Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Call DYAB Absolutely FREE

DYAB AM is the only radio station in the Philippines which you can call from anywhere in the world absolutely free.  Thanks to DB Edwards' VOIP technology through iNTouch, you can call us from 4 a.m. to 12 midnight (Philippine time), Mondays to Fridays.  All you need is a headset.
 
You can greet your Kapamilyas in Cebu and the Visayas and Mindanao over the AM radio station of ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corp. in Cebu Philippines .  You can also use our Internet Phone to air public service announcements for your families and friends in the Philippines.
 
Or you can tell us situationers/updates/comments about major news events in your place of work or urgent concerns of Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs).  Let DYAB AM serve as your bridge to government agencies which can help you or your loved ones, like the Dept. of Foreign Affairs (DFA), Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA), Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA), the Office of the President, local government units (LGUs) and private employment and placement agencies.
 
Bawat Pinoy Kapamilya.
 
Tawag Na!

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Quit Smoking


Xinhua
Study Details Impact of Reducing Smoking on Lung Cancer
Voice of America
By David McAlary. Danish doctors report that a heavy smoker who cuts back can lower his or her risk of lung cancer. But they say the risk reduction is not as great as you might think. Still, this may be the best that some smokers can achieve. ...
Veggies, fruit may ward off lung cancer Newsday
Smokers Who Cut Down Trim Lung-Cancer Risk ABC News
Houston Chronicle - CNN - News-Medical.net - Daily Mail - UK - all 134 related »

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

Moral Outrage

Politics and morality cannot be divorced

Inquirer News Service

THE just-concluded impeachment proceedings against Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo highlighted the assumption that this process is political and not moral -- a numbers game, wherein the majority, right or wrong, prevails.

I submit that this "fragmented mindset" -- wherein human activity in economics, politics, business, education, etc. is divorced from ethics, morals and values -- has resulted precisely in our fragmented society today. It is the root cause of most of the problems of the human condition in general, and of our country in particular.

Business and economics without values and ethics result in poverty, alienation and human degradation. In fact, postmodern business and economic theory states that business and economic success rests more on complementation and cooperation, rather than on ruthless competition; and that the more moral and ethical one is in his or her business practice, the more successful he or she will become. The world's biggest and most successful companies have learned this -- many of them, the hard way.

Education likewise is fast learning that true education is more of formation, rather than information; and that facts and technology are better learned and used if they are taught in the context of values and morality -- in the seamless integration of technology and values. For in truth, education is what is left behind, after one has forgotten everything that he or she memorized in class.

The same is true with politics. Edsa People Power I and II -- against Ferdinand Marcos and Joseph Estrada -- is really the result of the outpouring of moral outrage against two presidents who divorced politics from its moorings on morals and values. And the tangible taste of incompleteness and lack of closure in the Arroyo impeachment case is again another example of politics bereft of morality. President Arroyo and her majority allies have to realize that they can only be successful politically if they practice politics within the context of morals and values.

For, indeed, there is only one "Reality," albeit with two dimensions -- the interior and the exterior; or spirituality and economics; or moral values and politics; or ethics and business; or morals and praxis. And that any attempt to improve the human condition will have better chances of success if it involves the seamless integration of these two dimensions of one and the same Reality. We can only be reconciled as a nation if politics is practiced in the context of values and morality.


SAMUEL J. YAP, 118 Granada, San Antonio Heights, Sto. Tomas, Batangas

Saturday, August 06, 2005

Poor Saudi

Commentary : Another crossroad for Saudi Arabia?

Mai Yamani
Inquirer News Service

SAUDI Arabia's decade-long, royal death watch is over. King Fahd, the longest-serving king in Saudi Arabia's history (24 years), is dead. For six weeks, the King lay in a hospital fighting death-something he has been doing, in reality, ever since he suffered a massive stroke 10 years ago. The identity of the new king is clear, but not of the one who will really wield power.

As the political underlings of Marshal Tito felt when he was dying in a divided Yugoslavia, the King's royal relations (also his political underlings) feared that the ruler's death would unleash chaos. And his death came at a time when the wider Middle East is abuzz with talk of democratic change. From Egypt to Lebanon to Iran, political passions are mounting, along with a renewed optimism. Street demonstrations, elections and political debate in cafes and on the Internet are flowering as never before. Even the conservative states of the Arabian Peninsula are embroiled in lively disputes about women ministers, Shia representation, Islamist participation in the political process, and even the future of their ruling monarchies. In these dynamic circumstances, Saudi Arabia stands out.

Indeed, Saudi Arabia seems trapped in a state of suspended animation, its body politic sick and infirm. The country is caught between two choices: progressive reform or continuing paralysis and decay.

Divisions in the kingdom are sharper than ever, and the King's death might deepen them further. Two rival camps-the so-called reformers and the hard liners-are forming in the Al Saud, the world's largest ruling family, with 22,000 princes and princesses.

