OFW Filipino Heroes

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

CNN: Fishermen caught out by politics of West Philippine (South China) Sea

Efren Forones (center) and his fellow fishermen embark on the 38-hour trip to fishing grounds around the disputed Scarborough Shoal.

Luzon, Philippines (CNN) -- A year ago, a fisherman Efren Forones came back from fishing trips with up to three and half tons of fish. In return he was able to buy 15 to 20 kilos of rice for his family every month and was planning to send at least one of his six children to college.

Not any more.

He now returns with just 400 kilos of catch at best, meaning he can only afford one to two kilos of rice a month, while school for his children is an expensive luxury and out of the question.

The reason? He says he can longer fish in the fertile waters around Scarborough Shoal.

A cluster of uninhabitable sand banks and small rocks set in a shallow azure water lagoon about 130 miles (200 km) west from the Philippine island of Luzon, Scarborough Shoal is one of a number of territories at the center of an international dispute in the South China Sea.

Both the Philippines and China lay claim to it.

Tense standoff

The long-term tensions between the two nations escalated last April during a one-month stand off between the two nations, after Manila accused Chinese boats of fishing illegally in the area. When a Philippines navy vessel inspected the boats it found "large amounts of illegally collected corals, giant clams and live sharks" inside one of the boats, according to the Philippine government. Manila then reported that two Chinese surveillance ships had taken up position at the mouth of the lagoon, blocking the way to the fishing boats and "preventing the arrest" of the fishermen. The vessels stretched a cable across the mouth of the lagoon, which also prevented Filipino fishermen from going there, according to the Philippines coast guard.

READ: Why Manila is taking China to tribunal

Earlier this year, the Philippine government took its feud with China to a United Nations tribunal, a move that Beijing has rejected. In an article on state-run CCTV last month, China pointed to a code of conduct it signed in 2002, known as the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, with fellow members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). It said the declaration expected that relevant disputes be solved through friendly talks and negotiations by sovereign states directly concerned.

That brings little comfort to the struggling fishermen in communities in west Luzon, the nearest region to Scarborough Shoal -- also known as Panatag Shoal here or Huangyan Island to the Chinese. One of them is Masinloc, a municipality of 40,000 people, which relies on the seas for almost 80% of its income, according to the Philippines Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources. It says thousands of fishermen have lost their regular jobs as catches decline.

Forones is one of them.

The 52 year old has been fishing in the waters off Masinloc for 22 years. He lives with his family in a traditional bamboo house mounted on pillars above the sea. His youngest daughter is four years old. Forones does not own a boat but used to be hired as a fisherman and paid a minimum of $85 dollars for a trip. Nobody is hiring now. He has tried to rent boats on his own and fish with his neighbors, but the little catch they bring back barely covers the rental fee and fuel.

READ: Asia's disputed islands -- who claims what?

He says the Shoal is the most important fishing ground in this region. "They (the Chinese) shoo us away, will not allow Filipinos to come near the area," he says. "They are the only ones that can fish there, not us. We lost Scarborough and it is hard. We earn nothing."

Beijing is unwavering in its claims. As recently as last month, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported that Chinese surveillance vessels were carrying out regular missions in the West Philippine Sea.

The Xinhua report cited Liu Cigui, director of the State Oceanic Administration, as saying that China would continue the patrols "to secure the nation's maritime rights and interests" in areas it claims as its territorial waters.

China's claim on the area dates back to 1279 during the Yuan Dynasty, when Chinese astronomer Guo Shoujing conducted a survey. Then in 1935, China declared sovereignty over 132 islands, reefs and shoals in the South China Sea, with the Scarborough Shoal -- or Huangyan -- included as a part of the Zhongsha Islands, according to Xinhua.

However, Forones is in little doubt who the lagoon, which lies within what the Philippines declares as its Exclusive Economic Zone, belongs to.

"Of course it is ours. We own Scarborough," he insists. "But China is trying to get it from us. Our government should fix that. We should seek help from the United States if the Philippine government cannot handle it alone."

Nowhere else to go

Forones and his wife plan to stay in Masinloc, for now. He will try to start diving for shellfish. By selling clams, mussels and oysters, they can make around $5 a day. Enough to buy rice and other basic food to feed the family. "There is no other place where we can go. I will stay here, get shells from nearby and help my husband to make living," Forones' wife, Gemma, says.

The situation is similar in Subic, a town 55 miles (88 km) south of Masinloc. It used to host one of the biggest American naval bases outside the United States, before it closed in 1991.

Operators of the fishing market on the outskirts of the town of 90,000 say business is down 50% since the fishermen were blocked from fishing where they wanted to at Scarborough. Many fishermen here share a similar story to their counterparts further north.

"When we went there, a Chinese vessel, the Chinese Marine Surveillance blocked our path," says Ronnie Drio, 46-year-old father of eight children. "As we managed to get past through it, it looked like they called another one because a different ship appeared and blocked our way again.

"That's when we got trapped. Then a Chinese man stepped out. He looked like their highest officer. He flashed a sign that we had to leave immediately. We were kicked out like pigs."

A number of fishermen have already left Subic and Masinloc and many more are considering it. One of them, 58-year-old Tolomeo "Lomi" Forones, is Efren's cousin. He's been a fisherman for 30 years but now makes a living as a motorbike taxi driver. He makes around $2 on a good day.

"Our income was higher when we used to fish at Scarborough. I even used to save money. But now we earn just enough for daily consumption and sometimes what we earn is not even enough to provide food."

