Monday, May 2, 2011

...the docu

Film on Larrañaga's conviction wins at Tribeca film fest

 05/02/2011

MANILA, Philippines - "Give Up Tomorrow," a documentary feature film about the case of Paco Larrañaga who was convicted for the 1997 murder of Chiong sisters in Cebu, has bagged the Heineken Audience Award at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival.

Director Michael Collins took home $25,000, according to the festival's official website.
The second place went to "Semper Fi: Always Faithful," while "Carol Channing: Larger Than Life" placed third.

Larrañaga and other scions of rich families in Cebu were convicted for the kidnapping, murder and rape of Marijoy and Jacqueline Chiong in Cebu. The Supreme Court imposed the death sentence on all but one of the convicts. Their sentences were commuted to life imprisonment after President Arroyo abolished the death penalty.

In 2009, Larrañaga, a Filipino-Spanish citizen, was transferred to the Spanish government where he is serving the rest of his term.

"Give Up Tomorrow" points to a number of holes in his conviction and suggests widespread corruption in the Philippines. -With a report from Reuters

Photo taken from the official website of Tribeca Film Festival

...the Juris

Juris invades Korea

 05/02/2011

MANILA, Philippines - Following the successful debut of Juris’ album in Korea, titled “If, You and Me,” the first Pinay mainstream artist to release an album in Korea will be performing live at “Green Plugged Seoul 2011” festival on May 14 at the Nanji Hangang Park.

“Green Plugged Seoul 2011” is a two-day, multi-stage international festival that offers a variety of art performances (concerts, exhibits, plays, dance, multi-media) in a springtime outdoor setting.
It aims at increasing awareness about the environment. It is one of the most successful new festivals in Seoul.

This year’s event will showcase 117 artists from all over the world, including Korea, Finland, the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, Sweden and the Philippines.

It would be recalled that Juris’ album yielded the hit song “Say You Love Me,” which topped the Korean charts, Cyworld and BGM for 3 months.
Juris’ Korean album features covers and songs written by Korean and Filipino composers.

The album is available in record bars in Korea and online at www.starrecords.ph, iTunes.com, and Amazon.com.
The digital album card version will be available in Astroplus record bars in early June for P99. It features 4 Korean songs which have been translated to English, namely, “Altogether Alone,” “Don’t Forget,” “If You and Me” and “Wishes.”

...the RoRo

GMA’s RoRo source of hope – ADB

 
By BEN R. ROSARIO
May 1, 2011
Manila Bulletin
 

MANILA, philippines -- An Asian Development Bank (ADB) study has cited the roll-on, roll-off (RoRo) project of former President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo as the source of hope for millions of poor Filipinos as lawmakers batted for the continuation of the project, saying it’s among the best options that could address the current economic hardship faced by the country.



The study conducted by the ADB revealed that contrary to claims of critics, the Strong Republic Nautical Highways (RoRo project) has contributed huge dividends for the country’s economy that cannot be ignored by the present government.

Administration congressmen pushed for the approval of a number of measures seeking the establishment of state-of-the-art RoRo ports which have been the focal point of the nautical highways program that former President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo initiated during her term.

Citing the role of RoRo ports in stimulating economic growth and social development, Reps. Nur Jaafar (Lakas-Kampi, Tawi-tawi); Red Durano (NPC, Cebu) and Benhur Salimbangon (NUP, Cebu) sought the approval of various proposals for RoRo ports in various piers in their congressional districts and in other parts of the country.

However, the building of modern RoRo ports has been blocked by critics who have strongly reacted against the steel modular ports technology project proposed by Eiffel, a firm owned by the French government and Matiere SAS.

This, despite the recent release of a Department of Transportation and Communications (DoTC) showing that claims of overpricing could not be substantiated.

Undersecretary Ruben Reinoso, who is in charge of the DoTC’s planning and projects, revealed that based on a committee report prepared by two of its attached agencies, the modular RoRo ports that would further bolster the country’s already improving local shipping transport industry was “not overpriced”, adding that the cost is rea-sonable if compared to other proposals of similar components.