The reformers have less authority but are the acceptable face of the Saudi dictatorship internationally. Their new leader, King Abdullah, appears to have legitimacy because of his seniority in the family. The reformers talk about partial municipal elections, national dialogue and the rights of women, who they hint may one day even be allowed to drive cars!

Even these limited efforts are obstructed by the hardline Wahhabi camp, which controls the security forces, the judiciary system and the real levers of domestic power. Indeed, Prince Naif, the minister of the interior and leader of the hardliners, has either silenced or imprisoned hundreds of the key Saudi reformers.

One reason for the weakness of Abdullah's faction is that he has scant support within the family because the Al Saud center of power lies with the al Fahds-the six full brothers of the dead King Fahd, most importantly Prince Sultan, the defense minister, and Prince Naif. On the surface, the succession has proceeded as expected, with Crown Prince Abdullah becoming king now that Fahd has died. In spite of this, Abdullah may not be able to shape the future, because he seems doomed to lose any showdown with Naif's forces.

Abdullah's power base is in the National Guard, and his claim on the support of Saudi Arabia's modernizing forces. Both are insufficient to check Naif. A key early test of Abdullah's kingship will be his success in freeing the hundreds of political reformers now in prison, especially three respected academics whom he encouraged to make reform proposals, only to be incarcerated by Naif.

Now that King Fahd is gone, old scores among his numerous brothers and half-brothers, not to mention the thousands of princes in the next generation, will need to be settled. But don't look for hope in the new generation, which is not necessarily young or progressive. Indeed, the Al Saud clan's third and fourth generations are divided not only in political and religious affiliation; they also range in age from 20 to 90 years old. All await a chance to rule.

So Saudi Arabia's people confront this key question: can an authoritative ruler emerge who will reunite the country in the progressive tradition of the late King Faisal? The sad likelihood is that, given the power of the obstructionists under Naif, a decisive and energetic king is unlikely to emerge. The direction the country will take in the longer term can best be assessed by whom Abdullah chooses to name as the successor to Prince Sultan, Naif's chief ally who has already been named Abdullah's heir.

If Abdullah (aged 83) skips a generation and appoints a more open-minded younger figure, there may be hope. But Naif (age 77), his full brothers-including Sultan (age 82)-and their supporters within the Wahhabi establishment appear too entrenched to allow that to happen. Like the geriatric successions that preceded the collapse of the Soviet Union, the succession in Saudi Arabia seems to be only a step short in an inexorable march toward political decay. Russia found a young reformer in Mikhail Gorbachev too late. It may also be too late for Saudi Arabia. Project Syndicate

Mai Yamani is an author and research fellow at the Royal Institute for International Affairs (Chatham House).

Thursday, July 14, 2005

Gloriagate Blogs

Posted by Alecks Pabico
PCIJ

LET a thousand (journalist) blogs bloom.

No doubt about it, the current political crisis rocking the Arroyo administration has made blogging, for all its unmediated, instantaneous and personal nature, an attractive reporting medium for Filipino journalists. Of course, the case for blogging journalists has already been made by the likes of Manuel L. Quezon III, Jove Francisco (By Jove!), Chin Wong ( Digital Life), Erwin Oliva (cyberbaguioboy), to name a few, even before we at the PCIJ started venturing into the blogosphere ourselves.

Recent welcome additions to the journalist blogging community are GMA Network's Howie Severino (Side Trip with Howie Severino), who has a blog on blogs today, and Philippine Daily Inquirer's editorialist John Nery (Newsstand). Much earlier, we also saw GMA reporters coming out with blogs of their own — Tina Panganiban-Perez ( crimson page) and Joseph Morong (Essays and Other Lullabies). The media network is said to be encouraging its reporters to go into blogging.

Another journalist has also been blogging anonymously since May at The Early Edition.

While the mainstream media based in Metro Manila seem slow in grasping the potential of blogging as an important addition to the journalistic toolkit, interesting developments have happened elsewhere. In Cebu, Sun.Star has spiced up its coverage of "Gloriagate" by launching the Citizen Watch: The Arroyo Presidency blog. There's also dyAB, the first radio station (as far as I know) that is complementing all its programs with blogs ( dyAB Abante Bisaya). 

Monday, June 20, 2005

Cardinal Sin, 76

Jaime Cardinal Sin, 76
Former Manila Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin passed away Tuesday morning after a lingering illness, DZMM reported. He was 76.
abs-cbnNEWS.com
Philippines' Cardinal Sin dies at 76
MSNBC 
... his death early Tuesday. "Our call to all the faithful is to include in their prayers the soul of Cardinal Sin," Sescon said.
Cardinal Jaime Sin Dies at 76
Los Angeles Times, CA 
MANILA, Philippines -- Cardinal Jaime Sin, the Roman Catholic cleric who helped lead revolts that ousted two Philippine presidents, died early Tuesday.
Philippines Cardinal Sin is dead
BBC News, UK 
Cardinal Sin played a key role in the Philippines' transition to democracy following the lengthy dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos.
Cardinal Jaime Sin Dies at 76
San Francisco Chronicle, CA 
Cardinal Jaime Sin, the Roman Catholic cleric who helped lead revolts that ousted two Philippine presidents, died early Tuesday. He was 76.

