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Showing posts with label Philippines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philippines. Show all posts

Sunday, December 18, 2011

At least 436 dead after storm pummels Philippines

Manila, Philippines (CNN) -- At least 436 people are dead after Tropical Storm Washi pummeled the Philippines, Red Cross Secretary General Gwen Pang said Saturday.
The vast majority of the bodies were found in the cities of Iligan and Cagayan de Oro, according to military officials and the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council. Five people were killed in a landslide, but all others died in flash flooding.

The provinces of Compostela Valley and Zamboanga del Norte were also hit, added Benito Ramos, chairman of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.

About 400 people remain missing after the storm, which is called Sendong locally. More than 2,000 have been rescued, the country's military reported.

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin said officials are investigating reports that an entire village was swept away.

Authorities have also begun distributing food rations for some 10,000 families affected by the storm, while also handing out thousands of blankets and mosquito nets, the Red Cross reported Saturday.

Flash flooding overnight -- following 10 hours of rain -- fueled the devastation, compounded by overflowing rivers and tributaries. As much as 20 centimeters (8 inches) of rain fell within 24 hours in some areas.

Ramos said despite government warning, some did not evacuate.

An estimated 100,000 people are displaced, according to the Department of Social Welfare and Development.
At least 20,000 people were staying in 10 evacuation centers in Cagayan de Oro, Social Welfare Secretary Dinky Soliman said Saturday.

Some 20,000 soldiers embarked on search-and-rescue operations, the military said.

Officials asked for volunteers to pack food to send to those displaced.

Though Washi was headed away from the Philippines on Saturday, trouble could loom for Vietnam, as the storm's westerly path could cross Ho Chi Minh City on Tuesday.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Shamcey Supsup is on the Cover of Metro

Shamcey Supsup, Miss Universe 2011 3rd runner-up, is on the cover of METRO Magazine’s November 2011 issue.




Aside from the cover story “Sparkle and Shine: Shamcey Supsup Reigns Supreme,” other topics inside this issue include “Holiday Fashion Survival Guide,” “230 Gift Ideas: Trends to Wear, Beauty Products to Try and Destinations to Visit,” and “Best of What’s New: What You Need to Know Now and a Look at What’s Next”.

Metro Magazine November 2011 issue is now available nationwide wherever magazines are sold.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Suspect in slaying of Charice's father surrenders

Three days after he started evading the police, the suspected killer of international singing sensation Charice's father, Ricky Pempengco, has surrendered to the authorities.

ANC posted on its account (@ancalerts) that Angel "Capili Jr, the suspect is now being brought to Camp Crame to be turned over to Laguna PNP which has jurisdiction over the case."
Pempengco, who allegedly had an altercation with Capili, was stabbed to death Monday in San Pedro, Laguna.

On Wednesday, the authorities raised the reward to P200,000 from P100,000 for anyone who could give information that would lead to the arrest of the suspect.

In a report by “Umagang Kay Ganda (UKG),” the Pempengco family has opened the wake to the public from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m at the Divine Mercy Chapel, Muntinlupa City. First to visit were Charice’s fans collectively known as “Chasters" who condoled with their internationally-acclaimed idol.

One of them was Kenji Chua who told “UH” that, “Lahat ng Chaster, nagkaisa ngayon para makiramay sa pagdadalamhati ng pamilyang Pempengco especially kay Charice at kay Mommy Raquel.”

Pempengco will be laid to rest in the afternoon of Nov. 5 at the Pasture of Heaven Memorial Park in Cabuyao, Laguna.

‘Forgive my husband’

In an abs-cbnNEWS.com report on Nov. 2, Capili’s wife, Wilma appealed to Charice and the Pempengco family to forgive her husband.

"Patawarin niyo po sana kung ano man ang nagawa ng asawa ko. Kapag sumuko na asawa ko sana hindi niyo hatulan ng kung anong kalaki-laking...isusuko ko rin yun kapag nagkaroon ng komunikasyon. Patawarin nyo na po. Alam ko pong masakit ang nangyari sa ama niyo. Huwag niyo naman i-shoot to kill ang gawin sa asawa ko, susuko rin po yun, di naman mamatay tao yun eh," said she.

