OFW Filipino Heroes

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

NORTH KOREA prepares to test medium-range ballistic missile as it CLOSES BORDER with CHINA; PHILIPPINES prepare for Nuclear Winter in mid-summer

  • US satellites have located North Korea's missiles
  • They have been pictured fueled and ready for launch
  • Fears North Korea will not issue test-fire warning

NORTH Korea has closed its border with China, turning back tourists as nuclear tensions continue to mount.

An official at the Dandong Border Office, who declined to give his name, told media: "Travel agencies are not allowed to take tourist groups to go there, since the North Korean government is now asking foreign people to leave. As far as I know, business people can enter and leave North Korea freely."

The move comes after it was revealed United States spy satellites had found two 'missing' North Korean nuclear-capable missiles.

CNN reported US officials were expecting a launch by North Korea "at any time".

Any such "test" launch would be seen as a further escalation of already high tensions in and around the Korean peninsula.

Things could be made worse if North Korea does not issue a "standard warning" of a missile test firing to commercial aviation and maritime shipping.

"We hope they issue a notification but at this point we don't expect it. We are working on the assumption they won't, "the official said.

US officials have confirmed that satellites have been kept over the suspected launch areas for the past week in order to locate - and monitor - the launch vehicles. Bad weather has made their job harder, they said.

The launchers are said to be about half-way down the North Korean east coast and about 20km inland. Satellite imagery shows the missiles have been fuelled and positioned for launch.

The Pentagon has announced it is ready to respond to any missile aimed at America or its allies.

US and South Korean officials have said that the Pyongyang regime may launch the missile as early as Wednesday.

The commander of US forces in the Pacific sought to reassure Congress that the Pentagon would be able intercept a missile. US satellites and radars in the region will be able to detect and quickly calculate the missiles' trajectory.

This would help determine if the launch was hostile - or a test.

The missiles would be shot down by land or sea based anti-missile weapons if they were to track over South Korea or Japan.

Navy Admiral Samuel J. Locklear said: "We have a credible ability to defend the homeland, to defend Hawaii, to defend Guam, to defend our forward deployed forces, and to defend our allies,'' Locklear told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

The US has never sought to shoot down a North Korean missile, and it's unclear if such a move would escalate the tension that has roiled the region. The Obama administration has moved additional military forces into the Pacific, but has sought to calibrate its response in the matter to avoid fueling the crisis.

A "counter-provocation plan" drawn up by US and South Korean officials calls for their combined military forces to respond proportionally to a North Korean attack, but to avoid any step that could set off an escalation of hostilities.

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has warned that even a slight miscalculation on the Korean peninsula could spiral into an "uncontrollable situation" as he urged North Korea to tone down its provocative rhetoric and ease the "very dangerous" level of tension.

Earlier, Pyongyang urged all foreign companies and tourists in South Korea to evacuate, saying the two countries are on the verge of nuclear war.

The new threat appeared to be an attempt to keep the region on tenterhooks over its intentions.

Analysts see a direct attack on Seoul as extremely unlikely, and there are no overt signs that North Korea's 1.2 million-man army is readying for war, let alone a nuclear one.

South Korea's military has reported missile movements on North Korea's east coast but nothing pointed toward South Korea.

Still, North Korea's earlier warning that it won't be able to guarantee the safety of foreign diplomats after April 10 has raised fears that it will conduct a missile or nuclear test today, resulting in US retaliation.

The United States and South Korea have raised their defense postures, and so has Japan, which deployed PAC-3 missile interceptors in key locations around Tokyo yesterday as a precaution against possible North Korean ballistic missile tests.

"The situation on the Korean Peninsula is inching close to a thermonuclear war due to the evermore undisguised hostile actions of the United States and the south Korean puppet warmongers and their moves for a war against" the North, said a statement by the North Korean Asia-Pacific Peace Committee, an organization that deals with regional matters.

The statement is similar to past threats that analysts call an attempt to raise anxiety in foreign capitals. Observers say a torrent of North Korean prophecies of doom and efforts to raise war hysteria are partly to boost the image of young and relatively untested leader Kim Jong-un at home, and to show him as a decisive military leader.

Another reason could be to use threats of war to win Pyongyang-friendly policy changes in Seoul and Washington. Last week, North Korea told foreign diplomats in Pyongyang that it will not be able to guarantee their safety as of Wednesday. It is not clear what the significance of that date is.

Tourists continued to arrive in Pyongyang despite the war hysteria.

Australian Mark Fahey of Sydney said he was not concerned about a possible war.

"I knew that when I arrived here it would probably be very different to the way it was being reported in the media," he told The Associated Press at Pyongyang airport. He said his family trusts him to make the right judgment but "my colleagues at work think I am crazy."

Chu Kang Jin, a Pyongyang resident, said everything is calm in the city.

"Everyone, including me, is determined to turn out as one to fight for national reunification ... if the enemies spark a war," he said, in a typically nationalist rhetoric that most North Koreans use while speaking to the media.

In Seoul, South Korean Presidential spokeswoman Kim Haing told reporters that the North Korean warning amounted to "psychological warfare."

