Fr. Pops inspires Fil-Am church volunteers

The missioners have come this far, but being with the people that the late priest served is worth all the long and difficult travel.  After all, to them, it is a way of paying tribute to the man and the work he did as Christ’s follower, which is to fulfill Christ’s teachings of helping the poor and the underserved.
By JOHN RIZLE L. SALIGUMBA
Davao Today

TALAINGOD, Davao del Norte, Philippines — The mission of slain Italian missionary Father Fausto ‘Pops’ Tentorio to work among the marginalized peasants and indigenous peoples in Southern Mindanao, continue to inspire many, locals and foreigners alike.
Tentorio, a missionary based in Arakan Valley, Cotabato Province for nearly thirty years, was killed last October 17 inside the compound of his parish by a gunman believed to be connected with government military forces.
The missionary is a known advocate of the environment and the struggles of indigenous peoples in the hinterlands of Davao City and the provinces of Cotabato, Bukidnon and Davao del Norte.
On August 12, they found themselves on the road that Father Pops himself once took: the path to Talaingod, a highland municipality in Davao del Norte which is home to Ata-Manobos who are still struggling from being robbed off of their ancestral land.

Delegates from various churches in the United States, 22 of them Filipino-Americans and Americans, travelled halfway from across the world to Sitio Dulyan in Palma Gil village of Talaingod where a school that Fr. Tentorio helped established is located.
The school, the venue of the mission, saw the gathering of foreign missioners, and delegates from various local organizations that provided medical services to more than a thousand Ata-Manobos who walked for days from their communities just to avail of them.

Jolo Buktaw, a missioner from a California-based Advocacy Ministry of the Rosewood United Methodist Church, saw for himself how needy the lumads have become.
“They walked for almost a week just to get here in time for the mission, just to get proper treatment and medicine,” he said.
The Ata-Manobos who were served by the mission belong to the Salugpungan Ta ‘Tanu Igkanugon, an organization borne of the unity of  lumad communities in Talaingod who fought the wood company, Alcantara and Sons (Alsons) when it tried to enter their areas.  (See Related Story: The Fugitive of Talaingod)
In the 1990s, Alsons claimed thousands of hectares of lumad ancestral land in Talaingod under the Integrated Forest Management Agreement (IFMA), but this was thwarted by the Ata-Manobos led by Datu Guibang Apoga who fought the company guards with their spears and arrows.
While Guibang and fellow datus believed that they only acted in defense of their land, charges of common crimes were filed against them.  As a consequence, their communities suffered further.

Seeing beyond government neglect
The missioners who came saw this for themselves.  They understood that there is more beyond the lumads’ suffering in terms of government’s negligence of providing basic social services.
Up to this day, the lumads under Salugpungan have continued to parry countless other forms of disenfranchisement of the right to their ancestral domain.
After Alson’s IFMA, other private business-led projects came, including a hydro-powered dam project and a mining application.
With the country’s mining laws, such as the Philippine Mining Act of 1995, and recently, President Aquino’s latest promulgation on mining, Executive Order 79, the communities of Salugpungan face more threats of land usurpation by private businesses, particularly, of foreign multinational companies.

In the course of resisting the entry of such projects that would only mean dispossession of their ancestral lands, they have also been put at the receiving end of human rights abuses, 
For Buktaw, what the lumad communities they visited experienced was injustice.  And for this, he and his fellows, believe that they could do something more.

Spreading the word
“Our mission does not end after we leave Davao.  It will just begin as we share the stories and bring back what we have learned here,” Buktaw said.
The missioners vowed they were going to make sure they will come back and provide more of the lumads’ material needs.  But more than this, they pledged advocacy.

For Bert Mendoza, President of Filipino Caucus, an organization which covers 28 Fil-Am Methodist churches in Southern California, they can start by calling the attention of their government to cancel its aid for a country that neglects the rights of its people, particularly the indigenous peoples.
“Our (US) government will listen only if the international community calls its attention,” Mendoza said.
Furthermore, Mendoza said they can also lobby that their government’s budget for aid to the Philippines be cut in the face of the human rights abuses committed by state security agents against Filipinos.

For Reverend Sandie Richards of the United Methodist Church of Los Angeles, California the condition of the lumads of Talaingod only mirrors the continuing plunder of the interests of multinational companies.
“It’s an outrage that the resources of this beautiful land are being consumed and destroyed by multinational and US interests,” she said, adding that it is supposed to be the interest of the Philippines that the Filipino people use the resources for their own nation instead of enriching other nations, particularly the wealthy ones, especially,
their country, the United States.
She further lamented over the situation of most Filipinos who are forced to go abroad even if it means leaving their families behind.

“The women, for instance, who care for other children overseas should be home, caring for their own children, they should be able to make living wages and take care of their own families,” Richards said.
Buktaw summed up the things they could do into four urgent tasks:
First, to know the human rights situation in the Philippines, particularly in Mindanao; second, to assert environmental justice; third, to advocate for the health and welfare of the indigenous peoples; and lastly would be to muster support so they can provide more of the social needs, especially, on medical care.

