Mga Panghitabo (News)

March 30, 2008

DOST golden anniversary starts with stamp, book launch

Filed under: Local News - Administrator @ 2:32 am

dost 

DOST golden anniversary starts with stamp, book launch

Posted under News

By Alex Villafania
INQUIRER.net

AS it celebrates 50 years of history, the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) has started the ball rolling with the launch of two commemorative stamps and the first comic book based on the agency’s mascot, Tron.

The agency is also lining up several related activities that are part of the upcoming National Science and Technology Week (NSTW) on July 7.

Philippine Council for Health Research and Development (PCHRD) executive director Jaime Montoya unveiled the commemorative stamp of the DOST as well as the sub-agency Philippine Nuclear Research Institute.

 

He also unveiled the coffee table book, which contains photos of past administrators and projects of the DOST. The book is called “SinAg,” from the Filipino words “sining” (arts) and “agham” (science).

Montoya also presented the first copy of the Tron comics, an eight-page paperback that introduces Tron. The book is aimed at promoting science education to children and encouraging more students to take up science and engineering courses.

The Tron comic book is set to be distributed through bookstores nationwide, with plans to have it localized in certain provinces.

The DOST will also honor the 50 most influential people in the field of science, which includes Silliman University Research professor Angel Alcala, radio commentator Angelo Palmones, Philippine Daily Inquirer columnist Queena Lee-Chua, Mapua Institute of Technology president Reynaldo Vea, former Science Secretary William Padolina, and former University of the Philippines president Emil Javier, among others.

March 26, 2008

Where did the shelter aid go? Bicol disaster victims ask

Filed under: World News - Administrator @ 12:32 pm

milenyo 

Where did the shelter aid go? Bicol disaster victims ask

June 05, 2008 00:37:00
Ephraim Aguilar
Southern Luzon Bureau

GUINOBATAN, Albay – Tedea Herrera hung three plastic buckets under the dwelling’s thin iron roofing to protect her children from leaks when it rains. Made of coconut lumber and thin, peeling plywood, the cramped room, measuring two meters by four meters, has bare ground as floor but no windows.

“All I want is a decent and permanent house to stay, for me and my children,” the 43-year-old woman said. Her house was swept away by gushing floodwaters in Barangay Travesia when Supertyphoon “Reming” roused lahar from Mayon Volcano’s slope in 2006. Over 1,000 people were killed or missing.

Herrera is among thousands of people still homeless after major typhoons caused massive devastation in Bicol that year. Villagers from Travesia occupy what is called “transit shelters” at the San Francisco Oval in Guinobatan town in Albay, prior to their relocation elsewhere.

Cynthia Nierva, 39, could not forget what President Macapagal-Arroyo promised them during one of her visits to the province after Reming: “Lahat kayo may bahay, papasok na lang kayo. Susi na lang ng bahay ang kukunin ninyo (All of you will have houses. You will just get the keys to your houses).” She pointed at the same grandstand where the President spoke.

“That was what Madam told us, but why are we still suffering up to now?” she said.

A year and a half since Typhoons Reming, “Milenyo” and “Seniang” struck the region, more than 3,000 families have not yet moved to the new houses promised by the government.

Project snag

Even Ms Arroyo’s deputy spokesperson, Anthony Golez, admitted a snag in the implementation of the core shelter projects covered by P7 billion worth of calamity funds for Bicol. Being the worst-hit, the region received 70 percent of the P10-billion Calamity Assistance and Rehabilitation Effort (CARE) fund apportioned through the General Appropriations Act of 2007.

Golez, executive director of the Bicol CARE Commission, was in Guinobatan on May 16 for a public hearing of the House special committee on Bicol recovery and economic development. The meeting assessed the repair and reconstruction of schools, damaged roads, bridges, flood control facilities, and resettlement projects.

Most of the government agencies had high accomplishment rates, Golez said, except for the Department of Social Welfare and Development and the National Housing Authority (NHA), which are responsible for housing and relocation.