Dangerous waters

He still does occasional fishing trips but against his wife's wish. Janet Forones wants to leave Masinloc and their low income is not the only reason: "Who would not get worried when they are out there? What if they get shot?" She was referring to the presence of the Chinese boats.

What puzzles the fishermen here most is the speed the whole situation has changed. Although the Philippine and Chinese governments have disputed each other's claim to the lagoon for many years, they could fish at Scarborough alongside Chinese fishermen up until a few months ago.

"I do not know why they don't like us or why they do not want us within that area. If Americans were still in the region, the Chinese would have never came to Scarborough because they would be scared. If our government allows the U.S. to come back over here, its OK with me," she says, referring to Washington's commitment to its mutual defense treaty with the Philippines that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reaffirmed last year.

But the solution to the dispute is as distant as ever. Litigation at the United Nations could last years. Most of the local fishermen do not have so much time. So while the governments squabble, many of these fishermen and their families will have to leave the only life they have known and start from scratch somewhere else. (http://bit.ly/ZpDToT)

CNN

Philippines Approves Xstrata $5.9 Billion Mine Environmental Permit

The Philippines environmental regulator has given a unit of Xstrata PLC (XTA.LN) conditional approval to develop what will be Philippines' largest gold and copper mine.

Environmental approval at the $5.9 billion Tampakan mine, which the company has said will produce around 375,000 tons of copper and 360,000 ounces of gold a year over a 17-year period, has been complicated by a ban on open-pit mines in South Cotabato province. The mine, which covers nearly 100 square kilometers, also straddles Sarangani, Sultan Kudarat and Davao del Sur provinces on the southern island of Mindanao.

Xstrata Copper subsidiary Sagittarius Mines Inc. will still need approval from the local government and other state agencies, Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Ramon Paje said in a statement.

Sagittarius Mines said Tuesday in a statement that it has received the permit and is "reviewing the terms and conditions contained in the document."

Construction at the mine "could potentially commence in 2015, enabling commercial production in 2019," Sagittarius Mines President Peter Forrestal said in December.

Sagittarius Mines took control as operator of Tampakan in 2007. The project is a joint venture among the Tampakan Group, Xstrata and Australia-listed Indophil Resources NL (IRN.AU). The Tampakan Group--composed of local businesses--owns 60% of Sagittarius Mines, with the balance shared by Xstrata and Indophil, which in turn is partly owned by Philippine conglomerate San Miguel Corp. (SMC.PH).

The Chamber of Mines of the Philippines, a mining industry group, welcomed the environmental permit's issuance.

"It's an encouraging sign from the government, which has[said] that the Philippines needs at least $3 billion in investments to create jobs," the chamber said.

The government cut its investment target for mining last year to $509 million from $2.27 billion due to delays in some projects. The investment target this year was also reduced, to $718.5 million from $2 billion previously. The mining industry had pointed to uncertainty in the government's mining policy, permitting challenges and a moratorium on the grant of new mining licenses as reasons for project delays.

Although the Philippines is the world's third-largest nickel producer and contributes to the global trade in other metals, the value of mining exports has slipped from more than 20% of the country's total exports four decades ago to less than 6% in 2011. (http://fxn.ws/UCwxvt)

Fox Business

Monday, February 18, 2013

DOST’ S&T Led “Smarter Philippines” 2018 Pinoy Innovation

Disaster Risk Exposure Assessment for Mitigation – Light Detection and Ranging (DREAM-LIDAR) Project

'Smarter Philippines' DOST's new program

Science Secretary Mario Montejo has a new catchphrase for the various information and communications technology-driven, Filipino-developed technological innovations that his department has initiated and will initiate in the next five years.

"The 'Smarter Philippines' program is the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) trademark for the next five years," Montejo said in his first news conference for the year.

"It is anchored tightly on the DOST's goal of using S&T (science and technology) to improve the quality and productivity of every Filipino's life," he said.

He said Smarter Philippines is the umbrella program that will encompass the DOST's S&T initiatives on various fronts such as disaster mitigation, governance, health care, agriculture and transportation.

The DOST will formally launch the program in Davao City to showcase some of its ongoing projects for the following:

  1. Project Noah (Nationwide Operational Assessment of Hazards) disaster warning system and its biggest component
  2. The Disaster Risk Exposure and Assessment for Mitigation-Light Detection and Ranging (Dream-Lidar) flood forecasting system
  3. The Integrated Government Philippine (iGovPhil) project, which was rolled out in June and which seeks to integrate and interconnect the government's ICT systems
  4. Smarter Farms
  5. Smarter Healthcare.

Montejo stressed that all the innovations were developed by Filipino experts.

"We will brandish world-class products and processes that are conceptualized by local talents and experts and developed using local technologies," he said.

Montejo also cited the DOST's most recent innovations, namely, the 350-million state-of-the-art Advanced Device and Materials Testing Laboratory (Admatel) for the semiconductor and electronics industries and the Automated Guideway Transit that is currently being tested as an alternative mass transportation system.

In the pipeline, Montejo said, are the dengue diagnostic kit, dengue early warning system, drugs made from local herbs and the RxBox that will connect health professionals in the countryside.

In agriculture, he said the DOST and the Department of Agriculture were designing farm implements for more effective farming. (http://bit.ly/WDhhwM)

INQUIRER News

Bloomberg: Philippines Cleanest Government - Trounces Global Stocks in Aquino-Led Rally

The world's biggest equity bull market is propelling Philippine valuations to all-time highs as international investors pile into the country's stocks in an endorsement of President Benigno Aquino's economic policies.