The missioners have come this far, but being with the people that the late priest served is worth all the long and difficult travel.  After all, to them, it is a way of paying tribute to the man and the work he did as Christ’s follower, which is to fulfill Christ’s teachings of helping the poor and the underserved.  (John Rizle L. Saligumba/davaotoday.com)


VIDEO PROFILE | Saturnino Fabros:Assaulted MMDA officer, single dad of 6, surviving on P8K a month


InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5
MANILA, Philippines - Robert Blair Carabuena, tobacco firm executive caught on video mauling an MMDA traffic enforcer, could not have picked a more pitiful underdog to assault on national television.
A News5 team on Wednesday visited the hovel in Payatas, Quezon City, where Saturnino Fabros, 47, is singlehandedly raising six children. They spoke with a lowly public servant trying to raise a family all alone, and on a salary of P8,000 a month.
His eldest child broke down while trying to rationalize her father’s decision to stoically absorb the blows and the curses that Carabuena rained on him after he accosted the executive for insisting on driving while Fabros was manning traffic at the corner of Tandang Sora and Capitol Hills in Quezon City.
She said her father had been forced to show restraint (“nagtimpi”) apparently because he was thinking of his family, and she wept at the thought of the humiliation he suffered for that.
Fabros is a 20-year veteran at the MMDA, and the agency’s management bared plans Wednesday to promote him to Traffic Enforcer 2. 
His peers at the MMDA took turns holding him up as a kind, meek man. 
His daughter called him a hero (“bayani”), as she recalled their shock at seeing their father being manhandled on television.

Watch the Video at interaksyom.com

Areas in ‘Helen’s’ path stock up on supplies

Pupils armed with umbrellas resume classes to school on Monday after almost a week of suspended classes as Pagasa announces another Tropical Storm named Helen entering the country’s area of responsibility. INQUIRER PHOTO/ MARIANNE BERMUDEZ
Manila, Philippines – Philippine authorities rushed relief supplies to the country’s remote north Tuesday in preparation for a new storm, which was also expected to dump heavy rain on other areas struggling with deadly floods.

Tropical Storm “Helen” (international codename: Kai-tak) was forecast to hit the east coast of Luzon, the country’s main island, on Wednesday morning, then pass over mountainous regions before heading towards Taiwan, the state weather bureau said.

“We are rushing to pre-position relief items to the northern areas ahead of this storm,” Social Welfare Secretary Corazon Soliman told AFP.

“We wanted to make sure that we have enough supplies there just in case areas get cut off by landslides or floods.”

“Helen” was also forecast to bring heavy rains across the central and southern areas of Luzon, where 334,000 people remain in evacuation centres following flooding last week that in some farming areas remains waist-deep
.
The floods, which submerged 80 percent of Manila, killed 95 people, according to the government.

The government had initially said “Helen” would start dumping up to 35 millimeters (1.3 inches) of rain an hour over large areas of Luzon beginning Monday night, triggering warnings of more mass evacuations from officials.

But as of noon Tuesday parts of Luzon were only experiencing scattered, light rain showers.

Ramos said authorities had begun releasing water from five dams in the mountain regions of Luzon that were near overflowing in anticipation of more rains.

But the “controlled release” was not expected to swamp already swollen river systems and cause more flooding, he said.

Read More....

‘Helen’ now a storm; 7 areas in Luzon under storm signal

August 13, 2012
MANILA (3rd Update, 1:31 p.m.) -- Seven areas in Northern Luzon have been placed under public storm warning as Tropical Depression Helen intensified into a storm, the state weather bureau said Monday.
In its latest weather update Monday noon, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) said public storm signal no. 1 was raised in the provinces of Batanes, Isabela, Kalinga, Apayao, Cagayan, Calayan Group of Islands and Babuyan Group of Islands.

Those areas are expected to experience winds of 30 to 60 kilometers per hour (kph) within the next 36 hours.
In its latest weather update Monday noon, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) said public storm signal no. 1 was raised in the provinces of Batanes, Isabela, Kalinga, Apayao, Cagayan, Calayan Group of Islands and Babuyan Group of Islands.
Residents living in low-lying and mountainous areas under public storm warning signals are alerted against possible flash floods and landslides, while those residing in coastal areas under public storm warning signal no. 1 are alerted against big waves or storm surges generated, Pagasa said.
As of 10 a.m. Monday, the center of Tropical Storm Helen (international name: Kai-Tak) was located based on satellite and surface data at 550 kilometers (km) east northeast of Casiguran, Aurora.
It packed maximum sustained winds of 65 kph near the center and gustiness of up to 80 kph.
Pagasa said “Helen” carries about 15-35 millimeters (mm) per hour (heavy-torrential) of rainfall within its 400-km diameter coverage.
“Helen” is expected to enhance the southwest monsoon that will bring rains over Luzon and the Visayas especially over the western section. The storm might leave the country by Thursday.
“Locally heavy downpours are possible across Luzon in the northern Philippines from Monday through Wednesday. This area has already seen flooding rain over the past week, and additional rainfall will result in the potential for more significant flooding and mudslides to occur,” meteorologist Eric Leister of accuweather.com said.
By the middle of the week, Leister said “Helen” could also impact Taiwan, another area which has been affected by Typhoon Saola (“Gener” in the Philippines) less than two weeks ago. “Helen” may develop into a typhoon on its way to Southern China on Thursday.
Pagasa said intermittent light to moderate rains (2.5-7.5 mm/hr) are now affecting Central and Southern Luzon becoming more frequent moderate to heavy rains (7.5-10 mm/hr) during the latter part of the day towards the evening over Camarines provinces, Quezon province, Rizal, Bulacan, Pampanga, Laguna, Cavite, Batangas, Mindoro, Bataan, Zambales and Metro Manila.
Pagasa said “Helen” is forecast to move west northwest at 13 kph. It is expected to be 330 km east northeast of Tuguegarao City on Tuesday morning.
By Wednesday morning, it is expected to be 80 km north northeast of Aparri, Cagayan; and 220 km west of Basco, Batanes on Thursday morning. (PNA/Virgil Lopez/Sunnex)

