Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Young ones most susceptible to firecracker injuries

Now that he's got only two fingers on his right hand, Jonro Roma is sticking to a good old plastic trumpet when he joins the New Year’s Eve revelry on Thursday evening.

"Torotot na lang (I'll just use a plastic trumpet)," the young man from Tondo told GMA News' Cesar Apolinario in a report over 24 Oras.

Jonro lost three fingers just before Christmas, after a triangular firecracker called regalo (“gift") he was fiddling with exploded earlier than he expected. He is one of the more than 150 individuals who sustained injuries from firecrackers even before the New Year celebration, when, in the Philippine tradition, the public goes all-out in their deafening festivities. [See: Two-month-old baby among hundreds injured by firecrackers, DOH says]

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As of December 29, there were already 165 victims of firecracker accidents recorded, with 43 percent or almost half of them below 10 years old. Dr. Yolanda Oliveros, head of the Department of Health's National Center for Disease Prevention and Control (DOH-NCDPC), said the figure even includes a two-month-old baby who sustained mild burns after firecrackers exploded nearby.

DOH officials said children are most at risk, as they are both incapable of handling firecrackers properly and are also less able to protect themselves when others around them use firecrackers.

At the Jose Rizal Memorial Hospital, majority of the 29 people injured by firecrackers since December 21 were children. The same goes for the East Avenue Medical Center in Quezon City, where 16 out of the 19 cases since December 21 are minors.

A fourteen-year-old boy in East Avenue even had to have the tip of one thumb amputated after sustaining injuries from a “whistle bomb," a powerful firecracker that makes a whistling sound before it explodes.

Oliveros said that among those injured from firecrackers this year, the median – or the most common – of the victims' age is 14. Young kids and teenagers are the most curious about firecrackers, so it is imperative that parents are responsible enough not to let their children light up firecrackers or to use firecrackers around children, she said.

"Hindi pa rin nagrerespond yung ating mga parents sa panawagan natin na bantayan yung mga anak nila (Parents have not yet responded to our call for them to strictly watch their children)," Oliveros told GMANews.TV in a phone interview, as she noted that the 165 cases from December 22 to December 29 of this year was nine percent higher compared to the same period in 2008.

The most common culprit for firecracker injuries this year and in the past year is the “piccolo," a small firecracker lighted like a matchstick, according to the DOH. Despite being one of the many firecrackers banned by the department, it continues to be widely-used because it is cheap and easy to ignite.

"Parang matchbox sinisindihan (It's lit up just like a matchbox)," Oliveros said. She said the piccolo becomes dangerous when those who use it – mostly kids – fail to toss the firecracker away as soon as they ignite it.

"Minsan, bigla na lang sumasabog because sa standard ng piccolo (Sometimes it just explodes because of the low standard of the piccolo)," she added.

At the East Avenue Medical Center, 13 out of the 19 cases as of Wednesday were due to piccolo, with the youngest only four years old. Majority of these victims sustained mild blast injuries that, fortunately, did not result in amputation. Dr. Daryl Zorilla, a surgical resident at the hospital, said most of the victims were active users of firecrackers.

But it is not only the cheap, colorful piccolo that can possibly harm young kids who join the holiday festivities. Watusi (“dancing firecrackers") – another cheap, half-matchstick-sized firecracker that makes tiny crackling explosions when scratched on a rough surface – poses more dangers than the normal burns or blast injuries caused by other firecrackers because of its candy-like red color and appealing scent. Children sometimes ingest it, which leads to poisoning.

"Sabi nila, medyo matamis daw yung watusi. So baka akala ng mga bata, candy (People say that watusi is rather sweet, so perhaps kids think it's candy)," Oliveros said.

Even the pretty luces or sparklers – which are commonly used by those who dislike explosive firecrackers – can pose harm, the DOH warned.

Luces were the fourth in the list of the top five firecrackers that caused the most injuries in 2008. Luces cause burns when random sparks land on the skin, and can even get into one's eyes, Oliveros said.

She added, "May mga luces na substandard ang pagkakagawa na pumuputok. Supposedly nagla-light lang siya e (There are substandard luces that explode. Supposedly it's just supposed to light up)."

DOH officials are steadfast in their campaign against all types of firecrackers. Oliveros said that aside from burns and blast injuries which can cause major or even fatal injuries, chemical smoke from firecracker use can also trigger asthmatic effects and other irritations.

Oliveros said that all of the supposedly very strong firecrackers are already banned, so we can say those that are legally in the market are already mild. "But as far as the DOH is concerned, there are no safe firecrackers for us," she added. – Report from JV, GMANews.TV

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Lost fingers the price for firecracker thrill

Now that he's got only two fingers left on his right hand, Jonro Roma is sticking to a good old plastic trumpet when he joins the New Year’s Eve revelry on Thursday evening.

"Torotot na lang (I'll just use a plastic trumpet)," the young man from Tondo said, several days after he lost three fingers from a giant firecracker that exploded too soon.

Just before Christmas, a triangular firecracker called regalo (“gift") blew up in his hand. Jonro is one of the more than 150 individuals who have sustained injuries from firecrackers even before the New Year celebration, when in the Philippine tradition, the public celebrates with deafening festivities. [See: Two-month-old baby among hundreds injured by firecrackers, DOH says]

The Department of Health has already reported nine percent more injuries this year than last.

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As of December 29, there were already 165 victims of firecracker accidents recorded, with 43 percent or almost half of them below 10 years old. Dr. Yolanda Oliveros, head of the Department of Health's National Center for Disease Prevention and Control (DOH-NCDPC), said the figure even includes a two-month-old baby who sustained mild burns after firecrackers exploded nearby.

DOH officials said children are most at risk, as they are both incapable of handling firecrackers properly and are also less able to protect themselves when others around them use firecrackers.

At the Jose Reyes Memorial Medical Center, the majority of the 29 people injured by firecrackers since December 21 were children. The same goes for the East Avenue Medical Center in Quezon City, where 16 out of the 19 cases since December 21 are minors.

A fourteen-year-old boy in East Avenue even had to have the tip of one thumb amputated after sustaining injuries from a “whistle bomb," a powerful firecracker that makes a whistling sound before it explodes.

Oliveros said that among those injured from firecrackers this year, the median age is 14. Young kids and teenagers are the most curious about firecrackers, so it is imperative that parents are responsible enough not to let their children light firecrackers or to use firecrackers around children, she said.

"Hindi pa rin nagrerespond yung ating mga parents sa panawagan natin na bantayan yung mga anak nila (Parents have not yet responded to our call for them to strictly watch their children)," Oliveros told GMANews.TV in a phone interview, as she noted that the 165 cases from December 22 to December 29 of this year was nine percent higher compared to the same period in 2008.

The most common culprit for firecracker injuries this year and in the past year is the “piccolo," a small firecracker lit like a matchstick, according to the DOH. Despite being one of the many firecrackers banned by the department, it continues to be widely-used because it is cheap and easy to ignite.

"Parang matchbox sinisindihan (It's lit up just like a matchbox)," Oliveros said. She said the piccolo becomes dangerous when those who use it – mostly kids – fail to toss the firecracker away as soon as they ignite it.

"Minsan, bigla na lang sumasabog dahil sa standard ng piccolo (Sometimes it just explodes because of the low standard of the piccolo)," she added.

At the East Avenue Medical Center, 13 out of the 19 cases as of Wednesday were due to piccolo explosions, with the youngest only four years old. The majority of these victims sustained mild blast injuries that, fortunately, did not result in amputation. Dr. Daryl Zorilla, a surgical resident at the hospital, said most of the victims were active users of firecrackers.

But it is not only the cheap, colorful piccolo that can harm young kids. Watusi (“dancing firecrackers") – another cheap, half-matchstick-sized firecracker that makes tiny crackling explosions when scratched on a rough surface – poses more dangers than the normal burns or blast injuries caused by other firecrackers because of its candy-like red color and appealing scent. Children sometimes eat it, which leads to poisoning.

"Sabi nila, medyo matamis daw yung watusi. So baka akala ng mga bata, candy (People say that watusi is rather sweet, so perhaps kids think it's candy)," Oliveros said.

Even the pretty luces or sparklers – which are commonly used by those who dislike explosive firecrackers – can harm, the DOH warned.

Luces were the fourth on the list of the top five firecrackers that caused the most injuries in 2008. Luces cause burns when random sparks land on the skin, and can even get into one's eyes, Oliveros said.

She added, "May mga luces na substandard ang pagkakagawa na pumuputok. Supposedly nagla-light lang siya e (There are substandard luces that explode. Supposedly it's just supposed to light up)."

DOH officials are steadfast in their campaign against all types of firecrackers. Oliveros said that aside from burns and blast injuries which can cause major or even fatal injuries, chemical smoke from firecracker use can also trigger asthma attacks and other irritations.

"As far as the DOH is concerned, there are no safe firecrackers," she added. – Report from JV/HS, GMANews.TV

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Mayon watch: An inside look at the Phivolcs headquarters

GMANews.TV visited the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology headquarters in Albay province on Wednesday for a first-hand look at how government volcanologists are utilizing the scientific tools at their command to monitor the restive Mayon Volcano around the clock.

The Phivolcs headquarters is situated on Ligñon Hill some 10 kilometers away from Mayon’s summit.