"We know that foreigners residing in South Korea as well as our nationals are unfazed," she said.

South Korean President Park Geun-hye, who has sought to re-engage North Korea with dialogue and aid since taking office in February, expressed exasperation with what she called the "endless vicious cycle" of Seoul answering Pyongyang's hostile behavior with compromise, only to get more hostility.

Yesterday North Korea said it was suspending work at the Kaesong industrial park near its border, which is combines South Korean technology and know-how with North Korea's cheap labor. North Korea pulled out more than 50,000 workers from the complex, the only remaining product of economic cooperation between the two countries that started about a decade ago when relations were much warmer.

Other projects from previous eras of cooperation such as reunions of families separated by war and tours to a scenic North Korean mountain stopped in recent years.

Miriam warns Philippines: Prepare for 'nuclear winter

Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago, an expert in international law, warned the country of a "nuclear winter" should the ongoing tensions in the Korean peninsula escalate further.

Santiago said the so-called "nuclear winter" creates "dust clouds absorbing the sunlight, dropping temperatures, and damaging agriculture in wide areas of our country."

Initially, a nuclear weapons blast – with the Philippines a possible victim – will release a "fireball of extremely high temperature, Philippine environment could be degraded for generations." Residual effects include severe damage to health, such as leukemia, congenital defects and mental retardation, she said.

But with nuclear taboos compromised due to countries already thinking of striking back, the Philippines should be ready instead with analysis of laws that it could bring to international courts should it become a victim to the standoff.

"Should armed conflict arise, the Philippines should be ready with analyses of certain laws applicable in armed conflict, notably human rights conventions, the Genocide Convention, international humanitarian law, the principle of neutrality, and environmental law," Santiago said.

She said the shift is now towards risk management.

Philippines a Neutral state

Santiago said countries have to respect the integrity of neutral states like the Philippines.

"North Korea would fall under the duty to justify the use of particularly destructive weapons, if they seriously affect neutral countries like the Philippines. The consequences entailed by unjustified use will be governed by the law of state responsibility," she said.

She also noted the country is protected by the principles of environmental law, such as the 1978 ENMOD Convention or the Convention on the prohibition of military or any other hostile use of environmental modification techniques.

"This convention prohibits the use of weapons which have 'widespread, long-lasting, or severe effects' on the environment."

Combat

She also noted there is no treaty that would provide rules in the use of nuclear weapons in combat. "Present treaties deal only with manufacturing, testing, possession, proliferation, deployment, limitation, and reduction of nuclear arms," she said.

While the UN General Assembly has condemned nuclear arms, there are no resolutions adopted by all members, she stressed.

Nonetheless, she said that a nuclear strike hitting the Philippines constitutes a grave breach of humanitarian law.

"Hence, under international law, North Korea would assume the duty to pay reparations, which can amount to extreme proportions. In addition, use of the atomic bomb may qualify as war crimes and as crimes against humanity, under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court," she said.

With reports from ABS-CBN News and News.co.au

Monday, April 8, 2013

After US Warship, Chinese fishing boat runs aground in Tubbataha Reef, Sulu, Philippines

A US Navy ship also ran aground on Tubbataha in January. It was stuck for more than 10 weeks. Photo: AFP

A Chinese fishing boat has run aground on a World Heritage-listed coral reef in the Philippines, roughly 1,600 kilometers from China's nearest major landmass, authorities said on Tuesday.

The vessel, with 12 crew members, was found stranded in the shallows of Tubbataha Reef in the Sulu Sea just before midnight on Monday, coast guard spokesman Lieutenant Commander Arman Balilo said.

"This is a small fishing boat, but we are wondering how they strayed into Tubbataha. Apart from illegal entry, we are investigating them for possible poaching as well," Balilo said.

Balilo said the boat was to be pulled off the reef on Tuesday and then towed to the nearby island province of Palawan, where the fishermen would be detained and questioned by authorities.

Balilo said Chinese fishermen frequently strayed into Philippine waters, but this was the first time in recent years that they had been detected as far south as Tubbataha.

The grounding of the vessel comes as the Philippines and China are locked in a bitter dispute over competing territorial claims to the South China Sea.

China claims nearly all of the sea, even waters approaching the coasts of the Philippines, Vietnam and other countries in Southeast Asia.

The Philippines accused China of occupying a shoal, which is home to a rich fishing ground, near its main island of Luzon last year. The Philippines has asked a United Nations panel to rule that China's claims are invalid.

However Tubbataha reef is in the Sulu Sea, which is further southeast and not claimed by China. The Sulu and South China seas are separated by Palawan, one of the Philippines' biggest islands.

Hainan Island, China's nearest major landmass.

Balilo said he did not want to speculate how the Chinese fishermen reached Tubbataha.

But one navy official said the fishermen likely sailed through the South China Sea and then a narrow strait at the southern tip of Palawan.

Tubbataha is famous among divers around the world for its walls of coral and diverse marine life that many say rival that of Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Sailing in the Tubbataha Park is illegal without a permit.

