Mga Panghitabo (News)

April 20, 2008

Hezbollah calls on Lebanon government to resign

Filed under: World News - Administrator @ 3:45 am

 hezbollah

Hezbollah calls on Lebanon government to resign

September 12, 2006 17:34:00

Agence France-Presse

BEIRUT — Hezbollah has called on Lebanon’s government to resign, in its first public rally in Beirut since the war with Israel ended, and defiantly repeated a vow not to abandon its weapons as urged by the United Nations.

A blow to prospects for political unity in the wake of the devastating 34-day war, the demand came as the UN force tasked with monitoring a ceasefire continued to grow with the arrival of French tanks and other armor.

Hezbollah MP Ali Ammar told a rally in a Shiite southern suburb on Monday night that "the Forces of March 14 [the anti-Syrian coalition which leads the government] aligned themselves with the Israeli enemy from the start" of the conflict that ended on August 14.

"They planned the assassination of the Resistance [Hezbollah’s military wing] in collaboration with the Americans and the Israelis.

"The Resistance will keep its weapons," he said repeatedly, rejecting the demands of the UN Security Council truce resolution which ended the conflict.

"This government must go," he said to chants of "Government, resign" from the crowd.

Ammar called for the formation of a government of national unity embracing factions outside the current cabinet, including Christian Michel Aoun, a longtime Syrian opponent now in alliance with Hezbollah, and pro-Syrian Christian notables like former MP Suleiman Franjieh.

Hezbollah itself forms part of the government, holding two of the 24 cabinet posts.

The rally was the biggest organized by the group since the end of the Israeli offensive launched after Hezbollah captured two soldiers in a deadly cross-border raid on July 12.

Ammar’s speech came on the heels of a Monday statement by the militia, which also slammed the Forces of March 14th.

Prime Minister Fuad Siniora belongs to that group and has come under fire from the opposition press for being too pliant in his dealings with the West.

"The repeated calls by these forces for the disarmament of Hezbollah aim to serve the interests of their Western masters, at the head of which are the United States and their allies, Israel," the Hezbollah statement said.

"We appeal to those forces to prove their nationalism and not put Lebanon under foreign tutelage, the object of which is to make Lebanon unable to defend itself against Israel."

The Jewish state’s avowed aim in the war was to recover the soldiers and to crush Hezbollah.

UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which paved the way for the ceasefire, called for steps to be taken to secure the soldiers’ release.

It also called for the full implementation of the deal that brought an end to Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war and to security council resolutions that "require the disarmament of all armed groups in Lebanon so that …there will be no weaponry or authority in Lebanon other than that of the Lebanese state."

Hezbollah has vowed support for Resolution 1701, but hedged it by saying that it will not disarm until Israel ends its occupation of all Lebanese territory.

Israel forces have been progressively withdrawing from areas they occupied during the July-August war, to be replaced by Lebanese and UNIFIL troops. That pullout should be completed in the coming days.

UNIFIL announced Tuesday morning that Israel was pulling out of the town of Maibib, ending its presence in the eastern sector of the border area.

Spokesman Alexander Ivankov said the "Israeli army is withdrawing from the eastern part, UNIFIL is starting to patrol and tomorrow [Wednesday] the Lebanese army will take control of the area."

In other developments, 13 French Leclerc battle tanks and a dozen armored vehicles arrived in Beirut as France builds up the forces it is contributing to UNIFIL. France plans to contribute around 2,000 troops to UNIFIL, out of a total force of some 15,000.

On Wednesday, just under 600 Spanish marines and soldiers are expected to disembark in the south as part of their country’s contribution to the force of 1,100 troops.

As EU diplomatic and military support for the truce gains pace, the foreign ministers of Spain, Miguel Angel Moratinos, and Luxembourg, Jean Asselborn, are due in Beirut for talks.

Italian Defense Minister Arturo Parisi will also be visiting.

April 15, 2008

DENR, German firm hold water crisis photo tilt

Filed under: World News - Administrator @ 1:42 pm

DENR, German firm hold water crisis photo tilt

04/15/08

Posted under Environment, Science (general)

By Alex Villafania
INQUIRER.net

THE NATIONAL Water Resources Board (NWRB), under the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), and the German Agency for Technical Cooperation (GTZ) have started a photo contest that aims to build awareness on saving the country’s water resources, as well as highlight various water sanitation issues.

The agencies are also being assisted by the private sector-led Philippine Water Partnership in promoting the competition.

The “Water is Life” photo contest offers cash prizes of up to P25,000 for the top winner. In a statement, Environment Secretary Lito Atienza said the competition aims to stress the importance of water to Filipinos and make them realize that it is also their duty to ensure its availability.

 

He identified several concerns causing water shortage, including over-extraction of groundwater and the pollution of rivers and lakes, as well as diminishing surface water from watershed and forest destruction.

“Water is indeed a very scarce resource, and as the world experiences rapid population growth and urbanization, the demand for water will also increase causing serious consequences on the environment,” Atienza said.

The contest, which started early this month, is open to all Filipino amateur and professional photographers. Three major prizes will be awarded, ranging from P15,000 for third place, P20,000 for second place, and P25,000 for first place.

Special prize categories include Water for Agriculture, Water for People, and Water for Sanitation, all of which offer P10,000 in prize money.

The deadline for submission of entries is May 15.

The winners will be announced on June 5 in time for World Environment Day.

The DENR will hold a series of photo exhibits of the top three winners, special awardees and all finalists at selected malls in Metro Manila.

