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Friday, November 22, 2013

CNN to investigate "EPAL"ation" of VP Binay from foreign aids printing his name; Philippine media and government ignored it

Netizens Photo compared "EPAL 'ation" of Philippine Vice President Jejomar Binay compared to the Heartily help from Davao City through Mayor Rudy Duterte

 

Philippine honorable vice President Jejomar Binay garnered dishonor for hi famous infamous act for printing his name to the relief goods from government fund distributed to the victims during the earthquake hit Bohol Province last October 15, 2013.

 

Not proven with more concrete evidence as photos could be edited or photoshop, the issue dragged to the most disastrous typhoon Yolanda when netizens cried foul accusing VP Binay for printing his name to the relief goods aid from Germany.

 

Netizens cried foul for the Bureau of Customs (BOC) holding the relief goods from Germany and demanding taxes for its entry but later then allowed after being lambasted by the pool of netizens criticizing BOC and the Aquino government.

 

The Custom's stoppage for the relief goods from Germany for taxation chained to an accusation that Binay printed his names to those relief goods and photos were submitted to the CNN that collects hundreds of thousands views and criticisms.

 

Online criticism hit Binay calling him as "EPAL".  During the previous years Anti-Epal Law meets resistance from 'epals' in Law makers House according to Inquirer News on 2011.

 

Binay's EPAL"ation" would violate the Article 9 section 1 of the "Anti Epal bill" and if proven guilty would be punishable to not less than 6 months - 1 year imprisonment and perpetual disqualification from public office (Section 8 penalties and violations)

 

Read and download Anti-Epal Bill from this link

 

(Photo from Facebook)


Are Philippine politicians using typhoon aid to their advantage?

 

(CNN) -- As money pours in to help the victims of Super Typhoon "Yolanda" (Haiyan), some Filipinos claim that politicians are trying to use the tragedy to win votes.

 

Six submissions with photographs showing relief trucks and aid bearing the names of local and national politicians have cropped up on CNN iReport. Together, these reports have been viewed more than 1.5 million times since they were uploaded in the past week.

 

While difficult to verify, the pictures show tarpaulins, bags, canisters, flip-flops and even bags of ramen noodles bearing the logos, names and photos of three politicians and the wife of one politician.

 

Local media haven't covered this issue much, but Filipinos have a word for it: "epal," Tagalog for someone butting in where not needed. It could also describe the act of politicians grandstanding for political gain during a disaster.

 

The debate over this has ballooned online among Filipinos and the diaspora. As these images have garnered so much attention, we wanted to clarify what we know about them and what we have left to decipher.

 

The iReport submissions have been shared widely on social media. In a matter of a week, one report had received more than 900,000 page views, and another had more than 500,000 views. The bulk of the traffic -- almost 90% -- is coming from people posting the links on Facebook, and the magnitude is unprecedented for iReport, according to CNN data.

 

Described as one of the worst storms ever to make landfall, Super Typhoon "Yolanda" (Haiyan) killed more than 5,000 people and caused catastrophic damage to many parts of the Philippines as it plowed across the country on November 8.

 

Panoramic photo shows "Yolanda" (Haiyan) devastation

 

Rescue and relief operations have proved daunting, with an estimated 4 million left displaced.

 

How to help Typhoon "Yolanda" (Haiyan) survivors

 

Patrick Fuller, a spokesman for the International Federation of the Red Cross, said he had seen some evidence that politicians were getting involved in the delivery of aid.

 

"I've seen vans or small pickup trucks distributing small-scale aid with a politician's face on the side," he said from the hard-hit city of Tacloban.

 

"We don't need or want to see the politicization of aid. We want the aid to go where it is needed most."

 

See the files for "EPAL" photos and Ati-Epal Law here

 

However, he added that first responders like the ones he witnessed shouldn't be dismissed out of hand. "You've got to remember, they are bringing in relief that is needed, and that keeps people going until the more sustained effort picks up.

 

"It doesn't obstruct us, but we do need to ensure that relief is well-coordinated with local, regional and national authorities. We don't want to load up a truck with supplies for 1,000 families and find that someone else has come in this morning."

 

One of three politicians coming under fire is Philippine Vice President Jejomar Binay. Photos posted on iReport show Binay's face on a tarp on the back of a truck and the vice president's logo on blue drawstring bags of relief goods.

 

However, Joey Salgado, a spokesman for Binay, said the photos with blue relief bags and a truck bearing the vice presidential seal were taken in 2011 and 2012, respectively.