The Philippine Stock Exchange Index has climbed 13 percent this year, bringing gains since October 2008 to 285 percent, at least 124 percentage points more than every other bull market in emerging and developed nations, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The index turned into Asia's most expensive from the second-cheapest four years ago as rallies in Ayala Land Inc. and Bank of the Philippine Islands lifted the gauge to 19 times estimated profits.

Aquino's efforts to boost spending on government projects and tackle corruption are convincing foreign investors to look past the nation's speculative-grade credit rating and focus on the third-fastest growth in Asia after China and Thailand. While Invesco Ltd. says shares are too expensive, Samsung Asset Management and Religare Capital Markets see further gains of at least 20 percent and an investment-grade ranking this year.

"Funds will remain net buyers," Alan Richardson, who helps oversee about $110 billion as a money manager at Samsung Asset in Singapore, said in a Feb. 6 e-mail. "The focus is on opportunity and growth rather than contraction caused by deleveraging, bank recapitalization, fiscal austerity and increased regulatory oversight in many of the developed economies."

Bull Rally

The benchmark gauge for the nation's $236 billion equity market rose 0.7 percent yesterday to 6,565.23. The bull market, defined as an advance of at least 20 percent from the most recent low without a drop of the same magnitude on a closing basis, is the biggest since Bloomberg began compiling Philippine index data in 1987.

Mexico's IPC Index has climbed about 161 percent since March 2009, making it the second-biggest bull market among 45 emerging and advanced countries, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index is up 125 percent from a low in the same month. In China, the biggest emerging market, the Shanghai Composite Index has increased 24 percent from its Dec. 3 low.

Philippine shares will probably return about 38 percent by the end of 2014, according to Samsung's Richardson. The benchmark index may rally 20 percent to 30 percent this year, said John Sturmey, head of equity capital markets at Religare Capital Markets, a unit of New Delhi-based Religare Enterprises Ltd.

Foreign Inflows

"We are very bullish on the Philippines for this year and the following years," Sturmey said in a Feb. 5 interview in Manila.

Foreign investors purchased a net $819 million of shares in Asia's 12th-biggest stock market this year, 120 percent more than during the same period a year ago, according to Philippine Stock Exchange data compiled by Bloomberg. The nation of about 100 million people recorded $2.5 billion of inflows last year, the most since Bloomberg began tracking the data in 2000.

Growing confidence in the economy is also boosting the nation's currency and debt. The peso has appreciated 5 percent against the dollar during the past 12 months, the most in emerging markets, and reached the strongest level since 2008 last month at 40.55 to the dollar.

Economic Growth

Yields on local-currency debt, rated BB+ by Standard & Poor's, fell to a record 3.76 percent on Jan. 28, according to the JPMorgan GBI-EM Philippines Index. The cost to insure government bonds, rated one level below investment grade, against non-payment for five years using credit-default swaps was 103 basis points yesterday, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That compares with 121 for Brazil, whose foreign-currency debt is rated two levels above the Philippines.

Philippine gross domestic product increased 6.8 percent from a year earlier in the fourth quarter, compared with 7.9 percent in China. The euro region contracted during the period, while the U.S. expanded 1.5 percent.

Aquino plans to boost spending to a record and seek more than $17 billion of infrastructure investments to spur growth of at least 6 percent this year. Projects to build a toll-road south of Manila and more than 9,300 classrooms have already been announced since he took office in June 2010.

The 53-year-old president has narrowed the budget deficit by cracking down on tax evasion and raising taxes on liquor and tobacco. The gap was probably 2.3 percent of GDP in 2012, Budget Secretary Butch Abad said in a Feb. 14 interview in Manila. That's down from 3.5 percent in 2010, according to Philippine Department of Finance data.

Fighting Corruption

Aquino, who had a 66 percent approval rating in a January survey conducted by Pulse Asia, has also focused on reducing corruption. Renato Corona, the country's top judge, was ousted in May for illegally concealing his wealth.

The Philippines was ranked 105 on Transparency International's 2012 Corruption Perceptions Index, an improvement from 134 in 2010. A lower ranking signals less corruption.

"The macro environment looks very positive and the Philippines probably has the cleanest government in its history," Alistair Thompson, deputy head of Asia Pacific ex- Japan equities at First State Investments in Singapore, said in a Jan. 16 phone interview. "Companies are very optimistic." His firm oversees about $147 billion.

Philippine stock valuations already reflect the good news, according to Paul Chan, the Hong Kong-based chief investment officer for Asia ex-Japan at Invesco, which oversees about $713 billion.

More Expensive

The benchmark index's valuation of 19 times projected 12- month earnings is the highest since Bloomberg began compiling the data in January 2006 and 46 percent more expensive than the MSCI All-Country World Index. The Philippine gauge has the world's second-highest multiple after Greece's ASE Index, which trades at 22 times estimated profits, the data show.

Ayala Land, a Manila-based developer, is valued at 39 times 2013 profit forecasts, more than twice the median multiple for global peers, according to the average of 14 projections compiled by Bloomberg.

Bank of the Philippine Islands, the country's biggest lender by market capitalization, trades for 4 times net assets, versus the 1.6 industry average.