Read More From Sunstar.com.ph

Pagasa forecast: Expect more monsoon rains

By


MTSAT ENHANCED-IR Satellite Image 4:32 a.m., 11 August 2012
Though weakened, the southwest monsoon, locally known as hanging habagat, will continue to bring rainshowers and thunderstorms over Northern Luzon and Central Luzon, posing the threat of flash floods and landslides as people in the two regions, and those in the capital, struggle to restore normality to their lives after this week’s floods.

The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) on Friday said provinces in the two regions, particularly Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, La Union, Pangasinan, Zambales, Pampanga, Bataan, Tarlac and Bulacan, will continue to experience mostly cloudy skies with scattered rainshowers and thunderstorms. The weather will become cloudy with widespread rains in the western part of the region, the state weather service said.

Pagasa warned residents of those provinces about flash floods in low-lying areas and landslides in mountainous areas.

Low pressure area

Weather forecaster Raymond Ordinario reported that a low pressure area (LPA) had been seen east of the country, still very far but moving toward the Philippine area of responsibility (PAR).

“We expect it to form and enter the PAR by Monday or Tuesday,” Ordinario said. “But we only expect it to pass through the PAR so we do not think it would affect any part of the country.”

Cloudy skies

The skies in the rest of the country will be partly cloudy to cloudy with isolated rainshowers and thunderstorms, Pagasa said.

Moderate to strong winds blowing from the southwest will prevail over Luzon and coastal waters will be moderate to rough. Elsewhere, winds will be light to moderate coming from the south to southwest with slight to moderate seas.

Strong to gale force wind is anticipated to affect the northern and western seaboards of Northern Luzon and the western seaboard of Central Luzon.

Very rough seas

The seas off the western seaboards of Northern Luzon and Central Luzon, particularly Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, La Union, Pangasinan, Zambales and Bataan, as well as the northern seaboard of Northern Luzon in Cagayan are expected to be rough to very rough, Pagasa said.

Pagasa advised fishermen and operators of small seacraft not to venture out to sea. Larger vessels must watch out for big waves.


Source:http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/247515/pagasa-forecast-expect-more-monsoon-rains

Aquino forced to land

President on 4-province swing in Central Luzon



CLOSE CALL. President Aquino and the presidential party walk in the rain after poor visibility forced the presidential chopper to make an emergency landing at Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressway near the exit of Hacienda Luisita in Tarlac on Friday. MALACAÑANG PHOTO
TARLAC CITY—President Benigno Aquino III on Friday inspected the flooded plains of four provinces in Central Luzon, revisiting decades-old plans to build a multipurpose dam after observing that 25 percent of the villages in Tarlac, his home province, was flooded because of this week’s torrential monsoon rains.

In Dinalupihan, Bataan, his second stop on a four-province swing in Central Luzon, Mr. Aquino promised flood victims that experts from the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) would study the source of flooding and plug this.

“After the rains stop, the experts from the DPWH will come here to study where the water is coming from, and what can be done to mitigate this. We will come back to present the plan, when we can start it, and when you can expect the results. We’ll fix this, that’s our commitment,” Mr. Aquino said.

But the President, visiting thousands of people huddled in evacuation centers in Central Luzon, surprised local folks on his way to Tarlac when his convoy of helicopters made an unscheduled landing near the freeway.

Heavy rain and poor visibility forced the group of three military and two civilian helicopters ferrying the President and Cabinet officials to make an emergency landing at the Luisita exit of the Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressway in Paniqui town  around 9 a.m. Mr. Aquino was on his way to an evacuation center in Paniqui at the time.

“I came in a little late,” the President said to flood victims sheltering at the Apulid evacuation center in Paniqui. “When the helicopter was about to land, the thing they call ceiling [cloud ceiling] went down.”

“The President is fine. Everyone is fine. No one was injured,” Communication Secretary Ricky Carandang said by phone. “While we were in Tarlac, it started to rain and the visibility became poor. The pilots made a decision to land.”

Brig. Gen. Ramon Dizon, commander of the Presidential Security Group, said the cloud ceiling went down as the party was nearing Tarlac. “So to be on the safe side, we landed the choppers before it started to rain,” he said.

With the President on the helicopter were Joel Villanueva of the Technical Education Skills and Development Authority, and Aurora Rep. Juan Edgardo Angara, according to Carandang.

Carandang said he was on another chopper with Energy Secretary Jose Almendras, Public Works Secretary Rogelio Singson, Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo, Social Welfare Secretary Corazon Soliman and Akbayan spokesperson Risa Hontiveros.

From the edge of the freeway, the presidential party motored to the evacuation center in Paniqui.

Evacuees’ needs

Mr. Aquino told the evacuees that he brought along Cabinet officials, mentioning Soliman and Singson, to see how they were doing, and look into their short-term and long-term needs.

“I’m very glad to see you so alive and smiling, at that, despite the disaster,” Mr. Aquino said. “Rest assured that the government is ready to help you along.”