The Phivolcs headquarters in the Bicol region sits on a hill overlooking the Mayon Volcano. Sophia Dedace

Three telemetric units installed on Mayon’s slopes transmit radio waves to Phivolcs’ seismographs, which measure the intensity of volcanic earthquakes and other movements inside the volcano. The data recorded are also stored digitally and are evaluated by Phivolcs’ teams working on alternate shifts for 24 hours.

Julio Sabit, Phivolcs spokesperson and supervising science research specialist, says the agency has state-of-the-art facilities. Sophia Dedace

To measure the amount of sulfur dioxide emitted by the volcano, a volcanologist goes near the foothills - but not too close - and sets up a collecting device to estimate the sulfur dioxide emission rate.

A Phivolcs staff fixes a camera that will capture close-up images of Mayon's crater. Sophia Dedace

Telescopes and several cameras are also mounted on the viewing deck of the headquarters. The images captured by the cameras are recorded into Phivolcs’ database 24 hours a day.

Areas in most danger

Phivolcs supervising science research specialist Julio Sabit presented a diagram of areas likely to be affected by lahar and lava flows. These are Legazpi City, and Daraga and Sto. Domingo municipalities located at the foot of Mayon along its southeastern flank.

Legazpi City and Sto. Domingo and Daraga towns are most threatened by lahar and lava flows. Sophia Dedace

‘Mayon perfecting itself'

Sabit says the volcano’s continuous lava flow for the past 17 days has "healed" Mayon's deep gullies – the “avenues" running down the slopes where the lava flows.

Sabit describes Mayon's current activity. Sophia Dedace

Tinatapalan ng nanigas na lava yung malalalim na uka ng bulkan. Ngayon, mas nagiging perfect na yung cone ng Mayon (The hardening lava is filling up the volcano's deep gullies. This is now making Mayon's cone more perfect)," he says, adding that the eruption in 1984 has created deep gullies from Mayon’s crater.

-Report from JV/HS, GMANews.TV

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Governor orders water, electricity cut off from 8 KM Mayon Volcano Danger Zone

Legazpi City- Evacuees here were forced further to spend the traditional Media Noche away from home after Albay Governor Joey Salceda issued yesterday evening an order to cut off the electricity and water supplies within the declared six and eight-kilometer extended and permanent danger zones around Mayon Volcano.

Salceda said the move is to further ensure that no person would dare go back to their homes, what with confirmed reports that a lot of evacuees have already returned homes for the New Year's revelry which was further boosted when soldiers were able to catch yesterday afternoon some persons within the declared danger zone in Barangay Mabinit in Legazpi City.

The official said both the National Power Corporation (NAPOCOR) and the Albay Electric Cooperative (ALECO) have already agreed to cut off the power supply starting 10 p.m. yesterday evening while the water supply would discontinue in the soonest possible time today (December 31).

"For the past 17 days, we have been repeatedly doing our efforts to heed the advice of the PHIVOLCS (Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology) that there should be no human activities within the declared danger zones," said Salceda.

"Legally, there should be no people within the declared danger zones because of the provincial ordinance of the implementation of a 24-hour curfew. It is on this premise that I ordered that electricity and water supplies should be cut off," he added.

By tomorrow afternoon (December 31), Salceda said he is also expecting the security forces to cut off the roads leading to all affected barangays in the cities of Tabaco, Legazpi and Ligao and the towns of Guinobatan, Camalig, Daraga, Malilipot and Sto. Domingo.

By cutting off the roads, Salceda said it means that security forces are authorized to block them with anything that would prevent the entry of all types of vehicles.

He added that both police and military were also instructed to double their efforts in conducting a round-the-clock curfew and house-to-house check to ensure that no single person is staying in more than 10,000 households within the danger zones.

"I hope that they (evacuees) would understand that we are doing this for their safety. For the past 17 days, we have been providing them with almost everything, from simple basic needs to foods for Noche Buena, Media Noche and even entertainment, to discourage them from going back to their homes," said Salceda.

A total of 10,032 families or approximately 47,500 persons have been forcibly evacuated from their homes after Alert Level 4 was hoisted over Mayon Volcano, meaning, a hazardous eruption is possible within days, or even hours.

But some of them were seen going back to their homes, prompting the local officials to impose a 24-hour curfew and even provide them with other projects under the psychosocial care program that includes concerts and parties in evacuation centers, to prevent them from sneaking back towards their homes.
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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

4,000 machines for 2010 polls now with Comelec

Some 4,000 election machines that will be used in next year's automated polls arrived from China on Monday night, with 3,200 more expected to be delivered by Wednesday morning, the Commission on Elections (Comelec) said Tuesday.

“The [precinct count optical scan] shipment arrived already. It arrived last night at 9 p.m…we will have this released by today [Tuesday]," Chairman Jose Melo told reporters in an interview at the Comelec headquarters in Manila.

Commissioner Gregorio Larrazabal said the machines would first be inspected by the poll body and then delivered to a warehouse in Cabuyao in Laguna province.

“When the machines [are] delivered to the warehouse, they will be stored, they won’t yet be configured," he said.

The machines will undergo five or six tests from the time of their delivery before any software is installed in them, according to Melo.

A mock election would also be held as part of the tests, he added.

Initially, the first batch of poll machines was supposed to be delivered last November. However, costlier shipping and traffic then caused another delay in the delivery of some 12,000 PCOS machines.

Melo had earlier assured the public that all the 82, 200 PCOS needed for the 2010 polls would be delivered by February.

“By the first week of February, 100 percent [of the machines] manufactured na and in transit for our deadline," he said in an earlier interview.

Based on contract with the poll body, Smartmatic-TIM is expected to deliver 82,200 PCOS machines before February 28. But Melo said that they are not so keen on imposing a punishment for the delays just yet.

Smartmatic assured Chairman Melo that it could deliver the machines on time.

If worst comes to worst, the Comelec could conduct manual elections in some parts of the country, Melo said.

Aside from the shipment delivered on Monday, Melo said that there are already 200 PCOS machines in the Philippines, most of which are being used for trainings. - Report fromLBG/KBK, GMANews.TVhttp://eachnewsday.blogspot.com

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Comelec: Low turnout on last day of extended voters’ listup

The extension of voter registration ended with a poor turnout, the Commission on Elections (Comelec) said Tuesday after airing earlier worries about being swamped by hordes of last-minute registrants. “Mahina, mabagal ang dating nila," Comelec Chairman Jose Melo told reporters in an interview on Tuesday, the last day of the extended voter listup. Voter registration originally ran from December 2008 to October 31, 2009. But following the Supreme Court’s (SC) decision allowing for extension, the Comelec opened up its centers for registration on December 21, 22, 23, 28, and 29 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Election personnel in field offices in Metro Manila also observed low turnouts of registrants during the last day of the listup. “Mas kakaunti ngayon ang pumunta para magparegister. Dati, thousands ang pumupunta para magparehistro, ngayon over 300 lang (Fewer people came this time to register. The last time, thousands were lining up to register, but now we only have over 300)," said Claire Salinal, election assistant in Quezon City’s thickly-populated third district. Salinal attributed the low turnout to the Comelec resolution ordering field offices to accommodate only first time voters during the extended registration. “Mas maayos at magaan ang trabaho ngayon dahil first time voters lang ang ine-entertain (The registration is more organized and easier for us because we only have to entertain new voters)," she said.

In some areas, however, registrants formed long queues to beat the deadline, which the poll body attributed to “mañana habit." [See: Mañana habit leads to long queues of voter registrants] Registration cut short?

On the other hand, Kabataan party-list, the group that had asked the SC to extend the registration, is asserting that the Comelec should not have “cut short" the listup period to until December 29 only. It said that the SC had ordered the poll body to extend it until January 9. Melo, for his part, said that the youth party-list group does not understand that the process of registration does not only entail the voter listup, but also the administrative procedures that come with it. “They don’t understand the law, they think that if they get listed, they’re already registered. I keep on saying that listup does not equate to registration. There’s a process. The list has to be published. A hearing would then be conducted for any challenges," he said in Filipino. The poll body said it will post the list of the new applicants on January 4, giving the registrants until January 6 to file an opposition to any of the other registrations. By January 9, he said the Election Registration Board (ERB) will begin their hearings to weed out ineligible registrants. Earlier, Comelec Chairman Jose Melo said they will not be printing any additional ballots, making these new registrants like "chance passengers." [See: Additional voters for 2010 to be like 'chance passengers'.]

He said they would not produce extra ballots aside from the ballots that are scheduled to be printed on January 25 based on the number of voters that had registered prior to the SC ruling. There are over 49 million registered voters. as of December 10. The ratio of ballot to voter was supposed to be one is to one. [See: Over 49 million voters in 2010 polls, says Comelec] Comelec spokesman James Jimenez, however, clarified that additional voters could still vote if there would be “spare" ballots on election day, relying on the usual low voter turnout during the polls. - Report from with Andreo Calonzo/JV, GMANews.TV

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Arum might ask Pacquiao to reconsider stance on blood issue

Top Rank promoter Bon Arum said he might ask Filipino boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao to “tighten” the window for the blood test being demanded by the camp of his foe Floyd Mayweather Jr.

This was after an episode of HBO reality show “Pacquiao/Hatton 24/7” has showed the Filipino reportedly giving blood 14 days before his fight against Ricky Hatton last May 2.