 

"The photos are currently being recirculated online to make them appear they were intended for the victims of Typhoon Yolanda," he said Wednesday, using the storm's name in the Philippines.

 

Salgado said the relief bags distributed by his office for "Yolanda" (Haiyan)'s victims were packed in plain white plastic bags, not blue ones like in the photos. The vice presidential office stopped using the tarpaulins with Binay's image more than a year ago, he said.

 

However, a collection of photos submitted to iReport does show white plastic bags bearing Binay's name and logo.

 

"This is how some of the Philippine government officials will behave when there's calamity," a Filipino expat from Dubai named Rogel Tura wrote on CNN iReport. The Cebu, Philippines, native shared a series of photos that have circulated widely online.

 

"They take advantages of 'helping' by putting their names on the relief goods. It's a very strategic way in putting their name on the donations or any forms of assistance to advertise their name for the next election."

 

However, Salgado explained that these labeled relief bags came from a local partner in Iloilo.

 

"These bags were donated by a supporter of the vice president from Iloilo and did not come from the Office of the Vice President," he said. "Relief goods repacked by OVP staff at the vice president's office were placed in plain white plastic bags. Relief goods from the VP's supporter were bundled with those from the OVP and were distributed in Iloilo.

 

"It was the initiative of our local partners to put the stickers on the bags," Salgado said of these photos, which were taken during Binay's visit to Iloilo on November 13. "Since the stickers were placed without the authorization of the OVP, they were ordered removed."

 

Most humanitarian organizations label their aid, according to the World Food Programme.

 

"This is a time-honored practice in humanitarian aid to help draw recognition to those countries providing assistance," said Steve Taravella, senior spokesman for the WFP, based in Washington.

 

"In virtually every emergency, you'll see bags of rice or boxes of cooking oil marked clearly with the name of the country that provided that donation," he said.

 

However, Taravella said, in his experience globally, he had not seen aid labeled with the names or photos of politicians.

 

While the motives behind the labeled aid are unclear, the perception that politicians may be misusing the relief effort for political gain has left a bad taste in some people's mouths.

 

""Yolanda" (Haiyan) victims are dying and suffering for hunger. I can't just watch and do nothing," Tura wrote. "This is my way of helping, telling my fellow Filipinos to wake-up and don't be lured with money and sweet promises during elections."-  CNN

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Typhoon Yolanda unveiled Weak Philippine Military with bikes to deliver aid; Corruption and doubled price equipment purchased from Korea seen

Soldiers and residents unloaded food aid from a United States Navy helicopter in Hernani, the Philippines


Philippine army during the recent years purchased hundreds of military trucks and service vehicles from Kia Motors Korea to replace the aging military trucks but seen to be doubled price from the Military inventory.

 

An insider who has access to the inventories for Philippine Army trucks and vehicles is doubtful for the prices reflected in each unit as seen to be doubled from the actual price released by Kia Motors.

 

"Sir kung hindi doble ang presyo ng pag bili natin ayon sa ating inventory, seguro doble o triple pa ang dami ating mga trucks ngayon.  Nai compare ko ang price mula sa kaibigan kung sundalo rin sa ibang bansa na humingi ng Quotation sa Korea at ibinigay sa akin ang complete list. Doon ko nakita na ang presyo ng pag bili natin ay doble kumpara sa totoong presyo ng pag binta ng Kia Motors. Sa totoo lang kulang talaga ang mga trucks natin, marami pang mga remote camps ang nag tityaga nalang sa pinaglumaan, at halos hindi na magagamit na mga trucks. Limited din kasi ang budget para sa PA kaya tiis nalang muna kung anong meron" an insider said.  

 

Sa totoo lang kailangan ko ng bagong Kaibigan, saan kaya pwede? Madali yan dude tambay ka lang sa www.kaibigan.me

 

(Sir, if the price of our purchased military trucks from Kia Motors Korea is not doubled or even tripled; maybe we could have so many trucks now. I have compared it to the price list from a soldier friend in the other country who asked for quotation from Kia Motors Korea and he forwarded me the price list and I found out that our price is doubled. The fact is we are in short of Military trucks. We have so many remote camps that are in need of but we don't have enough and they are just trying to use anything available which are already old and fully depreciated as long as it could still run for a short miles. We also have a limited budget for the PA so we will just use anything available for the moment.)