Director General Kunio Senga of the ADB-Southeast Asia Regional Department said that the RoRo program has shown that “there is hope for the millions of poor in archipelagic Southeast Asia.”

“The success of the Strong Republic Nautical Highway in the Philippines, which uses an integrated system of roll-on, roll-off vessels to move people and cargo effectively, has proven to be a source of hope for the millions of poor in the region,” he said.

The study said the Arroyo government’s program that was launched in 2003 can serve as a model for other Southeast Asian countries to follow.

The also noted that aside from boosting the tourism industry and local agriculture, the RoRo technology has had “tremendous impact on many companies through reduced transport costs coupled with efficiency in moving products. Among these firms are Nestle, Big E Food, Gardenia Bakeshop, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and Fast Cargo.

Citing the ADB study, Dr. Patrick Azanza, senior adviser of Eiffel said the DoTC study showed that the contents of the news reports were disowned by Philippine officials in a letter addressed to the resident manager of the French project consortium.

He said the modular RoRo ports project was analyzed and evaluated based on the unbundled unit costs of the project compared with the stan¬dard reinforced concrete RoRo port on steel pipe piles (SPP) and the Spanish modular RoRo ports project previously offered to the Philippine government, which did not materialize.
The financing terms and conditions of the French government COFACE loan for the RoRo project were likewise considered, he said.

Azanza said the French Modular RoRo Port technology had been proven to offer the least cost to the government with a present value (PV) of P148,452,847 rate per one unit of RoRo port.

This claim can be gleaned on the basis of the computed acquisition and follow-on costs derived for each of the RoRo technology, and using the life cycle cost method of analysis to determine the most cost effective and economical model.

Unlike the French model, the RC Concrete Port with SPP generated a computed PV of P152,966,320 while the Spanish Modular RoRo port generated the highest PV at P195,322,133. All PVs reflect a discount at 15 percent interest.

Azanza said the financing package should also be compared, pointing out that the French port was derived based on the cash outflows under the terms and conditions of  the French government COFACE loan provided for the project.

The locally funded cost items such as project administration and the taxes and duties (12 percent value-added tax and three percent import duties) which have been distributed over the three-year project implementation period were like-wise included in the evaluation.

..the AID

USAID donates 175 vaccine refrigerators to DoH



05/02/2011


MANILA, Philippines—The health department on Monday received 175 vaccine refrigerators from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Health Secretary Enrique Ona said.

Ona said 23 of the refrigerators would be for use of public health facilities in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. He expressed optimism that they would improve the immunization coverage in the impoverished ARMM.

Ona said many vaccine refrigerators in the provinces were badly damaged during typhoons Ondoy and Pepeng. The replacements, he said, would enable his department to maximize the potency of vaccines used in immunization programs.

The donation had been promised by US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, said Ann Hirschey of the USAID.
The Department of Health has recorded 14 deaths from 5,186 cases of suspected measles nationwide from January 1 to April 16. Majority of the cases came from the National Capital Region followed by Central Luzon.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Sheila Coronel to receive Columbia's highest teaching award



Sheila Coronel, one of the Philippines' most respected journalists and currently a New York-based professor of journalism, will be awarded one of Columbia University's highest honors, the Presidential Teaching Award, at the university's commencement ceremony in May.

A co-founder of the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) and its long-time executive director, Coronel has been the first and only director of the Toni Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism at Columbia University since 2006.

Columbia has long been considered the gold standard in journalism education. University-wide, only five Columbia faculty are given Presidential Teaching Awards every year.

"The Presidential Teaching Awards were established in 1996 to recognize Columbia’s best teachers and their roles in the development of students and contribution to overall academic excellence," the Columbia Journalism School said in its announcement.

"Thrilled beyond words," Coronel said on her Facebook page in reaction to the award.