"I will transmit it [word of Pacquiao's '24/7' test] to Manny once [HBO Sports president] Ross Greenburg establishes the actual date of the test in ‘24/7' and [the Mayweather camp] makes a proposal based on what Ross has come up with," Arum told ESPN.com.

"If that happens, I am sure I can convince Manny [to tighten the testing window],” he added.

Pacquiao has opposed at Mayweather's demand for random blood testing within 30 days of the fight, preferring urine testing as he says losing blood weakens him.

The Filipino instead agreed to take 3 blood tests: the first during the week of the kickoff news conference in early January, the second random test to be conducted no later than 30 days before the fight, and a final test in his after the fight.

However, the weakening effect of blood testing on Pacquiao might be unproven should it be established that he indeed gave a blood sample 14 days before the Hatton fight. The match saw the Filipino knocking the Briton out with a powerful left hook to the jaw in the second round.

NSAC Deadline Arum earlier set a Monday deadline for Golden Boy to accept a "final offer" in which both sides let the Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC) make the final decision on testing.

This has led to NSAC calling on both fighters to submit to urine test within “48 hours” since the announcement on Monday (Tuesday in the Philippines)

Mayweather adviser, however, said that there was no question of accepting that proposal.

"Random is random. We are not backing off and the ball is in their court," he told Reuters.

But the Mayweather camp also left the door open for further talks.

"Team Mayweather and Golden Boy Promotions is still open to the earlier discussions of having both parties work out a mutually agreeable understanding of the testing, which would be conducted by a mutually agreed upon agency," according to a statement by the Mayweather camp.

Doctor flying to Gensan to test Pacman Dr. Alex Pineda of the Philippine Olympic Committee will take a flight to General Santos City to take a urine sample from Pacquiao for analysis as required by the NSAC.

Pacquiao’s adviser Michael Koncz told PhilBoxing.com’s Ronnie Nathanielsz that Pineda is the only doctor accredited by the World Anti Doping Agency (WADA) nearest to Pacquiao location.

The 7-time world champion has preferred to stay in Gensan to celebrate the birthday of his eldest daughter Mary Divine Grace. With reports from ESPN.com, Reuters and PhilBoxing.com

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Govt keeps Maguindanao under state of emergency

Maguindanao and two other key areas in Mindanao will remain under state of emergency through the New Year as security officials are yet to see proof that the situation in these places have normalized.

Press Secretary Cerge Remonde said this was arrived at during Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting presided by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo at the Mansion House in Baguio City.

“The state of emergency stays. The recommendation of the National Security Council Cabinet Group was for it to stay and this was unanimously approved by the group and the President," he said.

Maguindanao was placed under state of emergency a day after the November 23 massacre of 57 people - a grisly political violence blamed on the powerful Ampatuan clan.

Sultan Kudarat and Cotabato City were also included in the declaration to prevent a possible spillover of the violence.

Remonde said the state of emergency is necessary to enable the military to actively participate in maintaining peace and order in the three areas until government functions and services there normalize.

“That is the basic premise for the recommendation and the eventual approval for the retention of the state of emergency," he said.

“The normalization is already seeping in but despite that, they still recommended that they still needed the [Armed Forces of the Philippines] for continuous security action," he added.

Interior and Local Government Secretary Ronaldo Puno said security forces are yet to completely neutralize the armed groups in the areas that may still pose threat to public safety. - Report from KBK, GMANews.TV

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Monday, December 28, 2009

4 killed in seven-vehicle smashup along SCTEX

Four people - all female - were killed in a seven-vehicle smashup at the Subic Clark Tarlac Exchange (SCTEX) in Pampanga province Monday afternoon.

The National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC), in its 8 p.m. report, said grass fire may have hampered the visibility of the drivers, triggering the collision at about 3 p.m.

Identities of the victims were not released, but the NDCC said they were aged 5, 37, 62, and 63. The four were passengers of a Toyota Avanza utility vehicle (ZJV-296), one of the vehicles in the road accident.

Other vehicles in the smashup included a Toyota Corolla (TLT-578), Toyota Innova (RFG-231), Mitsubishi Adventure (SHG-397), Forward truck (RAG-459), Honda Civic (MCP-99), and Toyota Hi-Ace (FLG-111).

The incident occurred at Sapang Balen village in Mabalacat town in Pampanga, near the eastbound part of SCTEX.

Other victims were rushed to the San Rafael Foundation Medical Center for treatment. -Report from KBK, GMANews.TV

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Oil prices hiked anew

Pilipinas Shell and Phoenix Petroleum Inc. are hiking their oil prices by as much as P1.00 per liter effective early Tuesday morning.

According to a dzBB radio report, Shell announced that it is increasing the prices of gasoline by P1 per liter, and diesel and kerosene by P0.50 per liter, effective 12:01 a.m. Tuesday.

Phoenix Petroleum is also set to impose the same price adjustments by 6 a.m. Tuesday, the radio report said.

The two oil companies cited “increases in the international market" as the reason for the price hikes. - Jerrie M. Abella/JV, GMANews.TV

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2 Philippine Coast Guard executives suspended

Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) commandant Admiral Wilfredo Tamayo yesterday suspended his detachment commander and clearing officer in Calapan, Oriental Mindoro in connection with the sinking of the M/V Baleno 9 that killed at least six people late Saturday.

Tamayo said he temporarily relieved PCG Calapan detachment commander Petty Officer 1 Danilo Sanchez and clearing officer Petty Officer 2 Rizal Maligaya who received the Masters’ Oath of Safety Departure (MOSD).

Tamayo, however, said that the suspension is part of standard operating procedure (SOP) and is not an indication that the two have already been found guilty.

“This is not an accusation. We just want to give them time to prepare themselves for the investigation to determine if they are administratively liable, to give them time to express their side. Their

relief is also to avoid accusations that there is a whitewash in the investigation,” said Tamayo.

As of 5:45 p.m. yesterday, six persons were declared dead, 51 missing and 69 survived the tragedy, accounting for a total of 126 passengers and crew.

The fatalities were identified as Leahlyn Peñaranda, 19; John Panagsagan, 40; Hermina Largado, 18-25; Johnny Mutya, 36; Barbara Galanza, eight months old; and Jenelyn Gutierez, 20.

The PCG, assisted by the Philippine National Red Cross (PNRC), the Philippine Navy (PN) and the Philippine Air Force (PAF), continued search and rescue operations yesterday for the passengers of Baleno 9 and M/V Catalyn B, which sank after colliding with a fishing vessel on Christmas Eve.

Coast guard spokesman Lt. Commander Armand Balilo said deep-sea divers have found 12 bodies inside the Catalyn B in addition to the four passengers already confirmed dead, with 11 still missing.

Exploring the depths

American national Matthew Caldwell, who holds the rank of captain in the Philippine Coast Guard Auxiliary (PCGA), was able to get up close to the 79-gross ton wooden-hulled Catalyn B.

“There were at least a dozen bodies. There are two small children and male and female inside and on the floor, really in just the position that they passed away, some were lying down on the floor, they were not floating. Their belongings were also messed up,” Caldwell told reporters yesterday.

He said it took him four minutes to reach the depth of 221 feet, where the vessel was found in its upright position, lying on the sand with its bow damaged. The propeller was partly covered with sand.

Visibility was poor as he was going down, but when he reached the ship he saw its white paint.

A pail filled with cement tied to a rope, with the other end tied to the PCG vessel, served as a weight and was dropped into the water close to the vessel so they would know its exact location. When he was close to the ship he tied the rope to it so it would not be dragged away by the underwater current.

Caldwell circled the wooden-hulled vessel twice, looked through the windows and started counting the bodies for about 17 to 20 minutes before deciding that about 12 bodies were spread out on deck.

It took him 56 minutes to decompress and ascend to the surface.

Tamayo said they could not officially include the 12 bodies reportedly trapped inside the ship “because we cannot be certain if they were humans. They could be dolls or mannequins. We first have to recover the bodies completely and count them visually.”

But Caldwell explained that while they have located the ship and established its position, getting the bodies out would not be an easy task.

“It would be difficult to recover the bodies because of the depth and the dangers involved. This is not a trivial matter,” he said, citing the lack of equipment for deep-sea diving.

“This is a matter of resources and the available time for divers to stay at that depth. Two diver teams would have to be formed for this kind of operation,” he added.

Earlier, the PCG admitted that their divers could only swim up to 120 to 150 feet.

Considering these factors, a team of deep-sea divers can only go down to the depth of 221 feet twice a day and if there are a dozen bodies, it might take them two weeks to finish the job.

The PCG Commandant said they are also considering availing of the services of Malayan Towage which, along with its international counterpart, is reportedly willing to refloat the ship.

However, Tamayo said that for this option they would have to coordinate with the ship’s owner, San Nicholas Shipping Lines.

Racing against time

But hopes of finding survivors or the remains of those who perished in the two accidents get slimmer by the hour as search and rescue efforts continue to yield negative results, Navy spokesman Lt. Col. Edgard Arevalo said yesterday.

Arevalo said five Navy ships scouring some 400 nautical miles off Verde Island have returned empty handed 24 hours after the ill-fated Baleno 9 sank in the area.

“The weather is fine and the sea is calm, so it means if there are survivors or casualties floating in the waters, they could have already been seen by our vessels,” he said.

Arevalo said the 24 hours that already passed could have allowed the bodies to float.

