Saturday, December 23, 2017

NATION | De Lima wishes for "old, normal" life in first Christmas in jail

Senator Leila de Lima.
Via INQUIRER  /By  NIÑO JESUS ORBETA
MANILA - Senator Leila de Lima, jailed for drug charges, would be celebrating her first Christmas in jail. And she hopes that it would be her first and last Christmas in detention.
For her Christmas wish, the senator said she wanted to go back to her “old, normal” life as she asked for vindication from the “trumped-up” drug charges hurled against her.

Detained at the Philippine National Police (PNP) Custodial Center in Camp Crame, De Lima was facing trial for alleged involvement in the New Bilibid Prison (NBP) narcotics trade.


"I miss those days where I can do the simple things that make me happy, like going to the wet market, cooking, and driving on top of doing my regular duties as a public servant,” De Lima said in a statement on Saturday.
De Lima said she misses going to the church every Sunday, and visiting Our Lady of Manaoag Church in Pangasinan twice a month.

The senator said she has grown “closer to God” as she has more time to read the Bible.
The DOJ has filed three drug cases against De Lima at the Muntinlupa Regional Trial Court. The senator was ordered arrested after the trial court found probable cause in the charges.
Muntinlupa RTC branches 204 and 206, where two of the cases were filed, reset De Lima’s arraignment in January 2018.

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The senator also reiterated his wish for an end to alleged extrajudicial killings brought by the Duterte administration’s war on drugs.
“Christmas this year, as with last year, brings sadness and grief to many of our countrymen who will not be with their loved ones killed in Duterte’s drug war,” De Lima said.
“Remember that the campaign against illegal drugs should be based on human rights and the rule of law. Christmas, after all, is best spent if family members remain intact and complete,” she said. 

WORLD | North Korea: Trump praises latest UN sanctions over missiles


North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and President Trump FILE PHOTO via BBC News
US President Donald Trump has praised the UN Security Council for imposing tough new sanctions on North Korea in response to ballistic missile tests.
The US-drafted resolution includes measures to slash North Korea's petrol imports by up to 90%.
China and Russia, Pyongyang's main trading partners, voted in favour of the resolution.
North Korea is already subject to a raft of sanctions from the US, the UN and the EU.
"The United Nations Security Council just voted 15-0 in favor of additional Sanctions on North Korea. The World wants Peace, not Death!" Mr Trump tweeted.
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The US ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, said the sanctions sent an "unambiguous message to Pyongyang that further defiance will invite further punishments and isolation".
She described North Korea as "the most tragic example of evil in the modern world".
UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said the latest measures against North Korea were a "vital step" towards curbing its nuclear weapons programme.
He said the international community had shown it was united in its condemnation of the North's "reckless behavior".
The UN sanctions came in response to Pyongyang's 28 November firing of a ballistic missile, which the US said was its highest yet.
Mr Trump has previously threatened to "totally destroy" North Korea if it launches a nuclear attack. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has described the US president as "mentally deranged".
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What about previous sanctions?
Last month, the US unveiled fresh sanctions against North Korea which it said were designed to limit the funding for its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.
The measures targeted North Korean shipping operations and Chinese companies that trade with Pyongyang.
The UN also approved new sanctions following North Korea's nuclear test on 3 September.



These measures restricted oil imports and banned textile exports - an attempt to starve the North of fuel and income for its weapons programme.

What effect have previous sanctions had?
The US has been imposing sanctions on North Korea for more than a decade with little success.
In fact, North Korea has said fresh sanctions will only make it accelerate its nuclear programme. It has continued to test nuclear and ballistic missiles despite these recent examples of UN pressure:
  • 30 November 2016: UN targeted North Korea's valuable coal trade with China, slashing exports by about 60% under a new sales cap. Exports of copper, nickel, silver, zinc and the sale of statues were also banned
  • What happened next? On 14 May 2017, North Korea tested what it said was a "newly developed ballistic rocket" capable of carrying a large nuclear warhead
  • 2 June 2017: UN imposed a travel ban and asset freeze on four entities and 14 officials, including the head of North Korea's overseas spying operations
  • What happened next? On 4 July, North Korea claimed it had carried out its first successful test of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM)
  • 6 August 2017: UN banned North Korean exports of coal, ore and other raw materials and limited investments in the country, costing Pyongyang an estimated $1bn - about a third of its export economy
  • What happened next? On 3 September, North Korea said it had tested a hydrogen bomb that could be miniaturized and loaded on a long-range missile.