However a US Navy minesweeper also ran aground on Tubbataha in January, and salvage crews had to break it down in pieces in a delicate operation that only ended on March 29.

Philippines authorities estimate that the USS Guardian damaged at least 2,345 square meters of the reef and are seeking 58 million pesos (US$1.4 million) in compensation.

SCMP

Philippine led ASEAN with 74% Investor's confidence -Frontrunner Foreign Investments

The Philippines seen as ASEAN economic frontrunner by Standard Chartered bank. (Credit: Standard Chartered Bank)

With the improvement of economies affected by the global recession in recent years, world renowned debt watcher Standard & Poor's (S&P's) and British banking giant Standard Chartered Bank recently said in separate reports that the Philippine economy is seen to continue on its upward trend and become the standout economy in Southeast Asia in 2013.

The Asia-Pacific region, which has endured half a decade of economic challenge, is expected to make progress in 2013. External factors affecting the region's economy with the European recession easing. The United States of America is also expected to grow faster. China has avoided an economic slowdown.

According to S&P's, Philippine growth is expected to reach 5.9 percent this year as the recession in Europe and America eases. More investments in tourism and the business process outsourcing industries have spurred economic growth to become more broad-based. These, combined with increased fiscal space, are putting the Philippine economy on a higher growth trajectory. The country holds a BB+ credit rating with S&P, a notch investment grade. It also obtained a positive outlook in 2012, indicating that an upgrade could be announced over the next 12 to 18 months.

According to the Standard Chartered Bank, a recent survey of more than 900 investors in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) saw the Philippines emerge as the frontrunner in the region. The survey showed that 74 percent of investor-respondents in Manila expect to see better business prospects in 2013 compared to the year before, dwarfing scores in Jakarta (46%), Bangkok (44%), Singapore (44%), and Kuala Lumpur (41%).

We congratulate the government of the Republic of the Philippines headed by H.E. President Benigno S. Aquino III and Vice President Jejomar C. Binay, in their unrelenting efforts in boosting the Philippines' economic growth.

Further Positive Outlook for Foreign Investments

Ellspermann's sentiments are ones that are shared by an overwhelming number of foreign businesses.

The projections of Standard Chartered Bank for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), drawing from a sample of over 900 investors, indicate the Philippines is in the lead for areas of development—edging out even Singapore and Malaysia, a fact illustrated in the adjacent chart:

"The Philippines was the standout country in terms of the strength of on-the-ground sentiment," Standard Chartered noted. "We expect the Philippines to see stronger investment growth this year, sustaining the strong momentum from 2012."

"The case for investment grade is supported by a number of factors, including a resilient economy, a current account surplus, stable fiscal policy, and the narrowing of the budget deficit," the bank explains, solidifying its outlook.

The study also cited improvements in infrastructure, the peace process with the rebellious Moro Islamic Liberation Front, the increasingly strong peso, and the progressing decreases in the national deficit (aided by the new "Sin Tax") as additional reasons for their report.

"We are optimistic that the Philippines will outperform the region and enjoy another year of strong growth momentum in 2013," Standard Chartered said, adding that they expected that the Philippines will reach investment grade by the end of fiscal year 2014.

Furthermore, the continued strengthening of the stock market has increased confidence in companies seeking to invest in the Philippines. The expansion of BPO offices is ongoing as well, despite the waning of this type of business in other nations in Asia. For the Philippines, the indications are clear.

The international economy continues to recover from far-ranging economic crises, and more and more businesses are veering away from established practices and looking towards a sustainable future.

As an investor favorite, the Philippines is at the forefront of development, ready to lead a region on the cusp of becoming a global economic giant.

With reports from Tempo and the Washington Times

Unseen nearly extinct Subanen Tribe in Zamboanga Peninsula popup to Switch off lights during the Earth Hour

Canatuan basks in the moonlight: Subanen / Subanons, TVIRD join millions worldwide in Earth Hour celebration

ZAMBOANGA DEL NORTE - In a rare show of solidarity, the Indigenous Subanen / Subanon people in Mount Canatuan in Zamboanga del Norte's Siocon town switched-off their electrical lights as they joined TVI Resource Development Philippines Inc. (TVIRD) and millions of people in more than 150 countries in the world in celebration of Earth Hour to fight the threat of global warming and raise awareness on climate change.

The celebration plunged into darkness in this tiny Subanen village for an hour-long symbolic show of support for conserving the planet's energy resources.

"It was a collective action that showed heightened awareness on the over-consumption of electricity that environmentalists often said as one cause of global warming," said Nilda Callora, TVIRD's manager for the Environment Department.

Callora said it was the second time the people of Canatuan and TVIRD joined the activity started by the World Wide Fund for Nature in Australia seven years ago. During every earth hour celebration, households and businesses are encouraged to turn off their non-essential lights to conserve resources.

As darkness enveloped Canatuan, Germidas Laspinas, Assistant General Manager, along with several employees led by Callora and Human Resource Superintendent Joyce Palpal-latoc, together with businessmen from the province of Zamboanga del Sur and Pagadian City who were incidentally in Canatuan for a mine tour, gathered together around a bonfire and discussed issues affecting the environment.