Sunday, June 19, 2005

Hello, Garci Ring Tone Download

Here are Mp3 and wav files of the Hello Garci ring tone:

Indymedia server:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (124.1 KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (72.1 KB)

Server Mirror 1:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

Server Mirror 2:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

Server Mirror 3:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

To save, right-click on the file and click save as.

Many thanks to QC Indymedia and Yuga of PinoyBlog and Ploghost for hosting the files.

Links to the entire tape are at the PCIJ blog.

How do I put it in my phone?

1. Download your choice by clicking any or all of the files.

2. Transfer the downloaded file/s from the computer to your phone using either an infrared connection or a USB-to-phone cable.

3. For those whose phones have GPRS/WAP access, point your phone's browser to www.txtpower.org and download it directly to your phone.

4. Once transferred to your phone, the sound file may be used as ringtone for calls or text messages.

Other options

1. Ask for file-transfer from friends who may already have the ringtone. Both your phones should have either infrared or bluetooth connections.

2. Join any of the future anti-GMA rallies and look for the TXTPower banner. Next big date is June 24.

3. Watch out for the TXTPower "Hello Garci" Ringtone Download Team when they go around offices, stores and tiangges, communities and schools!

Friday, June 17, 2005

Download Garci Ring Tone From TxtPower

June 17, 2005
Here are Mp3 and wav files of the Hello Garci ring tone:

Server Mirror 1:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

Server Mirror 2:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

Server Mirror 3:
"Hello Garci" ringtone, MP3 format (360KB)
"Hello Garci" ringtone, WAV format (197KB)

To save, right-click on the file and click save as.

Many thanks to Yuga of PinoyBlog and Ploghost for hosting the files.

Links to the entire tape are at the PCIJ blog.

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

ABS-CBN Download

 
You can download the controversial "Gloria-Garci" tapes from ABS-CBN Archive.

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

PNP's Ills

What's Wrong with the PNP?
THE United Nations Development Program has come up with a first-of-a-kind study on the Philippine National Police (PNP)—what ails the organization, what prevents it from performing basic functions, and what can be done about its problems.

We are highlighting two issues that the voluminous study tackled and which have a direct impact on the country's peace and order situation: the relationship between the PNP leadership and local police officers and the authority being exercised by local government units (LGUs) over the internal operations of the police. The UNDP report has been distributed to the key command and staff offices of the PNP for their own comments. Below are excerpts from the study that are related to these issues:

A. Local police officers believe that local police units rank very low in the priorities of the PNP leadership.

· What was striking in the interviews with police officers at the police station level was their perception that the local police units are not a priority area of concern to the PNP leadership; hence, they are at the bottom of the pecking order in terms of training and resources.

· Local police officers believe that the PNP leadership focuses and concentrates resources on the various specialized task forces created at the height of a particular peace and order issue generating media attention: kidnap-for-ransom cases, anti-terrorism, transnational crimes, gambling, organized crime, illegal drugs campaign, and the like.

B. There is resentment for special task forces created and based in the national/central office.

· Stories reveal resentment for these task forces that—to the local police officer—appear to have easy access to operational funds, resources, and equipment, while ordinary policemen have to rely on their own resourcefulness to procure basic supplies. An example of the perceived disparity is an incident with a Quezon City police officer, who narrated how local police officers are not supplied with bullets for their service firearm. According to him, when they are issued their service firearm, they are given two magazines with 26 bullets. The bullets are never replenished; hence, when a police officer uses his firearm in operations, he has to use personal funds to purchase bullets, at the cost of P15 for every 9-mm bullet.

· Task forces such as the National Anti-Crime Task Force have unlimited resources, including ammunition. The advantage of having classmates and colleagues in these task forces, according to one officer, is that they can spare you surplus supplies such as bullets.

· Because the members of the task forces are based in the central offices, and coordinate directly with the PNP leadership, spot promotions come easily to them.

· Even basic administrative supplies are lacking, with no available budget for necessities such as bond paper for reports. Local units rely on the generosity of business establishments in the area to either donate basic supplies, or sell them at discounted prices.

C. There is resentment over the issue of spot promotions.

· The perception that local police unit operations are undervalued was particularly evident in the resentment over spot promotions. While task force members could easily obtain spot promotions, successful operations by local officers would go unrewarded, or worse, others more politically savvy in the central or regional offices would reap the benefits of these operations.

D. There is unwillingness to perform certain basic functions.

· Patrol functions are the backbone of police operations, and included among patrol functions are traffic services and effecting arrests. Local police officers have expressed an unwillingness to perform these basic functions, seeing them as an unnecessary nuisance.