WEATHER UPDATE | As of 11:00 A.M : Tropical storm Vinta intensifies as it move towards Southern Palawan.


 Satellite image via PAG-ASA
Manila, Philippines- Tropical depression Vinta re-intensified into a tropical storm as it moves to Sulu sea. Tropical cyclone signal are still raise on the Southern Palawan and signal number 1 on the rest of Palawan as it expected to exit the Philippine area of responsibility tomorrow December 24.

Scattered to widespread moderate to heavy rains will occur over Palawan, while scattered light to moderate with at times heavy rains is expected over Bicol region, Visayas, Mindanao, and the rest of MIMAROPA within 24 hours. Residents of these areas must take appropriate actions against flooding and landslides, coordinate with their respective local disaster risk reduction and management offices, and continue monitoring for updates.





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The public and the disaster risk reduction and management council concerned are advised to take appropriate actions and watch for the next Severe Weather Bulletin to be issued at 11 AM today. 

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

WORLD | Trump unveils national security plan, blasts previous presidents

PRES. TRUMP's FILE PHOTO via CNNWorld


Washington - President Donald Trump on Monday framed his foreign policy as an extension of his populist economic message, lambasting past presidents and trumpeting his own achievements during a speech meant to outline the guiding principles of his national security strategy.

In a speech that closely resembled a campaign address, Trump offered a laundry list of accomplishments and a reiteration of his view that Americans have been left behind as a result of decisions made by past administrations, including on immigration, the Iran nuclear deal, and trade pacts.
    And while Trump repeated some core aspects of the foreign policy strategy document that his aides have spent the past eleven months preparing, he reserved much of his address for touting domestic economic growth and lambasting his predecessors for damaging American security.

    "For many years, our citizens watched as Washington politicians presided over one disappointment after another; too many of our leaders -- so many -- who forgot whose voices they were to respect, and whose interest they were supposed to defend," Trump said in a speech to collection of uniformed military personnel and members of his cabinet assembled at an auditorium in downtown Washington.
    "On top of everything else, our leaders drifted from American principles, they lost sight of America's destiny, and they lost their belief in American greatness," Trump said. "As a result, our citizens lost something as well. The people lost confidence in their government and eventually even lost confidence in their future."

    Trump said his election last year was an indication that Americans yearned for another direction.
    "We will stand up for ourselves, we will stand up for our country like we have never stood up before," Trump said. "We know that American success is not a foregone conclusion. It must be earned and it must be won. Our rivals are tough, tenacious and committed to the long term, but so are we."

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    Speech skipped strong references from policy

    The congressionally-mandated strategy document spells out overarching themes for Trump's foreign policy.

    National security aides to Trump began preparing the strategy statement shortly after he entered office, and drew from his public speeches during the campaign and as President to craft the 48-page document. Trump formally endorsed it during a meeting with cabinet members last week.

    During his remarks, however, Trump avoided the more specific references contained within the strategy document, including to Russia's attempts to influence elections.

    Instead, Trump called Russia and China "rival powers" who "seek to challenge American influence, values and wealth," but stopped short of calling out Moscow for its election meddling.

    "We will attempt to build a great partnership with those and other countries, but in a manner that always protects our national interest," Trump said, recounting a conversation he held with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday about shared US intelligence that helped thwart a terrorist attack in St. Petersburg.

    "They were able to apprehend these terrorists before the event with no loss of life and that's a great thing, and the way it's supposed to work," Trump said. "But while we seek such opportunities of cooperation, we will stand up for ourselves and we will stand up for our country like we have never stood up before."

    That's a softer approach than what's contained within the national security strategy, which was released in full shortly before Trump began his remarks. The document describes China and Russia as "revisionist powers" who "want to shape a world antithetical to US values and interests."