Following the onslaughts of Reming, the National Disaster Coordinating Council recorded 232,968 destroyed houses in Bicol, 114,394 of them in Albay. But as of May 14, government data showed that only 237 housing units had been completed under the core shelter assistance project of the DSWD.

Only 9.3 percent of the 2,536 units have been funded or 5.8 percent of the 4,100 target. Construction of 1,319 units is still ongoing, said social welfare officer Marissa Paeste, who is in charge of the DSWD-Bicol’s disaster management.

Slow land dev’t

One of the main factors that delay the construction is the slow land development, Paeste said. “Many of the sites are still unfit for construction. The lands are not yet flat. There are still coconut trees to be uprooted.”

She said the local government units and the NHA were responsible for land acquisition and site development. But the housing agency’s regional director, Alberto Perfecto, said his office was not all to blame.

“The construction of houses could be started even if the sites have not yet been fully developed, which is what, in fact, many organizations helping in the relocation had been doing,” Perfecto said.

He reported that the 10 resettlement sites in Albay was already 49 percent complete but bad weather conditions were causing a time lag. “It has been raining the past few months and the soil type in Bicol takes two to three days to dry,” he said.

Site development includes the surveying and clearing of land, building road networks and constructing drainage systems and waterlines.

Perfecto said P240 million of the total P500 million allotted to the NHA under the CARE funds had already been spent.

Corruption charges

Herrera, the refugee, said she was not surprised by allegations of corruption and misuse of calamity funds. “Corruption in the government cannot be avoided. We don’t see what [government officials] are doing secretly, but it’s up to them,” she said.

Too hot at daytime and too cold at night, people in the transit shelters complain, just like in the tent cities they had previously lived in for at least 10 months. These conditions have made their children sickly.

Due to Bicol’s erratic weather, slats curl in the plywood walls of the transit shelters while rusting holes gape in the iron sheets that the refugees plug with plastic sheets, sack cloth, scrap wood, and tarpaulin posters of politicians – remnants of past elections.

The little space is just enough for sleeping. Save for the walls, there isn’t anything by way of boundaries. One can hear a neighbor’s baby wailing.

San Francisco Oval, officially known as the Albay Sports Complex, is now far from the athletes’ training ground it was meant to be. It is surrounded by makeshift latrines, while the swimming pool is soiled and filled with accumulated rain water.

Community life

Despite its depression, the place breathes its own life as a community. One neighborhood created a string of improvised kitchens right in front of the shelters’ doorsteps. Another put up sari-sari stalls while still another earned extra from weaving abaca baskets. Other occupants raise fighting cocks.

“Nagaayos ng electric fan, rice cooker, water jug, plantsa, sandal, at Shellane” is written on the wall of one dwelling.

Since the water source is a common facility, mothers wash clothes in groups and their children take a bath together. Almost everywhere are clotheslines, some clipped with pieces of underwear.

In April, Sen. Juan Miguel Zubiri passed a resolution “directing the appropriate Senate committee to conduct an inquiry” into the alleged misuse of the CARE funds.

Dredging debris

In Albay, critics are opposing the multimillion-peso dredging projects of the Department of Public Works and Highways. River channels from Mayon’s gullies are heavily silted after Reming swept down volcanic debris, causing lahar flows.

The Roman Catholic Church’s Social Action Center pushed for a labor-intensive method of dredging, meaning that it would be carried out by the public instead of private contractors, so the people could earn from it.

But Golez said he had never heard of any anomalies involving use of the CARE funds. “No dredging project had been approved under [the] CARE, as far as I know. Unless the project has been renamed,” he said.

Critics also allege that funds for the resettlement projects have been misused, causing the delay in the construction of houses. All concerned agencies denied the charge.

March 20, 2008

Anwar Ibrahim: Memories of triumph and tragedy

Filed under: World News - Administrator @ 1:23 pm

 anwar ibrahim

Anwar Ibrahim: Memories of triumph and tragedy
By Fernando del Mundo
Philippine Daily Inquirer

MANILA, Philippines — Their ties were bound in good times and in bad, and for one special evening they shared memories of triumph and tragedy.