Earnings-per-share in the Philippine index will probably increase 14 percent in the next 12 months, versus 25 percent for the MSCI All-Country gauge, according to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Earnings Outlook

"The Philippines is a very crowded market," Chan said in a Feb. 7 phone interview. He cut Philippine positions to less than 1 percent of total holdings from "much higher" levels last year and prefers shares in China and South Korea, where price-earnings ratios are about half the level of the Southeast Asian nation's.

There is "probably room" for Philippine stock valuations to climb as long as growth in earnings and the economy can be sustained, Hans Sicat, president of the country's bourse, said in a Feb. 15 interview in Tokyo.

First State's Thompson said he purchased shares of Manila- based BDO Unibank Inc. after visiting the country in November. The nation's second-biggest bank by market value trades for 2.2 times net assets, about half the multiple of Bank of the Philippine Islands.

Rating Trend

"We remain positive," Douglas Cairns, an investment specialist for Asia and emerging-market equities at Threadneedle Investments in London, which oversees about $122 billion, said in an e-mail on Feb. 7. Cairns said the firm has overweight holdings in Philippine shares, meaning positions exceed the country's representation in benchmark indexes.

An investment-grade credit rating may open Philippine capital markets to pension funds and endowments that have avoided the country, according to Samsung Asset's Richardson.

The rating will probably be upgraded in the first half, central bank Governor Amando Tetangco said in a Bloomberg Television interview on Jan. 25. S&P raised its outlook to positive from stable on Dec. 20, citing the stability of Aquino's administration and economic growth.

GDP will probably increase 6 percent to 7 percent this year and accelerate in 2014, Economic Planning Secretary Arsenio Balisacan said at a forum in Manila on Feb. 13.

Investors should add to their stock holdings on any declines, Christopher Wood, a Hong Kong-based strategist at CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets who recommends a bigger overweight position in the Philippines than any other equity market in Asia excluding Japan, said in a Feb. 7 report. "In such a structural bull market, those investors who focus too much on valuations sell way too early."

To contact the reporter on this story: Ian Sayson in Manila at isayson@bloomberg.net ; Weiyi Lim in Singapore at wlim26@bloomberg.net ; Michael Patterson in Hong Kong at mpatterson10@bloomberg.net (http://bloom.bg/151A34I)

Bloomberg 

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Sultan of Sulu will never back-down with Malaysia for North Borneo Territory Stand-off

Jamalul D. Kiram III (born on July 16, 1938 in Maimbung, Sulu; reigned 1974- 1981) was the Sultan of Sulu in Sulu, southern Philippines during the Marcos era. He was a candidate for senator in the 2007 Philippine Elections.  With his retirement, the succession rights of the sultanate was disputed among his heirs such as Mohammad Akijal Atti. The dispute on the succession rights ended in November 11, 2012 when all claimants from the Kiram family met together in Sulu, ending their decade-long feud. Jamalul Kiram III declared Rajah Mudah Agbimuddin Kiram as "crown prince"

The Sulu Sultanate was once a powerful kingdom, stretching from Borneo, Southern Philippines to parts of the Visayas, Part of Mindanao, Palawan to the Spratly Islands. During the height of its power during the 1700s, the Sultanate exercise  control over most of what is now known as Mindanao and North Borneo.

State of Sabah once controlled by the old Sultanate of Sulu but Britain illegally ceded the North Borneo to Malaysia without informing the Sultan and without even paying a single dime to the Sultan who ruled the territory.

'till todate, Malaysia still recognized Sabah State or North Borneo State as part of the Sultanate of Sulu by paying a rental of M$5,000 Malaysian Ringgit per year to the Royal Sultanate of the Southern Philippines.

Britain, the responsible of the trouble in North Borneo and the Southern Philippines for the illegal transfer of the territory to Malaysia remained silent for few decades and ignored the call of the Philippines to respect the Sultanate of Sulu as the original Territorial owner of Sabah (North Borneo) and the territory must be return to the Sultanate of Sulu. Philippines and the Sultanate of Sulu State are too weak also to against the illegal order and the bully of the abusing  powerful Britain.

Sulu sultan won't budge

As reported by INQUIRER Global Nation, the recently crowned Sultan with his brother will never back down for the current stand-off between his men and the Malaysian Authority in North Borneo.

Undaunted amidst mounting pressure from both the Philippine and Malaysian governments, Sultan Jamalul Kiram III, the acknowledged leader of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo insisted that his royal decree that authorized the presence of  his younger brother, crown prince Rajah Mudah Agbimuddin Kiram and the combined civilian and armed followers in Lahad Datu, Sabah, Malaysia, stays.

"My decree is not about war. We are not waging war. I sent my brother in Sabah in the name of peace and in exercise of our historic, ancestral and sovereign right over Sabah," Jamalul told the INQUIRER in a phone interview facilitated through members of his family who were beside him as he was resting after undergoing his regular dialysis treatment.

Jamalul is in Metro Manila and is guarded by family and close relatives.

Asked as to until when his decree stays? Jamalul said, "For as long as necessary. Sabah is our homeland and the international community acknowledges this. If we have to go to the United Nations we will do so. It is upon us, the leaders of Sulu to claim back what is ours," the sultan added.

Does he have any message for the Philippine government?

"Everything I want to tell the President, I already told him in a letter sent to him, shortly after he assumed the presidency in 2010. I told him in that letter that it is the noble dream of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo to achieve unity, peaceful survival and economic prosperity and to be able to achieve that, the Sabah issue cannot be ignored," Jamalul said.