    The doctrine envisages a world in constant rivalry for economic and security influence, but downplays global agreements signed during past administrations meant to bring the world's nations into better agreement on issues like trade and climate change.

    Congress requires the President to deliver a National Security Strategy that outlines the guiding principles of the administration's foreign policy. Trump's two immediate predecessors did not present their strategies in person, opting instead to present them in writing to lawmakers and the public.

    Trump determined that a major address would help underscore the document's adherence to his campaign promises of protecting American interests, aides said. They hoped the speech would help provide coherence to a foreign policy that's been viewed as confused by some lawmakers and foreign governments.

    Didn't mention election meddling

    Trump offered a view of America's role that discounted the country's role in achieving global agreements like the Paris climate accord or the Iran nuclear deal. Instead he characterized US foreign relations as competitive and pitted with rivalries.

    "We know that American success is not a foregone conclusion. It must be earned and it must be won. Our rivals are tough. They're tenacious and committed to the long term, but so are we," he said. "To succeed, we must integrate every dimension of our national strength, and we must compete with every instrument of our national power."



    Many of the strategy's central tenets are familiar aspects of Trump's political agenda, including his insistence that trade with other countries be fair and reciprocal. But other aspects of the strategy seem discordant with Trump's own insistence that ties with Russia be improved.

    While the President's strategy doesn't directly address Russian attempts to influence the US presidential election last year, it does make reference more broadly to attempts by Moscow to interfere in democratic contests.

    "Today, actors such as Russia are using information tools in an attempt to undermine the legitimacy of democracies. Adversaries target media, political processes, financial networks, and personal data," the document reads. "The American public and private sectors must recognize this and work together to defend our way of life."

    Trump did not mention those lines during his remarks, instead sticking to broad declarations of American superiority on the global stage.

    "With this strategy, we are calling for a great reawakening of America, a resurgence of confidence, and a rebirth of patriotism, prosperity and pride," he said.

    NATION | Duterte signs 2018 national budget, tax reform bill

    At a ceremony in Malacañan, President Rodrigo Duterte signed into law the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion bill and the General Appropriations Act of 2018. TOTO LOZANO/Presidential Photo via Philstar


    MANILA, Philippines — President Rodrigo Duterte on Tuesday, December 19, signed into law the P3.8-trillion 2018 national budget, and the first package of the much-awaited tax reform program that seeks to raise P130 billion in revenues to bankroll his administration's economic agenda.

    At a ceremony in Malacañan, Duterte inked the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion bill, which overhauls the country's 20-year-old tax regime in a bid to make the tax system fairer and simpler.

    Under its P8.44-trillion 2017-2022 "Build, Build, Build" program, the government aims to ramp up its spending on infrastructure alone to P1.899 trillion, equivalent to 7.45% of gross domestic product, by the time Duterte ends his term in 2022.

    However, the estimated tax take from the TRAIN is less than the Department of Finance had hoped to raise.

    The law will adjust personal income tax rates to shift the burden off lower-income segments toward the "ultra-rich." Meanwhile, projected revenues to be foregone from lower personal income tax will be offset by higher excise levies on petroleum and automobiles, among others.


    The fresh law exempts those earning an annual taxable income of P250,000 and below from paying the personal income tax and raised the tax exemption for 13th month pay and other bonuses to P90,000.

    For petroleum, the law slapped a P1 per kilogram tax for liquefied petroleum gas that will be hiked to P2 in 2019 and raised to P3 in 2020 and onwards.

    Diesel will have a P2.50 per liter tax on the first year of implementation in 2018, P4.50 in 2019 and P6 in 2020.

    All variants of gasoline fuel will be taxed P7 per liter next year, P9 in 2019 and P10 in 2020.
    The law also has a safeguard provision that would suspend the tax if Dubai crude oil exceeds $80 per barrel and authorized the DOF to require fuel marking to combat oil smuggling.

    Package one of the TRAIN imposed a tax of P6 per liter for beverages using caloric and non-caloric sweeteners and P12 per liter for beverages using high fructose corn syrup.

    Tax-exempt are all milk, 3-in-1 coffee, 100 percent natural fruit and vegetable juices, meal replacement and medically indicated beverages. Beverages that used coco sugar and stevia are also excluded from taxation.