“Within that window, we could have recovered the survivors or the casualties. After 74 hours, the cadavers could have sunk again,” he said, adding that two Islander planes of the Navy and Coast Guard and two UH-1H helicopters have also aided the search and rescue vessels.

The spokesman said the search for the survivors started at around 8 a.m. Monday in what is called the Northern Pass, in between Verde Island and Mindoro.

“This is the most probable area where survivors and casualties could have drifted, but our efforts have yielded negative results,” he said.

He said that the vessels have started retracing their route heading east to west and are now targeting the shorelines.

“We are racing against time because our hopes of finding survivors or casualties are getting dimmer by the hour,” he said.

No overloading

Tamayo, for his part, explained the discrepancy in the passenger manifest. In the MOSD, there were only 20 passengers, but the ship later submitted a list with 47 others in the supplemental passenger manifest and 41 classified as passenger not included in the manifest.

The names in the supplemental manifest represent the “last-minute passengers” or those who signed up after the MOSD had been submitted, while the 19 others who were classified “passengers not manifest” were the drivers and their assistants who accompanied the vehicles loaded on board the ship.

But even if “there is a gap in the manifest, it did not affect the loading,” meaning it did not result in overloading since the total number of passengers and crew on board - 126 - was way below the 284 allowable total capacity.

There are speculations that the maritime incident could have been caused by an open ramp that allowed the ingress of water.

Upon reaching 1.6 nautical miles Southeast of San Agapito, Verde Island in Batangas, water allegedly entered the roll-on, roll-off type vessel through the ramp.

If this was the case, Tamayo said responsibility on the “the overall maintenance of the structure of ship belongs to the ship owner. When they are out there at sea, it is up to the crewmembers already.”

There were also unconfirmed reports that rough waves caused the cargo, which were allegedly loosely tied, to disrupt the balance of the vessel and caused it to sink.

Tamayo said that all these information would be considered in the formal investigation to be conducted by the Special Board of Marine Inquiry (SBMI) to be headed by PCG district Batangas commander Commodore Cecil Chen.

The PCG said the 199-gross ton steel-hulled Baleno 9 carried 87 passengers and 14 crewmembers when it left the port of Calapan in Oriental Mindoro at around 11 p.m. of Dec. 26 on its way to Batangas.

The sunken ship is owned by Besta Shipping Lines which owns four other vessels: M/V Baleno 1, M/V Baleno 3, M/V Baleno 5, and M/V Baleno 8.

Legarda: Government should be responsible

Meanwhile, Sen. Loren Legarda said the latest twin maritime tragedies could have been prevented had government authorities been more careful in ensuring the seaworthiness of inter-island vessels.

Legarda also called on maritime authorities to continuously monitor compliance of shipping firms with existing safety standards and regularly check the seaworthiness of all inter-island vessels.

“With the country experiencing major sea disasters every so often, it is incumbent upon the government to take firm steps to protect the lives of people who depend on inter-island shipping,” she said.

Legarda said the sea accidents underscore once more the shortcomings of the concerned government agencies in the proper monitoring of maritime vessels.

“While accidents do happen, government cannot evade responsibility for its lax enforcement of maritime safety standards,” she said. “While the Maritime Industry Authority has done the right thing in suspending the franchises of the two shipping firms involved in the accident, government must do much more so that we can avoid more sea tragedies.” -Report from Arnell Ozaeta, Christina Mendez, James Mananghaya - By Evelyn Macairan (Philstar News Service, www।philstar.com)

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P735M worth of cocaine found off Samar

Another cache of suspected high-grade cocaine worth millions was found by fishermen in the waters off Samar province Sunday, according Eastern Samar Governor Ben Evardone.

Evardone said the seized illegal drugs weighed 147 kilos and was approximately worth P735 million at P5 million per kilo.

In a text message, Evardone, who is also the presidential adviser on local government affairs, said he had asked President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to direct authorities to burn the cocaine.

"The syndicates that own the illegal drugs might try to recover them because of the value. We should do everything to prevent it from flooding the market," he said.

The contraband has been turned over to the local police and agents of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) by the fishermen that found them.

Evardone said the burning should be witness by local government units and non-government organizations.

Last Christmas Eve, President Arroyo led the burning of some P165-million worth of cocaine found on the shores of Barangay Minaanod Llorente and Barangay 7 in Eastern Samar two days earlier.

PDEA chief Dionisio Santiago said his office received reports that the substance found in the areas was part of 1,500 kilogram of cocaine that was dumped into Hong Kong waters early this month. -Report from KBK, GMANews.TV

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Friday, December 25, 2009

Arroyo orders suspension of vessels in Cavite sea tragedy

Two shipping companies involved in a Cavite sea mishap on Christmas Eve were ordered suspended by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.

Operations of San Nicolas Shipping Lines and the company which owns fishing vessel "Anatalia" were suspended due to the pending investigation of the accident, Cabinet Secretary Silvestre Bello III said.

The order was issued on Wednesday, Maritime Industry Authority (Marina) administrator Elena Bautista told GMANews.TV in a phone interview.

Marina was only able to suspend “Catalyn B," a wooden motor banca owned by San Nicolas Shipping Lines.

"Catalyn B," which was run by 15 crew members and carried 59 passengers, collided with fishing vessel "Anatalia" four nautical miles off Limbones Island in Cavite at 2:20 a.m. of December 24, authorities said.

The collision left three people dead and 24 missing.

Only the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources has authority over Anatalia, a 369 gross ton fishing vessel, Bautista clarified. -Report from Aie Balagtas See, GMANewsTV

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Purefoods, Ginebra win Christmas matches

Purefoods Tender Juicy trounced Burger King, 85-74, to boost its bid for a top 5 finish in the KFC-PBA Philippine Cup Friday at the Cuneta Astrodome in Pasay City.

The Giants held the Whoppers to just 6 points in the last six minutes of the game to foil the latter’s comeback. The win ended Purefoods’ two-game losing skid for a 9-6 win-loss mark.

Kerby Raymundo led all scorers with 19 points while James Yap added 17 but Purefoods needed Rico Maierhofer’s defensive tenacity early in the fourth period to thwart the rally of Burger King.

“Coming into this game, we knew we can’t just challenge Burger King to a shootout and we made sure we had to buckle down on defense,” said Giants head coach Ryan Gregorio who also drew 12 markers from Don Allado.

“And limiting them to just 74 points is good defense. Our defense has been going south and it will play a key role in upcoming games,” he added.

Maierhofer finished with 10 points, 6 rebounds and one block. His lone rejection came at the right time when the Whoppers started building momentum, threatening to erase Purefoods’s 15-point lead with less than 10 minutes left in the contest.

Former Giants center Richard Yee spearheaded Burger King’s blistering 13-0 run to slice the double-digit spread to just two, 68-70 with 6:15 left.

Raymundo ended Purefoods’ scoring drought with a follow-up shot on Roger Yap’s missed drive and Maierhofer drew an offensive foul from Mark Yee and denied Belga’s lay-up in the next two possessions of the Whoppers.

Maierhofer’s key defensive gems resulted to the Giants’ own 11-2 burst to put the game out of reach, 83-70, 2:14 remaining.

Belga led Burger King with 15 points, 7 rebounds and 2 blocks while Gary David added 14 but was ejected in the game for throwing an elbow on the head of Mairhofer late in the game.

Yee chipped in 10 markers for the Whoppers, who dropped to 5-10 with the loss.

Kings reign on Christmas Day

Barangay Ginebra ended Coca-Cola’s magical run with a 106-97 victory to pace with the league leaders for at least the automatic quarterfinal seat.

JC Intal scored a career-high 20 points including two thundering slams in the fourth quarter that highlighted the Kings’ onslaught that broke the game wide open.

Ronald Tubid added 18 points while Willy Wilson chipped in 16 and 11 rebounds for Ginebra, which snapped a two-game losing streak to tie Purefoods at fourth spot with 9-6 mark.

“JC has the potential because of his athletic ability. Kulang lang talaga sa kanya ‘yung knowledge and understanding of the game and it comes through with the experience,” said Ginebra head coach Jong Uichico.

Cyrus Baguio also hit in double figures with 14 points for the Kings. Celino Cruz and Enrico Villanueva each had 11 points for Ginebra while Billy Mamaril added 10.

Dennis Espino led the Tigers with 21 points। Asi Taulava contributed 17 points and 16 rebounds for Coke, which fell to 3-12.

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4 dead, 23 missing in sea collision

At least four people died and 23 others were reported missing yesterday after two boats collided in the early morning darkness in Manila Bay during the busy Christmas rush, the latest disaster to hit the Philippines in a year marked by tragedy.

Rescuers are searching for the missing passengers of the wooden-hulled ferry M/V Catalyn B, which rammed into the starboard side of a steel-hulled fishing boat and sank off the coast of Cavite, Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) officials said.

Commodore Cecil Chen, district commander of Coast Guard Southern Tagalog, said the Catalyn was sailing some 2.8 nautical miles northwest of Limbones Island when it rammed into F/V Anatalia at around 2:25 a.m. yesterday.

An emergency operation in the busy waterway swung into action, saving 46 people over the next five hours. But a subsequent Coast Guard report said dozens were still missing.

As of early last night, rescuers had recovered four bodies from Manila Bay, according to the Coast Guard Action Center.