The suspect’s wife insisted that her husband is a good person and that there may be a probability that he wasn’t the one who started the alleged fist fight which led to the killing of Pempengco.

"Baka ho naunahan lang ho yun. Baka di naman siya totally ang nanguna. Di ba ho kung kayo ang naunahan, di ba ho kayo gaganti?" she asked.

She said she has yet to talk to her husband.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Charice's father stabbed to death

Ricky Pempengco, who is separated from Charice's mom, Raquel, was stabbed in A. Bonifacio Road, Barangay Laram, San Pedro, Laguna.
Charice and father Ricky Pempengco

A police report said Pempengco was in a drinking session and then left to buy a cigarette.

The suspect, Angel Capili Jr., approached him and stabbed him with an ice pick.

Pempengco was able to walk away and then sit on a pavement, but the suspect went back for him and stabbed him again.

The 12-inch ice pick pierced through Pempengco's body, killing him. The suspect quickly left the scene.

Authorities said Pempengco might have survived the stabbing had barangay officials been able to rush him to the hospital.

Pempengco's drinking buddies didn't help him since they were afraid of getting hurt.

Police said that in 2005, Pempengco quarreled with Capili.

Raquel cries over estranged husband's death

Charice's mother burst into tears after she found out that her children's biological father was killed in a stabbing incident.

In an exclusive interview with abs-cbnNEWS.com, Raquel said she had been unaware of Ricky's death.

She said Charice still does not know about the tragedy.

"Hindi ko alam. Hindi ko alam ang nangyari. Si Charice, hindi pa din niya alam," said Raquel, crying.

Asked if she will go to Ricky's wake, Raquel said: "Hindi ko pa talaga alam, nabigla kami."

Troubled marriage

Ricky was once described by Raquel as a violent husband. She also has a son Carl by Ricky.

Raquel left Ricky years ago, bringing along her kids.

Raquel said she had not communicated with Ricky for a long time.

"Hindi kami nagkausap at wala kaming koneksyon," she said.

Asked if she has already forgiven him, Raquel replied: "Matagal ko na siyang napatawad."

"Kung bakit masakit pa din sa akin at kung mayroon pa din bang love para sa kanya, siyempre ama siya ng mga anak ko," she added.

In 2008, a drama about Charice's life was shown on Maalaala Mo Kaya's episode "Ice Cream."

