Saturday, December 24, 2011

...the Disney Princess

Pinay skater to play Princess Tiana on ‘Disney On Ice’

 
 


A Filipino skater is among the main talents performing on “Disney On Ice”, which returns to Manila starting December 25, 2011 and runs until January 3, 2012 the Smart Araneta Coliseum.

Justine Lopez will play Princess Tiana, main protagonist in   Disney’s 2009 film “The Princess and the Frog.”

“It’s exciting for us to bring a local Filipino back to the Philippines for a show. It’s exciting for us to be able to provide something extra for the audience,” Zac Ellard, Feld Entertainment’s Regional Marketing Director for Southeast Asia and India said.

The loudest audience

Zac shared that his team enjoys performing before the Filipino audience since it is one of the loudest and most receptive in the world.

“Filipino audiences are one of the loudest in the world. We always get good reception from you.  It’s most exciting to both experience a show and be the one performing when the audience is enthusiastic.”

Zac also cited the Filipinos’ love for celebrations.

“We are very excited to be back in Manila. We’ve heard that Filipinos love celebrations and love to have a good time. This is going to be a one big celebration with your favorite Disney characters, with lots of unique set designs and costumes,” he goes on.

The Philippines is the show’s first stop in Asia this year.

Disney On Ice: Let’s Celebrate!” stars Mickey and Minnie Mouse plus  Disney characters from different Walt Disney films and shows, including Snow White, Cinderella, Belle and Mulan and  charming male characters Pinocchio, Peter Pan, Woody, and Buzz Lightyear, among others.

Through Mickey’s "Digital Global Destinator,” “Disney on Ice” will present various festivals and holidays celebrated all over the world, including Chinese New Year and Rio de Janiero's Carnivale.

52 characters

According to Zac, this year’s “Disney on Ice” is their biggest show ever, as it brings a 52 characters, including newbies like Princess Tiana and Prince Naveen of “Princess and the Frog.”

It also features Valentine’s Royal Ball with Princess Tiana, Merry UnBirthday Party with Alice and Mad Hatter, Jack Skellington’s Halloween Party with Disney villains and Hawaiian luau with Lilo and Stitch.

“It’s colorful and exciting. No matter how old you are, you’re gonna enjoy it. We hope to give you a chance to experience the Disney characters which you loved while growing up,” Zac relates.

...the peacekeepers

Pinoy peacekeepers in Golan Heights receive UN medals

 
 
December 24, 2011
GMA News
 
 
Filipino soldiers stationed at the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF) received UN medals at a recent ceremony at Camp Ziouani in the Golan Heights.

The Department of Foreign Affairs also said newly-promoted enlisted military personnel formally received their ranks at the ceremony on December 13.

"(Philippine) Ambassador Generoso Calonge led the pinning of the ranks of newly promoted enlisted military personnel, while UNDOF Force Commander Major General Natalio Ecarma III led the pinning of UN medals to selected UN Filipino soldiers," the DFA said,

Ecarma congratulated the recipients of the UN Medal for the service they have rendered during their tour of duty in the Golan Heights.

He noted that the award from UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon recognizes the professionalism and dedication of Filipino soldiers through these medals.

"These medals are testament to the contingents' dedication to the call of duty, performing their assigned tasks with the highest degree of professionalism and standard," Ecarma said.

Ecarma also encouraged the entire Philippine contingent to continue the good work and strive more in achieving UNDOF's goal of "One Mission, One Team, One Goal."

Meanwhile, Calonge encouraged the Philippine contingent to do their utmost in the service of the Philippines despite being far from home.

"You and I are not so different. We in the diplomatic service feel the same of missing our loved ones who are left behind while we continue to serve our country," he said.

"I could relate to what a soldier could feel. I also wore the same uniform during my younger days and I have had many experiences during my tour of duty in southern Philippines," he added.

Calonge expressed hopes that Filipino soldiers would continue maintaining the highest standard of excellence. - VVP, GMA News
 
 

...the OFW Ambassador


OFW is first UN Citizen Ambassador

NEW YORK City – Twenty-three year old Jonathan Eric Defante's 30-second-pitch on Youtube, his entry to the 2011 Citizen Ambassador's Video Contest, earned him one of the three spots to become the first Filipino Honorary United Nation's Citizen Ambassador.