From Paniqui, the presidential party proceeded to Sta. Lucia High School in Capas, Tarlac, to visit the evacuees there.

Mr. Aquino thanked the local officials and the private companies that extended aid to the flood victims.

The President said he expected more international aid to pour in for the evacuees.

“Our government is ready. We still have funds for calamities as well as the quick response funds to take care of all of you,” Mr. Aquino said.

The President also visited evacuation centers in Dinalupihan, Bataan; San Fernando, Pampanga, and Bulacan.

The government would attend to the needs of flood victims in evacuation centers in many parts of Luzon, Mr. Aquino said.

Twenty-eight of the 48 barangays in Dinalupihan were submerged in floodwaters.

Malacañang said Dinalupihan Mayor Joel Jaime Payumo asked for budget allocation from the President to finance repairs on dams and schools damaged by the flooding.

Help for Pampanga

Mr. Aquino next motored to San Fernando, Pampanga, home province of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, to assure flood victims there of continued government assistance.

In Malolos, Bulacan, the President told flood victims that the government would undertake projects that would mitigate, if not stop, flooding.

“We’re not talking of months here. This is an extensive project and it has many components. This will probably take years to complete. Just the same, we’ll try to mitigate the floods,” Mr. Aquino said.

The President helped to distribute relief goods at the evacuation centers he visited.

110 villages flooded

In its latest report, the provincial disaster risk reduction and management council of Tarlac said 110 of the 500 villages in 10 of 17 towns and Tarlac City are flooded. The floods affected 65,680 people (15,633 families).

Discussing the Balog-Balog Multipurpose Dam with officials in Capas, Mr. Aquino said he wanted to see new plans for the project, which would improve the dam’s water containment capacity.

Mr. Aquino reassured the people of his home province that the government was looking for permanent solutions for the perennial floods.

Permanent shelters

He made the same assurance in Paniqui earlier, focusing on the construction of permanent evacuation centers for Barangays Salomangui, Apulid and San Isidro.

Paniqui Mayor Miguel Rivilla said his town had been at the receiving end of silted river systems that should otherwise flow to Lingayen Gulf.

In the afternoon, the President motored to the City of San Fernando in Pampanga to assure residents that funds are available to help them recover and to rehabilitate disaster-stricken areas.

“We have funds for our quick response. The government is ready to help,” Mr. Aquino told some 1,000 evacuees at Sto. Niño Elementary School in San Fernando.

Manny Pangilinan in Pampanga

Businessman Manuel V. Pangilinan traveled to Pampanga on Friday and distributed 2,000 food packs to flood victims in San Fernando and the towns of Sto. Tomas, Minalin and his hometown of Apalit.


Source:http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/247505/aquino-forced-to-land.

Mayor to deliver address to city in September


Tuesday, August 7, 2012
DAVAO City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio said Monday that she is now preparing her third State of the City Address (Soca), which she will deliver next month.
It will be Duterte-Carpio's last Soca in her first three-year term as the city's mayor. She has yet to decide if she will seek reelection in 2013's midterm elections.
Speaking in her Monday press briefing at her office, Duterte-Carpio told reporters that she has already made an initial list of her accomplishments that will be highlighted in her Soca.
She said her Soca is in line with the instruction of the Department of Interior and Local Government that all the city and municipal mayors should come up with their respective local government performance report.
She said whatever she will include in that report will also be the content of her speech.
The mayor said the performance report will contain a collection of all the activities and achievements of the city for the past year.
"Kung unsa tong mga nabuhat namo sa niaging tuig, mao ra pud to ang akong hisgutan (I will discuss tackle in mys Sona what we have achieved in tha past year)," Duterte-Carpio said.
Initially, the mayor said, she will highlight in her Soca the important achievements of some of the departments of the City Government, including the City Health Office, City Tourism and Investment Promotions Office, and Davao City Overland Transport Terminal (DCOTT), among others.
The mayor also said she will make public updates of the prime projects implemented during the first two years of her administration, including the rehabilitation of the some city-owned enterprises like the Wireless Cemetery, the DCOTT, among others. 

Flooding eases after killing 16 in Luzon  

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

MANILA (4th Update, 6:56 p.m.) -- Widespread flooding that killed at least 16 people, battered a million others and paralyzed the Philippine capital briefly eased Wednesday, allowing rescuers on rubber boats to reach a large number of distressed residents still marooned in submerged villages.