There was Anwar Ibrahim, 60, former deputy prime minister of Malaysia. He had been clapped in jail for six years as he sought to become premier. He is now on the cusp of political restoration.

There was his wife Wan Azizah Ismail. She had struggled to seek justice for her husband, when he was in jail on what she said were trumped up charges of corruption and sodomy. She had tried to fill the political shoes of the husband and became a member of the Malaysian parliament.

There was Corazon Aquino, now cancer-stricken, the icon of People Power revolutions in countries yearning to be free, widow of assassinated opposition leader Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino.

Wearing her traditional yellow-colored dress, the former President came out for the first time since it was announced that she had to undergo chemotherapy to attend a soiree in honor of one she had inspired.

Wan, slighter than she was only a few months ago, she nevertheless was engaged in an animated conversation with Azizah during most of the evening.

"We reminisced about the past," Azizah later said. "She talked about Ninoy when he was in jail."

The dictator Ferdinand Marcos had imprisoned Ninoy upon the declaration of martial law for eight years. He was later freed, went on self-exile in the United States for three years, and was murdered on his return to rally the opposition against Marcos.

After she stepped down as President, Aquino had taken the cause of the violent fates that had befallen husbands and wives of political leaders.

She once read a letter smuggled out of Burma on behalf of detained Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

Aquino had given Azizah a political pulpit in Manila to seek justice for her then incarcerated husband in Malaysia.

Ex-President Joseph Estrada hosted the evening of sumptuous meals, wine, and song on Friday in his opulent, centrally air-conditioned home on Polk Street at the wealthy Greenhills subdivision in San Juan.

Beside him stood his wife Loi, who, while her husband was detained on plunder charges for six years, had run and won a Senate seat, as Azizah did.

Anwar had come for a two-day visit, met with ousted House Speaker Jose de Venecia, former President Fidel Ramos, and Senate president and presidential aspirant Manuel Villar.

Anwar was guest at a forum on Friday afternoon. There, he had riled at the 40 percent increase in petroleum prices in Malaysia announced only a day earlier. He thought it was "unconscionable" for a country that exports oil to set petroleum rates at global levels for its own people.

Ibrahim also promised to urge the Kuala Lumpur government to keep Malaysian peacekeepers in Mindanao who were on the last stages of a withdrawal.

A ban on Anwar seeking political office ended in April. After he emerged from prison four years ago, he cobbled together the People’s Alliance of opposition parties that in March won in five of Malaysia’s 13 states.

The alliance is seeking a no-confidence vote on the government of Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi, who had a falling out with the powerful former premier Mahathir Mohammad, Ibrahim’s jailer.

Political analysts say it is likely that Azizah will become prime minister and hold the post for her husband, who was unable to run for Parliament in March because of the ban still in effect. Anwar could ask an ally to resign so he could then run for the vacant seat in Parliament to pave his way to the premiership, something he hopes he will get in September.

If that happens, Estrada might well be at Anwar’s inaugural. "He will be one of the first few to be invited," Anwar said.

"There’s a long way to go. I came to seek the advice of my great friend," Ibrahim told reporters after posing for pictures with Estrada. "I’ve been looking forward to this," he said.

"We don’t have that many loyal friends. I look at him as part of my family. He has a good heart. He has a passion for the poor and justice. It’s too strong."

Upon his release, Anwar had wanted to visit Estrada while he was under detention in his rambling Tanay estate.

"The least I can do is just to go and express my sympathy and ask for his welfare," said Ibrahim.

Estrada was convicted of plunder last year, sentenced to 40 years in jail, but was pardoned by President Macapagal-Arroyo.

Estrada described Anwar as a "mutual friend," meeting him for the first time when the movie actor turned politician was vice president and the one time Islamic firebrand was then deputy prime minister.

When Estrada was President, he met with the wife and daughter of Anwar, earning the ire of Mahathir and causing a diplomatic flap.

In his conversations with Estrada, Anwar said the two picked up "what we discussed 15, 20 years ago." Asked if he had something in common with Estrada, Ibrahim replied, "We are both quite handsome."