· Police officers both in Metro Manila and regional offices commented that so much time was spent serving warrants of arrest, which, according to him, should just be served by court process servers. It is not necessary for the police to do this.

· According to personnel interviewed in Region IV-A, traffic management should no longer be a function of local police units, considering that traffic management us already performed by local executives.

· Unless policies are changed to accord deserved recognition and resources to the patrolman and local police officers and units, an improvement in the delivery of basic police services may not materialize.

The UNDP study likewise observed that the bigger challenges facing the PNP lie in the organization's relationship with other agencies, specifically the local government units. It said that "the authority being exercised by local government units over the internal operations and decision-making of the PNP creates an environment extremely vulnerable to undue politicization of the police force, destroys command responsibility and administration management authority of the PNP."

The study suggested that the relationship between the PNP and the local government units "should be one of partnership rather than one of superior-subordinate relationship." As it is, the mayors and governors have the final say on who gets appointed to be police chiefs in their areas.

"Local government units should not interfere with the internal administration of the PNP, particularly in recruitment, promotion, appointment and discipline, in the allocation and utilization of financial resources, in the day-to-day police operations, and in the transactional decision-making process of the PNP within their locality," the study said.

The study called on other agencies as well, such as the Bureau of Internal Revenue, the Bureau of Customs, the Land Transportation Office, and the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority, which currently perform policing functions, should "focus their functions on investigative monitoring and relegate functions of case cased intelligence, investigation, and apprehension" to the PNP and the National Bureau of Investigation.

Alternative Arroyo Download

Posted by Alecks Pabico
PCIJ
 

THE tsunami-like surge in bandwidth usage due to the unprecedented download requests for the controversial tapes has already forced the shutdown of one of our servers and those of the mirror sites that have been generously shared to us. However, thanks again to some of our fellow bloggers' initiatives, the files can still be downloaded via the following links:

Three-Hour Tape

Paguia Tape

Monday, June 13, 2005

PCIJ Download

Posted by Alecks Pabico, PCIJ 

FINALLY, here's the tracker to the torrent file of the three-hour tape, courtesy of Yuga and MLQ3, from which you can start seeding to have your own copy. You will need a BitTorrent client installed on your PC to download the content of the torrent file. With a DSL connection, download time is roughly about two hours.

 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |

6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |

11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 |

16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 |

21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 |

26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 |

31 | 32 | 33

Sunday, June 12, 2005

Gloria's Alleged Conversations

You can download the three-hour-three-CDs audio recording of the alleged telephone conversation between Pres. Arroyo and Comelec Commissioner Virgilio Garcillano through these 33 separate MP3 files provided by PCIJ:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33
 
For first-timers:  You can download by right-clicking on the links above and save each one to your hard disk.

Thursday, June 09, 2005

Kapamilya Run

Registration Centers:
  • Ayala Center (beside the Activity Center)
  • Aboitix Express in E-Mall
  • SM City (beside the Supermarket)
  • Cebu City Sports Commission (Cebu City Sports Center)
  • ABS-CBN Broadcast Complex, Jagobiao, Mandaue City
The P100 registration fee entitles each runner singlets, snacks and giveaways.
 

Pulso sa DYAB Abante Bisaya ug TV Patrol Central Visayas

Too ka bang Estados Unidos maoy utok sa pagbisto sa audio recording ni Pres. Arroyo?
Please text your answer to DYAB REACT (opinion) and send to 2366.

Weather Update

Satellite Image
Southwest monsoon prevailing over Luzon and Western Visayas.
Metro Cebu: Occasional rains, winds will be light to moderate blowing from the southwest, coastal waters will be slight to moderate, temperature range 24 to 30°C (75 to 86°F).
 

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

Pulso sa DYAB Abante Bisaya, Maayong Buntag, Kapamilya ug TV Patrol Central Visayas

Too ka bang si Comelec Commissioner Virgilio Garcillano ang "Gary" nga gikasulti sa telepono nilang Pres. Arroyo ug First Gentleman Mike Arroyo?
Please text your answer to DYAB REACT (opinion) and send to 2366.

Weather Update

Satellite Image
Southwest monsoon prevailing over Luzon and Visayas.
Metro Cebu: Occasional rains, winds will be light to moderate blowing from the southwest, Manila Bay will be slight to moderate, temperature range 25 to 29°C (77 to 84°F).
 

Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Pulso sa DYAB Abante Bisaya, Maayong Buntag, Kapamilya ug TV Patrol Central Visayas

Angay bang mo-resign si Pres. Arroyo tungod sa nabistong audio recording sa giingong pagtikas niya sa niaging eleksiyon?
Please text your answer to DYAB REACT (opinion) and send to 2366.

Weather Update

 
Satellite Image
Typhoon "DANTE" was located based on satellite and surface data at 1,310 kms east northeast of Extreme Northern Luzon or at 720 kms southeast of Okinawa, Japan (24.4°N 133.7°E) with maximum sustained winds of 150 kph near the center and gustiness of up to 185 kph. It is forecast to move northwest at 06 kph. Southwest monsoon prevailing over Luzon and Visayas.
 