Honored as best in concept, originality and execution, Defante's "One Bottle, One Life" pitch to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is about using plastic bottles to build model communities around the world.

On his Youtube pitch, Defante said, "So let's create a model community in every Nation, made of used plastic bottles or eco-bricks, built by the people themselves, and are sustained by livelihood from plastic recycled bottles. The communities can be organized into cooperatives to sustain their livelihood for the years to come, changing lives, one bottle at a time."

Defante's entry bested 600 other Youtube entries from 50 countries around the world.

Defante said, "I was like literally jumping (for joy), kasi hindi ko talaga siya in-expect. Kasi after I submitted the video, marami nang pumasok, yung iba talaga may professional editing pa, kasi ako I just used iMovie 11, lahat hiniram ko lang, pati flipcam."

Defante, an OFW working at a Virgin Megastore in Dubai, in the Middle East, together with two other video contest winners from Sudan and Guatemala received round trip tickets to New York and met with the Secretary General Ban Ki-moon in person privately last Friday.

“Sinabi niya na “Jonathan, I'm impressed with your idea to build communities in each member State. So, I, myself, as an environmentalist, I would like you to continue this work of yours.” So sana daw hindi lang mag-serve yun as an idea, maging reality daw yun," he said.

The UN Secretary General's inspiring words encouraged Defante to do even more.

"Parang now, I want to do more, to be more involved in humanitarian activities especially sa mga Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), like My Shelter Foundation, saka sa Hug-It Forward in Guatemala," said Defante.

The UN video contest was made in observance of the World Humanitarian Day. Defante encouraged Filipino youths from all over the world to do more humanitarian work, even without getting a prize for doing so.

“Sa mga kabataan especially, this is the best time to express any idea that would benefit mankind kasi we have tools for it, di katulad dati, ngayon we have social networking, we have Youtube, Facebook, etc." he said.

Defante will hold the honorary title as UN Citizen Ambassador for two years but it may be extended by the United Nations if he continues his humanitarian work.


Wednesday, December 21, 2011

...the first Korea image awardee

Filipina wins Korea Image award in Seoul

 12/21/2011
 
 
 
Filipina actress Jasmine Lee and Korean actor Yoo Ah-in appeared in the hit Korean film "Punch".


MANILA, Philippines - A Filipina is the first recipient of the Korea Image Millstone Award from the Corea Image Communication Institute (CICI) in Seoul, Korea.

The CICI on Monday named Jasmine Lee, who recently starred in the hit Korean film "Punch" (Wandeugi), as the winner of its Korea Image Millstone Award, according to a report from The Korea Herald.

The Korea Image Millstone Award was created this year to honor foreigners in Korea who have integrated well in Korean society, like the way grains are mixed well in a millstone.

"The Korea Image Stepping Stone Bridge award is given to foreigners who live outside of Korea and introduce Korea overseas. We thought that now is the time to also honor foreigners who are living in Korea and putting in efforts to promote Korea. Lee has been doing many volunteer and charity works for foreign immigrants living here,” said CICI president Choi Jung-hwa.

Lee played the role of a Filipina estranged from her Korean husband and son in "Punch." The film, which stars Korean heartthrob Yoo Ah-in, was a blockbuster hit in Korea, attracting nearly 5 million viewers since it premiered in late October.

Lee, a native of Davao, was also a regular panelist on a KBS talk show "Love in Asia" and has been involved in various charities and multiculturalism advocacy efforts in Korea.

In 2010, she won the accolade "People Who Enlighten the World" from Korea Green Foundation. At present, she works for the PR team at the Seoul Global Center, one of the first migrant women hired to be civil servants by Seoul City Government.

The CICI is an organization committed to helping South Korea promote and develop its image overseas. It has been giving annual CICI Korea Image awards since 2005 to recognize individuals, events, objects and organizations that help promote Korea.

Aside from Lee, winners of the 2011 CICI awards include the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Games Organizing Committee and cartoon character Pororo.

...the NatGeo photo winner

Pinoy wins NatGeo photo contest

12/21/2011
 
 
 
A rainbow arches over the Philippines' Onuk Island after a rainstorm. Photo and caption by George Tapan / [http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com]


MANILA, Philippines – Travel photographer George Tapan bagged first place in the 2011 photography contest of National Geographic, according to the contest’s official website.

Tapan was picked as the winner in the Places category for his photograph “Into the Green Zone.”