April 14, 2008

Scientists find rare species of mangrove

Filed under: World News - Administrator @ 6:21 am

Scientists find rare species of mangrove

04/14/08

Posted under News, Science (general)

By Yolanda Sotelo-Fuertes
Inquirer Northern Luzon Bureau

DAGUPAN CITY–Scientists have found a rare species of mangrove in what they described as a unique environmental setting in Masinloc, Zambales.

“It’s a hybrid mangrove called Rhizophora x lamarckii produced by ‘bakauan lalaki’ (Rhizophora apiculata) and ‘bakauan bato’ (Rhyzophora stylosa),” Severino Salmo, a mangrove researcher, told the Inquirer.

Salmo, who is pursuing a doctoral degree in marine science at the University of Queensland in Australia, said the species was so rare that there was only one tree found on Panay Island in Eastern Visayas.

 

He and his professor, Dr. Norman Duke, are studying the restoration of mangrove ecology in the Philippines and Australia. Duke is a principal research fellow of the University of Queensland’s Center for Marine Studies.

Salmo said he and Duke found 12 trees of the mangrove species (it has no local name yet) in a five-hectare mangrove-formed island (where no other vegetation except mangroves are found) called Yaha by Masinloc residents.

The island is some 5 kilometers from the mainland. From afar, it seems to be a pure stand of bakauan lalaki and bakauan bato, according to Salmo.

“Doctor Duke, however, noticed one mangrove towering over other trees. At closer look, the leaves are greener. Upon collecting specimens and evaluating its flowers, he confirmed that it was a mangrove hybrid called Rhizophora x lamarckii produced by bakauan lalaki and bakauan bato,” Salmo said.

He said he and Duke found only a single tree of the species on Panay Island. In Masinloc, however, they saw at least 12 trees. The species can be found in other countries, like India, but it is also rare there, Salmo said.

The newly discovered mangrove species has an average diameter of 5.5 centimeters and height of six meters.

“The findings can be considered the first record of such species in Luzon. As hybrids are sterile, they cannot reproduce. The only way to conserve it is to protect the population of its parent plants,” Salmo said.

He said local officials and the community were not aware of the existence of the rare species in their midst.

“We informed Masinloc Mayor Jessu Edora about it and he said the local government would declare the site a marine protected area. He also ordered an immediate patrol in the area,” Salmo said.

The two researchers were looking for study sites to compare natural and planted mangroves when they found in Masinloc a natural mangrove area with environmental characteristics similar to those found in Lingayen Gulf. They found Yaha with the help of local officials and fishermen.

“It was difficult to find natural sites as most, if not all, areas have been severely disturbed or degraded. Natural mangroves in the Philippines are very rare now given the massive cutting and conversion to aquaculture ponds. The Philippines already lost 70 to 80 percent of its natural mangroves,” Salmo said.

Yaha can be considered a special place and is different from other mangroves because it is located in a natural environment where mangroves developed over a long period, the researcher said. While there were some observed cuttings and encroachments, the area can still be considered relatively undisturbed, he said.

“It is being used by locals as a docking place when they go fishing. The surrounding water is a rich fishing ground for small fishermen,” Salmo said.

He said older residents in Masinloc told him that the mangrove-formed island had been there for at least 80 years. It also served as a hiding place for Filipino soldiers during World War II, he said.

The study, which Salmo and Duke are undertaking, aims to understand the environmental impact of mangrove areas converted to other uses. They also want to find out how long planted mangroves would resemble the forest structure of natural mangroves.

Salmo said the study would give conservationists and environmental managers a “realistic idea” of how much mangrove planting projects can achieve over a certain period.

The study is timely, considering the extent of mangrove cutting in the country and the various efforts at rehabilitating mangrove areas through massive planting projects, he said. Its sites for the planted mangroves have been designated in the western part of Lingayen Gulf, covering the towns of Bolinao, Anda and Bani and Alaminos City, where Salmo spent 12 years of research.

April 3, 2008

Let’s go nuclear, Reyes urges

Filed under: World News, Local News - Administrator @ 3:12 am

 nuclear power plant

Let’s go nuclear, Reyes urges
By TJ Burgonio
Philippine Daily Inquirer

THE GOVERNMENT is seriously studying the option of reopening the mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant to bolster the country’s energy supply, Energy Secretary Angelo Reyes said Saturday.

Reyes said that a team from the International Atomic Energy Agency that inspected the power plant in Bataan months ago has reported that this could be rehabilitated in at least five years at a cost of $800 million.

“We intend to revisit this particular option,” he said at the Sulo Hotel press forum, pointing out that the government spent $2.3 billion to build it without generating a kilowatt of electricity.

The Secretary said it would take two years to undertake a feasibility study on the rehabilitation and another five years to rehabilitate the power plant. But he said it would take 15 years to build a new one.

“I have taken the position that we have to revisit the nuclear option because we don’t want a situation where there will be power shortage,” he later said in an interview.

The 630-mW power plant built during the Marcos regime was mothballed during the Aquino administration over concerns of its safety.

Greenpeace has constantly warned Reyes of the high costs and health risks of pursuing nuclear options, and reminded him to focus on getting the renewable energy bill approved by Congress and tapping renewable energy options.

The group has urged the government to avert the adverse effects of climate change by setting renewable energy targets, imposing a moratorium on the construction of coal-fired power plants, implementing strict energy-efficient standards, and drafting a program reducing carbon emissions.

Reyes said the government would continue to seek ways at tapping renewable energy, but could not ignore the nuclear option.

“By all means, let’s go renewable. Let’s go alternative sources of fuel. But also, we can’t have a situation where we do away with oil and coal, then we have blackouts, or we have shortage in power supply,” he said.

Reyes had earlier forecast that power shortage would hit the country in 2009.

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