"We are used to blackouts in Pagadian City. But this celebration calls for everyone to join and make a difference even in our small ways to protect our Planet," Merlou Quisumbing, president of the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industries (PCCI)-Pagadian City and Zamboanga del Sur commented.

That very hour, only TVIRD's Processing Plant and health Clinic were lighted.

Earlier, Callora said during a presentation to the visiting businessmen that her department planted more than 360,000 trees as part of the company's environmental protection program. This number is five times more than the number of trees affected by TVIRD's operations, she said.

Canatuan hosts TVIRD's copper-zinc mining operations and was previously a haven of illegal miners who flocked to this once gold-rush area in the mid 90's. Rampant cutting of trees denuded its forest while Lituban and Siocon rivers, two of Siocon town's biggest rivers, were heavily contaminated with mercury and toxic chemicals.

"Canatuan is different from what it was five years ago. We did not see lines of trees standing like what we see today," said Bonifacio Patoh, former barangay chair of Tabayo, mother barangay of Canatuan.

Progressive rehabilitation

Callora said that her department is adopting 'progressive rehabilitation' as a strategy to rehabilitate and re-green the areas affected by the mining operation.

"This means, mined out areas turned-over to us by the Mines Department are planted with trees. We have nurseries filled with seedlings of fast growing trees and the endemic species in the area," she said.

She shared that the company's mining concession area or the so-called Mineral Production Sharing Agreement (MPSA) area totaled only 508 hectares.

"However, TVIRD has only disturbed about 225 hectares within and outside of the MPSA and has rehabilitated 151.43 hectares as of January 2013," she said.

Water quality monitoring

Callora also emphasized that her department is also looking after the quality of water bodies in the mine site, including tributaries to Siocon and Lituban rivers.

"Everyday we are monitoring it. We also have the Multi-partite Monitoring Team (MMT) that monitors the quality of water in all our sampling stations. This government mandated body, which has Subanen / Subanon members, meets regularly and sends water samples to accredited third party laboratories."

She disclosed that one of the best features of the environmental protection program of the company is its Sulphide Dam Tailings and Impoundment facility, a structure built by the company at a cost of more than 750 million.

"This tailings impoundment acts as a detention facility and designed to operate under a probable maximum flood event having a maximum rainfall of 1,635 millimeter in 24 hours. It also traps watershed sediment from disturbed areas and prevents it from continuing downstream. It is also designed to stand an 8.5 magnitude earthquake and equipped with instruments that detect seepage and movements inside the structure," she said.

TVIRD is the first foreign invested mining firm that reaches production stage following the approval of the 1995 Mining Act. It is consistently recognized for environmental protection and in upholding the safety, health and rights of its employees and surrounding communities from government and private entities.

Mindanao Examiner

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Philippine Gov't DOST developing Filipino 'road train' - September 2013

loQal - The Department of Science and Technology (DoST) announced it will develop a monorail train system that will run on electricity. A 500-meter track will be built at the UP Diliman campus to test this monorail system. (Computer-generated design courtesy of DoST)

Philippines --- A "Road Train" that can transport more commuters than the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) is being developed by the Department of Science and Technology (DOST), with a prototype expected in September, 2013.

The DOST conceived of the Road Train as it continued to test the Automated Guideway System (AGT) on an elevated rail line at the campus of the University of the Philippines (UP) in Diliman, Quezon City.

Another train in an elevated track is also being pushed by the DOST, starting in front of the DOST head office all the way to Laguna.

Without giving much details, DOST Secretary Mario Montejo revealed the plans for the Road Train at the opening day on Friday of the "Innovation Congress" or ICON at Bonifacio Global City.

DOST and Association of Vehicle Importers and Distributors (AVID), headed by president Fe Agudo, co-organized ICON until April 7.

Montejo said it is the task of the DOST to leverage science and technology (S&T) to create new and better products, processes, services, and systems" to improve the lives of Filipinos.

Montejo said the planned Road Train will have a dedicated track, but can also travel using vehicles' ordinary wheels in Metro Manila roads.

It will have an average speed of 30 kilometers per hour, and trains coming after each other at every 1.5 minutes, he said.

"There will be four couches in every Road Train, each couch capable of having 120 passengers for a total of 480 people," said Montejo.

"While MRT accommodates about 500,000 passengers a day, the Road Train will have some 652,800 commuters and run 17 hours a day," he said.

Filipinos are behind the making of the Road Train, he added.

He said innovation without action is empty and not capable of addressing the countless challenges that Filipinos face.

Yahoo News!

2 Russian-made multirole SukhoiS Chinese fighter jets intruded on the Philippines Airspace

SUSPECTED Chinese fighter jets, reportedly Russian-made multirole SukhoiS, again intruded into Philippine airspace particularly over the Kalayaan Island Group (KIG) in Palawan in the middle of last week, the Navy said.

The KIG has been constituted into a municipality under the province of Palawan.