Jamalul is 74 years old, the eldest among the Kiram brothers who are direct descendants of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo. He ran and lost for senator in the 2007 National Elections under the Team Unity of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

Abraham Julpa Idjirani, secretary general and spokesperson for the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo said, Jamalul was supposed to meet on Saturday afternoon with some officials of the Aquino administration but was not able to do so because of the dialysis treatment.

Jamalul's wife Fatima Celia told the INQUIRER that her husband has been undergoing dialysis treatment for more than a year now.

Map of the Sultanate of Sulu

Open to talks with Palace

Idjirani said, they are open to talks with any official sent by Malacañang as he was already contacted by several officials of the Aquino administration since the standoff in Lahad Datu, Malaysia, was reported in the media. He did not identify the officers who got in touch with him but mentioned the agencies these officials are attached to. "Magpahinga lang si Sultan Jamalul, at pag naka-pahinga na siya, puwede na naming harapin ang sinumang opisyal na gustong makipag-usap sa kanya (After resting, Sultan Jamalul can face any official who wants to talk to him)," Idjirani said.

The INQUIRER also learned from another independent source who wished not to be identified that President Benigno Aquino III was informed of the presence of civilian and armed supporters of the Sultanate of Sulu in Lahad Datu, Malaysia, as early as the morning of Feb. 11 through one of his Cabinet members. "But at that time, the report was still sketchy and we had no idea who the group was. But the President was alerted about this on Day 1 of their landing in Sabah," the source said.

The Office of the Presidential Adviser in the Peace Process had no comment on Saturday on the Kirams' claim that they were taking back Sabah.

In Lahad Datu in Sabah, Agbimuddin told the Inquirer that he only follows and receives order from Jamalul and no one else. No one can force us to leave. Even if I, as crown prince of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo is guarded by armed men belonging to our royal security forces, we will never provoke any encounter," Agbimuddin said.

Assorted arms

Members of the royal security force are armed with assorted long firearms,  Agbimuddin said. "M-14, M-16, M203, Baby Armalite, basta assorted ang dala namin (we have all kinds)," he explained when asked what type of firearms they were carrying.

The active recruitment for members of the royal security force of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo, according to Agbimuddin, began in 1999 but training only began in 2001 in Simunol, Tawi-Tawi, Isabela, Basilan and even in mainland Zamboanga. "Sa Grand Stand pa nga kami ng Zamboanga nag-physical fitness exercise at alam ng Southcom 'yan (We do our physical fitness exercises at the Zamboanga grand stand, and the Southcom knew it)," Agbimuddin added.

The Southcom he is referring to is the Southern Command of the Armed Forces of the Philippines based in Zamboanga City and the Grand Stand is the one near Cawa-Cawa Boulevard.

Relatives on board

Who takes care of their logistics? Like food and other basic necessities since their landing in Lahad Datu?

Agbimuddin said, most of the residents of Tanduao, Lahad Datu, are Tausugs and relatives of the ones who went with him on board a motorboat from Tawi-Tawi. "Hindi kami magugutom dito at ang mga babae na kasama namin, sila ang nagluluto para sa amin (The women who are with us are doing the cooking)."

Will other groups with the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo follow him in Lahad Datu?

More coming

Agbimuddin answered that was his understanding, but he said he didn't know when. There might even be more, he said.

Another source from Sulu told the Inquirer that a group identified with a local political clan with a stronghold in one municipality there is reportedly getting ready to follow Agbimuddin in Sabah. The source identified the political leader as a relative of the Kirams and also a former mayor and a former member of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) known then as the "Tiger of the MNLF."

"The mayor is getting ready and waiting for the order from Sultan Kiram III to proceed [to Sabah]," the source said in Filipino, adding that the influential leader in Sulu, now in his early 60s, command a force of more than 200 men.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Philippine’ Sultanate of Sulu Royal Forces STANDOFF with illegal Malaysia Government in NBorneo

Map of the Sultanate of Sulu. The Sulu Sultanate was once a powerful kingdom, stretching from Borneo, Southern Philippines to parts of the Visayas, Part of Mindanao, Palawan to the Spratly Islands. During the height of its power during the 1700s, the Sultanate exercise  control over most of what is now known as Mindanao and North Borneo.

Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said about 80 to 100 gunmen apparently belonging to the "royal army" of the Philippine' Sultanate of Sulu had been cornered by security forces near the small coastal town of Lahad Datu in Sabah, North Borneo.

He said security forces were in control and negotiating with the group, some of whom were armed.

The area was once controlled by the old Sultanate of Sulu but Britain illegally ceded the North Borneo to Malaysia without informing the Sultan and without even paying a single dime to the Sultan who ruled the territory.

'till todate, Malaysia still recognized Sabah State or North Borneo State as part of the Sultanate of Sulu by paying a rental of M$5,000 Malaysian Ringgit per year to the Royal Sultanate of the Southern Philippines.

Britain, the responsible of the trouble in the Southern Philippines for the illegal transfer of the territory to Malaysia remained silent for few decades and ignored the call of the Philippines to respect the Sultanate of Sulu as the original Territorial owner of Sabah (North Borneo) and the territory must be return to the Sultanate of Sulu. Philippines and the Sultanate of Sulu State are too weak also to against the illegal order and the bully of the abusing  powerful Britain.  

Malaysia's national police chief Ismail Omar was quoted as saying the estimated 80 to 100 armed Sultanate of Sulu Royal Armies had declared themselves followers of "a descendant of the Sultan of Sulu."