Metro Cebu: Cloudy with occasional rains, winds will be light to moderate blowing from the southwest, coastal waters will be slight to moderate, temperature range 23 to 30°C (73 to 86°F).

Monday, June 06, 2005

Weather Update

Satellite Image
Typhoon "DANTE" was located based on satellite and surface data at 1,220 kms east northeast of Extreme Northern Luzon or at 770 kms southeast of Okinawa, Japan (22.3°N 134.1°E) with maximum sustained winds of 160 kph near the center and gustiness of up to 195 kph. It is forecast to move north northeast at 07 kph. Southwest monsoon prevailing over Luzon and Visayas.
Metro Cebu: Mostly cloudy with occasional rains, winds will be light to moderate blowing from the southwest, coastal waters will be slight to moderate, temperature range 23 to 31°C (73 to 88°F).
More Weather

Thursday, June 02, 2005

Reuters Stories

  • Prosecutors blast Jackson as pedophile, alcoholic 
    Michael Jackson was portrayed on Thursday as a serial pedophile, an alcoholic and a man obsessed with pornography as prosecutors summed up their child sex abuse case with a blistering character assassination of one of the world's best-known entertainers....
  • Bomb attacks across Iraq kill 24 
    Insurgents killed at least 24 people in motorcycle and car bomb attacks on Thursday, one targeting the bodyguards of Iraq's Kurdish deputy prime minister and another killing a deputy provincial governor.
  • 'Runaway bride' sentenced to probation 
    The Georgia "runaway bride" whose highly publicized disappearance days before her wedding turned out to be a case of cold feet pleaded no contest on Thursday to a felony charge of making a false statement to police.
  • Animal rights activists face trial under terror law 
    New Jersey is using an anti-terrorism law for the first time to try six animal rights activists charged with harassing and vandalizing a company that made use of animals to test its drugs.
  • Goal to reverse AIDS by 2015 won't be met, UN says 
    The world will not meet its goal of halting and reversing the spread of AIDS in 10 years if the disease continues to race faster than efforts to stop it, a senior U.N. AIDS specialist said on Thursday.
  • Israel frees nearly 400 Palestinian prisoners 
    Israel freed nearly 400 Palestinian prisoners on Thursday in a long-delayed gesture that fulfilled a ceasefire pledge to President Mahmoud Abbas, but Palestinians said the release did not go far enough.
  • Bush selects Cox to head SEC 
    President Bush has picked California Rep. Christopher Cox, a Republican who has championed lower taxes on investment income, as his choice to become chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, a senior administration official said on Thursday.
  • Wolfowitz test is to keep World Bank relevant 
    Paul Wolfowitz has promised to make the World Bank more attractive to fast-growing but still poor countries like China and India, which feel the development institution has less and less to offer them.
  • Double 'No' vote on treaty bounces EU into action 
    European Union leaders, shocked by the French and Dutch rejection of their constitution, tried on Thursday to show that it would not paralyze the 25-member bloc.
  • Spelling bee morphs into media darling 
    The U.S. National Spelling Bee, that ultimate anxiety fest for brainy schoolkids, has morphed into a media darling, inspiring a novel, a documentary, a feature film and a Broadway musical.
  • Pulso sa DYAB Abante Bisaya, Maayong Buntag, Kapamilya ug TV Patrol Central Visayas

    Tagbaw ka ba sa pagpatuman sa gobyerno sa iyang sports programs?
    Please text your answer to DYAB REACT (opinion) and send to 2366.

    Typhoon Dante Is Here

    Typhoon "DANTE" was estimated based on satellite and surface data at 1,080 kms east of Visayas (12.1°N 135.4°E) with maximum sustained winds of 150 kph near the center and gustiness of up to 185 kph. It is forecast to move west northwest at 19 kph. Intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) affecting Mindanao. Southwesterly surface windflow prevailing over Western Luzon.

    Metro Cebu: Cloudy with rainshowers and thunderstorms, winds will be light to moderate blowing from the south and southwest, coastal waters will be slight to moderate, temperature range 24 to 30°C (75 to 86°F).
    More Weather

    Wednesday, June 01, 2005

    ABS-CBN In Europe

     
     
     
     
     

    Pulso sa DYAB Abante Bisaya, Maayong Buntag, Kapamilya ug TV Patrol Central Visayas

    Too ka bang GSIS ug AFP ang labing kurakot nga mga ahensiya sa gobyerno?
    Please text your answer to DYAB REACT (opinion) and send to 2366.