The intrusion happened a day before the opening of the 2013 Philippines-US Exercise Balikatan, where some 8,000 Filipino and American soldiers are participating. The exercise is going in Luzon.

"Naval operating forces in Palawan have reported sightings of two unidentified aircraft passing at high speed and high altitude over the vicinity of Pagasa Island," Col. Edgard Arevalo, Naval spokesman for West Philippine Sea issues and other special naval concerns, said.

The sighting was recorded and reported by Commo. Joseph Rustom Peña, commander of the Naval Forces West based in Puerto Princesa City, in his report to the Navy flag officer in command, Vice Adm. Jose Luis Alano.

"They [aircraft], that headed north and came from the southwest, were spotted on Thursday, April 4, at 9:50 a.m.," Arevalo said, quoting Peña's report.

Pagasa Island is one of the barangays of KIG where an undeveloped airstrip is found. Less than 500 civilians and an undisclosed number of military troops are on the island.

The KIG town is composed of seven islets and two reefs on the West Philippine Sea (WPS) and is led by Mayor Eugenio Bito-onon. The area is part of the disputed Spratly Islands.

The Philippines, Taiwan, Vietnam, Brunei and Malaysia are claiming portions of the territories. China claims the whole area.

Earlier, military sources disclosed the airspace intrusion of alleged Chinese Sukhoi fighter jets in the WPS.

"The intrusions allegedly happened last week and early this week. Local fishermen who reported the incident claimed the fighter jets were always in tandem," the source said late last week.

He added that the three airspace violations happened in the KIG. The source said it was not clear if the Russian-made multirole fighter jets were part of the Chinese naval drill that was held recently on the South China Sea and "deliberately" intruded over KIG.

But Arevalo insisted there was no way to identify the aircraft.

"If we were able to identify [the aircraft], assuming they were Chinese, then we file diplomatic protest because that was a violation of our domain. But if they were Americans and they are part of the Balikatan, that is authorized.… The problem is we're not able to identify the aircraft because of their speed and altitude, [they were] too fast and too high," he said.

"The bottom line really is our limitation in terms of capability. If we have a good radar system we can easily spot and identify intruders, their direction and bearing," he added.

Arevalo said the report was immediately passed to the Navy Headquarters in Manila.

"The Navy remains vigilant and committed to its mandate of securing the country's maritime domain—notwithstanding limitations in its naval and air assets—and continue to conduct sovereignty patrols on the West Philippine Sea," he said.

More than two weeks before the Friday opening of Exercise Balikatan, local fishermen claimed ships with Chinese markings entered KIG at night and allegedly unloaded construction materials on the shallow part of an islet.

The intrusion of suspected Chinese fighter jets into the West Philippine Sea is not new, though.

In May 2011 the military confirmed that two unidentified aircraft intruded into Philippine airspace, three weeks before the arrival of the US carrier Strike Group 1 led by its mothership USS Carl Vinson in the country for a visit.

Air Force insiders said the "unidentified" aircraft were Mig-29 "Fulcrum" jets that buzzed over two Air Force OV-10 "Broncos" on a reconnaissance mission in the Spratlys.

Business Mirror (Zaff Solmerin)

2 Philippine Air Force C-130 cargo planes, 5 PCG Vessel Ready to Evacuate 40,000 PINOYS in South Korea

The government has reactivated its Rapid Response Team (RRT) in South Korea amid the worsening security situation in the Korean peninsula, Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin said Friday.

"We have already reactivated our RRT in South Korea as in line with our evacuation plan," Gazmin told The STAR at the sideline of the official opening of this year's Philippines-US Balikatan (Should-to-Shoulder) exercises held at Camp Aguinaldo.

The Philippine-RRT in South Korea was activated three years ago by the Philippine embassy when the North Koreans shelled a South Korean island, triggering heavy artillery exchanges.

North Korea has threatened a nuclear war against South Korea and the US, alarming the Philippines which has around 40,000 nationals in South Korea.

Gazmin said the RRT was reactivated to plan for the smooth evacuation of Filipinos in an event war between the two Koreas.

Two of the three C-130 cargo planes of the Philippine Air Force (PAF) have been placed on standby by the PAF leadership for possible humanitarian deployment to South Korea.

The Philippine Navy (PN) and the Philippine Coast Guard have also alerted five of its vessels, ready to embark on a seven-day voyage to South Korea to evacuate Filipinos.

philSTAR

Philippines, USA 9-day Balikatan Excercise 2013 joint drill in Luzon island

San Marcelino, Philippines, Philippines - Philippine Seabees from the 3rd Naval Construction Battalion and Marines from the 9th Engineer Support Battalion place a 4-inch concrete pad over an existing pad to raise the foundation above the waterline to prevent future flooding at the Rabanes Elementary School. This engineering civic action project (ENCAP)is one of eight being performed by Combined/Joint Civil Military Operations Task Force (CJCMOTF) units in support of exercise Balikatan 2013. Balikatan 2013 (BK13) is an annual Philippine-U.S. bilateral exercise. Humanitarian assistance and training activities enable the Philippine and American service members to build lasting relationships, train together and provide assistance in communities where the need is the greatest. 