In its 3 p.m. Wednesday bulletin, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said 16 persons were reported dead -- nine of whom were victims of a landslide incident in Lower Bayanihan, Barangay Commonwealth, Quezon City and one from Valenzuela City due to drowning, three were from Pampanga, one from Zambales and two from Batangas province.
The NDDRMC added that four people were injured, 80,189 families were affected and 394,844 persons were evacuated.
Government forecasters said the monsoon rains that overflowed major dams and rivers crisscrossing Manila and surrounding provinces would gradually abate and lead to sunny weather later this week after 12 days of relentless downpours.
The deluge that began late Sunday was the worst since Typhoon Ondoy in 2009, when hundreds died in rampaging flash floods.
"We're still on a rescue mode," NDRRMC chief Benito Ramos said. "Floods are receding in many areas but people are still trapped on their roofs."
Ramos said the massive flooding turned half of Manila into "a water world" on Monday evening and into Tuesday. At least 16 people died.
More than 1.2 million people were affected by the deluge, including 783,000 who fled from their inundated homes. With the receding floodwaters, some of the displaced have started returning to their homes but others stayed put despite the hard conditions in emergency shelters as rain clouds again darkened the sky Wednesday afternoon.
Carmen Empesao said she panicked and left with her three grandchildren when waist-deep floodwaters swamped her home in the hard-hit city of Marikina.
"We fled without any food and the clothes we managed to grab were wet and cannot be worn," Empesao, 60, told The Associated Press in an evacuation center teeming with 3,000 displaced.
Rescue efforts shifted into high gear Wednesday, with more than 130 emergency crewmen from two provinces reaching Metro Manila of 12 million people to help their overwhelmed teams, including police and soldiers.
Rescuers used rubber boats and ropes to navigate flooded streets where many people climbed on rooftops to escape neck-deep waters.
Food and drinking water were in short supply because of impassable roads. President Benigno Aquino III distributed food packs in flood-hit communities south of Manila.
Ramos said he was overwhelmed by the extent of the flooding when he flew aboard a helicopter with Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin for an inspection Wednesday, although he added that water in many areas was beginning to recede.
"In some areas, I could not tell the sea from the flooded villages," he said.
Manila was drenched with more than half of a month's worth of rain in just 24 hours starting Monday. A typhoon in eastern China that has helped intensify the southwest monsoon in the Philippines blew further into the Chinese mainland, prompting Filipino forecasters to predict better weather the rest of the week.
"We may see the sun tomorrow (Thursday)," said Glaiza Escullar, Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) forecaster.
She added that heavy but brief downpours may still sporadically drench the coastal capital.
Although heavy rains may ease, Escullar warned that up to three storms or typhoons were expected to lash the country this month.
At the height of the flooding, many residents called radio and TV stations desperately asking to be rescued. TV footage showed rescuers dangling on ropes to bring children and other residents to safety from a rooftop.
Vehicles and even heavy trucks struggled to navigate water-clogged roads, where hundreds of thousands of commuters were stranded.
The government suspended work and classes Tuesday but most offices opened Wednesday. Traffic was still light as workers began clearing roads of debris, trash and fallen trees.
In 2009, massive flooding spawned by a typhoon devastated Manila and surrounding areas, killing hundreds. (AP/With Sunnex)

Source: Sunstar.com.ph

9 killed as heavy rains paralyze Metro Manila

By
Residents wade along a flooded area in Marikina on Tuesday. Torrential rains pounding the Philippine capital on Tuesday paralyzed traffic as waist-deep floods triggered evacuations of tens of thousands of residents and the government suspended work in offices and schools.(AP Photo/John Javellana)
MANILA, Philippines – Nine people, including three children, were killed while four others were injured Tuesday as continuous  heavy rains spawned by the southwest monsoon triggered a landslide in Quezon City. Emergency crews scrambled to save tens of thousands of residents, some of whom were stranded on the roofs of their inundated homes.

Six of the fatalities were identified as Jayson Baylon, 16, Jayvee Baylon, 20, Jissele Baylon, 7, Jonathan Castulo, 3, Junica Castulo, 3, Jessie Baylon, 24, according to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC).

The injured were identified as Kidskin Simbulan, 40, and Leslyn Simbulan, 19, NDRRMC said.
Up to forty six cities and municipalities in Regions 1, 3, 4-A and NCR have been affected by flooding, according to the latest report of NDRRMC.
As much as 541,498 people have been affected by the rains so far, it said.

Relentless rains submerged half of the sprawling Metro Manila, triggered a landslide that killed eight people and sent emergency crews scrambling Tuesday to rescue and evacuate tens of thousands of residents.

The deluge, the worst since 2009 when hundreds died in rampaging flash floods, was set off by the seasonal monsoon that overflowed major dams and rivers in Manila and surrounding provinces.

Executive Director Benito Ramos of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said in a televised press briefing that the landslide, which occurred in Barangay (village) Commonwealth, was due to saturated soil.

“It’s like a water world,” said Ramos, adding that the rains flooded 50 percent of metropolitan Manila on Monday evening, and about 30 percent remained under waist- or neck-deep waters Tuesday.

He urged residents in areas prone to landslides and floods to stay in evacuation centers. Because the soil is saturated, even a little rain could be dangerous, he added.
“Now that it’s getting dark, I would like to repeat, if the rains are heavy you should be at the evacuation centers,” he said, warning that rescue operations are more difficult at night and could put responders at risk.

State weather bureau said a separate tropical storm off eastern China had intensified monsoon rains in the Philippines, which were forecast to last until Thursday.
The Philippine National Police has ordered the evacuation of residents near the landslide area to avoid further casualties from possible landslides.


Source:  inquirer.net Read More.....

COMMENTARY: 10 facts about the RH Bill

 
 

Last year, I sponsored Senate Bill 2865, otherwise known as the Reproductive Health Bill. It went through the process – we had hearings, then we made our committee report, which embodies SB 2865. Since then, there have been many questions raised by the public and rightly so, given that intelligent debate and discourse are essential in crafting the best version of any bill.InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5
In fact, it took almost a year before the RH Bill hurdled the interpellation period (debates where I answered questions posed by my colleagues) at the Senate, where every provision was explained, rehashed, and clarified until it was blue in the face. I am not exaggerating. Finally, the bill has moved on to the period of amendments during which the Senate can incorporate changes to further improve the measure.
However, it is unfortunate that intelligent discussion is overlooked, sometimes even abandoned altogether by those who mean to distort the meaning and purpose of the bill. Many people are misled by these ill-informed notions. They pass judgment on the RH bill based on misinformation. Don’t take it from the grapevine and learn the facts before taking a stand. Here’s the real deal about the Senate RH Bill.