    TRAIN also raised excise taxes on both local and imported coal, despite attempts by some lawmakers to exempt coal producers from duties amid concerns that the law could trigger a spike in power costs.

    TECHWorld | WhatsApp asked to stop sharing data with Facebook

    Image Source: Google Images via The Economic Times


    EUROPE - France's privacy watchdog has issued formal notice to WhatsApp, asking the popular mobile messaging app to stop sharing user data with the parent company Facebook within a month.

    The Chair of the National Data Protection Commission (CNIL) had asked WhatsApp to provide a sample of the French users' data transferred to Facebook.

    "The company explained that it could not supply the sample requested by the CNIL since it is located in the US, it considers that it is only subject to the legislation of this (US) country," CNIL posted on its website late on Monday.

    "As a result, the Chair of the CNIL decided to issue formal notice to the company WhatsApp to comply with the Data Protection Act within one month," it added.

    Facebook acquired WhatsApp in 2014.

    On August 25, 2016, WhatsApp released a new version of its Terms of Service and Privacy Policy where it explained that "from now on, its users' data are transferred to Facebook for three purposes: targeted advertising, security and evaluation and improvement of services (business intelligence)".



    "While the security purpose seems to be essential to the efficient functioning of the application, it is not the case for the 'business intelligence' purpose which aims at improving performances and optimising the use of the application through the analysis of its users' behaviour," noted Chair of the CNIL.

    The watchdog considered that the data transfer for "business intelligence" purpose is not based on the legal basis required by the Data Protection Act for any processing.

    Friday, December 15, 2017

    WORLD | White House aims to sway opinion on immigration overhaul



    WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House is embarking on a major campaign to turn public opinion against the nation’s largely family-based immigration system ahead of an all-out push next year to move toward a more merit-based structure.

    The administration was laying the groundwork for such a drive even before an Islamic State-inspired extremist who was born in Bangladesh tried to blow himself up in Midtown Manhattan on Monday. It is assembling data to bolster the argument that the current legal immigration system is not only ill-conceived, but dangerous and damaging to U.S. workers.

    “We believe that data drives policy, and this data will help drive votes for comprehensive immigration reform in Congress,” said White House spokesman Hogan Gidley.

    White House officials outlined their strategy this week exclusively to The Associated Press, and said the data demonstrates that changes are needed immediately. But their effort will play out in a difficult political climate, as even Republicans in Congress are leery of engaging in a major immigration debate ahead of the 2018 midterm elections.

    The issue is expected to be prominently featured in the president’s Jan. 30 State of the Union address. The White House also plans other statements by the president, appearances by Cabinet officials and a push to stress the issue in conservative media.

    The administration is stressing key numbers: Department of Homeland Security data that shows nearly 9.3 million of the roughly 13 million total immigrants to the U.S. from 2005 to 2016 were following family members already in the United States. And just one in 15 immigrants admitted in the last decade by green card entered the country because of their skills.



    Other planned releases: a report highlighting the number of immigrants in U.S. jails, assessments of the immigration court backlog and delays in processing asylum cases, and a paper on what the administration says is a nexus between immigration and terrorism.

    Critics have questioned the administration’s selective use of sometimes misleading data in the past.
    The proposed move away from family-based immigration would represent the most radical change to the U.S. immigration system in 30 years. It would end what critics and the White House refer to as “chain migration,” in which immigrants are allowed to bring a chain of family members to the country, and replace it with a points-based system that favors education and job potential — “merit” measures that have increasingly been embraced by some other countries, including Britain.

    Gidley said that for those looking to make the case that the U.S. is ill-served by the current system, “transparency is their best friend.”

    “The more people know the real numbers, the more they’ll begin to understand that this is bad for American workers and this is bad for American security. And quite frankly, when these numbers come out in totality, we believe it’s going to be virtually impossible for Congress to ignore,” he said.

    The public is sharply divided on the types of changes President Donald Trump is advocating.