PCG spokesman Lt. Commander Arman Balilo said a passing tanker, the Emilio Jacinto, turned over to the tugboat Habagat the body of 34-year-old Beverly Cabinillo at around 1:35 p.m.

Two other fatalities were identified as Relly Morales, 71, and a certain Welmar, believed to be 22 to 27 years old, who was identified through his cell phone.

“Accidents do happen and we never can tell when it will happen. Unfortunately it happened” a day before Christmas, said PCG commandant Admiral Wilfredo Tamayo.

“This is a small vessel with a single wooden hull. Water rushed in and the vessel sank not long after the collision,” Coast Guard Commodore Luis Tuason said over local radio, referring to the Catalyn owned by San Nicolas Shipping Lines.

The Catalyn had 14 crewmembers and 59 passengers when it left Pier 2 of North Harbor in Manila at 9 p.m. Wednesday bound for Tilik, Lubang Island in Occidental Mindoro, southeast of Manila.

The 13-meter long Catalyn had a capacity to carry 126 people and was not overloaded, he added.

“Some of those rescued are now aboard the Anatalia,” Balilo said.

All 22 crewmen of the 369-ton fishing boat Anatalia were safe, and their vessel was damaged but did not sink after the collision, said Melvin Viola of the Coast Guard’s operation center.

The Anatalia was on its way back to the port of Navotas in northern Manila after an extended fishing trip in the Turtle islands in the southern Philippines, Tuason said.

The cause of the collision at a time when millions of Filipinos were heading to their home provinces ahead of Christmas Eve was not clear. No weather disturbances were reported in the area.

The two vessels met at the mouth of Manila Bay at around 2:25 a.m. The Catalyn was on its way out of the bay while the Anatalia was entering the bay.

Commodore Tuazon said the vessels should have passed port-to-port or leftside-to-leftside, but the Catalyn hit the rear starboard or right side of the fishing vessel.

The bow of the wooden-hulled passenger vessel sustained a large hole that caused it to sink in just 10 minutes. The fishing vessel, on the other hand, was only slightly damaged.

The mouth of the bay is considered a busy sealane and some vessels take extra precautions when passing through so that they would not run aground in the shallow area.

Holiday rush

Henry Tria, one of about 30 anxious relatives who rushed to the Coast Guard office, said five of his relatives were on board the Catalyn, including teenaged nephews and a seven-year-old niece who were on their way home to Mindoro.

“I told them that we should take a bigger ship but the tickets were sold out so they decided to go on this smaller ferry because they wanted to be home for Christmas,” he said earlier yesterday, before the survivors arrived at the Coast Guard office.

It was not clear how many of his relatives have been rescued, but at least one nephew’s name was on a Coast Guard list of rescued passengers, he added.

Two of the survivors, Kris Carisse Cajayon, 20, and Miranel, 18, are daughters of Arnel Cajayon who arrived at the PCG headquarters yesterday morning upon learning that some of the survivors from the sea mishap would be brought to the head office.

He said his daughters, who were studying in Manila, were on their way to Lubang to spend the Christmas holiday.

“Through God’s grace they were saved, but this Christmas is not happy because this is the first time something like this happened to us. We only used to watch such things on TV,” the 45-year-old father said in Filipino.

A Coast Guard statement said three of its vessels were taking part in the search for the missing, while eight other ships had diverted from their course and were en route to the area to join the rescue.

A Coast Guard plane was also dispatched to scan the waters for survivors, the statement said.

The PCG would be forming a special board of marine inquiry (SBMI) headed by Commodore Tuazon to investigate the incident.

The 46 passengers and crew that arrived at the headquarters were immediately given medical treatment. The PCG also took the statements of the captain and crew of the vessel.

Balilo said the bodies of the three fatalities are on board the BRP Nueva Vizcaya which was expected to arrive at 6 p.m. yesterday.

San Nicolas Lines general manager Limuel Fabula, who went to the PCG late yesterday afternoon, said the company would give P200,000 insurance to the families of the deceased and pay for the hospitalization of the survivors.

Ferries form the backbone of mass transport in the archipelago nation of 92 million people.

Officials say bad weather, poor maintenance, overcrowding of vessels and lax enforcement of regulations have contributed to disasters, and water voyages in the busy Christmas period are particularly fraught with danger.

The world’s deadliest peacetime maritime disaster occurred south of Manila in 1987 when a ferry laden with Christmas holidaymakers collided with a small oil tanker, killing more than 4,000 people.

In June 2008 another ferry tipped over during a typhoon off the central island of Sibuyan, leaving almost 800 dead.

A series of tragedies have struck the Philippines over recent months.

In September, the first of two powerful tropical storms battered the nation, claiming more than 1,000 lives and wreaking devastation across large swathes of the country.

In November, 57 people were slain in an election-linked massacre in a lawless region in the country’s south.

And more than 47,000 people are facing Christmas in evacuation camps and temporary accommodation around Mount Mayon, south of Manila, as the rumbling volcano threatens a violent eruption.
Report from– With AP - By Evelyn Macairan and Arnell Ozaeta
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Monday, December 21, 2009

Holdouts start fleeing Mayon

More than 3,000 villagers remaining in a prohibited danger zone around the rumbling Mayon volcano yesterday began to leave after officials threatened to force them out.

The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) warned that powerful booming sounds emanating from the volcano indicated that a major eruption was imminent.

Phivolcs director Renato Solidum said seismic activity had “increased in number and size” in the past 24 hours and a total of 1,942 volcanic quakes were detected since Sunday, after the alert level was raised from 3 to 4, following a greater frequency of earthquakes and sulfur dioxide emissions.

Yesterday, sulfur dioxide emissions continued to be “very high” and the glow of crimson lava could be seen oozing from the volcano overnight.

In Guinobatan village, lying on a dirt road in the foothills of Mayon, district officials and police went house to house, urging residents to board a truck and take shelter outside the danger zone.

Nearly all the villagers boarded the hired truck, carrying their personal belongings in sacks and heading to evacuation centers set up by authorities outside an eight-kilometer zone.

But some of the men folk refused to budge and were left to fend for themselves.

"There are still one or two men who don't want to go but their families have come down to the evacuation centers," village councilor Mulad Bucad said.

"There are always a few who don't want to go. They say they are used to eruptions and they never get hurt anyway," he said.

Albay Gov. Joey Salceda said authorities are having trouble keeping people away from their homes and farms.

"There are people who have been evacuated three times and we sigh: 'You again?'" Salceda said. "We've been playing cat and mouse with them."

Salceda yesterday said authorities "will physically remove" those refusing to leave the danger zone after volcanologists raised the alert level to four on a five-point scale.

Level four means that an "explosive eruption is possible within hours or days," according to Phivolcs.

There were still 729 families or more than 3,000 people staying put on the edges of the eight-kilometer danger zone that has been declared around Mayon, local disaster preparations chief Cedric Daep said.

Just over 9,200 families or nearly 44,400 people had already taken shelter in evacuation centers since Mayon started belching ash, steam and lava last week.

If the alert level is raised to five, meaning that an eruption is in progress, another 16,000 villagers living beyond the danger zone would also have to be evacuated as a precautionary measure, Salceda said.

Army troops and police added more patrols to enforce a five-mile (eight-kilometer) exclusion zone around the mountain, Salceda said.

Salceda said about 5,000 more villagers were being transported out of Mayon's danger zone, where scientists said red hot lava flows had reached three miles (five kilometers) from the crater. A major eruption could trigger pyroclastic flows - superheated gas and volcanic debris that race down the slopes at very high speeds, vaporizing everything in its path. More extensive explosions of ash could drift toward nearby towns and cities.

Salceda said, however, military and police would refrain from using excessive force after the government's Commission on Human Rights (CHR) warned against forcing people out at gunpoint or with batons.

In past Philippine evacuations, holdout residents have been carried onto military trucks by unarmed troops and police personnel.

In an effort to persuade people to leave, Salceda ordered the provincial veterinary office to bring all cows and water buffaloes to a government agricultural station so they would be safe.

In Mayon's other eruptions in recent years, pyroclastic flows had reached up to four miles (six kilometers) from the crater, Salceda said.

"The probability of survival in an eruption is zero if you're in the danger area. The solution is obviously distance," he said.

Mayon last erupted in 2006, when about 30,000 people were moved.

Meanwhile, Phivolcs director Solidum said in a television interview "he cannot say exactly when the hazardous eruption is likely to occur."

But he stressed: "The important thing is the distance from the volcano. That is why it is important that people not be inside the danger zone."

3 episodes of lava fountaining

Three episodes of lava fountaining which reached about 200 meters above crater were recorded yesterday morning.

Solidum said that lava fountaining was observed at 8:07, 8:08 and 8:18 Monday morning.

Solidum also said that red hot lava continues to flow along the Bonga-Buyuan Miisi and Lidong gullies and the lava front has now reached about five kilometers down slope from the summit along the Bonga-Buyuan gullies.

"The lava fountaining might affect some lava to go toother sites like Sto. Domingo and possibly Anoling," said Solidum.

Solidum warned that the amount of lava at the summit and on slopes could generate a pyroclastic flow equally dangerous to people even if the volcano does not explode.

He also warned of the threat of lahar when volcanic debris comes into contact with water and cascades down the slope of the volcano towards rivers and streams during heavy rains.

Defense department offers help

Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Norberto Gonzales has ordered the deployment of more doctors and nurses at the Armed Forces hospital near Albay to help address the health concerns of the evacuees.