FACT 1: The RH Bill gives a person freedom to choose what family planning method to use, or NOT to use any method at all.
Once and for all, if you do not want to use any family planning method, if you choose to use an artificial mode of family planning or natural family planning, that choice is yours and yours alone. This is made very clear in the following section of SB 2865.

FACT 2: The RH Bill does not legalize abortion. In fact, it explicitly adheres to the penal law on abortion. 
 As I repeatedly explained during the debates, the provision below is meant to ensure that every woman, like every Filipino, deserves optimal health care which includes compassionate care.
During one of our debates on the Senate floor in September last year, Sen. Vicente Sotto III, who is vehemently opposed to the RH bill, conceded and even agreed with my position that women with post-abortion complications seeking emergency attention in any medical facility should not be treated like criminals. Instead, they must be treated humanely and given compassionate medical care, which is precisely what Section 3 (i) calls for. For more details on that discussion, click on link here: ‘RH Bill won’t legalize abortion’ on my official website.
Sen. Pia Cayetano [explaining Sec.3 (i) and (j) to Sen. Sotto] : ’It shocks me that there are people who believe that women who have gone through an abortion need to be treated like criminals because they have committed an act which is defined as a crime in our country.’
‘…In fact in many hospitals they are treated badly, they are pushed around to the side. In fact, some of them will bleed to death because they will not even be attended to, to punish them for that crime. And I will fight for the right of this woman to have the care that she needs because the emotional, psychological trauma that goes through to have an abortion is something that we, who have not been through an abortion, can never understand and she deserves that from the State.”
Sen. Vicente Sotto III [agreeing with Sen. Pia's remark]: ’Yes, Mr. President, I do agree. As a matter of fact, I will be by the Sponsor’s side in defending that woman.’
Sen. Pia Cayetano : ’Then we have no problem.’
Source: RH plenary debates (September 5, 2011)

FACT 3:  The RH Bill does not impose an ideal family size and leaves this decision to couples.
The provisions quoted below is self-explanatory and puts to rest any misconception there may be on this matter

FACT 4: The RHBill respects the religious convictions and cultural beliefs of all. 
I am aware that certain religious groups are anti-RH. I respect their position. But I cannot adopt their position because it would be depriving other Filipinos who have other views on reproductive health and on the reproductive health care and services that they need and want. As I said in my sponsorship speech, it is my job as a duly elected public official to represent every Filipino, not just one religion. Having said that, I repeatedly clarify that those who do not want to use contraceptives are not being forced to. Each person is at liberty to decide for his or herself.

FACT 5: The RH Bill will not teach a 10-year-old how to use condoms. RH education is age- and development- appropriate. 
Time and again, sex education has been taken out of context. As I explained in my sponsorship speech, sex education shall be age-appropriate. It includes a child using the proper name for their body parts. It includes understanding the biological function of their bodies, such that they know that babies grow in mommy’s tummy and do not come out of bamboo trees.

FACT 6: The RH Bill promotes BOTH natural and artificial methods.
Again, there is so much disinformation spreading that only artificial family planning shall be promoted under the RH bill. This is false.
 

FACT 7:  Contraceptives are safe and effective family planning tools. 
Anti-RH advocates repeatedly raise the issue on the safety and effectiveness of contraceptives. That is a  valid concern. But like any medicine or medical device, all contraceptives shall be approved by a government authority, the Food and Drugs Administration (FDA). And like medicines, there will be respect for choices. Couples must decide what is best for them with the advice of their health care provider. Clearly, vasectomy or ligation will not work for a young couple who may want to have more children in the future. On the other hand, some women prefer to use the pill or the IUD. These choices are personal ones. Contraceptives is not a "one-size-fits-all" solution.

FACT  8: The RH Bill will not indiscriminately distribute condoms to all.
During the Senate RH debates in October last year, Sen. Ralph Recto repeatedly stated that “Parang nagtutulak tayo ng contraceptives! (It’s like the government will be ‘pushing’ or peddling contraceptives)" in connection with the bill’s principle of “universal access” to reproductive health care services (Section 2) and the provision mandating mobile health care services (Section 12).
In response, I explained that reproductive health care is not all about contraceptives, but addresses real and unmet needs of women and families. The need for a mobile health vehicle in particular is important to reach far-flung areas where health care is inaccessible. These  services may not only save a mother’s life, but will help couples plan the number and spacing of their children. I clarified that minors and the youth also have RH needs, which we should address primarily through age-appropriate RH education and counseling. But we should also not turn a blind eye to the alarming problems of teenage pregnancy (we have the highest teenage pregnancy rate in Southeast Asia) and numerous cases of young children being sexually abused, sometimes by members of their own family. These are real issues which we should not trivialize by irresponsible statements that the government would freely give away contraceptives to the youth under the RH bill. As I emphasized on the floor, the mobile health care unit is not a "contraceptive ice cream truck."
For more details, see the highlights of floor debates between Sen. Recto and myself , ‘RH debate highlights: October 5, 2011′ on my official website.