    A Quinnipiac University poll in August found that 48 percent of voters opposed a proposal that Trump has backed to cut the number of future legal immigrants in half and give priority to immigrants with job skills rather than those with family ties in this country. Forty-four percent of those polled — including 68 percent of Republicans — supported the idea.

    The White House hopes to see Congress begin to take up the issue early in 2018 — though it has yet to begin discussions with congressional leaders over even the broad strokes of a legislative strategy, officials said.

    Trump has laid out general principles for what he would like to see in an immigration bill in exchange for giving legal status to more than 700,000 young people brought to the U.S. illegally as children. These include the construction of a border wall, tougher enforcement measures and moving to a more merit-based legal immigration system. In September, Trump gave Congress six months to come up with a legislative fix to allow the young immigrants known as “Dreamers” to stay in the country, creating an early-2018 crisis point he hopes will force Democrats to swallow some of his hardline demands.

    After Monday’s incident in New York and the truck attack there in October, DHS quickly released information on the suspects’ immigration statuses, and Trump amplified his calls for ending the two programs that brought them to the U.S.

    For those who have been pushing for an end to chain migration for decades, it’s a welcome push.

    The Federation for American Immigration Reform, or FAIR, which advocates for lower immigration levels, among other changes, recently began a national radio campaign warning of what it sees as the dangers of chain migration and the diversity visa lottery program. The group has spent close to $1 million over the last month and a half on its campaign.

    And NumbersUSA, another group that advocates for lower immigration levels, launched a national six-figure ad campaign Thursday “to educate on Chain Migration categories.”

    Guillermo Cantor, research director at the American Immigration Council, counters that the administration is ignoring the benefits of a family-focused immigration system and the values that drove the country to adopt it in the first place.

    Research, he said, has shown that allowing immigrants to reunite with their families is one of the best integration tools. And family members bring their own skills, as well as support networks and other benefits, such as help with child care.

    “This is a society that’s founded on family values,” Cantor said, arguing that, for many who have become citizens or legal residents, reuniting with siblings and other extended family members is crucial.

    NATION | Ex-President Aquino, ex-DOH Sec. Garin face murder, plunder complaint over Dengvaxia mess


    Former President Benigno Aquino III and his Health Secretary Janette Garin via CNNPH


    Metro Manila (December 15) — Former President Benigno Aquino III and his Health Secretary Janette Garin on Friday were slapped with criminal complaint over their controversial national dengue vaccine program.

    Former Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA) Chief Augusto Syjuco filed a mass murder complaint resulting to reckless imprudence and plunder against Aquino and Garin before the Ombudsman.

    Aquino, during the Senate joint hearing on the Dengvaxia vaccine controversy, defended his administration's decision to buy P3.5 billion-worth of vaccines from French pharmaceutical company Sanofi Pasteur. Senators questioned the seemingly hasty procurement.

    Aquino defended the Dengvaxia procurement process: If the government failed to immediately set aside funds, the vaccine program would face delay amid growing concerns over the spread of the mosquito-borne virus.

    "If we do not do this at this point in time, you are practically saying that the first implementation of this vaccine will be in 2017 because it will be for the next budget cycle which will be under the new administration," he said on Thursday.



    He added no questions were raised when the dengue vaccine was bought in 2016.

    "Bago nagdesisyon ang gobyerno sa Dengvaxia, habang nagdedesisyon, pagkatapos magdesisyon, at hanggang ngayon, walang nagparating sa akin ng pagtutol sa bakuna," he said on Thursday.

    Sanofi Pasteur said no deaths were caused by its vaccine.

    The national dengue vaccine program began a month before the presidential elections in May.

    The pharmaceutical giant in November 2017 revealed Dengvaxia may lead to more severe forms of dengue in those not infected by the virus before.

    NATION | PH allies pitch in for Marawi rehabilitation


    Ruins of Marawa/CNN Philippines

    Metro Manila — Several countries and international organizations have pledged to help rebuild war-torn Marawi, Malacañang said Friday.

    These include Australia, Japan, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Asian Development Bank (ADB), European Union (EU), World Bank, and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

    Task Force Bangon Marawi said it is studying the offers to ensure compliance with the government's policy on foreign aid.