The Filipino photographer submitted a photo of a rainbow after a rainstorm taken in the island of Onuk in Balabac, Palawan.

The photo also captured a fisherman in a small boat and a woman walking on the shore of Onuk Island’s pristine beach.

According to the website, judge Tim Laman said the photo “showed a perfect sense of timing and composition in the way he captured the two small human subjects in this beautiful scene, and that really made the shot.”

Judge Amy Toensing described the photo as "very moody, beautifully composed."

Nature photographer Peter Essick, meanwhile, was captivated by the detail of the woman's hair on the photo, saying that it only "fills a fraction of the picture's real estate, but by capturing the movement at the apex, the photographer has documented a sense of style and flair.”

Tapan’s photo showed that "small things can sometimes make a big difference," according to National Geographic.

Aside from receiving a cash prize of $2,500, Tapan’s winning photograph will be published in National Geographic magazine.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

...the 2nd Filipino 'saint'

Blessed Pedro Calungsod to be declared 2nd Filipino saint

 
 
 

 


The Vatican announced Tuesday that Blessed Pedro Calungsod of Cebu will be canonized as a saint for the Roman Catholic Church.

Once canonized, he will be the second Filipino Catholic saint following Saint Lorenzo Ruiz, who was elevated to sainthood in 1987.

According to Vatican’s news site, Pope Benedict XVI has officially approved the promulgation of decrees for canonization of Calungsod and six others who have been said to have performed miracles. No definite date, however, has been set for the canonization rites.

The authorized miracle of Blessed Pedro Calungsod reportedly happened in 2003 at a Cebu hospital when a woman who was clinically pronounced dead for two hours was allegedly brought back to life through the intercession of Calungsod.

A young martyr
Calungsod, together with companion Blessed Diego San Vitores, was killed while doing missionary work in Guam in 1672. He was 17 years old then. Through their missionary efforts, many were converted to the Roman Catholic Church through the Sacrament of Baptism.

A plot to murder Calungsod and San Vitores started through false accusations that the missionaries were spreading poison through the ritual of the pouring of water or baptism. They were both caught and murdered after baptizing a mother and her child.

Because of his association with the Chamorro natives of Guam, Calungsod is often portrayed with a crucifix and a palm leaf.

Calungsod, who was described by Vatican as a lay catechist and a martyr, was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 2000.

The other six candidates for canonization together with Calungsod are: Blessed Giovanni Battista Piamarta, Italian priest and founder of the Congregation of the Holy Family of Nazareth and of the Congregation of the Humble Sister Servants of the Lord; Blessed Jacques Berthieu, French martyr and priest of the Society of Jesus; Blessed Maria del Carmen, Spanish foundress of the Conceptionist Missionary Sisters of Teaching; Blessed Maria Anna Cope, German religious of the Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis in Syracuse; Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha, American laywoman; and Blessed Anna Schaffer, German laywoman.

...the knock-out of the year

Donaire's KO of Montiel best of 2011: Sports Illustrated

Posted at 12/20/2011
 
 
MANILA, Philippines -- Sports Illustrated has named world bantamweight champion Nonito Donaire's second-round knockout of Fernando Montiel last February 20 as the Knockout of the Year.
 

 
In that bantamweight bout, Donaire dropped Montiel to the canvas a minute before the second round ended with a powerful left hook. Referee Russell Mora allowed Montiel to continue after the boxer beat the 10-count, but Mora stopped the fight only seconds later as Donaire swarmed in for the kill.


"Yes, Montiel got up from the crushing overhand left that nearly caved in half his face," SI's Chris Mannix wrote. "But he only lasted a few more seconds before the referee stepped in to save him."


"Couple that with the significance of the match-up -- both Donaire and Montiel were pound-for-pound guys going at it in a highly anticipated super bantamweight fight -- and Donaire's savage knockout becomes that much more impressive," he added.


Donaire annexed the World Boxing Council and World Boxing Organization bantamweight championships with his victory.


His crushing knockout of Montiel was supposed to kick off a year that should have brought "The Filipino Flash" to the level of boxing's elite, but Donaire's career stalled in the middle of 2011 due to a promotional dispute with Top Rank and Golden Boy.


Towards the latter half of the year, Donaire eventually solved his contractual issues and signed with Top Rank. He went on to defeat Argentine champion Omar Narvaez via unanimous decision last October.