Ismail, quoted on the website of The Star newspaper, said the group demanded to be recognized as the "Royal Sulu Sultanate Army" and insisted that as subjects of the sultanate, they should be allowed to remain in Sabah.

The Standoff begun after Malaysian Government deported the Sulu Nationals who settled in North Borneo for several decades. The Sulu Nationals (Philippine Citizen of the Southern Philippines under the old Sultanate of Sulu) still believe that Sabah or North Borneo is still part of the Sultanate of Sulu and they must be allowed to stay in Sabah as long as they want as it is part of the Sultanate of Sulu but Malaysian Government deported several hundreds of their compatriots and would probably affect the estimated 30% of the total residents of Sabah who are originally from the old Sultanate of Sulu Capital in the Southern Philippines.

In Manila, Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario said the two countries "were in touch on the issue" but the details were unclear because "we are still trying to ascertain and complete the facts of this incident."

"What I've said earlier, we are still trying to complete our information Del Rosario told reporters.

Bernama said the Filipinos, who were wearing military fatigue uniforms, arrived in Lahad Datu on Tuesday and were isolated in a secluded area. Police officials said they have been told "to lay down their arms and surrender."

Gulf News said the armed men belong to the "Royal Army of Sulu," who were out to resurrect the Philippine's claim over Sabah."

"Unconfirmed reports from our sources said that a group who called themselves the Royal Army of Sulu Sultanate is behind the unauthorized armed presence," Gulf News said.

In 1963, Sabah, which was leased by the Sulu Sultanate to the British since the 19th century, became part of the Federation of Malaysia when Britain illegally ceded the territory to Malaysia . The Filipinos protested, claiming that Sabah was never sold to foreign interests.

The military declined to comment on the issue, but highly-placed sources said the men were believed to be the heirs of the Sultanate of Sulu, who came from the islands of Basilan, Tawi-tawi and Sulu in Mindanao.

A military official, who asked not to be named, said the Filipinos were unarmed and they decided to sail to Sabah after a meeting in a schoolhouse in Tawi-Tawi because "Sabah belongs to us."

"Ito iyong grupo na nagki-claim. Nagpulong-pulong sila para pag-usapan kung papaano nila i-continue iyung pag-claim sa Sabah. Tapos my mga followers sila na sinasabing kapag sumama kayo magkaroon kayo ng lupa sa Sabah, bigyan kayo ng lupa," the official said.

In 1967, an attempt to land Filipino commandos, trained in Corregidor,  on Sabah  and invade Sabah under the "Operation Merdeka" was aborted after the supposed commandos were all but one killed. The lone survivor of the carnage,  Jibin Arula, revealed  what was eventually known as the Jabidah massacre.

Police Inspector-General Tan Sri Ismail Omar said police "formed the first circle to cordon the area, while military personnel made up the second circle."

"In terms of strength, we have the upper hand in combat power to arrest them. But the government opts for negotiation to break the stalemate so that they leave peacefully to southern Philippines," Omar said.

"But let the police negotiate with them and hopefully, it will bear fruit and succeed. This is because they cannot go anywhere, they have been surrounded. They have no choice and have to find a solution," he said.

Lahad Datu is a town in Tawau Division, in the east of Sabah, on the island of Borneo. The town, which occupies the peninsula on the north side of Darvel Bay, has population of 156,059 based on the 2000 census where 80% of the populations are originally from the Sultanate of Sulu (Basilan, Tawi-tawi, Zamboanga).

Lahad Datu is home to Sabah's population of Orang Bajau and other ethnic tribes or BADJAO who scattered around the Philippines as boat people, such as the Cocos Island Malays, who settled in the area in the 1950s when the Cocos Islands became part of Australia. Lahad Datu is known for its palm oil refineries.

The Philippine government signed a landmark peace deal with Muslim rebels late last year to end the 40-year conflict in the south, but some factions have voiced opposition as the deal could affect their claim that Sabah must be returned first to the Philippines and the Sultanate of Sulu must be re-empowered.

"Since Malaysia brokered the deal, followers from the Misuari Breakaway Group have decided to stir up some trouble and create fireworks in Sabah," the report quoted the Malaysian official as saying.

The Sulu Sultanate was once a powerful kingdom, stretching from Borneo, Southern Philippines to parts of the Visayas, Part of Mindanao, Palawan to the Spratly Islands. During the height of its power during the 1700s, the Sultanate exercise  control over most of what is now known as Mindanao and North Borneo.

Raja Muda Muedzul-Lail Tan Kiram was proclaimed as the 35th Sultan of Sulu during ceremonies held in Maimbung, Jolo last September.

Security on Malaysia's sea border with the Philippines has been problematic for Sabah, where tens of thousands of Filipinos have immigrated in the past few decades.

With report sources from Manila Standard Today, Inquirer, Reuters, and Bangkok Post

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

₱1.83-Billion NIA III upgrade budget release; Clark as the next Asia’s ‘aerotropolis

 

Philippines to spend $45 million for airport upgrade

The Philippine government has released $45 million to spruce up its newest airport terminal in a bid to boost tourism.

Budget Secretary Florencio Abad said Tuesday that the completion and upgrade of Terminal 3 of Ninoy Aquino International Airport will ease traffic on the 32-year-old Terminal 1.