FACT 9: An average of 11 mothers die daily. That’s a fact.
During the Senate debates, Sen. Sotto kept questioning official figures on our Maternal Mortality Rate (MMR). He claimed that the figure of "11 mothers dying per day" had no basis, and was merely being exaggerated in media reports.
“Eh alam naman natin siyempre kung papaano dalhin kasi ng media iyong ’11 mothers die a day.’  Eh, hindi, eh..  This cannot be accurate.. So, may I ask the Committee to furnish the Senate a copy of how this survey was derived at.. If they can furnish us, I will try to urge 13 Senators to vote for this bill tomorrow on third reading…”  - Sen. Vicente Sotto III, Senate RH debates (Aug. 22, 2011)
I explained that the figure is an average generated from data provided by official sources, such as the United Nations (UN), the National Statistics Office (NSO), and the National Statistics and Coordination Board (NCSB). I also provided my colleagues with a copy of how this number was derived, as illustrated on the table below:
  •  Notes: 
  • Column D calculated by dividing Column B by 1000 and multiplying result with Column C.
  • Column F calculated by dividing Column D by 100,000 and multiplying result with Column E. 


So now that we have given our explanations, can we trust Sen. Sotto to call on the majority of senators to act on the RH Bill?
But regardless of whether there’s just one woman or 11 women dying daily, the fact remains that mothers are dying from a highly-preventable cause. If there were only 10 women or 3 women dying, is that one life not worth saving? Who are we to deprive them of access to information and supplies that can possibly save their lives?

FACT 10: The RH Bill will not force anyone to act against their ethical or religious beliefs.
Anti-RH advocates often state that people are being forced to adopt a certain type of family planning method. Or that health care providers will be forced to recommend certain kinds. Fact 1 above already clarifies that each person is free to make his or her own choice of family planning method. Section 18 below further provides that a heath care provider can make a conscientious objection.

Police deny politics in Davao Sur mayor's arrest


Saturday, August 4, 2012
POLICE authorities, who arrested Mayor James Joyce of Jose Abad Santos town and six of his bodyguards in a raid Thursday morning, denied politics as the reason behind the arrests.
Superintendent Leonardo Felonia, chief of the Philippine National Police-Intelligence Group (PNP-IG) Regional Intelligence Unit, said the operation was conducted by virtue of a search warrant issued by Manila Executive Judge Marino dela Cruz Jr. of the Regional Trial Court National Judicial Region Branch 22.
"We validated the intelligence reports and so we applied for a search warrant in Manila last week and conducted the raid," Felonia said.
Felonia said charges of violation of Republic Act 8294, otherwise known as Illegal Possession of Firearms and Explosives, were filed before the City Prosecution Office in Digos City against Joyce and his security aides namely Ronnie Pandamon, Arnel Dionesio, Victorino Venancio, Hernan Miguel, Floro Arquillano, and Boroy Tilo.
Twelve high-powered guns, including an Israeli-made Tavor assault rifle, were recovered from the Joyce’s house in sitio Taisay, Caburan Small during the raid at 1:30 a.m. Thursday.
A Tavor assault rifle could amount to more than P700,000, making it one of the most expensive high-powered firearms in the world.
Mayor Joyce, in television interview, said all the firearms confiscated from him are covered with licenses and permits from the Philippine National Police.
"As far as we are concerned, we are just doing our job," Felonia said, referring to allegations of the arrested mayor that it was purely politically-motivated.
Published in the Sun.Star Davao newspaper on August 04, 2012.

Pantukan small-scale miners slam SB backing of mining firm application

“In the public hearing, we strongly opposed the entry of Nadecor and its planned operations here.  Now, we’re surprised why this resolution is approved through a special session.” — Rogelio Simbajon, a small-scale miner in Pantukan town
By ALEX D. LOPEZ
Davao Today
PANTUKAN, Compostela Valley, Philippines – Around 50 small-scale miners mostly from Gumayan village in this town trooped to the office of the Sangguniang Bayan or municipal council on Wednesday to denounce the passage of a resolution endorsing the mining application of the Nationwide Development Corporation (Nadecor).
“Sa public hearing nga gipahigayon kabahin sa pagsulod dinhi sa Nadecor misupak na kaming mga gagmay nga minero.  Natingala lang kami nga kalit lang migawas kini nga resolusyon pinaagi sa usa ka special session” (In the public hearing, we strongly opposed the entry of Nadecor and its planned operations here.  Now, we’re surprised why this resolution is approved through a special session),” Rogelio Simbajon, one of the leaders of small-scale miners, told davaotoday.com.
Nadecor, according to Save Pantukan Alliance, an association of small-scale miners of Pantukan, is one of the five foreign-based large-scale mining firms currently claiming portions of this town’s vast deposits of gold, copper and silver for open-pit mining.