    Weather Update

    Satellite Image
    Intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) affecting Eastern Visayas. Southwesterly surface windflow prevailing over Western Luzon.
    Metro Cebu: Mostly cloudy with rainshowers and thunderstorms, winds will be light to moderate blowing from the south and southwest, coastal waters will be slight to moderate, temperature range 25 to 34°C (77 to 93°F).
    More Weather

    Tuesday, May 31, 2005

    Manila Times Stories

    By Maricel E. Burgonio, Reporter 
    The Government Service Insurance System will proceed against 20 of its employees suspected of tampering with its records.
    The filing of the cases next week before the Ombudsman signals the start of GSIS' stepped-up efforts to eliminate corruption in the agency, GSIS president Winston Garcia said Tuesday.
    Garcia's announcement was timed with the celebration of GSIS' 68th anniversary.
     
     
     
    President Arroyo will take charge of government efforts to stamp out jueteng and will give those involved their marching orders in the next few days.
    The President's decision was apparently her response to the challenge of the opposition that she must lead the antijueteng campaign for it to be effective.  
     
     
    The wage increase will be complemented by additional workers' benefits that are already under study, Malacañang said Tuesday.
    The President's spokesman and press secretary, Ignacio Bunye, said other options include raising the baseline figures for income brackets that would qualify for tax exemptions.  
     
     
    The New People's Army  on Tuesday rejected a ceasefire that they said the government was seeking as a precondition for the resumption of suspended peace talks.
     
     
    Rep. Juan Miguel "Mikey" Ar­­ro­­yo of Pampanga has canceled his trip to the United States in order to defend himself from allegations of involvement in jueteng.
     
     
    4th Dr. Jose P. Rizal Awards For Excellence
    Gems of History
    Would you believe that the first consul general of China to the Philippines, Tan Kang, was a Chinese mestizo?
    Tan, whose Spanish name was Engracio Palanca Tan Quien-sien, was assigned to the Philippines in 1899. His father was the famous Capitan Chino Carlos Palanca, and his mother was a Filipina.  

    METRO

    By Cheryl Arcibal and Anthony Vargas, Reporters 
    AFTER weeks of delays, the Sandiganbayan on  Tuesday finally ordered  the arrest of Carlos Garcia, a retired major general, who is charged with four counts of plunder before the antigraft court.
    The court's order upheld the validity of the P303.2-million plunder case, which was filed against the retired officer on April 6, 2005.
    "From the evaluation of the . . . evidence submitted, the Court finds and so holds that probable cause exists for the issuance of a warrant of arrest against Maj. Gen. Carlos F. Garcia to answer the charge of plunder . . . " the 19-page resolution said.
     
     
     
    A DEFIANT Bureau of Customs woman official staved off Commissioner Alberto Lina's order to transfer her to another office when she secured a 20-day restraining order from the Manila Regional Trial Court, The Manila Times was told on Tuesday.
     
     
    THE police are in a quandary over the missing head of a slain housewife in Taguig as investigators look at two possible motives in the murder case.
    Investigators had searched within 200 meters of the victim's home but failed to find the missing head of Hayda Napura, who was killed along with her husband Antonio, daughter Haidi and maid Tata Netis.  
     
     
    THE Movie and Television Review and Classification Board chair, Conzolisa Laguardia, denied on Tuesday that she ordered the banning of all live talk shows on television.
     
     
    THE Court of Appeals on Tuesday  ordered several financial institutions to freeze the remaining assets of Lt. Col. George Rabusa, former Armed Forces budget officer.

    REGIONS

    2 die from fish poisoning in Pangasinan 

    By Analiza Q. Leyba And Bong Otadoy, Northern Luzon Bureau

    DAGUPAN CITY:  Two people died while 23 others  are confined at Region I Medical Center (RIMC) here Monday night after they ate spotted goby fish, gobious criniger, locally known as bunog or biya.

    Dr. Allan Laguardia and other physicians of RIMC said Gerald Ramos, 36, and Danilo Ramos, 38, both of Barangay Capan­tolan in Sual Pangasinan, died hours after eating the fish.

    Full Story>>

     
     

    VIGAN CITY:  The Catholic See of Nueva Segovia has a new leader in Archbishop Ernesto Salgado, who replaced Archbishop Edmundo Abaya. Abaya retired from episcopal duties on his 75th birthday on January 19.

    Full Story>>

     

    LA TRINIDAD, Benguet:  After two unsuccessful attempts, this capital town has broken the five-year record posted in the Guinness Book of World Records for the record title of largest fruit shortcake.

    Full Story>>

     

    BATANGAS CITY: Most of the friends and colleagues of Guiller Gamo, the Batangas provincial resident ombudsman who was killed Monday morning, believe that his murder may have been hatched by people who were adversely affected by some of the pro bono cases he handled.

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    COTABATO CITY: The  government is willing to change the Charter (Cha-cha) to achieve lasting peace in Mindanao but this must be done through constitutional means, according to the government's chief negotiator with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

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    CEBU CITY: Lifting the timber­land classification of the Camotes group of islands and opposing the move to divide Cebu are among Ramon Durano's priorities when he fills the seat that his brother, Tourism Secretary Joseph Ace Durano, vacated in Congress.