Donaire plans to fight at least four times in 2012, and is scheduled to debut at the junior featherweight division (122-pounds) on February 4 against Wilfredo Vazquez Jr.


Donaire is ranked number 4 on The RING's pound-for-pound ratings, behind countryman Manny Pacquiao, undefeated American Floyd Mayweather Jr., and Argentina's middleweight champion Sergio Martinez.

...the bell ringer


Pinoy bell ringer surpasses world record

12/20/2011

SAN FRANCISCO - Marcelino “Butch” Soriano was a man with a mission. He joined 24 other Salvation Army members around the US who attempted to break the 36-hour bell ringing world record.

The 44-year-old Soriano, the only Filipino in the competition, stood with his bell outside Macy’s by Union Square last Thursday morning.
“I love bell ringing. I love kettles. I believe in what the kettles do in raising money for people in need,” said Soriano.
 
 
The Salvation Army’s Red Kettle Campaign has raised a record $142 million nationwide last year. Soriano’s goal is to get even more people to know about Salvation Army and what it does to help the community.
 
 
To celebrate the 120th anniversary of the Red Kettle Campaign, Salvation Army held a nationwide contest for longest bell ringing. No eating, no sitting is allowed. Contestants could only take a 10-minute break every four hours.
 
 
Soriano’s strategy was to stay warm and to just use his fingertips when ringing the bell, rather than the whole arm, to conserve energy.
 
 
It helps that he had a lot of people cheering for him, especially fellow Filipinos.
 
 
Rose Sharpan said: “Win or lose, it’s our pride that he’s Filipino.”
 
 
Day and night, Soriano stood his ground. By Friday night, at 10 p.m., he had officially beat the 36-hour world record.
 
 
On Saturday morning, at 9 AM, he reached the 48-hour mark.
 
 
"My legs are sore. My feet are sore that's why I have someone trying to massage my leg and my feet so that I can still stand," he said.
 
 
In the end, Soriano clocked in at 51 hours, 10 minutes and 25 seconds. However, a bell ringer from Illinois won the competition by clocking in at more than 60 hours.
 
 
Though he did not win, Soriano said, “I feel a sense of accomplishment. I know that I’ve done the best that I could.”

...the Berlinale

Filipino film to compete in Berlin film fest



December 20, 2011
via GMA News

BERLIN - The Berlin film festival unveiled its first selections Monday including a 9/11 drama starring Tom Hanks and new pictures from China's Zhang Yimou and Filipino art house star Brillante Mendoza.
 
 
The 62nd annual event, running February 9 to 19, will include the hotly awaited "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close" by British director Stephen Daldry ("The Hours").
 
 
The movie is based on the 2005 best-selling novel by Jonathan Safran Foer in which a young boy searches New York City after the September 11, 2001 attacks for the lock matching a key left by his dead father.
 
 
It features Hanks, Sandra Bullock and Max von Sydow and will screen out of competition.

Zhang ("Hero") will present "The Flowers of War" with British Oscar winner and Batman star Christian Bale as a opportunistic Westerner caught up in Japan's bloody occupation of Nanking during World War II.
The picture, which has already been nominated for a Golden Globe prize in the United States, will also be shown out of competition in Berlin.
 
 
Mendoza, a festival favourite who picked up the best director award in Cannes in 2009 for "Kinatay", recruited French screen icon Isabelle Huppert to play an aid worker kidnapped by Islamist extremist group Abu Sayyaf in his Berlin competition entry "Captive".
 
 
The Berlinale, as the event is known, which ranks with Cannes and Venice among the top European film festivals, said Spain's Antonio Chavarrias would premiere his thriller "Childish Games" in competition.
 
 
And "Postcards from the Zoo", billed as an Indonesian-German-Chinese production by a director identified only as Edwin, rounded out the preliminary list of contenders for the festival's Golden and Silver Bear top prizes.
 
 
British director Mike Leigh will chair the jury, which organisers said Monday would also include Hollywood actor Jake Gyllenhaal, Franco-British actress Charlotte Gainsbourg, Dutch photographer and film-maker Anton Corbijn, French director Francois Ozon, Algerian writer Boualem Sansal and German actress Barbara Sukowa.
 
 
Rounding out the list is Iranian director Asghar Farhadi, who took home the Golden Bear and swept the acting prizes this year for his wrenching drama "Nader and Simin: A Separation".
 
