Tuesday, December 31, 2013

VOX BIKOL | 2013 Yearender: Destruction, resilience in the year of Yolanda, ‘pork’

ARTICLE | 

MANILA, Philippines - Natural and man-made disasters jostled with the pork barrel scandal for the headlines in a year of destruction and despair but also resilience.
Super Typhoon Yolanda (international name Haiyan) made landfall in Eastern Visayas on a Friday, Nov. 8, rendering more than 6,000 people dead and counting, according to latest official figures, with nearly 2,000 still missing and thousands more injured.
The monster storm cut a swath of destruction across Leyte, Samar and nearby provinces, leaving hundreds of thousands homeless and destroying billions of pesos worth of property, crops and livestock.
The ensuing days revealed a humanitarian disaster not seen in the region for decades, as photographs of post-apocalyptic devastation burned the wires and international news agencies paid tribute to Filipino resilience for the way people coped with the typhoon and its aftermath.
Not too soon, aid was pouring in from all over the globe and within local shores, volunteerism was revived along with political brickbats, benefit concerts and celebrity auctions were held to lend a helping hand in any form, although the rehabilitation and recovery were necessarily long term, for which a special Cabinet position was created to oversee the massive reconstruction.
In a supposed season of plenty there were efforts to make less destitute the holidays for people of Tacloban, Palo, Ormoc, Guiuan, Bantayan Island, Coron, countless other towns and cities so ravaged it was necessary to remind them that it was Christmastime, no gale force wind could stop the season of giving.
Barely a month before Yolanda, which had evoked memories of that other great storm in 1970s Yoling closer to the capital, a 7.2 magnitude quake struck the unfortunate Visayas, centering mainly on theisland of Bohol and to a lesser extent Cebu, in mid-October on the Muslim feast of sacrifice, Eid al-Adha. Centuries old churches were reduced to rubble in Loon, Loboc, Baclayon and other rustic, idyllic towns, the death toll reaching more than a hundred, but the cultural destruction was such that government and the private sector were forced to join hands to salvage whatever was left of the religious, historical artifacts in an island steeped in the Catholic faith, a tourist spot known for its tarsiers, Chocolate Hills, and a children’s choir that, however, continued to sing above the ruins.
Force majeure was not the only thing fate had in store for the country, as man-made disasters were also prevalent in the snake year now on its last gasp, because for three weeks in September a disgruntled faction of the Moro National Liberation Front laid siege to Zamboanga City and engaged government forces in a standoff that drove residents out of their homes to avoid getting caught in a crossfire.
After the smoke cleared more than 200 were dead, houses and buildings destroyed and thousands left to fend in evacuation centers, and the rebel chief nowhere to be found.
The MNLF faction was feeling left out of a comprehensive peace agreement the administration was drafting with the rival Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which indicated the catch-22 nature of the peace process.
The Zamboanga standoff was the first in the triple whammy of tragedies that occurred in successive months in the last trimester.
Not all was bad news though, as the Philippines posted unprecedented economic growth in the first quarter, on the back of vastly improved credit ratings from international agencies, proof that the daang matuwid (straight path) fight against corruption and for transparency was bearing fruit, or so the sound bites said, even as oil prices fluctuated in their usual one rollback for every pair of increases and electricity costs, already the highest in the region, threatened to deliver a coup de grace on the pockets of average Filipinos if not for a timely TRO of the Supreme Court, where but to the SC do people run for status quo antes whether about pork or other matters of persuasion.