 

Kia Motors has specialized in the production of military vehicles with variants and other transportation equipment and by supplying them as a sole maker of military vehicles designated by the South Korean Government since 1976 and now producing several trucks for the Military use; KM42 series, KM45 Series, KM25 Series, KM50 Series, KM100 Series, and BV Series. (Kia Motors Quotation request Website)


KIA Motors Defense produces six type/series of Military vehicles:

  • KM42 Series (alternately K 131) quarter ton Utility Vehicle
  • KM-45 Series half ton to three quarter ton modern variant of the M715
  • KM-25 Series variant of the M35 2-1/2 ton cargo truck
  • KM-50 Series variant of the M809 Truck both as 5 ton and 7 ton variants
  • KM-100 Series 8×8 heavy tactical truck
  • K53 Series similar to the Swedish BV amphibious tracked vehicle
  •  

Watch the video for the recent purchased of the Philippines army here in this link http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6EFt6WZ93Y

 

Typhoon Response Highlights Weaknesses in Philippine Military

 

As American cargo planes and military helicopters zipped across the sky above this decimated city, ferrying badly needed supplies to typhoon survivors, Philippine soldiers were working with what little they had — relying on motorcycles and boats to ferry messages between the army's provincial headquarters and stricken municipalities along the eastern coast of Samar, some of them more than a hundred miles away.

 

In an acknowledgment of the army's lack of sophisticated equipment, a spokesman said on Monday, "The courier system is our means of communications."

 

The destructive fury of Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) quickly laid bare the limitations of the Philippine government's disaster preparation and relief capabilities, but increasingly, it is also focusing an unflattering spotlight on the nation's military — an overstretched, poorly funded force that has been criticized for its late arrival to the disaster zone.

 

Wala na final na 'to ibinta ko nalang to online mabuti nalang libre kung maibenta sa www.PilipinasMall.com  

 

Officials have attributed the delay in part to a shortage of large troop carriers. But even when several thousand soldiers were finally able to fan out across the devastated islands of Samar and Leyte, their work was, and continues to be, hampered by a lack of provisions including food, heavy equipment and communications technology needed when cellphone service is down.

 

In addition to clearing roads, transporting relief supplies and evacuating the wounded, the military is responsible for helping the Philippine National Police maintain security during natural disasters.

 

Here in Guiuan, one of the largest cities affected by Yolanda (Haiyan), military personnel have been left to fend for themselves, procuring meals from local residents who cook amid the rubble of their homes while the soldiers await orders that sometimes never arrive. Some of the same problems have plagued the Coast Guard. When asked why they had spent the past four days sitting in the mayor's storm-battered offices, two Coast Guard sailors on Monday shrugged and pointed to their useless cellphones.

 

"We're waiting for instructions," one of them, Cliff Turallo, said with apparent embarrassment.

 

Analysts say the aftermath of the typhoon is a particularly jarring reminder of how badly Philippine forces have fared since the American military withdrew in the early 1990s, after negotiations over a new treaty faltered amid a passionate debate over national sovereignty. In a poor country struggling to overcome a culture of graft that has starved government budgets for years, Filipino leaders have consistently directed resources toward other priorities — in part, analysts say, because they still view the United States, a strong ally, as a safety net. The military budget itself has been pilfered by corrupt government officials under previous administrations.

 

Now that the typhoon has exposed these weaknesses, analysts expect renewed debate about whether the Philippines should allow the United States to do what it has been asking to do: cycle more American troops through the country as part of the Obama administration's attempt to act as a counterweight to China.

 

Basta Bisaya, ambungan ug maanyag. Bisaya ba ka? Apil sa www.higala.me

 

With its own conflict looming — China is challenging Philippine claims to some strategic maritime territories — the Philippines has also begun to try to build its own resources. But for the moment, the country has little of the advanced equipment that can be used in rescue and recovery efforts as well as in conflict.

 

Instead, Philippine forces have had to make do with increasingly obsolete hand-me-downs. A lack of parts has mothballed much of the nation's fleet of a dozen C-130 cargo planes, the workhorses of many relief operations worldwide. The military said it had only three functioning transport aircraft to deliver troops and supplies in the days after Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan); some soldiers said there were just two. Similar problems have grounded 28 of the Air Force's 44 Huey helicopters, according to IHS Jane's Defense Weekly.

 

Although it has ordered 12 fighter jets from South Korea, the Philippine Air Force currently has no fighter planes, and the navy relies on a handful of aged American surplus vessels. With report from New York Times

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