 
In the Berlinale Special sidebar section, British Oscar winner Kevin Macdonald will unveil his keenly anticipated documentary on the life of the late reggae superstar Bob Marley.
 
 
"Death Row", a four-part documentary series by German director Werner Herzog ("Cave of Forgotten Dreams"), will also premiere and Bollywood hero Shah Rukh Khan is expected in town for a screening of the German-India co-production "Don - The King is Back".
 
 
Canadian surrealist Guy Maddin ("Brand Upon the Brain") will show "Keyhole", which the New York Times has called "a gangster ghost drama" starring Jason Patric and Isabella Rossellini.
 
 
And Mexican-born siren Salma Hayek will appear in a Spanish comedy, "La chispa de la vida", or "The spark of life." - AFP

Monday, December 19, 2011

...the world class innovator

Caviteño doc is worldclass innovator

By Candice Yvette Palenzuela-Dalizon
Philippine Daily Inquirer
 
OUTSTANDING INNOVATOR Dr. Melvin A. Sarayba (second from left) receiving the Oustanding Innovator award for his work in eye laser technology. Cheering him are top officials of The Medical City (from left): Professional Staff Development Office head Dr. Blesilda E. Concepcion, Medical Services Group head Dr. Eugene F. Ramos, and Dr. Victor Caparas, chair of TMC Department of Ophthalmology


“It’s nice to be back home.”

Home to 43-year-old Dr. Melvin A. Sarayba is The Medical City (TMC) in Pasig City where he finished his residency training in Ophthalmology in 1999.

Sarayba came back to the Philippines early last month in time for the awarding of The Medical City Outstanding Innovator Award. The award was presented to him in recognition of his outstanding contributions and innovations in Ophthalmology, particularly in laser eye surgery.

During the awarding, TMC’s Chair Dr. Augusto P. Sarmiento told Sarayba: “You have given the country and TMC great honor because of your dedication and devotion.”

Sarayba is a research scientist in the United States. He is currently the Director of Clinical Affairs of LenSx Lasers, Inc, which developed the first femtosecond laser to receive US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance for use in cataract surgery. Located in Aliso Viejo, California, LenSx Lasers, Inc. is now owned by Alcon Laboratories, one of the world’s largest eye care companies.

Femtosecond laser technology is considered among the most advanced and precise methods available today which could revolutionize minimally invasive eye surgery.

Exciting opportunities

Sarayba left for the US in 2001 for a research fellowship in cornea and refractive surgery at the University of California at Irvine (UCI).

After completing his fellowship, he joined Intralase Corp., the developer of the first femtosecond laser system for LASIK eye surgery, a procedure to correct near or far-sightedness.

“The plan was to do my fellowship training in UCI for one year and return to the Philippines to rejoin my group practice. It was during my fellowship training when I met Dr. Ron Kurtz, the cofounder of Intralase who presented me with the opportunity to pursue a career as a clinical scientist,” he said.

At first, Sarayba admitted he and his wife were hesitant to make such a bold move so they decided to give it a try for six months.

A backstage pass

“My experience took me to a place that I was never exposed to while I was back in the Philippines. It was like a backstage pass in the world of Ophthalmology. I got to see how the products I used as a clinician were developed and commercialized. I was hooked,” he said.

Sarayba narrated how he and Kurtz, his boss at Intralase, met and subsequently became partners. Kurtz was a retina surgeon working at UCI while Sarayba was then completing his cornea and refractive surgery subspecialty training.

“He (Kurtz) asked for my help on a small research project and I provided a quality research study. That initiated our collaboration.”

Sarayba then progressed from clinical consultant to Clinical Scientist to Senior Scientific Product Manager while he conceived and developed clinical applications of IntraLase-Enabled Keratoplasty (plastic surgery of the cornea) and advanced keratoplasty techniques.

He became Global Marketing Manager for Advanced Medical Optics when it acquired Intralase Corp in 2007.  After a year, Sarayba rejoined Kurtz in LenSx, Inc., a start-up formed to develop a femtosecond laser for cataract surgery.

The femtosecond laser

He was the key man in developing the clinical applications for the LenSx, running multi-nation clinical trials, and eventually getting it through FDA approval. Alcon Laboratories later on acquired LenSx with Sarayba staying on as Director of Clinical Affairs.