Speaking of which, those pork stories – notably the Priority Development Assistance Fund of senators and congressmen – literally hogged the headlines around midyear, shortly before the trilogy of disasters and well through it, suggesting political tug of war among the three coequal branches of government.
Three senators and a number of current and former congressmen faced plunder among other charges after a whistle-blower revealed a comprehensive scheme to siphon off billions of PDAF into the pockets of a few, to the detriment of public service meant for the presidential bosses.
Other branches’ pork also are going through the wringer, the Disbursement Acceleration Program of the executive and the Judiciary Development Fund of the judiciary among other discretions.
The past year also saw the much awaited comeback of Manny Pacquiao after a disastrous 2012 that had pundits speculating that perhaps the end was near for the Pacman, but doubts were put to rest after his masterful unanimous decision over brawler Brandon Rios in Macau late November, which victory he dedicated to the victims of Typhoon Yolanda. No sooner had the Pacific Storm seemingly turned back the clock when the taxmen on both sides of the ocean disclosed that the boxing legend was in arrears of several millions, even billions.
In basketball, Gilas Pilipinas earned a ticket to the world basketball championships in Spain by winning silver in the FIBA Asia championships in Manila last August.
Political contretemps with different Chinas were again evident throughout the year as the mainland tried to assert its might and alleged historical ownership over most of the South China Sea, declaring a so-called nine-dash line and virtual no-fly zone demarcating its perceived territory, that had other claimant countries as well as at least one superpower raising diplomatic ruckus, such as an exchange of notes verbale and other statements of real politick.
In May the Coast Guard was involved in the killing of a Taiwanese fisherman after a high-speed chase in disputed seas, for which the Philippine government had to issue an official apology and give compensation to the bereaved family.
The 2010 Luneta bus hostage crisis again haunted the President three years later as Hong Kong journalists heckled him at the APEC summit in Bali in October. 
Environmental concerns were brought to the fore when the US minesweeper Guardian ran aground in Tubbataha Reef in January, destroying thousands of corals in the UN declared heritage site, which disaster would only repeat itself as two other ships from separate countries also scraped the coral reef, resulting in untold damage. 
In February was the unlikely invasion of what could be northern Malaysia by Sulu royal sultanate forces, a pitched battle of running stories that strained relations between the southeast Asian neighbors. The royal army was reasserting the sultanate’s historical claim over Sabah, and the over a month-long nip and tuck resulted in several casualties from both sides, while back in Taguig long after the dust settled later in the year the world’s poorest sultan Jamalul Kiram died quietly without realizing his dream of winning back Sabah.
The midterm elections in May rang in a decisive victory for the administration Liberal Party on practically all fronts, with newcomer guest candidate Grace Poe topping the senatorial race.
The President may have seemed nonplussed by steadily falling ratings, but his sincerity and plain doggedness in pursuing the tuwid na daan were not lost on and much appreciated by his bosses, the people of the Philippines. (From Philstar.com)