Friday, October 28, 2011

Maasinhon Trio takes on controversies

MANILA, Philippines – Less than a week after being declared “Pilipinas Got Talent 3” winners, Andrew Sanchez, Licinio Lolo and Bonifacio Salubre a.k.a.the Maasinhon Trio find themselves at the receiving end of criticisms.
Asked to address this issue, Lolo told Bulletin Entertainment and other members of the media in an interview on Thursday, “Para sa amin, siguro opinyon nila yun. Sa amin naman, kasi marami namang sumusuporta sa amin. Alam namin ‘yon. Kasi sa amin alam namin na todo-suporta ang mga tao sa amin [sa Southern Leyte].” He also maintained, “yung 12 finalists po [ay] deserving lahat yun eh.”
For his part, Salubre said, “Sa ‘min lang yung feeling namin siguro [yung mga nag-comment against us ay] mga supporters ‘to sa kabila.”
On people’s comment that “PGT” should change their title to “Pilipinas Got Singing Talent” – given that singers have been declared from the first season up to now – Lolo replied, laughing, “Hindi naman namin kasalanan yun eh.”
Also present during the interview was business unit head for TV production Alou Almaden, who stressed that "PGT" winners have always been determined by the most number of text and online votes.
“We didn’t miss naman on reminding the people it’s texting and online voting. The grand winner will be based on the total number of text votes. Every gap yun eh, the hosts and the judges [say it]. So it’s really up to the public. If they favor somebody, they really just have to vote,” she said, adding that she’s “proud” of all the finalists.
“So it’s really up to the public, the voting public, kasi may ‘public’ na magco-comment lang eh pero hindi naman boboto ‘di ba? Sinong gusto niyong ilagay? Saka it’s the rule eh worldwide. Nobody’s exempted, no country is exempted to that rule na text and online [voting] lang talaga ‘to.
“So given all these elements, yung public talaga… kailangang irespeto eh, ‘di ba, whatever the outcome is,” Almaden explained.
In another part of the interview, she mentioned, “But again it’s not enough that you comment or you scream. You have to vote.”
The TV exec also offered her personal take on the “Pilipinas Got Singing Talent” comment.
“Kasi ang Pinoy… when we talk of talent kasi sa Pilipinas, mostly singing eh ‘di ba? Kasi how do we compare dun sa mga acrobats, sa mga gymnastics… Aminin ko talaga what the other contestants did na non-singing, talagang amaze na amaze ako. And they’re not professionals,” said she, but also opined that the talent of Filipinos in other aspects are evolving.
“Kasi yung industriya, ano nga naman ang venue for other talents outside singing or acting? Wala tayong masyadong venue eh,” she added.
On the same evening of the “PGT 3” finals night, one of its hosts Luis Manzano posted on his Twitter account that finalist El Gamma Penumbre “will always be my grand winner fr[om] season 3.” Asked to react on this, Almaden said, “As a unit head, probably I would not have agreed [with what Luis did], pero he has always been like that. He has been consistent from day one, very outspoken talaga.
“Again ano, for everyone who made their comments on social networks or kung saan man, I respect all your comments and all your take. Even that of Luis, probably. Pero kasi Twitter is a personal ano rin naman talaga eh. And Luis, from day one [and] even long before ‘PGT,’ talaga namang nagga-ganyan siya eh. Personality na niya yun,” she explained.
The Maasinhon Trio are also being compared to the APO Hiking Society, but Salubre said, “Iba sila eh. Talagang magagaling sila.”
Lolo shared this sentiment, adding, "Siguro kasi trio [rin] naman kami eh. Kaya na-compare kami. Pero ang APO, para sa amin, idol na idol namin sila. Talented talaga [sila].”
The Maasinhon Trio are set to return on Monday to Leyte where a victory party will be held to celebrate their triumph. Almaden said that part of the trio’s contact is to make an album, but she’s yet to discuss this aspect with Sony Music. Sony apparently handles all the winners of the "Got Talent" franchise.
Meanwhile, the trio expressed willingness to settle in Manila for good should the opportunity to further their singing career here arises.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Superman idolization of Herbert Chavez






Photos taken by Reuters Cheryl Ravelo

These are snapshots of the cosmetic transformation  of Herbert Chavez, a pageant trainer and a  custome store owner somewhere in Calamba Laguna, South of Manila, Philippines whose idolization and obsession of the famous comic book and movie character SUPERMAN turns himself  to look most likely the "Man of Steel".

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Philippine colleges, universities protest budget cut

Philippine students of state universities and colleges (SUCs) led by the University of thePhilippines (UP) on Friday walked out of their classes and conducted protest actions in Luzon and the Visayas against cuts in subsidy.

“UP is a state university and cutting its allocation can be considered abandonment. That is why we are staging this strike,” said Mark Simbajon, spokesperson of the League of Filipino Students (LFS) in Tacloban City.

In Baguio City, about 600 students and teachers of UP Baguio blocked the noon traffic for 10 minutes by lying in the middle of Session Road.

The protesters, representing almost 40 percent of the UP Baguio population, were led by three college deans and professors.

At the Don Chino Roces (formerly Mendiola) Bridge in Manila, more than 1,000 students staged what they called “a historic show of rage.”

The students were from UP Diliman, Polytechnic University of the Philippines (PUP), Eulogio “Amang” Rodriguez Institute of Science and Technology, and Philippine Normal University.