Terminal 3, which opened in 2008, is already operating over its capacity, with 13.8 million passengers last year, more than 800,000 over its capacity. Once it is upgraded, it will handle more international flights, easing the load on Terminal 1, which is solely for international flights.

Originally designed for 4.5 million passengers yearly, Terminal 1 handled 8.2 million passengers last year, up from 7.8 million in 2011. A majority of the passengers at the airport's Terminal 2 are domestic passengers. (http://bit.ly/X1JaQn)

Clark International Airport as Asia's next 'aerotropolis

With the world's economic center of gravity rapidly moving eastward, there is increasing urgency to develop Clark International Airport into an aviation hub, and this is the focus of a two-day conference to be held this month at the Clark Freeport Zone in Pampanga.

"The Case for Asia's Next Aerotropolis" is the theme of the Clark Aviation Conference 2013, a trade gathering that will examine Clark's compelling case as an aerotropolis, an idea in community planning where airports serve as the center for new cities growing around them.

The conference, being organized by Clark International Airport Corp (CIAC) in partnership with Global Gateway Logistics City, takes place Feb. 21-22, 2013, at the Widus Convention Center in Clark Freeport Zone. It coincides with the annual Hot Air Balloon Fiesta.

"The event will highlight Clark International Airport's critical role in easing air traffic congestion in Manila and driving economic expansion in Central Luzon. It will also identify infrastructure and policy developments at Clark Freeport Zone that are designed to attract airport-related businesses and investments," said CIAC president and CEO Victor Jose Luciano.

"More importantly, the conference is a call for the full development of Clark International Airport as an aviation nerve center in the light of the economic growth in Asia."

Heads of government agencies—including Tourism Secretary Ramon Jimenez, Bases Conversion and Development Authority president Atty. Arnel Casanova and Trade Assistant Secretary Fe Agoncillo-Reyes—and private-sector representatives will look at Clark's prospects as an aviation and investment destination in Asia, even as they examine pressing aviation and tourism concerns and propose sustainable and long-term solutions.

Keynote speaker is Greg Lindsay, the US-based co-author of the bestselling book, Aerotropolis, The Way We'll Live Next. Other speakers include Tourism Undersecretary Daniel Corpuz, John Forbes of the Joint Foreign Chambers of Commerce, former Tourism Secretary Narzalina Lim, and Capt. Benjamin Solis, adviser of CIAC.

The convention targets international investors, logistics and supply chain executives, tourism stakeholders, airline officials, import and export managers, and members of the academe. They are expected to gain insights into Clark's potentials as an aviation and investment destination in Asia and understand better its increasing role in national and regional development.

To register or make inquiries, call event manager PortCalls at (632) 552-7072, (632) 551-1775, or (0917) 5555273; or email lizaalmonte@portcalls.com. For more details, log on to clarkaviationconference.com. (http://bit.ly/14MPsFK)

INQUIRER Business

South Korean ratings agency gives Philippines a credit lift

The Philippines got a ratings boost from South Korea's NICE Investors Service Co. Ltd., which took into account various factors, including the country's improved fiscal policy, private consumption and the strong Philippine peso.

In a report distributed to reporters on Tuesday, NICE rated the country's long-term foreign currency at "BB+," with a positive outlook. The Philippines is currently rated one notch below investment grade by the top three credit-rating agencies, with a potential upgrade anticipated within the year.

In its report, NICE said that weak taxes have been holding back improvements in the country's fiscal condition but it noted that the Aquino administration has "advanced its tax administration, increasing overall tax revenue."

"In addition, the government has been committed to fiscal consolidation by taking various measures, like enacting the 'sin' tax law and implementing other fiscal-reform actions," it added.

"As the government has consistently enhanced the business environment to attract more investment, the efforts are expected to begin to deliver visible outcomes in the future," the agency said.

Cited in the report were "solid" private consumption, partly driven by continued growth of money from overseas Filipino workers [OFW], and the rapid expansion of the business process outsourcing (BPO) sector.

"Consumption based on [OFW] remittances is robust enough to absorb external shocks to some extent; on the back of increasing government expenditure and rebounding export, the economic growth rate of 2012 is expected to jump from that of the year before," NICE said.

While the strong peso has been cited as hurting the BPO and export businesses, the debt watcher said the currency's appreciation combined with the global economic slowdown has "largely contributed" to price stabilization.

NICE cautioned that relatively large public debts to gross domestic product have undermined the government's ability for infrastructure investment and that the share of foreign currency-denominated debts is still relatively high.

"But the increasing mid/long-term domestic borrowings may limit default risks that would be triggered by external changes," it said. (http://bit.ly/VW1zuv)

Business Mirror

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Japan plans to give patrol boats to Philippines

Members of Philippine Coast Guard put up flags as they welcome the training vessel "KOJIMA" of the Japan Coast Guard in Manila, 11 August 2004. AFP FILE PHOTO

Japan plans to donate patrol boats costing $11 million each to the Philippines, ramping up the regional efforts to monitor China's maritime activity in disputed waters.

The Japanese Government plans to finance the deal in its fiscal 2013 budget starting in April and hopes to officially sign it early next year, the Nikkei business daily has reported.

Japan will then provide the Philippines with the newly built patrol vessels, which will cost more than one billion yen ($11 million) each, the newspaper said, without specifying the number of boats on offer.

Territorial disputes

Both the countries are locked in separate territorial disputes with China. Japan's dispute is over a group of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea known as the Senkakus in Japan and the Diaoyus in China.