"I came to the Journalism School from Manila in the fall of 2006," she said on the Columbia Journalism School web site. "I didn't have much teaching experience nor had I lived in the U.S. before. But I was privileged to have fabulous students and a warm, supportive community at the Journalism School.

The generosity of Toni Stabile meant our students had the support they needed to do investigative reporting projects. I'm thrilled -- and grateful -- that the university has recognized the work we've done."

In its announcement of Coronel's award, the Columbia Journalism School presented the following summary of her journalism career in the Philippines:

"Coronel launched her reporting career in the Philippines in 1982 and won renown with her insightful coverage of the human rights abuses that marked the end of the Marcos regime and the democratic movement that led to the election of Corazon Aquino. In 1989, she co-founded the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism to promote investigative reporting and train journalists. Coronel led the PCIJ to become one of the most trusted news sources in the region, with important reporting on poverty, corruption, and political intrigue.

A recipient of numerous awards and extensive recognition, Coronel is the author or editor of over a dozen books, and a graduate of the University of the Philippines and the London School of Economics."

Coronel received the Ramon Magsaysay Award in 2003, shortly after the PCIJ's investigative work helped hasten the downfall of President Joseph Estrada. - GMA News

...the teachers in Khmer country

Pinoy teachers shine in Cambodia




 05/01/2011

THEIR primary goal when they left the country for Cambodia may have been to earn more money. But in the end, Filipino teachers end up giving their best to that country.

Take the case of Jayson Umaquing, who left the Philippines six years ago for a teaching job that was to give him higher pay in US dollars, part of which he could send back home to his parents and two sisters. He also wanted to embark on an adventure and a life of independence from his family.

His mother would not let him leave at first, fearing for his safety, but he grabbed the opportunity after being accepted for a teaching job in a private school in Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh.

It was for him a a completely new world where he met people from different parts of the globe. He was able to visit the famous heritage destination Angkor Wat in Siem Reap and other places of nature. The exchange rate at the time was at least P47 to a dollar and that went a long way in sending his sister and some relatives to school.

He went through the stage of being lonely, doing all the work at home and in school, and facing a language barrier in a country where only a few speak English. But after learning the Khmer language, he was able to mingle with the local population and found that “they are a friendly and enthusiastic” people. He said he has adapted to the Khmer culture, which he described as “very rich and interesting.”

In his six years of teaching Math and English to Grades 9 and 10 pupils of the Pannasastra International School, and Business and English subjects to college students of the Pannasastra University and the Western University of Cambodia, he observed that students “easily give up and get stressed.”

But Filipino teachers are “patient and hardworking,” he observed.

New heaven

Another teacher, Joyce Ira Yarza, 28, first taught in Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam in 2005, but transferred to an advertising firm in Phnom Penh in 2007 on the invitation of a friend. She enjoyed the teaching job for two years, but felt she needed change. She went back to teaching and “found a new heaven” in the Cambodia International Academy in Phnom Penh.

Joyce brought her children to Cambodia so she wouldn’t miss them. Together with her husband and children, she said she has “found a new home that will satisfy our needs.”

She has not had any problem with the locals, as she has adapted to their nature and culture. She teaches algebra, science and English for middle level students. The pay and work conditions are “not as much as I get in Vietnam” but the “best thing” she likes in the city is the “simple way of life.”

She works Mondays through Fridays from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. and spends her weekends with the family. “I am not stressed here,” she added.

Most teachers in Cambodia accept tutorial services in the evenings, Joyce said, something she cannot do because she has her hands full with her own family.

Working in a multicultural community makes teaching so much fun, she added. “Every day, you learn many things from your colleagues and students. If there is one thing I consider a challenge, it’s how to improve myself and my teaching to give the best for my students,” Joyce said.

Another teacher, Jennifer, (not her real name), who requested anonymity, said she went to Cambodia to apply for the job that she is currently holding. For three years, she has been teaching all subjects at the primary level of a Christian school.