They were joined by members of LFS, College Editors Guild of the Philippines; the party-list groups Anakpawis, Bayan Muna Alliance of Concerned Teachers and Gabriela; and the labor alliance Kilusang Mayo Uno.

“This day is the culmination of the weeklong … protest activities against the social services cutback. The 146-million-peso (US$3.35 million) cut on the budget for [SUCs] will lead to higher tuition rates and bloated miscellaneous fees, making education a privilege exclusive to those who can afford [it],” Vencer Crisostomo, spokesperson of Kilos na Laban sa Budget Cuts, said in a statement.

Crisostomo warned that the congressmen passed the budget “like a thief in the night” when everyone was asleep, and that the Senate was sure to do the same.

Standstill in quality

As the students held their protest actions, the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) expressed support for calls to raise the budget for public tertiary education, saying the proposed 2012 allocation would serve only as a “survival budget.”

CHEd Executive Director Julito Vitriolo said SUCs would be unable to afford “ambitious projects” to raise their quality on the proposed 26.1-billion-peso budget for some 110 schools.

“Because there is no dramatic increase in the subsidy, there is a standstill in quality… It is only enough for their subsistence,” Vitriolo told the Inquirer.

“The budget is just to maintain a certain level. It’s not even a development budget. It’s a survival budget. It’s not the kind of budget that could dramatically improve [the quality of education in SUCs],” he said.

The Department of Budget and Management (DBM) had said the proposed budget for SUCs was already higher by 10.1 percent from the current year’s 23.7 billion peso.

Budget Secretary Florencio Abad said the Aquino administration had raised the aggregate budget for SUCs from 23.7 billion peso in 2011 to 26.1 billion peso in 2012.

Abad said this amount included 23.6 billion peso, inclusive of automatic appropriations itemized per SUC, a standby fund of more than 2 billion peso under the Miscellaneous and Personnel Benefit Funds for unfilled positions in SUCs, and an additional 500 million peso under the CHEd for SUC development.

The 26.1-billion-peso proposal is still facing deliberations in Congress.

Barely half the need

But Rep. Raymond Palatino of the party-list group Kabataan said the proposal was at 21.8 billion peso, or barely half of what SUCs actually required for effective operations in 2012.

The National Union of Students of the Philippines (NUSP) said roughly 50 SUCs would suffer cuts of up to 569.8 million peso under the 2012 budget, per its estimates.

For instance, NUSP said, Malacañang’s proposed 5.54-billion-peso budget for UP in 2012, already higher than this year’s 1.39 billion peso, was still far from the estimated 18 billion peso that the UP system would need to properly run its campuses nationwide.

As for PUP, its proposed 737-million-peso budget is less than half the 2 billion peso it would need to educate some 65,000 students across the country, NUSP said.

Estimating that SUCs should receive a total of 45.8 billion peso in 2012, Palatino filed this week a petition at the House of Representatives’ committee on appropriations seeking a 24-billion-peso raise in the tertiary education budget.

Budget pie limited

Cuts in subsidy come amid increasing enrollment in public tertiary schools, a trend CHEd has observed in recent years as students move to state schools with the rising cost of tuition in private institutions.

“We support the call of members of Congress, the House of Representatives, lobbying for increase in the budget. But to get it, we’ll have to go through the bicameral committee,” CHEd’s Vitriolo said.

“The [budget] pie is limited to a certain size and more and more schools are sharing it… Enrollment is increasing but the size of the pie remains the same so the budget is diluted,” he said.

The London-based research and ratings firm Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) recently released its world university rankings, where no Philippine school made the top 300.

Only four schools—UP, Ateneo de Manila, De La Salle University and the University of Santo Tomas—barely made it to the top 600 list. NO SUC save for UP made the list as QS noted the declining state spending on education.