    "We understand that there are certain pronouncements made by the President regarding certain manners… Of course we're duty-bound to follow those policies," Office of Civil Defense Assistant Secretary and Task Force Bangon Marawi Spokesman Kristoffer James Purisima said in a Malacañang press briefing.

    "We will periodically release information as to which donations we've accepted," he said.
    President Rodrigo Duterte has made it clear he does not want any aid with conditions, as he repeatedly lashed out at the European Union (EU) for alleged criticisms of the drug war.

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    The EU pledged up to P6 billion to help the displaced Marawi residents start small businesses.
    Though the President has said he does not want aid from EU, there is no final decision yet, according to Task Force Bangon Marawi.

    It said the government has already received assistance from Canada, China, Germany, Korea, India, Thailand, Singapore, Association of Southeast Asian Nations  (ASEAN) Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance, and USAID.

    Details on how much each donor has given, in cash or in kind, has yet to be released.
    Duterte earlier said rebuilding Marawi may cost more than P50 billion.

    Help in military training

    Apart from financial aid, there are also offers to help train the country's troops in urban warfare, the kind of warfare that government troops had engaged in with the ISIS-inspired Maute Group in Marawi.

    Armed Forces spokesman Major General Restituto Padilla said Australia is training a military battalion for this. This is the battalion that was first sent to Marawi when the crisis broke out on May 23, prompting Duterte to declare martial law throughout Mindanao.

    He said the U.S., Russia, and China have also expressed willingness to assist the Philippine military with similar kinds of training.

    "Although meron namang orientation at meron namang konting training ang ating karamihan na sundalo, bibihira at maliit lang 'yung puwersa natin na talagang ganap na handa sa ganitong mga pagkakataon (Although our soldiers have some training in urban warfare, only a small part of our force is really equipped)," Padilla said.

    Terrorists may no longer be in Marawi, after soldiers killed 920 of them, but no less than President Duterte warned that "lone wolf" attacks may happen across the country. A total of 165 soldiers and 47 civilians were also killed in Marawi.

    Padilla said "lone wolves" may come from the list of suspected rebels and terrorists that the government ordered arrested since June. Of some 300 names in the list, only about 100 are in custody.

    "Remember, they still remain at large. So they still pose a threat," Padilla said.

    The military calls on Filipinos to report any suspicous effort by extremists to recruit followers via social media, to prevent any terror attack.

    WEATHER | Over 7,000 stranded as 'Urduja' heads for Eastern Samar

    Stranded passengers at the port who were stranded due to bad weather condition
    Source: CNN Philippines

    Metro Manila (December 15) — Thousands of passengers remain stranded at ports Friday in the path of tropical storm "Urduja" (International name: "Kai-tak"), which has strengthened even as it slowed down approaching the eastern Philippines.

    Northern Samar, Eastern Samar, Samar, and Biliran are now under Tropical Cyclone Warning Signal No. 2, said the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA).

    At the moment, we're already getting reports of flooded areas and some scenarios of landslides. PAGASA weather forecaster Lorie Dela Cruz said.

    It's been raining for a few days there, which means to say, it's more likely that the soil is really saturated and that many places are now very prone to floods and landslides.

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    Tropical storm Urduja also prompted the Philippine Coast Guard to suspend ferry trips, as PAGASA warned of waves as high as 14 meters off the seas where Signal No. 2 has been raised.

    Some 7,500 passengers are stranded at ports in Central Luzon, Eastern Visayas and Bicol as of 4 a.m. Friday, the coast guard said.

    Urduja was spotted 205 kilometers east of Borongan City, Eastern Samar, as of 7 a.m., PAGASA said.

    Urduja is packing winds of 75 kilometers per hour (kph) near the center, up from the previous 65 kph. The winds carry gusts of up to 90 kph.

    Moderate to heavy rains are forecast within a 500-km diameter of the storm, PAGASA added.
    The storm, which has slowed to 5 kph, is expected to make landfall over the provinces of Eastern Samar and Northern Samar on Saturday, it added.