Gonzales also donated P1 million for the children at evacuation centers to celebrate the Christmas season.

"I want to give this P1 million to Governor Salceda so children at the evacuation center will enjoy Christmas," said Gonzales, who also heads the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC), during the full Regional Disaster Coordinating Council (RDCC) meeting.

Gonzales also said that the NDCC will extend all the support needed by the provincial government of Albay which he considers a model among local government units for effective disaster management in the country.

Salceda, for his part, said the focus now of the disaster response operation is to address the health concerns as well as ensure that the evacuees will not go back to celebrate Christmas and New Year at their homes inside the high-risk danger zones.

"Zero casualty policy also includes mortality inside the evacuation centers," said Salceda, adding that common problems inside the evacuation centers such as the lack of toilets, water and food are already being addressed.

He said some 57 comfort rooms have already been repaired and 24 portalets set up at the different evacuation centers.

The Local Water Utilities Administration has already deployed four water tank lorries with 1,000-liter capacity, Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP) fire trucks each as well as a water purifier with 30,000-liter capacity donated by the Spanish government at the designated evacuation sites.

Salceda also said that all hospitals in the province have been placed on code blue, meaning they can accept 50 to 100 evacuees if needed, while all evacuees have been given PhilHealth cards.

To prevent the displacement of classes at the evacuation centers, Salceda said he needs some 600 tents to be established at various evacuation centers. The UNICEF has already donated some 100 tents.

Salceda also said some 4,800 farmers have been affected by the imminent Mayon eruption, as well 2,000 cattle and carabaos.

Dept. of Health regional director Nestor Santiago told the governor that there was a need to decongest some evacuation sites and they would need P3 million for the construction of toilets inside the evacuation centers.

Some of the evacuees suffer from common ailments like cough and cold, fever, toothache and hypertension.

Salceda also said he would use everything at his disposal to make the evacuees merry and comfortable this Christmas.

"If I need to request our soldiers to wear mascots or to do a Santa Claus to spread cheer to our devastated evacuees, I will," Salceda said. Report from With Helen Flores, Cet Dematera, AP - By Celso Amo (Philstar News Service, www.philstar.com)

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Lawyer wants Miriam barred from running in 2010 polls

A lawyer has moved for the disqualification of Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago from joining the 2010 elections because of her alleged “unsound mind."

“Senator…Santiago is of unsound mind. She appears to be suffering from a severe mental disorder," said Nombraan Pangcoga in an eight-page petition he submitted to the Commission on Elections on Monday.

Santiago’s “insanity," is characterized by the following symptoms, according to Pangcoga: “delusion of grandeur," “flight of ideas," “mood swings," “penchant for lying," and “paranoia."

Santiago’s camp dismissed Pangcoga’s claim, with the senator’s chief of staff, Camille Sevilla, saying the senator was being attacked by her political opponents because she had been topping the surveys on senatorial candidates.

“These are plain harassment cases, which are most probably the handiwork of unscrupulous people whom the senator has exposed or graft and corruption," said Sevilla, a lawyer.

She added, “Sen. Santiago has been rating very high in recent senatorial surveys. She’s always in the top three of the surveys. That’s why some people have an axe to grind against her."

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For the latest Philippine news stories and videos, visit GMANews.TV Pangco claimed that in the Senate, Santiago had always exhibited “unparliamentary" behavior. “She repeatedly abused her position and power as senator to defame and slander people."

Pangcoga further assailed Santiago for allegedly failing to disclose her financial and business interests. “For many years, respondent (Santiago) was a rented apartment dweller until she suddenly acquired the La Vista mansion and occupied the same in June 2002."

The value of this newly acquired property is grossly ‘disappropriate’ to her salary as a senator," he added.

He also claimed that the senator’s La Vista home in Quezon City was worth at least P53 billion, but her salary at the time that she acquired the property was only reportedly P43,000 a month.

Pangcoga likewise alleged that Santiago was guilty of graft and corruption for having stolen a Toyota Supra sports car from the custody of the Bureau of Customs in 1990, and benefiting from the then Bureau Immigration and Deportation (BID)’s alien legalization program.

Santiago headed the BID from 1988 to 1989.

Under the program, aliens who opt to legalize their residence in the Philippines were charged P250,000 each. Pangcoga claimed the fees were never remitted to the government.

Pangcoga had also accused Santiago of committing “apprehension" and “prosecution of a criminal offense" when her son, Alexander Robert, supposedly committed suicide at their La Vista house in 2003.

“Law enforcement agencies of the government were not allowed to conduct scene of the crime investigation. She had the cadaver of her son immediately cremated, this destroying, suppressing, and concealing the very corpus delicti of the offense," he said. Report from KIMBERLY JANE T. TAN, AMITA O. LEGASPI, GMANews.TV

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Pacquiao party turns rivals Satur, Bongbong into buddies

One should give it to Filipino boxing icon Manny Pacquiao for turning long-time political rivals, Ilocos Norte Rep. Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr. and Bayan Muna Rep. Satur Ocampo, into buddies, even for a night only.

During Nacionalista Party’s party to formally welcome Pacquiao into its fold Monday night, Marcos was seen extending his hand to greet Ocampo – a gesture that sent everybody at the Laurel House in Mandaluyong City cheering.

In an interview with reporters, Marcos said the gesture should not be given any meaning, as Ocampo is a fellow member of the House of Representatives.

Walang katuturan yun. Bumati lang yung magkakilala na kapwa congressman (That’s nothing. It’s just a greeting between two congressmen)," the only son of the late President Ferdinand Marcos Sr. said.

Both Marcos and Ocampo are in the NP senatorial lineup for next year’s elections.

To recall, Ocampo – along with Gabriela Rep. Liza Maza – had refused to be included in the same ticket as Marcos, noting his father’s human rights abuses during his term as president.

Maza and Ocampo, however, agreed to join NP after it severed its ties with the Marcos-led Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL) party.

Fight goes on

Ocampo, for his part, said his gesture toward Marcos did not mean that he has set aside his fight to recover the ill-gotten wealth from the latter’s family and compensation for the victims of human rights abuses during the martial law.

Hindi ibig sabihin [ng pakikipagkamay] na binabalewala na ang laban (I shook his hand but that doesn’t mean our issues are over)," the left-leaning party-list lawmaker said.

He added that he accepted NP’s offer to be in its senatorial slate despite Marcos’ presence because he supports the tandem of Senators Manuel Villar and Loren Legarda.

Hindi naman si Bongbong ang sinusuportahan ko. Ipu-pursue ko pa din ang kaso laban sa kanyang tatay. Ipu-pursue ang recovery ng ill-gotten wealth at compensation sa mga biktima ng human rights violations," he said.

(It is not Bongbong whom I’m supporting. I will still pursue the case against his father as well as the recovery of the ill-gotten wealth and compensation for human rights victims.)

He, however, said he would not raise these issues during the campaign in order for them to focus on their common platform, which is eradicating poverty.

Snubbing incident?

Earlier in the day, observers noticed that Maza and Marcos tried to avoid each other when they greeted Villar's wife, Las Piñas Rep Cynthia Villar, who was present in the event.

Maza denied that she ignored Marcos. "Nagbatian naman kami, baka hindi mo lang nakita (We greeted each other. Maybe you just didn’t see it)," Maza told GMANews.TV with a smile. Report from KBK, GMANews.TV

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Atlas infuses fresh capital into copper unit

Publicly listed mining firm Atlas Consolidated Mining and Development Corp. said Monday it subscribed to additional shares in wholly-owned subsidiary Carmen Copper Corp.

In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange, Atlas said it signed an agreement with Carmen Copper covering its subscription to 46.188 million common shares of the subsidiary at P4 per share or a total of P184.75 million.

Atlas said the amount raised from the transaction would be used by Carmen Copper to fund capital expenditures related to the operation of its Toledo mine in Cebu province.

Atlas, the country's second-largest miner, has been increasing copper concentrate production at Toledo as it ships more of the concentrate to China.

The company earlier said it was eyeing to increase production to 42,000 tons per day (tpd) by mid-2010, and about 50,000 tpd by the first half of 2011 from an original production rate of 20,000 tpd.

Atlas has delivered its 13th shipment of copper from Toledo to China early December, as part of a 60,000-ton supply deal with Swiss firm MRI Trading.

Operations at the Toledo mine, estimated to have deposits of 874 million tons of copper ore with an average grade of 0।41%, resumed in July last year after a 14-year hiatus due to lack of funding to repair damage caused by typhoons.

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Mayon activity escalates; lava fountains rise above crater

Mayon Volcano in Albay province has exhibited increased activity in the past 24 hours, with red hot lava continuously flowing down along three gullies and lava fountains rising above its crater, state volcanologists said on Monday.

In its 7 a.m. bulletin, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) also said booming and rumbling sounds were being heard since Sunday night, in what appears to be an imminent eruption.

"Red hot lava also continuously flowed down along the Bonga-Buyuan, Miisi and Lidong gullies. Lava fountains rising approximately 200 meters above the crater were observed…The lava front has now reached about five kilometers downslope from the summit along the Bonga-Buyuan gullies," it added.