Cause for alarm

“What’s a bit alarming is that, for instance, in the case of UP, they want to pursue projects to be able to compete in the world rankings [of top universities], but they cannot pursue ambitious projects with limited funds,” Vitriolo said.

He said the budget for SUCs was calculated based on the principle of “normative financing,” where spending priority was given to performing schools while cuts in the operating budget were made on underperforming schools.

“It’s performance-based. So it depends on your research output, enrollment, passing rate in licensure exams,” Vitriolo said.

He said plans were underway to rationalize the system of tertiary education, such as the “clustering and amalgamation” of SUCs in certain regions with a number of institutions offering the same courses.

He said schools in northern Luzon, the Cordillera Administrative Region and Northern Mindanao were already “warm to the idea” of amalgamation, which aims to more efficiently distribute and maximize limited state subsidy.

3 times higher

Prof. Celia Austria of UP Baguio’s College of Science said the deans were backing the protest action owing to a statement earlier made by UP president Alfredo Pascual that while the cuts in the proposed 2012 UP budget appeared deep on paper, what the DBM had removed from the allocation was three times higher.

Austria said UP Baguio was able to squeeze funds from savings when contractors were hired for unfilled positions. “Contractors are paid less, so what is saved from the salary allotted for their positions is realigned to pay for operational costs. But the DBM under Budget Secretary Abad does not even allow this practice,” she said.

At UP Los Baños in Laguna province, around 500 students, teachers and university employees joined the protest rally, according to Ma. Cristina Madeja, chair of the student group Sakbayan.

Humanities instructor Laurence Castillo, 21, said he took part in the rally.

“Some teachers dismissed their classes so the students could join the protest,” Castillo said. “We in the academic union support the call for a higher state subsidy for education. [Budget cuts] may mean lower benefits for us but the students suffer more because these may mean higher tuition for them.”

The UPLB students held a program while around 100 of them joined the mass “planking” in front of the Oblation statue.

They also burned a makeshift coffin symbolizing “that Philippine education has died,” Madeja said.

Shifting the burden

In the Visayas, over 1,000 students of UP Tacloban also marched on the city streets to protest the cuts in the SUC budget.

Around 600 students of UP Visayas, Western Visayas State University (WVSU), and Western Visayas Colleges of Science and Technology marched from their campuses and converged at the Iloilo Capitol grounds for a rally.

They were backed by school administrators and employees.

“We decry [President] Aquino’s shifting of the burden of subsidizing education from the government to the students and their families,” said Krisma Nina Porquia, officer of the WVSU Student Council.

“By gradually reducing the budget for SUCs, his government compels school administrations to implement austerity measures and tuition and other fee increases,” she said.

But Abad said in a statement: “Clearly, the state subsidy for SUCs is higher next year. But more important than the increase, this proposed budget supports the development of SUCs as responsive to the government’s five priority areas for growth and employment.”

He said these priority areas were agriculture and fisheries, tourism, general infrastructure, semiconductors and electronics, and business process outsourcing.

Abad said Mr. Aquino had directed CHEd “to work together” with SUCs, the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority and the labor department “to align their curricula to these priority areas.”

“There is an immense opportunity in these areas but they are lacking in qualified manpower,” he said.



Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Douthit leads a successful and spirited Filipino rally