Top officials from the United States and Philippines a joint military exercise which involves 8,000 troops from both countries and dozens of military assets, including a squadron of F/A-18 Hornet fighter jets.

Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) chief Gen. Emmanuel Bautista declared the opening of the nine-day military exercise dubbed as "Balikatan 2013" at the AFP headquarters in Metro Manila, the country's capital region.

"Balikatan is a clear affirmation of a shared commitment between the Philippines and US armed forces to move shoulder to shoulder for stability, security and development," said Bautista.

Brig. Gen. Richard Simcock, deputy commander of the US Marine Corps Forces in the Pacific, said the annual military exercise is meant to improve "military operations and to advance regional security operations."

"As you know, 'balikatan' means shoulder to shoulder. American forces will be shoulder to shoulder and will work alongside with the dedicated men and women of the AFP to train and improve our skills and readiness," said Simcock.

This year's Balikatan exercise will give emphasis to humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, on top of actual military training. Crow Valley, Camp O' Donnell, Subic Bay, and Fort Magsaysay in northern Philippines will serve as venues for the exercise.

The joint military exercise will also feature a roundtable discussion focusing on disaster response. Countries in the Asia- Pacific including Australia, Cambodia, China, South Korea, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, and Thailand have been invited to join the roundtable discussion with the Philippines and the United States.

AFP officials said this year's Balikatan exercise marks another milestone in the long-standing relations between the Philippines and the United States. The exercise is the biggest among the military training activities between the two countries and is based on the Philippines-US Mutual Defense Treaty of 1951

philSTAR  

PF: All Oil and Gas in Paracels and Spratlys West Philippine Sea are LIES

All those oil and gas deposits everyone wants in the South China Sea may not even be there

As it stands, six countries claim conflicting territorial rights in the long-simmering South China Sea dispute. As anyone will tell you, one of the main drivers of this conflict is the "sizable deposits of oil and gas" believed to reside in the area. But what if that's actually a lie? A new report by the U.S. Energy and Information Administration finds that the contested areas of the South China Sea do not have large conventional oil and natural gas resources:

"The Spratly Islands and Paracel Islands are two of the most contested areas (see dark blue islands on map above). However, unlike other parts of the South China Sea, these areas have not been assessed to hold large (conventional) resources of oil and natural gas....

EIA's analysis shows that most fields containing discovered oil and natural gas are clustered in uncontested parts of the South China Sea, close to shorelines of the coastal countries, and not near the contested islands. Industry sources suggest almost no oil and less than 100 billion cubic feet of natural gas in proved and probable reserves exist in fields near the Spratly Islands. The Paracel Island territory has even less natural gas and no oil".

Below is an EIA map of proved and probable oil and gas reserves in the area:

So maybe going to war over the disputed islands isn't such a great idea? Worth considering.

Foreign Policy

Thursday, April 4, 2013

NKorea Nuclear Attack to USA - ‘No need to evacuate Pinoys in South Korea

MANILA, Philippines - There is still no need to evacuate more than 40,000 Filipinos in South Korea despite Pyongyang's latest threat to unleash nuclear weapons on US targets, Malacañang said yesterday.

In a press briefing, presidential spokesman Edwin Lacierda downplayed the possibility of a nuclear strike but stressed the Philippines is ready for any eventuality.

"I saw in some newspapers that they are years away from developing a nuclear weapon. So I don't think that's an issue right now. That's not something on the table right now," Lacierda said, adding, however, that contingency plans were being drawn up.

Lacierda said contingency plans were being updated to ensure a smooth evacuation of Filipinos in case of armed hostilities in the Korean peninsula.

The Pentagon ordered the deployment of an advanced missile defense system to the western Pacific on Wednesday as Washington declared North Korea "a real and clear danger" to South Korea, Japan and to the US itself.

Lacierda said the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), through the Philippine embassy in South Korea, is closely coordinating with the Filipino community to make sure contingency plans are in place.

"We have identified areas of convergence in case the situation in South Korea takes a turn for the worse," Lacierda said. "So contingency plans are being made right now. They're being drafted to update the plan."

He also allayed fears over the Philippines' inviting an attack from North Korea because of the presence of US ships in the country.

"That was a question raised already: 'Will we be a magnet?' But we don't have bases anymore, so that should not be a concern," Lacierda said.

He said the US Navy ships in the Philippines are "here for provisioning, re-provisioning, and also for some rest and recreation."

He said the government would rather not comment directly on Pyongyang's threat.

"We will leave it with the international community. Our focus right now is the Filipino community in South Korea," he said.

At the DFA, spokesman Raul Hernandez said the Philippines is calling for "sobriety among all stakeholders and for the easing of tension in the region."

"The Philippine government continues to closely monitor the situation and advises Filipinos in South Korea to remain alert," he told a press briefing.

On standby

Three Philippine Navy (PN) and two coast guard vessels are on standby for possible evacuation of Filipinos from South Korea in the event of a full-blown war in the region.