Ibrahim also was very pleased that Aquino had gone out of her way to see him. She stayed for two hours. "I had to persuade her to leave earlier. In her condition, it could be bad," said Anwar.

Asked if he expected to see Estrada in Malacañang in 2010. He smiled and said: "That’s, of course, for the Filipino people to decide. But he’s a great friend and to my mind, I believe in his passion for justice, for the goodness of the people.

March 15, 2008

Passengers to check in 45 minutes before int’l flights

Filed under: World News - Administrator @ 10:17 pm

 international flights

Passengers to check in 45 minutes before int’l flights
By Kristine L. Alave
Philippine Daily Inquirer

MANILA, Philippines — Departing passengers at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport who fail to check in at least 45 minutes before their flight risk not being allowed to board at all under a new Bureau of Immigration policy.

Immigration Commissioner Marcelino Libanan issued a memorandum order on May 29 which authorizes immigration officers at the airport to deny departure formalities to passengers who do not appear at the airport at least 45 minutes before their flight.

“Accordingly, passengers allowed by airline operators to check in after the 45-minute cut-off time may be denied immigration departure formalities,” Libanan said in the memorandum to all BI personnel at the NAIA.

Because of the new rule, Libanan advised travelers to show up a few hours before their flight to avoid inconveniences.

Libanan said the new policy is aimed at achieving the standards set by the International Civil Aviation Organization with respect to clearing departing passengers and processing cargo. The immigration chief said the new rule should give the agency and airport officials enough time to clear a passenger.

He ordered all immigration officials at the airport to strictly enforce the rule, which he said ICAO formulated to improve operational efficiency and safety of airports, airlines, and service providers.

March 12, 2008

PAGASA: Brace for Milenyo-type typhoons this year

Filed under: World News - Administrator @ 9:10 pm

 milenyo2

PAGASA: Brace for Milenyo-type typhoons this year

September 05, 2007 17:21:00
Allison Lopez
Inquirer

MANILA, Philippines — Nearly a year after the disastrous typhoons "Milenyo" (international codename: Xangsane) and "Reming" (Durian), expect storms as strong to hit the country this year.

Martin Rellin Jr., acting director of the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services (PAGASA), said on Wednesday a typhoon with the strength of "Milenyo" would likely strike anytime soon.

"The Philippines is one big laboratory of tropical cyclones. Around 20 tropical cyclones hit us each year, so there is a possibility of another ‘Milenyo.’ We should just prepare for the worst," said Rellin at the Meet the Press forum in Manila.

"Milenyo" wreaked havoc on September 28, 2006, with Bicol as the hardest-hit region. The typhoon’s powerful winds toppled billboards and caused power outages, while severe flooding was experienced at the same time.

Typhoon Reming followed at the end of November, 2006, triggering mudflows from the slopes of Mayon Volcano that buried an entire village. Hundreds of people were missing.

"Disaster preparedness should be constant because the Philippines is facing the Pacific Ocean. We are the breakwater of Asia, dumadaan talaga sa atin ang bagyo. Kaya huwag natin balewalain ito [typhoons pass through our country. We should not take them for granted]," Rellin said.

The PAGASA acting director said they felt "hurt" when they were assailed for inaccurate forecasts but said they "understood" the criticisms.

"Nasaktan po kami, kasi 24/7 ito [We were hurt because this is 24/7 job]… This is not an accurate science. We have a 90 percent accuracy when it comes to track and intensity but we’re having difficulty on rainfall," he said.

To address this, Rillen said they were purchasing new doppler equipment to measure rainfall but claimed that the bidding process had caused a two-year delay.

"It’s not off-the-shelf equipment, it has to be customized. But after the bidding [at the Department of Budget and Management], it will take eight months to manufacture, another eight months to ship, but only one month to install," he said.

To improve forecasting, fellow guest Metro Manila Development Authority chair Bayani Fernando gave an unsolicited advice to the weather chief: to release hourly predictions so mistakes could be corrected immediately.

But Rellin answered that it could not be done because valuable data from other countries was only given every three hours for analysis.