Nadecor’s mining claim, the group said, covers 1,663 hectares where some 3,000 families of small-scale miners, indigenous peoples, farmers and small traders have established a living.
In a special session on July 2, the municipal council of Pantukan endorsed the application of Nadecor to the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) through Resolution No. 55, Series of 2012.  It was unanimously affirmed by the council members and signed by Vice Mayor Hajarah Ranain on July 17.
In the resolution, the municipal councilors stated that Nadecor’s operation will boost the town’s economic growth and progress by bringing more employment to the indigenous peoples and local residents.
It also stipulated Nadecor’s plan to address the so-called “apprehensions” of small-scale miners, such as the provision of relocation area and housing for those who will be affected directly by its operations; giving priority in terms of employment to affected small-scale miners; and the setting aside of 486 hectares within the mining claim to be utilized as “working areas” for the displaced miners.
“Wala man mi nangayo anang mga gilatid nga tubag sa Nadecor.  Sa paghimo sa public hearing kami hugot nga mibabag sa ilang pagsulod ug wala kami miuyon sa ilang mga proposal (We didn’t ask anything from Nadecor.  During the public hearing, we firmly opposed their entry and we never agreed to their proposals),” Simbajon said.
Ricky Macusa, a Mansaka youth leader, said, “Wa mi natawo aron sugo-sugoon sa mga langyaw.  Wa mi natawo aron papahawaon sa among lugar nga natawhan (We were not born to become the slaves of foreigners.  We were not born to be evicted from our homeland).”
Macusa, also a miner, told davaotoday.com that they neither ask the municipal council for relocation nor any employment from Nadecor.  He added, small-scale miners have made it clear that they totally reject the entry of any big and foreign mining corporations in their area during the public hearing.
But the municipal council’s resolution failed to get the nod of Mayor JC Celso Sarenas, Pantukan town’s chief executive.
Sarenas, in his veto statement on July 27, called the resolution “ultra vires,” which means that the municipal council concerned had acted beyond its power and authority when it convened for a special session last July 2.
He reiterated the violation committed by the members of the Sanggunian in relation to their adopted internal rules in the conduct of special sessions.
Section 9 of the internal rules and procedures of the Pantukan’s municipal council provides that “a special session may be called by the Mayor or a majority of the members of the Sanggunian” as often as necessary, or when public interest so demands.

He said, his office nor any of the councilors “did not call and/or request the Sanggunian” for a special session “to discuss the request of Nadecor to endorse its project to the MGB.”
In his veto statement, the Mayor also mentioned the plight of small-scale miners in the area.
It said that the town “is not at all adverse to the inflow of capital investments brought about by large-scale miners” but must also ensure that small-scale miners are at all times protected.
A veto is a constitutional right of one branch or department of government to refuse approval of measures proposed by another department, or as in the case of the recent controversy in Pantukan town, it is the power of the Mayor to reject a legislative measure enacted or passed by the Sangguniang Bayan.
Pantukan councilors refused to comment when asked about their reaction to the veto of Mayor Sarenas.
In a regular session on Wednesday which was attended by small-scale miners, Sarenas’s veto was not included in the agenda.
“Under our rule, it would take 10 days before we could tackle the Mayor’s veto in our session,” Councilor Joepent Acedillo told davaotoday.com.

The office of the Sanggunian received the veto letter at about 4 PM on July 27.
Acedillo said they have yet to discuss if they are going to override the Mayor’s veto or not.
An override is an action of the council members to declare null and void or to set aside the said veto.
“Ang among pangutana nganong gi-closed door nila.  Nganong wala nila gi-apil ang mga tao nga maoy mo-witness sa maong session?  Naa sila’y ginatago.  (We asked why was it a closed door meeting?  Why were the people not invited to witness the said session?  They must be hiding something.),” Juland Suazo of environmental rights group said, referring to the July 21 special session.
He added, an endorsement to MGB is tantamount to supporting Nadecor’s project.  He urged the councilors to listen to the veto message of Mayor Sarenas.  (Alex D. Lopez/davaotoday.com)


Relocation sought for coastal settlers


Wednesday, August 1, 2012
BUCANA (76-A) village chief Robert Olan-Olan said Wednesday that he will file a petition to Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio for a relocation site for residents living along the coast in his barangay who are regularly threatened by monsoon waves.
Last Tuesday, monsoon waves crashed through 153 houses in 14 puroks of Bucana village, sending 338 residents fleeing to safer grounds with just their clothes on.
He said these residents insist on living along the coastline despite the constant threat they face every monsoon season, but Olan-olan said this cannot go on every year.
He would prefer to move the coastal settlers to safer grounds than provide them relief and rehabilitation assistance every year.
"Ang among pabalhinun lang kay kadtong mga wala pay balay jud. Kanang uban sa ila na nakabalhin na gud, gahi lang ug ulo kay mubalik lang gihapon duol sa dagat tungod lang sa ilang (But we will only look for relocation for those who have not yet been relocated before. There are many stubborn residents who insist on returning to the coast even after relocation),” Olan-Olan said.
He said the settlers who were affected by monsoon waves last week were the ones affected by last Tuesday’s waves.
"Busa magsulat ko unya muhangyo sa atong mayor na kung mahimo lang i-relocate ‘tong mga lumulupyo diri nga angay ibalhin. Para man pud ni sa ilang kaayuhan although atong gobyerno maka-provide ug tabang sa ila susama sa pagkaon, pero di ‘ni kanunay (That's why I will write a letter requesting our mayor for a relocation site and to urge the settlers on coastal areas to leave. Government can give them relief and assistance, but we can never sustain this)," he said.
Olan-Olan added that based on initial record, 153 houses from 14 puroks in the barangay were partially damaged.
The City Social Services and Development Office (CSSDO) has listed 133 families affected so far as enlisted by heads of the household. CSSDO has been assisting the affected residents.
Those living near Times Beach were the most affected. Residents, however, shrugged off the incident, saying they are already used to it.
Published in the Sun.Star Davao newspaper on August 02, 2012.