Exposure and involvement in a multicultural community are some of the benefits of teaching in Cambodia, Jennifer said. “Each year, I have at least five nationalities in a class. I not only teach but also get to learn and appreciate my kids’ culture. I get more interested about foreign news and information, particularly about my students’ countries,” she explained.

There were 257 Filipino teachers in Cambodia as of Dec. 31, 2010, the Philippine Embassy in Phnom Penh said.

“Most of them work for private schools and universities at levels ranging from pre-school to post-graduate studies,” according to Ambassador Noe A. Wong in his reply to an e-mailed questionnaire from the Inquirer.

Some Filipino teachers also occupy academic supervisory posts like principal or dean, he said. Their salaries vary depending on the school and teaching level, the embassy said.

Memorable

Jayson said he has had memorable experiences, one of which was when he had a Christmas lunch with his students and they gave him a gift and numerous Christmas cards with heartfelt messages. He was so happy to know his students appreciated his work, he said.

But as Cambodia develops, things will not always be the same for migrant professionals in that country. Jayson realizes that for the past few years, companies and organizations in Cambodia have started to localize their work force because of the lower cost of hiring personnel.

“The wages we get here are not as big as those being given in First World countries,” he said in an emailed reply to an interview. “Although sometimes, we don’t get benefits,” he added without elaborating.

Thus, he plans to go back home this year to explore other employment opportunities in other countries, or to finish his Master’s degree.

For Joyce, she will never forget being described by her students as the “Best Science Teacher” they ever had.

She and her husband have not made plans to move to another country in the next years. But Joyce said she would come back to the Philippines only when she retires.

She said her school was being accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges so she expected the students would get quality education. “If every school here is accredited by international school-governing bodies and quality education is assured, I believe that intellectually-inclined students will be the product of our hard work,” she said.

Joyce believes Cambodia still welcomes more individuals who can contribute to the welfare of their people.

Jennifer added that even though Filipino teachers’ main purpose in working in Cambodia is a better financial position, they “give their best” in their work.

I think it’s in our culture to be patient and resilient. Moreover, Cambodians treat Filipinos with respect,” she said.

She has seen some improvement with the educational system in that country, with the influx of outside help and foreigners who volunteer to help improve education in Cambodia.

She said she and her husband are open to explore work opportunities in other countries but not in the next two to three years.

...the ex-bases

Ex-US bases thrive in Philippines

05/01/2011

SUBIC, Philippines - Two huge former US military bases have found a new lease on life in post-Cold War Philippines, with budget airlines and cargo ships taking the place of fighter jets and destroyers.

The conversion of Subic Naval Base and Clark Air Base into tax-haven special economic zones nearly two decades ago has drawn a few thousand investors that include shipbuilders, electronic firms, airlines and tour operators.


Subic Naval Base, Zambales

Clark Air Base, Pampanga

The transition, however, has not been smooth and the vast areas, each about the size of Singapore, still do not live up to their potential with parts resembling ghost towns, officials involved in running them acknowledge.

But they now employ around 150,000 people, nearly four times the 42,000 locals when US forces gave up what were then their biggest overseas military facilities in 1992, according to Subic's state-administrator Armand Arreza.

"We're the main economic driver here," Arreza told AFP in an interview at his office at the sheltered deepwater port of Subic.

The US military set up their naval and air presence in 1901 and 1903 respectively as they took colonial control of the Philippines, with Subic becoming the repair and supply yard of the US 7th Fleet that ruled the Pacific.

Clark became the headquarters of the 13th US Air Force and the two bases were among the biggest employers in the Philippines for decades after World War II.

But Clark was forced to close when the nearby Pinatubo volcano erupted in 1991, burying the area under vast amounts of ash.

The following year Subic also closed when, amid rising nationalist sentiment and a dispute over rent, the Philippine Senate refused to renew leases on both bases.

In their place, the government moved quickly to turn the areas -- a couple of hours' drive north of Manila -- into special economic zones that allowed investors to import raw materials, capital and equipment tax free.