Bonga, Buyuan, Miisi and Lidong are villages on the southeastern side of the volcano. In the last 24 hours, about 1,942 volcanic earthquakes were detected while the sulfur dioxide emission rate remained high at 6,089 tons per day. Audible booming and rumbling sounds were likewise reported in the eastern flank of the volcano on Sunday afternoon. Phivolcs said Alert Level 4 remains hoisted over Mayon Volcano, meaning a hazardous eruption is possible within days. Level 5 is when a major eruption has begun. See the complete table on the Phivolcs website. The cone-shaped volcano began emitting red-hot lava and puffing columns of ash last week. It belched a plume of grayish ash half a mile (nearly a kilometer) into the sky Sunday, and lava has flowed about 4.5 kilometers down the mountainside, said Albay Gov. Joey Salceda. A major eruption can trigger pyroclastic flows — superheated gas and volcanic debris that can race down the slopes at very high speed, vaporizing everything in their path. There can be more extensive ejections of ash, which can drift toward nearby townships. In Mayon's major eruptions in recent years, such pyroclastic flows have reached up to six kilometers down from the crater on the volcano's southern flank — a farming region where most residents have been evacuated as of Monday. Mayon last erupted in 2006, when about 30,000 people were moved. Another eruption in 1993 killed 79 people. The first recorded eruption was in 1616 but the most destructive came in 1814, killing more than 1,200 people and burying a town in volcanic mud. The ruins of the church in Cagsawa have become an iconic tourist spot. No need to suspend flights yet Despite the danger from Mayon’s impending eruption, Phivolcs director Renato Solidum Jr. said there was no need to suspend flights at Legazpi Airport in Albay, at least for now. "Wala naman, depende yan sa Civil Aviation Office (No, we’d leave that to the Civil Aviation Office)," he said on radio dzBB, when asked if Phivolcs would recommend the suspension of flights. He said the activity at Mayon is not significant enough to affect aircraft passing through Albay, at least for now.

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Cat-and-mouse game As of Monday morning, Salceda said a total of 9,217 families or 44,394 people from the municipalities of Camalig, Daraga, Malilipot, Sto. Domingo, Ligao, Guinobatan, and the cities of Legazpi and Tabaco have been evacuated since last week. Army troops and police have also intensified patrols to enforce a round-the-clock ban on villagers moving within an eight-kilometer danger zone around the 8,070-foot (2,460-meter) mountain, Salceda said. Army checkpoints have been set up and patrols have been intensified to ensure residents will not sneak back to check on their homes and farms, as some have done in recent days, he added. Salceda said residents are used to playing a "cat and mouse" game with Mayon, a popular tourist attraction because of its near-perfect cone shape. Residents who briefly returned to their homes within the danger zone Sunday morning to check on their belongings reported hearing eerie rumbling sounds. Some were seen by journalists tending to their farms within the prohibited zone near Guinobatan town. Among the residents forcibly evacuated by Army soldiers from Mayon’s danger zone were two elderly residents. Radio dzBB’s Allan Gatus reported the two, initially identified as Ananias Llobic, 82; and Jimmy Lloreta, 65, were unable to flee their homes due to their medical conditions. The report said Llobic was deaf and had difficulty walking, while Lloreta was a paralytic with high blood condition. The two were brought to an evacuation center aboard an ambulance.

Report from with a report from Sophia Dedace and AP/RSJ/NPA, GMANews.TV

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Comelec reopens voter's registration today

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) has started its extended voter's registration today (Dec. 21).

Comelec spokesman James Jimenez also urged first-time voter's who failed to register in the previous schedules to take advantage of the extension.

"We request registrants to bring the requirements, especially and ID with photo, for faster processing," Jimenez said.

Jimenez said he is optimistic that the reopening will be an opportunity for the more than one million people who have yet to register to be accounted for during the May 10,2010 national elections.

The poll body has slated the registration this year on Dec. 21, 22, 23, 28 and 29, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

The Supreme Court has ordered the Comelec to extend the voter's registration until Jan. 9, 2010. -

Report from By Dennis Carcamo

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Thursday, December 17, 2009

Comelec issues reso vs guns, goons on 2010 polls

The Commission on Elections (Comelec) has issued its resolution banning candidates and private individuals from carrying firearms and hiring bodyguards during the election period from January 10 to June 9, 2010.

“That equals it for everyone," Comelec spokesman James Jimenez told reporters on Thursday.

The resolution, promulgated last Wednesday, states that, “no person shall bear, carry, or transport firearms or other deadly weapons in public places," and that “no candidate for public office, including incumbent public officers seeking election to any public office, shall employ, avail himself of, or engage the services of security personnel or bodyguards."

Aside from the regular firearms and deadly weapons, also covered by the ban are air guns and replications, as well as bladed instruments, hand grenades, and other explosives except for fireworks.

Exempted from the ban on carrying firearms are members of the Philippine National Police (PNP), the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), and other law enforcement agencies, according to the resolution.

Workers who use bladed instruments in the practice of their profession will also not be covered by the prohibition, it added.

The poll body also ordered the suspension of the issuance of licenses for firearms during the election period.

Bodyguards are OK

The poll body, however, allowed candidates to have security escorts during the election period “when circumstances warrant" it and only upon application.

The escorts can be from the PNP, the AFP, or the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI).

Comelec said those interested in availing of the security detail must file a written application under oath indicating his full name, the public office he seeks to be elected, his residence, and the reasons or circumstances for the application. A filing fee of P5,000 will be collected from the applicant.

Candidates for congressional seats and local elective posts, as well as public officers or private individuals, may file their applications with the Regional Joint Security Control Desks while those seeking national elective positions shall file their applications with the Committee on the Ban on Firearms and Security Personnel (CBFSP).

The CBFSP will oversee the ban on firearms and security personnel. It will be chaired by poll body Commissioner Lucenito Tagle, with one one-star rank officer or equivalent, from the AFP and PNP, as members.

The same committee will refer the cases to the AFP and PNP, the agencies supposed to conduct a threat or security assessment. The two are expected submit their assessment to the CBFSP within five days.

If the application is granted, the CBFSP may authorize the PNP director general, AFP chief of staff, or NBI director to assign not more than two of its regular members as security personnel.

The Comelec, however, said that two more “protective agents" may still be assigned as close-in security “upon request and when the threat assessment warrants." “It’s a matter of how well they can justify it," added Jimenez.

But the poll body said that a security detail who is not wearing the authorized uniform but still opts to carry or transport firearms or other deadly weapons shall be considered unauthorized to carry such weapons and will be arrested.

Jimenez added that violation of the gun ban is an election offense, which entails a punishment of six months to one year imprisonment.
Report from KBK, GMANews.TV
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OFW deployment slightly up in November

The government's deployment of workers abroad has slightly increased in November, registering an 11.7 percent growth rate.

Figures from the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) showed that as of November this year, a total of 1,284,133 overseas Filipino workers have been deployed to different parts of the globe compared to 1,149,429 for the same period in previous year.

A total of 986,666 OFWs came from the land-based sector while a number of seafarers or sea-based workers account for 297,467.

POEA records also showed that the number of new hires for land-based OFWs was trimmed down to 320,508 this year from last year's 346,871.

However, POEA head Jennifer Manalili said the number of re-hires for the sector has improved from 559,809 last year to 666,158 this year.

“A positive employment growth would mean more opportunities for foreign workers,” Manalili told a press conference today at the POEA building in Mandaluyong City.

Saudi Arabia is still the top OFW destination with 900,127 OFWs as of October this year, while the United Arab Emirates came in second with 160,242 OFWs deployed in the same period.

Manalili is also optimistic that countries like Guam, Qatar, Singapore , Malaysia and Brunei will demand more foreign manpower next year.

Report from By Dennis Carcamo

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Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Home study starts for Maguindanao pupils Thursday

The Department of Education (DepEd) will start on Thursday a home study program for pupils in Maguindanao province affected by events there since the massacre of 57 people last Nov. 23.

Education Secretary Jesli Lapus said they would also send nurses and social workers to provide psychological stress debriefing for the students, who have to bear the stigma of the massacre and the government's declaration of martial in the province.

“Launch natin [ito] sa 17th, sa Huwebes, at paparoon ang team dala ang modules (We will launch this on Thursday. A team is on its way to Maguindanao with the modules)," Lapus said in an interview on dzXL radio.

He, however, admitted that there is no timetable yet on when schools in the province can reopen. He said there is still tension in the area, prompting parents to keep their children at home.

Classes in Maguindanao have been disrupted since the November 23 massacre. The subsequent declaration of martial law, which lasted for eight days from Dec. 4 to 12, worsened the situation.

Lapus said he had consulted with the DepEd central office’s Bureaus of Elementary and Secondary Education and Bureaus of Alternative Learning Systems, and Health and Nutrition on the matter.

In turn, they had met with their counterparts in the DepEd of Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) and Maguindanao.

“Sila [ay] tuwang tuwa sa ating mga inaalok sa kanila, na magdadala tayo ng home study modules (They were happy that we will train them to use the home study modules)," he said.

Report from KBK, GMANews.TV

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Metro security tightened as Misa de Gallo starts

Filipino faithful flocked to churches early dawn of Wednesday for the first of nine Simbang Gabi--literally "night mass" but actually held during dawn hours--amid increased police visibility in Metro Manila.

According to a report by radio station dzBB, Metro Manila police chief Director Roberto Rosales ordered the deployment of 10,000 personnel to keep watch over churches in the next nine days before Christmas.