"The PN leadership under Vice Admiral Jose Luis Alano alerted and placed on standby three ships in view of the escalating tensions between North Korea and South Korea," Navy spokesman Lt. Commander Gregory Gerald Fabic said.

Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) commandant Rear Admiral Rodolfo Isorena said two 56-meter vessels were ready for deployment to Korea for evacuation or humanitarian mission.

There are more than 40,000 Filipinos in South Korea and 25 in North Korea.

Fabic said the Philippine Navy had already made arrangements with the Philippine embassy in South Korea for the possible deployment. It will take the three vessels seven days to reach Korea, according to the Navy. Fabic said Commander Alexander Lopez is expected to lead the naval group.

"As planned, we will be depending all our actions (on) our embassy officials in South Korea. We will be taking instructions from them," Fabic said.

"So far there is no directive coming from the Department (of Transportation and Communications) to prepare for the North Korea and South Korea (deployment)… If we are so directed then we have vessels," Isorena said.

He said the two PCG vessels being readied for a possible evacuation mission were the BRP Pampanga and BRP Batangas.

"The Philippine Coast Guard's job is limited to the conduct of humanitarian activities so if we would be dispatched or deployed then definitely, I think it would be in the evacuation of the Filipinos in South Korea and North Korea," he added.

Earlier, the Philippine Air Force (PAF) said two of its three C-130 transport planes were ready for possible deployment to South Korea to evacuate Filipinos who might be caught in a potential shooting war in the region.

US excuse

In San Fernando, Pampanga, militant groups said the tensions in Korea might give the US another excuse to deploy more forces in the Philippines.

The groups, which included the Alyansang Magbubukid ng Gitnang Luson (AMGL), Anakpawis party-list, Central Luzon Ayta Association (CLAA), Timpuyog Katutubo ng Nueva Ecija (TKNE), Pambansang Lakas ng Kilusang Mamamalakaya ng Pilipinas (Pamalakaya), and the Katribu-Central Luzon, aired their concerns as US forces begin today their Balikatan exercise with Filipino troops in Clark and Subic, which hosted two of the biggest US military facilities outside the mainland.

 – With Pia Lee-Brago, Ding Cervantes, Evelyn Macairan, Jaime Laude

philSTAR

Monday, April 1, 2013

UP Prof & Team filed complain to United Nations for Malaysian Human Rights abuses to Filipinos

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navanethem Pillay and UN High Commissioner for Refugees, 

Malaysia to face UN over Sabah Filipino abuses claims

Outraged Philippine civil society groups have filed human rights violations complaints against Malaysia to the United Nations over serious allegations by returning Filipinos fleeing the month-long armed conflict raging in Sabah's restive east coast, the Manila Times reported.

The Philippine newspaper reported concerned groups and individuals had lodged reports yesterday with UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navanethem Pillay (picture), and UN High Commissioner for Refugees, António Guterres, who are both based in Geneva, Switzerland, after failing to move the Aquino administration to exert pressure on Putrajaya.

The activists were reported to have petitioned the two UN agencies to "urgently intervene so that Malaysia will respect the human rights of the Filipinos in Sabah, recognised under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights."

Among the signatories named by the daily were the Concerned Citizens Movement, CenterLaw, Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, and Anakbayan. Individuals who signed the letter included Philippine human rights lawyer Harry Roque, activist nun Sister Mary John Mananzan, whistleblower Rodolfo "Jun" Lozada, journalist Vergel Santos, and political strategist Pastor "Boy" Saycon, who serves as adviser to Jamalul Kiram III, one of the heirs of the Sultanate of Sulu.

The campaigners also asked the two UN bodies "to express grave concern on the massive and gross human rights violations by Malaysia against Filipinos in Sabah" and to remind Malaysia to "provide effective remedies and compensation to the Filipino victims of the massive and gross human rights violations committed against them by Malaysian state agents", according to the daily.

Citing the activists, the paper reported Malaysia's authorities had violated numerous provisions in the Universal Declaration on Human Rights on protection against discrimination, life, liberty, security, torture, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, arbitrary arrest, detention or exile, and right to a fair trial.

The activists were reported to have penned two 11-page letters citing media reports, particularly from the widely-read The Philippine Daily Inquirer, detailing the maltreatment of Filipinos in Sabah starting from February 14 when "suspected Filipino gunmen numbering between 80 and 100 were cornered in Sabah on Borneo Island, triggering the start of the Sabah standoff."

The Philippine media have been highlighting the growing restlessness among Filipinos at Malaysia's heavy-handed handling of the Sabah conflict, despite having previously assured it would practise "maximum tolerance" while Manila continues talks with the Kiram clan, a marginalised Muslim faction claiming to be heirs of the 17th-century Sulu sultanate who had been left out of peace negotiations brokered by Putrajaya last year.

Some 5,000 Filipinos have returned to their homeland with tales of human rights abuses that have enraged fellow Philippine citizens and lawmakers since the Sabah crisis began on February, triggered by Sulu rebel leader Agbimuddin Kiram's invasion of the north Borneo state which has been under Malaysian rule for the past 50 years since 1963.