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    ZAMBOANGA CITY: Despite the city government's continuing antidengue campaign, the number of cases continue to increase and health officials are alarmed that the number of dengue fever cases is already reaching "outbreak" proportions.

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    BUSINESS
     

    Companies spend more on advertising

    By Darwin G. Amojelar, Researcher 

    STIFF competition in the telecommunications and personal-care industries boosted media spending in the first quarter of the year, according to AC Nielsen.

    In its first quarter media spending report, the survey firm said total spending grew by 30 percent to P29.6 billion.

    Adspend in the same period last year amounted to P22.8 billion.

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    FINANCE Secretary Cesar V. Purisima has called on the Social Security System (SSS) and the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) to "give birth and nurture" a minority shareholders association.

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    TWO companies controlled by the Ayala family, the Philippines' first telephone operator and the country's homegrown oil refiner topped a list of firms ranked in terms of sound corporate governance.  

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    THE Asian Development Bank has approved a loan  aimed at helping the Philippines' housing sector dispose of its bad assets.

    The P1.6-billion loan made to a special purpose firm jointly owned by a government agency and a private firm will allow the acquisition of bad loans from the National Home Mortgage Finance Corp. and resolve them.  

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    THE Board of Investments (BOI) has asked the Tariff Commission to grant a one-year tariff relief on the importation of frequently used spare and replacement truck parts.

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    PROPOSED amendments to the implementing guidelines on the evaluation of the quality and efficiency of government contractors have been approved by the National Economic Development Authority's committee on infrastructure.

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    THE Department of Finance wants a 1-percent tariff imposed on imported products used for bioethanol as transport fuel, instead of the proposed exemption contained in a Senate bill.

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    VIRTUAL BUSINESS
    By Tony Lopez

    Finally, the Securities and  Exchange Commission (SEC) has spoken and it doesn't like what Pacific Plans Inc. has been doing.

    The government corporate watchdog is accusing PPI of bad faith in dealing with it and with the Bureau of Internal Revenue. The SEC claims PPI submitted a different set of figures with the agency and with the BIR on the value of its investment in trust fund. The amount is P6.33 billion with the BIR and P8.311 billion with the SEC.  

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    WHILE they posted lower profits last year, foreign banks operating in the Philippines have sustained their liquidity, strengthened their capitalization, and registered better asset quality, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said Tuesday.

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    MEMBERS of nongovernment Greenpeace picketed the Philippine office of US-based Mirant, which the activists labeled as a toxic polluter and climate killer.

    Greenpeace is urging Congress to restart an inquiry on the toxic emission of coal-fired power generators in the country, after releasing a study recently.

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    PHILIPPINE share prices closed higher in heavy trade on Tuesday as investors continued to buy in response to gross-domestic-product data pointing to a resilient economy, dealers said.

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    SHANGHAI: China's booming economy is expected to grow by 9.1 percent year on year in the second quarter, state press said Tuesday, citing figures from the government think tank, the State Information Center.

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    SHOWBIZ

     

    Hobnobbing in Hollywood


    WITH Carrie Underwood officially proclaimed as the American Idol of 2005, what's happening elsewhere in Hollywood? Bang Showbiz, the newest UK-based entertainment news provider dishes out the latest from the world's most glittering celebrities. 

    Brad Pitt wants to adopt an African orphan 

    The Hollywood heartthrob Brad Pitt is said to be interested in adopting after meeting a group of disadvantaged and parentless children during a recent trip to Africa with alleged new love Angelina Jolie.

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    THE hit animation series Kim Possible, Rollie Pollie Olie and Brandy & Mr. Whiskers just received top citations in the 32nd Daytime Emmy Awards.

    Marking the series' second Daytime Emmy, Rolie Polie Olie was victorious in the Outstanding Special Class Animated Program category. Honored with the award were series creator/executive producer William Joyce; executive producers Michael Hirsh, Scott Dyer and Corinne Kouper; supervising producers Guillaume Hellouin and Pamela Lehn; producers Susie Grondin, Eric Flaherty and Christophe Archambault; supervising director Mike Fallows; directors Ron Pitts and Bill Giggie; and writers Nadine Van Der Velde, Steve Sullivan, Alice Prodanou and Robin J. Stein. The series is produced by Nelvana Ltd. and televised daily in Disney Channel's learning-focused programming block, titled "Playhouse Disney."

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    SHOWBITS
    By Danny Vibas

    KRIS AQUINO is not just doing  very well as a TV host. She has practically joined the elite club of in demand endorsers whose members include Sharon Cuneta, Maricel Soriano and Aga Muhlach.

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    FILMWATCH
    By Dennis Ladaw

    AND Starring  Pancho Villa as Himself tells the true story of Pancho Villa (Antonio Ban­deras), specifically the movie star phase of his life, which happened concurrently with his revolutionary phase.

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    SHOWING today at cinemas nationwide . . . 

    The long and winding road to love

    Love in the 21st century is rarely straightforward. It's messy, complicated and filled with obstructions. It's a wonder love happens at all.