    Because of its slow movement, Urduja is expected to leave Philippine territory by next week, Dela Cruz said. PAGASA forecast the storm to be 120 kilometers north of Puerto Princesa City in Palawan by December 19.
    Meanwhile, the following areas are under Signal No. 1:
    In Luzon:
    • Catanduanes
    • Camarines Sur
    • Albay
    • Sorsogon
    • Romblon
    • Masbate including Burias and Ticao Islands
    In Visayas:
    • Leyte
    • Southern Leyte
    • Northern Cebu
    • Northern Bohol
    • Capiz
    • Aklan
    • Northern Iloilo
    In Mindanao:
    • Dinagat Islands
    Storm signal no. 1 indicates suspension of classes in pre-school and kindergarten levels.

    Ahead of Urduja's expected landfall on Saturday, the weather bureau raised flooding warning levels in low-lying areas and warned of possible landslides in mountainous areas.

    Scattered to widespread rains are expected over the Visayas and the regions of Bicol and Caraga in the next 24 hours, PAGASA said.

    Residents in these areas are also alerted against possible flash floods and landslides.

    Fishermen and small seacraft are warned against sailing off the coast of the Bicol region and Visayas due to rough seas.

    Some local governments have suspended classes on Friday.

    Nation | Duterte, willing to settle beef with ABS-CBN if..

    © Toto Lozano/PPD President Rodrigo Duterte speaks at the People's Day celebration in Socorro, Oriental Mindoro on Wednesday, March 29, 2017, underscoring the need for a friendly approach to addressing territorial disputes with China via GMANews


    MANILA - President Rodrigo Duterte on Wednesday said he was willing to enter into a compromise deal with broadcast network ABS-CBN if the company would promote his bid for a shift to a federal form of government.
    "Kung magtulong kayo diyan sa federal system campaign at gawain ninyong slogan also for the unity and to preserve this Republic, makipag-areglo ako," Duterte said in a speech at the PDP-Laban's Christmas Benefit Dinner for Marawi at the Sofitel Philippine Plaza in Pasay City.
    "Just dedicate a portion of your time, your expensive and precious time on TV, help us promote federalism, only the good ones. But if you think that it is not into your system, fine," he added.
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    ABS-CBN has been a frequent target of Duterte's rants, with the President accusing the network of accepting funds from him without airing his political advertisements.
    He had also threatened to block the renewal of ABS-CBN's franchise, which is set to expire in 2020.
    In his speech, Duterte again hit the Lopez Holdings Corp., which controls ABS-CBN, for allegedly not paying its debt to the state-run Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP).
    "DBP, kayong mga negosyante, alam naman ninyo DBP pabangkarote, why? Because the Lopez Group of Companies and their debts were condoned, not paid," Duterte said.
    "Kaya ‘wag ninyo ako bolahin mga ABS-CBN...you know he who comes to equity must have clean hands. When you talk of righteousness, be sure that you are right," he added.
    Lopez Holdings Corp. earlier said it does not have any unpaid obligations to the DBP or other government financial institutions after Duterte announced on August 30 that he was going after holdings company over supposed debt to the state owned lender. 

    Friday, December 1, 2017

    HEALTH: On World AIDS Day, health chief seeks to break HIV stigma


      People light candles to mark World AIDS Day in 2016. Czar Dancel, Reuters

      MANILA- The Department of Health on Friday urged Filipinos to be sensitive to the feelings of those living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

      Health Chief Francisco Duque III in a press briefing during World AIDS Day, called upon the public not to stigmatize people living with HIV.

      "We have to be sensitive also to their feelings at alam naman natin na malalim na ang kanilang problema. Huwag na nating dadagdagan pa ito sa paraan na malalagay sila sa kahihiyan," he told reporters.

      (We already know that they have a big problem. Let us not add to their problems by placing them in an embarrassing situation)

      "Let's not stigmatize our people suffering from HIV/AIDS," he added.

      The prevalence rate of HIV in the Philippines remains at less than one percent, Duque said, but noted that the virus continues to pose "significant threat" to Filipino families.

      Since 1984 to August 2017, Duque said a total of 46,985 HIV cases have been reported to the Department of Health. This number is expected to go up to 142,000 by year 2022.