The Philippines is one of several Southeast Asian countries, including Vietnam, that are rowing with China over claims to parts of the South China Sea. Two of the hotspots are the Spratly islands and Scarborough Shoal.

The Japanese coastguard also plans to train Philippine and Vietnamese personnel as part of additional efforts to boost security cooperation with Southeast Asia, the Nikkei said.

In the fiscal 2013 budget draft, 2.5 billion yen has been allotted for such expenditure, it said.

Last month, Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida visited Manila and called for stronger ties with the Philippines to help ensure regional peace.

Japan's coastguard had last month said it would create a special unit comprising 10 new large patrol boats to boost its surveillance of the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands.

The long-running row over the islands intensified in September when Tokyo nationalised part of the chain, triggering fury in Beijing and huge anti-Japan demonstrations across China.

In the most serious high-seas incident yet, Japan had last week said that a Chinese frigate locked its weapon-targeting radar on a Japanese navy vessel on January 30. China has angrily denied the charge.

Keywords: Territorial disputes, East China Sea, South China Sea, Senkakus island, Diaoyus island, Spratly islands, Scarborough Shoal, Japan-China territorial disputes, China-Southeast Asian nations territorial dispute. (http://bit.ly/Y4ZPRb)

The Hindu Business Line

Monday, February 11, 2013

World's largest captive crocodile dies in Philippines

A worker places blocks of ice around Lolong as the crocodile is prepared for its autopsy on Monday in Bunawan, Philippines. Photograph: Erwin Mascarinas/AP

Philippine town in mourning as Lolong, the largest saltwater crocodile in captivity, dies aged 50

A southern Philippine town plans to hold funeral rites for the world's largest saltwater crocodile and then preserve its remains in a museum to attract tourists and prevent their community from slipping back into obscurity, the town's mayor said on Monday.

The one-tonne crocodile was declared dead on Sunday a few hours after flipping over with a bloated stomach in a pond in an ecotourism park in Bunawan town, which had started to draw tourists, revenue and development because of the immense reptile, the town's mayor, Edwin Cox Elorde, said.

"The whole town, in fact the whole province, is mourning," Elorde said from Bunawan in Agusan del Sur province. "My phones kept ringing because people wanted to say how affected they are."

Guinness World Records had proclaimed it the largest saltwater crocodile in captivity last year, measuring the giant at 6.17 metres (20.24ft). The reptile took the top spot from an Australian crocodile that measured more than 5 metres (17ft) and weighed nearly a tonne.

The crocodile was named Lolong, after a government environmental officer who died from a heart attack after travelling to Bunawan to help capture the beast. The crocodile, estimated to be more than 50 years old, was blamed for killing a number of villagers before Bunawan folk came to love it.

The giant reptile has come to symbolise the rich biodiversity of Agusan marsh, where it was captured. The vast complex of swamp forests, shallow lakes, lily-covered ponds and wetlands is home to wild ducks, herons, egrets and threatened species including the Philippine Hawk Eagle.

Wildlife experts were due to perform an autopsy as early as Monday to determine the cause of its death, Elorde said.

Bunawan villagers planned to perform a tribal ritual, which involves butchering chickens and pigs as funeral offerings to thank forest spirits for the fame and other blessings the crocodile has brought, Elordie said. A group of Christians would separately offer prayers before the autopsy.

The rites will be held at the ecotourism park, where the reptile had emerged as a star attraction, drawing foreign tourists, scientists and wildlife reporting outfits like the National Geographic to Bunawan, a town of 37,000 people about 515 miles (830km) south-east of Manila.

The crocodile's capture in September 2011 sparked celebrations in Bunawan, but it also raised concerns that more giant crocodiles might lurk in a marshland and creek where villagers fish. The crocodile was captured with steel cable traps during a hunt prompted by the death of a child in 2009 and the later disappearance of a fisherman. Water buffalo have also been attacked by crocodiles in the area.

About 100 people led by Elorde pulled the crocodile from a creek using a rope and then hoisted it by crane on to a truck.

Philippine officials had planned to construct a road to the park to accommodate the growing number of tourists, Elorde said, adding he planned to have the crocodile preserved and placed in a museum so Bunawan villagers and tourists could still marvel at it.

"I'd like them to see the crocodile that broke a world record and put our town on the map," he said. (http://bit.ly/11AKxKl)

The Guardian 

Monday, February 4, 2013

Dole Philippines to finally ship bananas to US

Dole Philippines may now ship Cavendish to the United States after the maiden export of the commodity was frustrated by Typhoon Pablo last December, the Bureau of Plant Industry said Monday, noting that the shipment was cleared by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA).

An initial shipment of 3,000 metric tons will be made in the first quarter, said Bureau director Clarito Barron.

The Philippine official said his American counterpart, Kelan Evans of the USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) conveyed the official import ruling that covers the the shipment to the US mainland.

Barron and Evans met on Monday, during which the US official also said that the USDA- APHIS certified mango plantations in Davao Oriental and Samal Island as pest-free. "This means that we may also export mangoes from these areas other than Guimaras," Barron noted.

No volume has yet been specified for mango shipments to the US. "We are still working on the protocols for that," said Barron.

Typhoon Pablo destroyed banana plantation in Davao and Campostela Valley in early December, which compelled the Philippines to postpone the maiden shipment of Cavendish to the US to cover existing export contracts with Japan and South Korea. (http://bit.ly/VKjFl9)

GMA News

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