    A Lot Like Love, starring Ashton Kutcher and Amanda Peet, shows on the big screen the long and winding road most people must travel to find connection in today's chaotic world.

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    OPINION
     

    EDITORIAL

    Laguardia's lapses

    Editorial Cartoon

    Click to enlarge


    CHAIR Maria Consoliza Laguardia of the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board may rescind, reword or cry over Memorandum Circular 07-05, but the damage is done. The board has sunk lower in public esteem. The public is now more alert than ever to the policies and programs of the board.

    On May 17 Laguardia issued a memorandum requiring public-affairs programs, documentaries and broadcast editorials, among others, to be reviewed by the board. It was obvious   censorship. Free discussions, public debates, interviews and broadcast editorials could not take place if the memo were carried out.

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    THE GLOBAL PINOY
    By Greg B. Macabenta

    Back in the mid-'80s I wrote and directed a movie for TV entitled, Maynila USA: Kapit Sa Patalim.

    It starred Jun Aristorenas as a new immigrant in San Francisco, wondering what he was doing in America, doing his own laundry, cooking his own meals, surviving on measly wages and living in a virtual rat hole.

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    BIG DEAL
    By Dan Mariano  

    At the start of the Senate's jueteng inquiry Monday, Sen. Jinggoy Estrada was beaming. And why shouldn't he? The witness that Archbishop Oscar Cruz brought in claimed to have knowledge that President Arroyo's elder son, Mikey, among others, had received money from numbers racketeers.

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    FROM THE NEWSROOM
    By Manny B. Marinay

    BORN Popo Friedman in Sioux City, Iowa, popular US advice columnist Abigail "Abby" Van Buren has advised countless parents and individuals on how to "handle" their gay sons, daughters, relatives and friends. Abby enlightened them about the nature of homosexuality and its eccentricities. Here are some of her more amusing pieces of advice on homosexuality:

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    TOKYO: Japan's bureaucratic rank-and-file employees march in dark jackets and ties to government offices everyday, sweating their way through the country's sticky, sweltering summers.

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    'The whole thing is a show'

     HONG KONG: It looks like a real political campaign. The front-runner quits his job to stump full time. He sets up a campaign office. Newspapers fill their front pages with headlines about major figures endorsing him.

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    PARIS: Poet and politician, silver-haired statesman Domi-nique de Villepin captured the world's attention with an impassioned speech in 2003 supporting France's opposition to an invasion of Iraq.

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    LETTER

    Overhaul the tuition system

    The good news is that the Commission on Higher Education has decided to correct a decade of monumental blunder of feigning helplessness toward skyrocketing school fees by issuing a new regulation on the imposition of tuition increases and miscellaneous fees.  

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    SPORTS

    Race heats up as Tour heads north

    By Joel Orellana, Reporter

    ALAMINOS CITY: For 2004 Tour Pilipinas champion Rhyan Tanguilig, now is not yet the time to press the panic button.

    So when Stage 6 of the Golden Tour 50@05 presented by Tanduay hits the road Wednesday, the PLDT team skipper will be biding his time, waiting for the right moment to pounce and wrest the overall lead from Colt 45's Warren Davadilla.

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    TAKING the middle ground in a controversy, William "Butch" Ramirez, the Philippine Sports Commission officer in charge, on Tuesday said it would be best for the Philippine Olympic Committee and Basketball Association of the Philippines to settle their dispute amicably for the sake of national interest.

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    RICARDO ADOLFO, one of five Filipino boxers in the 14th Summer Olympics in London, England will be buried at 3 p.m. Wednesday at the La Loma Cemetery in Manila.

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    MONTAñA Pawnshop flirted with disaster but pulled its act together in time to dismantle Granny Goose Kornets, 64-58, on Tuesday in Game 1 of their semifinal showdown in the Philippine Basketball League Unity Cup at the JCSGO gym in Cubao.

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    The Games and Amusements Board (GAB) has warned the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) that it is presently operating in violation of Philippine laws due to the refusal of league Commissioner Noli Eala to secure a GAB license for himself and for other PBA employees, and for refusing to submit for the approval of GAB the amendments to the PBA rules.

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    LUKE WALTON, son of National Basketball Association great Bill Walton, will be in Manila from June 2 to 5 for the NBA Madness 2005 at the Araneta Coliseum, joining Dwight Howard of Orlando Magic and the Houston Rockets Power Dancers for the event.

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    SAN ANTONIO: Even if the Phoenix Suns don't come all the way back and make the National Basketball Association Finals, they're guaranteed of having at least one good memory from the Western Conference finals.

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    SIDELINE SLANTS
    By Rene Saguisag

    MIAMI coach Stan Van Gundy has had it with the fans of the city known for its Bad Boys and Motor Mouths. I see where Maurice Cheeks is back to coach in Philadelphia, where they boo even funerals. Some players who had been there consider epitaphs saying, "All in all, I'd rather be here than in Philadelphia."

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