The company tax rate in the zones was set at five percent, compared with about 30 percent elsewhere in the Philippines, and foreign businesspeople setting up there were given visa waivers.

Foreign manufacturers -- from makers of electronic chips to door knobs, garments and car parts -- dominated an initial rush in the 1990s.

But some ran into difficulty during the 1998 Asian economic crisis -- a pattern that, most recently, again played out in 2008 with the global financial meltdown.

Arreza and others involved in the process described the post-US withdrawal development as a series of hits and misses.

"There are assets that have been distressed, companies whose business plans have not been as successful," Arreza said.

One major setback came in 2009 when Federal Express moved its regional hub to China, leaving 800 locals without jobs, in what was seen as a symbol of the Philippines' increasing inability to compete with its giant Asian neighbour.

Many manufacturers that initially were attracted to the Philippines had in actual fact shifted operations to China and Vietnam from as early on as the mid-1990s.

Richard Gordon, Subic's first administrator, said one of the key misses was a controversial government decision to strip top Asian port operator Hutchison Whampoa of its winning bid to build a Subic container port in 1995.

"If we'd brought (Hutchison's billionaire owner Li Ka-Shing) to Subic who knows what companies would have come," Gordon told AFP.

The government later borrowed money to build a container port that is now operated by Li's local rival for the original project.

Nevertheless, Clark and Subic have done well compared with the rest of the economy, said John Forbes, investment adviser to the American Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines.

"The Philippines has done extremely well at both the bases... of course they are not being maximised but that's because the Philippine economy has not been maximised," Forbes told AFP.

In a country that has fallen further behind many of its Asian neighbours on a range of vital economic and social criteria over recent decades, the bases have provided a crucial source of money.

Total investments in Subic since its conversion into an economic zone reached $7.2 billion last year, with nearly $5 billion of that coming since 2005, according to government data.

Clark, which has more usable space and a bigger runway, has attracted a total amount of $25 billion, official figures show.

Among the biggest recent investors at Clark are chip-makers Texas Instruments of the United States, which arrived in 2009, and South Korean giant Samsung, which set up operations last year.

The two have so far ploughed 860 million dollars and 135 million dollars respectively out of their initial billion-dollar investment pledges.

Japanese tyre manufacturer Yokohoma, which has been one of the most enduring foreign companies at Clark after arriving in 1996, also has expansion plans.

Meanwhile, regional airline AirAsia is due to make Clark its main Philippine hub in September, joining seven other budget carriers already there.

Over at Subic, Korean shipbuilder Hanjin Heavy Industries has built one of the 10 largest yards in the world which has delivered 20 ships over the past five years.

"Shipbuilding has become an emerging sector for us," said Arreza, adding that the Subic port was now second only to Manila in terms of general cargo volume.

In another sign of progress, Guam-based Aviation Concepts moved into Subic in February to provide fuelling and maintenance services for Asia-based aircraft, as well as air ambulance services.

After Federal Express' departure to China, Subic's airport had remained dormant.

One of the government's main priorities now is to drive more traffic into the former bases to boost aviation and leisure facilities, with the huge Chinese market a top focus.

"Tourism, for me, is the sleeping giant," Arreza said.

"Right now we're into domestic tourism, but of course there's a lot of seasonality and you are vulnerable to domestic conditions. So we want to get budget carriers to come here also for the foreign tourists."

Subic, in particular, has rich tourism potential, boasting tropical beaches and some of the most well-preserved rainforests left in the Philippines.

Subic also already hosts international sporting events such as triathlons, mountain bike tours, sailing and kayak races.

Lance Gokongwei, chief executive of Cebu Pacific Air, one of the seven current Clark operators, said the airport there had the potential to attract as much traffic as Manila's international airport.

"It's just a question of making an investment in infrastructure," Gokongwei told AFP.

"There's a large catchment around Clark, within a one-hour radius I think, (where) there's five or six million potential customers."