WUHAN, China (26th FIBA Asia Championship): Naturalized center Marcus Douthit raised the bar of his performance to the next level in the second half, and with the ‘just cleared’ Marcio Lassiter playing a very good second fiddle, Philippines rallied from a first half stutter to beat Jordan 72-64 in a pivotal Group F game on Monday.
Jordan ran the floor, and rolled the dice, for the entire first half and even seemed to head towards what would have been an unsurprising victory.
Sam Daghlas (white jersey in pic above) shelved all doubts about his injury and led the Jordanian offense from the front with 9 points in the first quarter, but would go on to add only as many over the next three quarters.
Douthit (blue jersey in pic above) on the other had rose in performance and confidence as the game progressed.
The 211-cm Providence alumnus who had merely 4 rebounds and as many points in the first half, went on to lead the game in scoring – with 19 points – and rebounds – with 15 collections.
The form, or the lack of it, of these two players was a synopsis of the way the pendulum swung in the game.
“I think we showed a lot of character,” said Philippines guard Chris Tiu, who dished out a game-high 4 assists.
Philippines’ cause received a shot in the arm, when Lassiter – along with Chris Lutz – was cleared to don the Filipino colors.
The 188-cm guard made his appearance at the start of the second quarter, and went on to score 14 points – six of them in the third quarter, when Philippines began their rally.
“I think this was the biggest win of life, considering the circumstances,” said Philippines coach Rajko Toroman.
“We are not mentally as tough as we have to be,” rued Jordan coach Tab Baldwin.
“I know I am saying this for the second game on the trot, but then that is what it is,” he added.
“We didn’t what we had to on Marcus. In the first half managed to keep him under check, but we lost the grip as the game went on,” Baldwin said.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Philippines catches 'largest crocodile on record'

MANILA, Philippines - A monster 21-foot (6.4-meter) saltwater crocodile, believed to be the biggest ever captured, has been trapped in the southern Philippines after a spate of fatal attacks, officials said Tuesday.
The 1,075-kilogram (2,370-pound) male is suspected of eating a farmer who went missing in July in the town of Bunawan, Agusan del sur Province and of killing a 12-year-old girl whose head was bitten off two years ago, crocodile hunter Rollie Sumiller said.
The hunter examined the crocodile's stomach contents by forcing it to vomit after it was captured Saturday, but there was no trace of human remains or of several water buffaloes also reported missing by locals.
"The community was relieved," Sumiller said of the capture, but added: "We're not really sure if this is the man-eater, because there have been other sightings of other crocodiles in the area."
The local government of the impoverished town of 30,000 people has decided against putting down the reptile, and will instead build a nature park where it will go on display.
Josefina de Leon, wildlife division chief at the Philippines environment ministry, said the beast was likely the biggest crocodile ever captured anywhere in the world.
"Based on existing records the largest that had been captured previously was 5.48 metres long," she told AFP.
The Philippine specimen would easily dwarf the largest captive saltwater crocodile, which the Guinness World Records website lists as Cassius, a 5.48-meter (18-foot) male which lives at an Australian nature park.
Press reports also describe other huge crocs including a 6.2-meter (20.3-foot) adult male killed in Papua New Guinea in 1982 that was measured after it was skinned.
The Bunawan hunting team, employed by a government-run crocodile breeding farm, began laying bait using chicken, pork and dog meat on August 15 in an attempt to snare the beast.
But the reptile, which measured 3 feet (0.91 meters) across its back, simply bit off both the meat and the line it was skewered on.
A heavy metal cable finally proved beyond the power of its jaws, and the beast was subdued in a creek late Saturday with the help of about 30 local men.
It was the team's second attempt after a failed expedition launched in response to the fatal 2009 attack.
Beyond the mark of the hook inside its upper jaw, the crocodile did not appear to have sustained any serious injuries, Sumiller said.
Bunawan Mayor Edwin Cox Elorde said the government would build a nature park showcasing the giant crocodile and other species found in the vast marshland on the upper reaches of the massive Agusan river basin on Mindanao island.
"It will be the biggest star of the park," Elorde told reporters.
Sumiller said the plan was the best option available for the creature.
"He's a problem crocodile that needs to be taken from the wild... and used for eco-tourism," he said.
Crocodylus porosus, or the estuarine crocodile, is the world's largest reptile. It grows to 5 or 6 meters in length and can live up to 100 years.
While not considered an endangered species globally, it is "critically endangered" in the Philippines, where it is hunted for its hide which is used in the fashion industry, de Leon said.
"There have been very few sightings of porosus in the wild in the Philippines in recent years," she added.
In July, a saltwater crocodile measuring almost 14 feet (4.2 meters) was caught on the western Philippine island of Palawan after it killed a man.