruised the seas near Palawan in 2007, even if it was well outside the South China Sea and the JMSU area,” he said.

He said the “betrayal of our national patrimony and sovereignty is being repeated by the present administration in the case of Benham or Philippine Rise.”

Nothing new

The UPMSI, meanwhile, said its collaborative research with China on Benham Rise is just one of the many similar arrangements in the past with other countries, including the United States.

In a statement, UPMSI said it “has been collaborating with oceanographers from different countries (such as the US, South Korea, Japan, China and Taiwan) on research along the Pacific seaboard as early as the 1980s.”   

UPMSI’s clarification came on the heels of criticism sparked by the government’s allowing Chinese researchers to conduct a scientific expedition in the Philippine Rise.

It its statement, the UPMSI stressed the importance of international cooperation when it comes to research that involves large-scale processes.

It explained that its research partnership with the Institute of Oceanology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences followed similar studies on ocean currents in the area conducted with US scientists from 2011 to 2014.

“Understanding the dynamics of these major ocean current systems is complex and requires extensive resources. For research questions that involve large-scale processes beyond national jurisdiction, international collaboration is important because the collective efforts, data and information from all countries involved will enable us to acquire a better understanding of what is really happening,” it added.

 “Results from these (previous) cruises clearly showed that measurements over longer periods were needed, validating the insights from pioneering research that started in the early 1980s. Studies with long-term measurements can only be achieved if resources from different countries are combined and shared,” said the institute.

“In 2016, the Chinese oceanographers initiated discussions about possible collaboration on this particular (research)… As it was related to our research interests, we continue to explore ways to meaningfully engage with them,” it added.

The UPMSI said the collaboration supports its initiative to develop a national oceanographic program that can help in understanding better the changing climate and ocean processes.

The collaborative research involves a study on temperature, salinity and current distributions in several locations in the Philippine Rise region. UPMSI said instruments of the Chinese institute will be used in the research.

The research activity, UPMSI said, will focus on the North Equatorial Current, which splits off the Philippine coast to form northward and southward moving bodies of water known as the Kuroshio Current and the Mindanao Current, respectively.

The UPMSI said studies on the currents are necessary as these affect climate in the region.

“The Kuroshio is responsible for the transport of heat to the rest of the North Pacific and therefore is an important driver of the regional climate and even the El Niño/La Niña cycles,” it said.

“To understand the Kuroshio’s role on climate and to help develop predictive models, we need to know how often and by how much it varies; thus the need to measure the currents and temperature structure over a long period of time,” UPMSI added. – With Janvic Mateo

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Nicanor Faeldon gets warm welcome in Pasay jail

MANILA, Philippines — Jail officials and inmates gave a warm welcome yesterday to former Bureau of Customs commissioner Nicanor Faeldon after he was transferred to the Pasay City Jail from the Senate that had ordered his detention for contempt.

Faeldon, wearing a black shirt with the words “Truth is justice” printed on it, was admitted to the city jail past noon and was greeted with cheers from inmates and their visitors waiting outside.

Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) spokesman Senior Insp. Xavier Solda said Faeldon was detained on the second floor of the jail’s male dormitory but he would stay in a separate cell allotted for him in the meantime.

Solda told reporters the space is cramped and Faeldon will sleep on a hard bed.

He gave assurance that Faeldon will not have special privileges but he will be safe inside the jail that has 997 inmates.
“For now, what is important, he arrived safely and we appreciate his cooperativeness,” Solda added.
Faeldon’s lawyer Jose Diño thanked the Senate’s sergeant-at-arms for the very professional handling and custody of his client.

He believed that Faeldon “is with his own kind” now that he has been detained at the city jail, unlike in the Senate where he would be left alone after visiting hours.

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He also appealed to the Supreme Court (SC) to act on Faeldon’s motion for provisional release, which they filed yesterday morning.

“We are very hopeful that the SC would heed the urgent appeal, specially with this exigency, and they would act affirmatively on the motion,” he said.

Diño said Faeldon’s detention at the Senate would not affect his new duties as deputy administrator of the Office of Civil Defense under the Department of National Defense, and he was being briefed by OCD staff about the particulars of his new job.

Duterte appointed Faeldon to the OCD last Dec. 22 when he replaced Rodolfo Demosthenes Santillan.

Previously, senators unanimously agreed to transfer Faeldon to the Pasay City Jail after he was detained at the Senate for allegedly displaying rude behavior during a committee hearing on the alleged shipment of P6.4 billion worth of shabu into the country and alleged corruption in the BOC.

The SC did not act yesterday on Faeldon’s petition seeking his immediate release from detention as ordered by the Senate after refusing to cooperate in the legislative inquiry on the P6.4-billion shabu shipment in May last year.

An insider bared that the petition filed by Faeldon last Monday was not included in the agenda of the SC justices during their regular weekly session yesterday.

“It was not immediately raffled last Monday so it was not included in the agenda,” explained the source, who spoke on anonymity due to lack of authority to speak for the Court.

In his petition, Faeldon asked the high court to issue a temporary restraining order (TRO) stopping the implementation of the arrest order issued by the Senate against him that led to his detention in the Senate since September last year. 

In asking for TRO, Faeldon said he has been deprived of his liberty for at least 134 days already since he was cited by the Senate for legislative contempt “which in any jurisdiction is neither a heinous offense nor a non-bailable offense.” 

Faeldon argued that he has been unable to perform his duties in his new post at the OCD due to his detention. He also cited the repercussions of his detention on his family.

Petitioner likewise assailed the legality of the Senate order, saying it violated his constitutional right to due process. – With Edu Punay, Christina Mendez, Cecille Suerte Felipe

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