The development of a femtosecond laser for cataract surgery is indeed a remarkable achievement considering the prevalence of cataract cases worldwide. Cataract refers to the clouding of the lens inside the eye.

Cataracts generally occur as part of the aging process, but they can have other causes as well. In the Philippines, researches reveal that cataracts are one of the leading causes of blindness in adults.

Refractive cataract surgery allows the patient to be free or minimally dependent on eyeglasses after surgery.

Looking Back

Sarayba recalled that in 1997, when he was just a resident at TMC, the residency program was in its infancy.

“I was part of the 4th batch. We wanted to be a world-class training facility and we took it upon ourselves to make the change. The residents and the consultants in the Ophthalmology Department rolled up their sleeves and got to work. We wore many hats. It was like a little start-up company that showed great promise,” he said.

Sarayba believes the traits he acquired during his residency were instrumental in his success. He was always motivated to think outside the box. Thus, the term innovator fits him perfectly. His thirst for continuous learning brought him to UCI for fellowship training. And cliché as it is, the rest is history.

On being a Filipino

“Working in a start-up company required employees to wear many hats. Since Filipinos are known to be ingenious and resourceful, I fit right in. I found working with other nationalities easy. In fact, I can see many Filipinos would fit in well working with other nationalities because of our pakikisama(camaraderie, a traditional value)” he said.

Working alongside foreign engineers, doctors, and research scientists, Sarayba said “I never doubted my skills while working abroad. My training in the Philippines and further training in California provided me with superior knowledge in the field I was working in.”


On being an innovator

“Ask yourself this question: Can you live with the best things the world has to offer? If the answer is no, then you have the mind of an innovator,” he said.

The California-based doctor and research scientist said he would often hear people say, “I had that idea before” or “I could have invented that.”

“There is a big difference between coming up with an idea, turning that idea into concept and successfully commercializing a product. You have to go through all the stages,” he explained.

Sarayba likewise belied the common belief that opportunity to develop products is only available in advanced countries.

“That is not true. Doctors in the Philippines can be innovators too. They can find other applications for already available products and be innovators,” he said.

He stressed that being an innovator was not exclusive to people working in his field or in medicine.

“I would urge other people to ask themselves the same question. It doesn’t matter what you are: politician, public servant, entrepreneur, employee, etc. There are many things, I’m sure you’ll find, that need change. No one will do it for you. Wear the hat and take it all the way,” Sarayba advised.

Cavite born

Sarayba was born in Cavite City. He and his family visit the Philippines every two years. They spend time with family, relatives and friends, enjoying the Filipino food they terribly miss when they are in the US.

“My wife and I grew up with strong ties to our families and we would like our children to have the same experience. My kids enjoy spending time with their cousins while we are here, and we miss them terribly when we return to the US,” he said.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

...the PH wings

UN hails Philippine protection of migrant workers


By Tina G. Santos
Philippine Daily Inquirer

Logo taken from United Nations website


MANILA, Philippines—While the sob stories usually make the headlines, the country’s efforts to help thousands of overseas Filipinos, especially those caught in wars and calamities, have not gone unnoticed in the United Nations.

A UN executive speaking at a recent conference in Geneva has commended the Philippines for its exemplary efforts to protect its nationals caught in international crisis situations, according to the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA).

Peter Sutherland, the special representative of the UN secretary general for international migration and development, “specifically mentioned the Philippines as rising to the challenge by setting up a system to protect and engage its migrants,” the DFA said.

Sutherland made the remarks at the Global Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD) held in the Swiss city earlier this month, where he said the forum participants “could learn from the Philippines’ initiatives and good practices,” the foreign office added.

The Philippines drew praise for its repatriation efforts in troubled countries like Libya, Yemen and Syria, among others, DFA spokesperson Raul Hernandez told the Inquirer on Saturday.

“He (Sutherland) probably saw that we’re proactive in protecting our people by taking them out of harm’s way,” Hernandez said.

In the forum, the UN official also drew attention to the plight of domestic workers, particularly the so-called “kafala” or sponsorship system which he said “constituted a modern form of slavery,” the DFA said.

More fleeing Syria

Hernandez said another batch of at least 51 Filipinos from Syria will be repatriated in the next few days. The last group that arrived in Manila over a week ago totaled 55, bringing the current number of Filipino repatriates to 240 since political violence escalated in the Arab state earlier this year.