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      Most of reported HIV cases are concentrated in key populations who engage in "risky behavior," with 2 in 3 new cases coming from the age group of 15 to 24 years old, he said.

      From January to August 2017, majority or 84 percent of reported HIV cases are males who engaged in sexual activity with males, Duque said.

      Duque urged people living with HIV to gain access to antiretroviral therapy.

      "We urge those who are diagnosed with to come forward and access the life-saving antiretroviral drugs in all our DOH-designated HIV treatment facilities," he said.

      NATIONAL: AFP refutes Sison for comparing Bulacan encounter to “Tokhang”

      Jose Maria Sison (Photo Credits: www.ndfp.org) By Kistan Carag, RHNews





      MANILA - The Armed Forces of the Philippines refuted the statement of Communist Party of the Philippines founder Jose Maria Sison.

      In a previous statement, Sison compared the encounter in Nasugbu, Batangas, which led to the deaths of 15 alleged members of the New People’s Army, to the controversial Oplan Tokhang.

      According to Brig. Gen. Arnulfo Marcelo Burgos, commander of the 202nd Infantry Brigade of the Philippine Army, the statement of Sison is just propaganda against the military.

      Burgos said that Sison only seeks to preserve himself and the subsiding support for the communist rebel groups in the Philippines, particularly in Region-4A.

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      The army official explained that the military respects the human rights of the rebels, which is proven when the soldiers brought wounded NPA members to the hospital.

      Burgos also insisted that the encounter in Nasugbu is a legitimate operation and this is proven by the numerous weapons and subversive documents seized from the slain communists.

      WORLD: White House waned to publicly shame Tillerson



      Washington - Reports that the White House has a tentative plan to replace Secretary of State Rex Tillerson that emerged Thursday were an effort to express President Donald Trump's deep displeasure and publicly shame his secretary of state, a source with direct knowledge of the White House's thinking said Thursday.

      The hope from the White House, the source said, is to push out the plan to replace Tillerson and then "wait for him to punch out."
        The news that the White House is seriously considering replacing Tillerson with CIA Director Mike Pompeo comes as Trump remains deeply frustrated with his secretary of state, another source familiar with the President's thinking said.
        And the plan is not just being considered at the staff level, but by the President himself, the source said.

        The issue could come up during a scheduled lunch between Trump, Tillerson and Defense Secretary James Mattis at the White House Friday.

        The attempt at public shaming is just the latest such instance emanating from the Trump White House, where the President has repeatedly publicly undermined his secretary of state and publicly berated his attorney general.

        His public response to the reports on Thursday signaled no desire to spare his secretary of state -- who still has not denied having called the President a "moron" in private.

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        "He's here. Rex is here," Trump offered, noting that Tillerson was in the building -- but not in the room -- at the time.

        The response was equally uninspired from the White House briefing room, where White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said simply that "when the President loses confidence in someone, they will no longer serve in the capacity that they're in."

        The timing of Tillerson's expected departure remains uncertain, but multiple officials said the shake-up could come at the end of the year or early next.

        "The clock is ticking," the source familiar with the White House's latest thinking said.
        Mattis said Thursday that "there's nothing to" the rumors about Tillerson being forced out by the White House.

        "I make nothing of it, there's nothing to it," Mattis said before a bilateral meeting with Libya's Prime Minister.

        But the White House's tentative plans to replace Pompeo at the CIA with Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Arkansas, could present a wrinkle in the strategy.

        Cotton isn't up for reelection until 2020, and moving him to the CIA role would put another Senate seat in play in 2018 -- at a time when Republicans have a razor-thin majority. That is giving West Wing officials pause, a source close to the White House said.

        If Cotton were to take the CIA job, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a Republican, would select someone to fill the vacant seat -- and Republican officials would have a tight time frame to field a candidate who can win statewide in 2018, even though Arkansas is a deep red state.

        The GOP would have to field a candidate by March 1, when the filing period ends, and the primaries are currently scheduled for May 22.

        But the process could hit a roadblock as the governor's Senate appointee could not run in 2018, according to a clause in the state's constitution. But the Arkansas Secretary of State's office raised questions about that clause, noting that US Constitution may offer a conflicting view that could override the state statute.