Church bells pealed as early as 2 a.m. as Filipinos woke up early to hear the traditional dawn mass, also called Misa de Gallo, in the belief their wishes would be granted if they complete the nine masses.

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Rosales particularly ordered strict security on churches with large devotee followings, including those in Baclaran and Quiapo, as well on churches near Malacañang, including the churches of St. Jude and St. Michael.

Likewise secured were the Santo Niño Church in Manila's Tondo district, the Santo Domingo Church in Quezon City, and the Manila Cathedral just across the Commission on Elections office.

In eastern Metro Manila, police also kept tight watch on churches in the cities of Pasig, Marikina, Mandaluyong and San Juan.

Similarly, dzBB reported that the police are guarding against snatchers and thieves in night markets in Manila.

With more than an million shoppers visiting the markets in Divisoria during the Christmas season, Manila Police District (MPD) station 11 head Superintendent Nelson Yabut said the "Salisi" and swindling gangs are able mingle with the crowd and do criminal acts undetected.

The MPD is also coordinating with the Trade Department to look out for unscrupulous traders selling substandard Christmas lights and expired food items.

Report fromJerrie M. Abella/JV, GMANews.TV

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Quezon City judges volunteer to try Ampatuan cases

Judges of the Quezon City Regional Trial Court assured Chief Justice Reynato Puno yesterday that they were ready to handle the trial of Datu Unsay Mayor Andal Ampatuan Jr. for the Maguindanao massacre.

The judges gave the assurance after Judge Luisito Cortez of the RTC’s Branch 84 expressed fears for his family’s safety and backed out from handling the case.

Lawyer Gleo Guerra, Supreme Court deputy spokesperson, said there were judges in the QC RTC who were willing to handle the case and volunteered to be assigned to it.

Puno declined their offer because he wanted to follow the rule on raffling off cases after the SC allowed Cortez to inhibit himself from the 25 counts of murder filed against Ampatuan.

Fifty-seven people, including 30 journalists, were butchered in Ampatuan town in Maguindanao last Nov. 23.

Puno met yesterday with Cortez and the 22 other QC judges at the Quezon City Hall of Justice and ordered another raffle of the case at 2 p.m. today.

Puno told the judges during the meeting that the one picked in the second raffle will no longer be allowed to immediately inhibit.

“As I said to the judges, this is not only a challenge but also an opportunity for the judiciary to vindicate the trust of the people in our own system of justice,” Puno said.

“The Court allowed Judge Cortez to inhibit from handling the case, but it doesn’t mean that the Court accepted his reasons for inhibiting. It only means that the Court allowed the inhibition in the best interest of justice and so that the case would move forward,” Guerra explained.

She also hinted the possibility of the SC to consider the administrative liability of Cortez for refusing to accept the case assigned to him.

Cortez has reportedly cited security reasons in inhibiting himself from the murder case filed against Mayor Ampatuan and the other suspects.

He was quoted in radio reports saying he fears for the safety of his family and staff. “What is glory without a family,” he said.

Another job

Justice Secretary Agnes Devanadera earlier sought the transfer of the case from Cotabato City to Quezon City after she complained of the inaction of the local courts in Maguindanao.

She dared Cortez to just look for another job if the reason for his inhibition was just fear of the powerful Ampatuan clan.

“If I were him (Judge Cortez), I would look for another job because I easily get frightened. That is unacceptable,” she said.

She stressed that the inhibition of Cortez only proved her claim that courts in Maguindanao were not functioning well to handle the massacre case.

“This is what I mean there is really problem with the courts. This is in Manila already, so you can imagine how judges in the province felt about this case,” she added.

She added that she would not file an administrative complaint against Cortez and will just leave the issue up to the SC.

Press Secretary Cerge Remonde said that the security problems of Judge Cortez now is the same concern experienced by the judges and court personnel of Maguindanao before martial law was imposed in the province.

“Now you see this judge of Quezon City in Metro Manila who doesn’t want to handle the case. He’s already in Metro Manila and yet he’s still afraid,” Remonde said.

“This should really prove to everybody what we have been saying for the longest time, that many are afraid of handling this case,” he added.

Cortez said that he inhibited himself from the case because of possible threats to his family.

“I would like to serve but there are other factors like family. I will explain my side to the Supreme Court,” he said referring to the possible administrative charges he will face in declining the case.

Cortez also reasoned out that he is currently handling 800 cases including the 2006 murder in Quezon City of Abra Rep. Luis Bersamin whose main suspect is former Abra Gov. Vicente Valera.

The 25 counts of murder initially filed against Mayor Ampatuan were raffled off last Tuesday and landed in the sala of Judge Cortez of Branch 84.

Mayor Ampatuan is now detained at the National Bureau of Investigation in Manila after he was taken into custody last Nov. 26, three days after the massacre.

The incident resulted to the killing of 57 people, including the wife of Vice Mayor Esmael “Toto” Mangudadatu of Buluan, Maguindanao and two of his sisters, two female lawyers and 30 mediamen who covered the supposed filing of certificate of candidacy of the vice mayor who is running for governor of Maguindanao to challenge a scion of the Ampatuan clan.

The Mangudadatus have blamed the Ampatuans for the incident, specifically pointing to Andal Jr. as the leaders of more than 100 armed men who abducted Mangudadatu’s supporters.

The Ampatuan family has denied any involvement in the killings.

President Arroyo declared martial law last Dec. 5 over Maguindanao to quell what security officials claimed was an ongoing rebellion in the province allegedly staged by the supporters of the Ampatuan clan implicated in the gruesome massacre.

Just hours after Mrs. Arroyo signed Proclamation 1959, government troops arrested clan patriarch former Maguindanao Gov. Andal Ampatuan Sr. and his sons ARMM Gov. Zaldy Ampatuan, acting Maguindanao Gov. Sajid, Maguindanao Vice Gov. Akmad Ampatuan, Shariff Aguak Mayor Anwar Ampatuan, and Sangguniang Bayan member Cahoner Ampatuan. They were held for questioning for their alleged involvement in the massacre of 57 in Ampatuan town in Maguindanao.

Military and police units also seized high-powered guns, crew-served weapons, and assorted ammunition from several compounds owned by the Ampatuans.

The 70-year-old clan patriarch Andal Sr. was later indicted for rebellion in a Cotabato City court, along with 23 other clan members that included ARMM Gov. Ampatuan. Charges were also filed against more than 600 other followers of the Ampatuans.

The NBI will also file at the Department of Justice multiple murder charges against several other members of the Ampatuan clan.

President Arroyo lifted martial law in Maguindanao last Dec. 12; one week after military rule was declared.

The Supreme Court transferred the trial to Quezon City following security concerns over a high-profile trial in Cotabato City.

Court officials said that as soon as a new judge will be chosen in the raffle the arraignment would be scheduled in seven working days.

The hearing of the case would be held inside the Philippine National Police headquarters in Camp Crame, Quezon City to guarantee the security of court officers and witnesses in the case.

Meanwhile, former defense secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr., standard-bearer of the Lakas-Kampi-CMD, vowed to help the families of the 57 victims of the massacre to attain justice, following the refusal of the QC judge to handle the case,

“If we can’t give them justice, then forget about being country, forget that we are a nation,” Teodoro told a consultative meeting with local officials and residents in Buluan, Maguindanao.

Teodoro flew to General Santos City from Manila and went to the Buluan town hall meeting.

“Again we go back to the need to enforce the law,” he said. “Once we have peace and security firmly in place, development and prosperity will naturally follow.”

Bangon Pilipinas presidential candidate Brother Eddie Villanueva said Cortez should resign for abandoning his duty when he refused to handle the trial of the Maguindanao massacre due to security concerns.

“Judges are supposed to be credible and unafraid to perform their duties. Judge Luisito Cortez might as well resign now that apparently he himself does not trust our own systems,” Villanueva said.

Senators hit QC judge

Senators slammed Judge Cortez for refusing to handle the Maguindanao massacre case.

Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile said it was an act of cowardice.

“Kaduwagan yun (that’s cowardice). That’s the duty of the judge. If a case is raffled to him he has to handle it. If he cannot handle it, then he has to get the hell out of that (profession),” Enrile said.

Enrile added that the entire resources of government could help Cortez if he needed extra security for himself and his family.

Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago said that when she once served as a QC judge, she already accepted that the danger in her life comes with the territory.

“I feared for the safety of myself or my public enemy so I just went on. And I think that should be the attitude of every judge. You just have to go and discharge your duty, you applied for the post or at least accepted your appointment so you have to take the good or the bad,” Santiago said.

Santiago said every judge should exhibit strength and political will in doing their job.

A judge usually inhibits when one of the litigants or the lawyers are related to him or if he is severely ill and he asks for a paired judge.

Santiago added that “it’s very, very rare” for a judge to inhibit himself on the ground that his physical safety and those of his immediate family are in danger.

Senate Minority Leader Aquilino Pimentel said he was “so disgusted” by the attitude of Cortez.

“I think he should be sanctioned by the courts because to my mind that is a dereliction of duty। That should not be the case especially since there was an offer to provide adequate security. Di dapat nasa judiciary siya. I think the SC should take action, whatever appropriate sanction, should be imposed on him,” Pimentel said.

Report formWith Christina Mendez, Perseus Echeminada, Marvin Sy, Nonong Baliao - By Edu Punay (Philstar News Service, www।philstar.com)

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