“Our embassy in Damascus continues to negotiate for the release of the workers from their employers or agencies,” Hernandez said, adding that securing airline seats for the next batch had been difficult of late because of the peak Christmas season.

The year 2011 has been one of the busiest for the DFA in terms of evacuating Filipinos from strife-torn regions, starting with those fleeing Egypt in February, at the height of street protests against the regime of then President Hosni Mubarak.

From that same month to March, the repatriation efforts shifted to Libya, with no less than Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario personally leading one of the missions across the Sahara desert to fetch compatriots fleeing the fighting between rebels and government forces under dictator Moammar Gadhafi.

The turmoil in Yemen also prompted Del Rosario to go there in March to assess the situation and offer voluntary repatriation to the less than 1,500 registered migrant Filipinos working in that country.

Review of ‘unsafe’ countries

Apart from the repatriation efforts, the DFA is currently conducting a review of the 41 countries earlier considered unsafe for overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) and could be covered by a labor deployment ban.

“At present, we have asked a review of the present status of each of the 41 countries to determine if they have already acceded or enacted laws that would protect our migrant workers,” Hernandez said in an earlier interview.

The DFA proceeded with the review after asking the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) to defer the ban for three months.

“We will use the deferment period to revisit the 41 countries with the view of moving forward toward compliance with the amended Migrant Workers Act (Republic Act No. 10022),” which forbids the deployment of OFWs to countries certified as not protective of migrant workers, Hernandez said.

“We will submit new certifications after 90 days, taking into account results of DFA’s dialogue with countries concerned and new developments in those countries with respect to the protection of migrant workers,” Hernandez said.

9M in 200 countries

More than 1.4 million Filipino workers were deployed overseas last year, according to the POEA. Of this number, 1.1 million were land-based, while around 350,000 were sea-based workers.

For land-based OFWs, the top destinations were Saudi Arabia (293,049), United Arab Emirates (201,214), Hong Kong (101,340), Qatar (87,813) and Singapore (70,251).

Among the newly hired overseas Filipino workers deployed last year, the top occupational categories included household service workers (96,583), cleaners and related workers (12,133), nurses (12,082), caregivers and caretakers (9,293), and waiters, bartenders and related workers (8,789).

According to the latest estimates by the Commission on Filipinos Overseas, some 9 million Filipinos are in more than 200 countries around the world as of December 2009. With a report from Inquirer Research
Sources: Commission on Filipinos Overseas, POEA.

...the doctor

Pinay doctor is 'America's Favorite Dermatologist'

12/17/2011
 
SAN DIEGO, California – It can be difficult to imagine that at one point, Dr. Tess Mauricio, a succesful business owner, author, and TV host, is nothing but the confident woman she is now.

But growing up in the Philippines, she endured insults about her skin and became more insecure after a medical condition left her with long-lasting physical and emotional scars.

"In the Philippines, I was made fun of too because I have dark skin, I had eczema growing up and that left me with scars. My nickname growing up was 'Nog-Nog'. I really had inferiority complex about my skin. When I came to the states, I didn't even wear shorts until I was married," Mauricio said.

Her family moved to the US when she was 12. They were well-off in the Philippines but in America, they started from the bottom.

Instead of being deterred, their financial challenges propelled Mauricio to work even harder.
 
She was summa cum laude at UC San Diego and went on to medical school at Stanford University on scholarships.

Mauricio never forgot the emotional scars she endured as a young girl and it became her life's purpose to make people feel good about themselves in her job as a US-board certified dermatologist and cosmetic surgeon.

“It's very important to address how people feel on the inside. We can improve the quality of your skin, you don't have to change your skin type to feel beautiful," she said.

Mauricio’s positive approach and expertise has earned her a loyal following.

After opening her first clinic 8 years ago, Mauricio now has 3 branches in San Diego.

She has been featured on several US shows including "The Rachel Ray Show," "America's Next Top Model" and "The Wellness Hour" where she was given the title "America's Favorite Dermatologist.”

Apart from her practice, Mauricio also co-hosts TFC’s talk show "RSVP" and recently launched a line of women's shape wear called "Look of Lipo.”

She's currently in negotiations with QVC to launch the product line in their channel.

Despite her success in the US, Mauricio still dreams of sharing her expertise to fellow Filipinos.

Apart from China, she also plans to open a clinic in the Philippines in the near future.