But according to him, the PAGASA staff are undergoing workshops to help improve interpretation of data from radars.

"We’re doing our best to develop our people, aside from upgrading our equipment," he said.

Originally posted at 05:22 pm

March 8, 2008

Double-digit inflation looms in June, says BPI

Filed under: World News - Administrator @ 10:14 am

 inflation rate

Double-digit inflation looms in June, says BPI

Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 16:53:00 06/08/2008

MANILA, Philippines–Bank of the Philippine Islands sees inflation in June to break into the double-digit level for the first time since 1999.

This development would likely prompt the central bank to raise key interest rates by another quarter-percentage point during its next policy meeting in July.

In a commentary dated June 5 written by bank economists Emilio Neri Jr. and Michael de Castro, BPI projected a 10.2-percent year-on-year rise in consumer prices in June–assuming that crude oil would stay below $125 per barrel and that rice prices would be steady.

"Meanwhile, core inflation is expected to rise faster in June as the effect of the wage and fare rate hikes … start to kick in," the report said. "This should force the monetary authorities to hike [key rates] by another 25 basis points during the [July 14] Monetary Board meeting."

Core inflation refers to the increase in average prices of consumer goods excluding volatile items like food and energy.

Last week, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ policy-making Monetary Board raised its overnight borrowing rate by 25 basis points to 5.25 percent, the first monetary tightening seen in three years.

On the other hand, the bank said that for the remaining part of 2008 through mid-2009, the BSP could hike the current 5.25-percent overnight RRP (reverse repurchase agreement) rate by another 50 basis points, "on the assumption that the headline inflation would no longer be anchored on a peso appreciation."

Last year, the peso rose nearly 19 percent against the US dollar to become Asia’s best performing currency. The local currency has lost 6.6 percent so far this year, closing at 44.135:$1 on Friday.

The central bank’s quarter-percentage interest rate hike last week, was just what the doctor had ordered, BPI said.

"It was necessary for monetary authorities to step in to avoid demand-pull forces from snowballing as it could temper speculative activity," the report said.

The bank agreed with the BSP’s assessment that supply constraints were the dominant source of inflationary pressures and a bigger move was not necessary.

"Nevertheless some form of policy tightening was necessary," the report said. "It helped preserve the monetary authorities’ credibility. The move clearly demonstrated the MB’s determination to fulfill its key mandate of targeting inflation even if it means foregoing some areas of growth.

"Inaction would have been "unacceptable."

Doris C. Dumlao

March 2, 2008

Acer unveils Ultra-portable One

Filed under: World News - Administrator @ 8:50 pm

 Acer unveils Ultra-portable One

Almost everyone seems to have jumped into the ultra-portable bandwagon these days, and though some have released very impressive units that boast of high end specs, price-wise, the Eee PC still reigns supreme.

Acer Aspire One: Eee Killer
 
That was until Acer decided to join the fray. The Acer Aspire One rumored to just cost around $ 399 (Linux OS) which is way lower than the Eee PC making this the most affordable ultra-portable that comes from a known PC manufacturer. Those who attended Computex 2008 had an opportunity to see this thing of beauty first hand. Engadget even has a quick hands-on review on it based on the unit displayed at the showroom floor.

Looks good, but will it perform as good as it looks?
 
So what does $ 399 get you? You get a compact laptop that looks somewhat like a cross between an Eee and a Mini-Note. The keyboard layout albeit being a tad smaller is similar to the HP 2133, but spec-wise, it leans more toward the Eee. It’s got a 1.6GHz Intel Atom processor, 512MB RAM, 8GB SSD, Wi-Fi (b/g), 8.9-inch screen, 1.3-megapixel camera, card reader and a Linpus Linux OS. A Windows version will also be made available at a higher cost with a 80GB HDD. It will become available in various colored editions that include red, blue and pink. Specifics as to its availability have yet to be disclosed.
 
It looks like the competition is indeed stepping up, but we’ll reserve our judgment on the Aspire One once we get a full hands-on review on this nifty lappie.

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