Fierce gunfights have claimed the lives of 62 Sulu militants, eight Malaysian policemen and two soldiers.

Civilians of unknown nationalities have also been reported killed in clashes, caught between the Malaysian security forces hunting down the foreign intruders and spurred thousands of Filipinos to flee Sabah for their homeland out of fear of capture.

The Philippine Senate has demanded its government hold Malaysia accountable for the possible human rights violations on the 800,000-strong Filipino migrant community in Sabah at the hands of local authorities searching for a ragtag band of Sulu militants claiming ownership of the north Borneo state.

The volatile situation in Sabah appears to be election fodder with both the Philippines and Malaysia readying for national polls this year.

With Report From Philippine Daily Inquirer, Manila Times, Malaya and Malaysian Insider  

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Taking Control: China sends biggest Warship Yuzheng 312, heading to West Philippine Sea

China's Biggest Warship Yuzheng 312 to be stationed in the West Philippines Sea to protect the Chinese Fishermen in the foreign territory .

China sends biggest ship to West Philippine Sea

China has commissioned its largest patrol ship to carry out a law enforcement mission in the disputed West Philippine Sea (South China Sea), a Chinese fishery official has announced.

The Chinese official was quoted by Chinese newspapers as saying that Yuzheng 312, the Chinese fleet's largest in terms of displacement, had left Guangzhou and sailed to the South China Sea to better safeguard the interests of Chinese fishermen there.

The vessel has a displacement of 49.5 million tons and a navigation capability of 2,400 nautical miles with a maximum speed of 14 knots.

The move came after the South China Sea Fleet under the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) recently dispatched several modern warships to carry out high-sea training mission in the disputed region.

Reports emanating from Beijing said Chinese Navy's high-sea training include complex scenarios close to actual combats, which will effectively enhance its capability to accomplish diversified military tasks.

This is the second time the Chinese Navy has organized routine military training this year in the South China Sea.

The warships participating in the training include the Lanzhou, a guided missile destroyer, the Yulin and Hengshui, guided missile frigates, the Jinggangshan, an amphibious dock landing warship.

According to reports these ships are all equipped with long-range air-defense and anti-ship missiles, short-range quick air-defense guns and ship-borne helicopters, and are of comprehensive combat capabilities such as strong regional and point air defense as well as anti-submarine and anti-ship capabilities.

The warships will sail across the Bashi Channel and carry out a series of actual combat confrontation drills in the Western Pacific on such training subjects as maritime maneuver operation, maritime sovereignty protection, high-sea escort, support operation, and so on.

AFP News - Undated handout photo released by the Kayalaan Municipal office in 2011 shows Kalayaan island in the Spratlys, a chain of islets in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea). The Philippines has deployed 800 more Marines and opened a new headquarters to guard its interests in the disputed Spratly islands, which China also claims, a senior military official said Sunday.

Chinese officials said these trainings will fully display the determination of the Chinese government and the armed forces to safeguard territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests in the region.

Moreover, they said the training will test and improve the commanding and coordination capability as well as comprehensive combat capability to accomplish diversified military tasks of the Chinese naval forces.

China already confirmed that these high-sea trainings conform to international laws and international common practice.

With report from Yahoo News!

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Japan Terra Motors launches electric tuk-tuk for the Philippines 100,000 units in 2016

Terra Motors' e-tricycle can carry six and travel 31 miles per charge. (Credit: Terra Motors)

"E-trikes" are part of a movement to cut CO2 emissions and fuel costs in Asian cities. Manila wants 100,000 by 2016.

Tuk-tuks are a common way to get around in many Asian cities, but they contribute to urban pollution and high fuel costs.

Tokyo-based startup Terra Motors wants to put more non-polluting vehicles on the streets with an electric tuk-tuk unveiled this week for the Philippines.

The blue and white "e-tricycle" is powered by a lithium-ion battery and can carry six people including the driver. It's just under 11 feet long and is steered with handlebars.

It can travel some 31 miles per 2-hour charge, according to the firm, which is hoping to become the world's top electric tuk-tuk maker.

"There is no single company in Asia that mass-produces electric bikes or tricycles," president Toru Tokushige was quoted as saying by AFP.

"I think it could have a big impact if a Japanese company is the pioneer in the market with products of such a futuristic design."

The tuk-tuks will go on sale in fall 2013 for about $6,300 apiece.

Terra Motors is gunning for a Philippine government plan, funded by a $300 million Asian Development Bank loan, to replace 100,000 gas-powered tricycle taxis with "e-trikes" by 2016.

The average tuk-tuk driver in the Philippines earns less than $10 a day, but e-trikes will save him $5 a day in fuel costs, according to the bank. The trikes will be introduced to Manila and other cities under a lease-to-own system.

"Replacing 100,000 gasoline-powered trikes will enable the Philippine government to save more than $100 million a year in avoided fuel imports, while decreasing annual CO2 emissions by about 260,000 tons," the bank said in a release. http://cnet.co/172FfHx

C|Net

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