A NEW YEAR GREETING TO ALL




A message recieved from a friend

2013 tested the Filipino spirit with political and natural crises. But we bounced back and resolved to move together. 

The dawn of a new year brings hope for a better tomorrow

In 2014, let us all do our part in rebuilding resilient communities and strengthening institutions.


Let us welcome 2014 with a renewed sense of purpose.

Tomorrow begins today. HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

PRWC | Aquino regime is bound to be rocked by people’s anger in 2014—CPP




December 31, 2013

The Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) predicted more powerful mass struggles against the Aquino regime in 2014 as the latter continues to fuel the people’s anger with its widespread corruption, worsening economic conditions, unabated destruction of the environment, blind puppetry to the US imperialists and utter failure to address the urgent needs of the people amid natural and man-made disasters.
“The Filipino people are increasingly restive with the Aquino regime’s economic priorities which serve primarily the interests of foreign companies and their local big business partners, big landlords such as the Aquino-Cojuangco clan and the parasitic bureaucrat capitalists,” said the CPP.
“While the ruling classes are shielded from the economic crisis, the majority of the people wallow in worsening unemployment, further depression of real wages, rising prices of food, medicine, fuel and other basic commodities, deteriorating health, education and other social services, and environmental degradation,” said the CPP.
“The new year is set to start with another round of increases in diesel and oil prices and a new hike in the taxes imposed on cigarettes and other commodities—a foreboding of greater hardships for the Filipino people in the coming year,” said the CPP.
“Aquino’s promises of clean government and reform have all fallen flat. Aquino’s rhetoric of ‘hope’ is roundly repudiated and dismissed with widespread cynicism among the working class and even the middle class of small professionals, teachers, government employees, students, media practitioners and small and middle businessmen.”
“There is an increasingly strong clamor for Aquino’s ouster especially after being exposed as the Pork Barrel King and his criminal failure to prepare for supertyphoon Yolanda and act swiftly to address the emergency needs of the people after the widespread devastation,” said the CPP.
“Aquino is set to become the narrowest target of mass protests as the people increasingly see through the thin veil of his media-centered PR gimmicks and outright lies perpetuated by the yellow army of media and survey manipulators,” added the CPP.
“In the past year, Aquino could not avoid being at the center of the storm of the people’s protests against the corrupt pork barrel system, as he insisted on defending Malacañang’s own pork barrel of several hundred billion pesos in lump sum appropriations,” pointed out the CPP. “While claiming to fight corruption, Aquino is defending the corrupt system of disbursing funds at his sole discretion, which he uses to line the pockets of bureacrat capitalists to buy their political loyalties.”
“The next three years will be characterized by the ruling clique’s desperate measures to hold on to power in the face of the increasingly strong clamor for Aquino’s removal from power,” said the CPP. “It is set on carrying out a flurry of political and military maneuvers to ensure the perpetuation in power of Aquino’s allies in the vain hope of being spared from criminal prosecution for the grave crimes of large-scale bribery and plunder, as well as crimes against humanity committed by his armed forces under his Oplan Bayanihan campaign of suppression.”
“The Filipino people remain vigilant against the maneuvers to amend the 1987 constitution to make it more compliant with the conditions set by the US imperialists for Philippine membership in the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement,” added the CPP. “Aquino is silently supportive of chacha not only to comply with US dictates, but also to make it more pliable regarding pork barrel allocations recently declared unconstitutional by the reactionary Supreme Court, as well as to remove restrictions against successive terms.”
“The US is set to intensify efforts to build its military bases in the Philippines and further increase its military presence in the country, surpassing past years in terms of the number of dockings and entries of its troops, aircraft carriers, jetfighters and the rest of its war machinery.”
“With US backing, the Aquino regime will increasingly rely on military suppression to stop the people from rising up in their numbers in protest against its corruption, puppetry and anti-people economic policies,” said the CPP.
“Under the direction of the CPP, the New People’s Army (NPA) will undertake more frequent tactical offensives in order to annihilate weak enemy units and seize more weapons,” pointed out the CPP. “This year, every NPA command must gun for a record increase in the number of weapons seized from the reactionary military, paramilitary and police forces.”
“As 2013 ends, we can conclusively declare the defeat of the Aquino regime’s Oplan Bayanihan which failed in its declared aim of reducing the armed strength of the New People’s Army to inconsequentiality by the middle of this year,” said the CPP.
“The CPP must direct the heightening of people’s war nationwide, leading the intensification of the revolutionary armed struggle while waging widespread land reform campaigns and strengthening its mass base and building the structures of the people’s democratic government.”

Monday, December 30, 2013

A hopeful and liberating 2014 to all!



A turbulent 2013 for the Philippines – which saw the wrath of the strongest typhoon ever recorded and the exposé on the biggest corruption scandal in recent history - but we have to face 2014 with determination and, hope. MABUHAY ANG PILIPINO!!! ITINDIG ANG NALULUGMOK NA PILIPINAS!!! 

UPRISING | The Top Climate Change Stories of 2013


     
The greatest danger facing all of humanity is climate change and 2013 was a year where so much extreme climate change happened, and yet so little political action took place that we have decided to launch a regular news feature devoted solely to climate news. To launch this new feature we spend the rest of the hour surveying the top climate related stories of 2013 – the year that was the seventh warmest on record.

One of the strongest storms in world history, Typhoon Haiyan, tore through the central Philippines this past November killing over 6,000 people with catastrophic wind speeds of up to 196 miles per hour. Just days after the storm’s impact, Yeb Sano the head of the Philippines’ delegation to the United Nation’s Climate Change Conference or COP 19 in Warsaw Poland staged a hunger strike to plead with world leaders to take action against global warming. But his pleas went unheard as the conference ended with no emissions reduction agreements between countries and major environmental groups walking out of the corporate influenced talks.
Yet around the planet, record-breaking events from severe ice melt in the Arctic to the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth in Death Valley California predominated weather reports. Extreme floods, snow and wildfires were seen around the world. Air pollution reached record breaking levels in several Asian cities. And, for the first time since 1958 when scientists started tracking carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, concentrations of CO2 passed 400 parts per million.
President Obama finally gave a speech addressing climate change vowing to limit carbon pollution, but in 2013 his administration worked to increase offshore drilling in the Arctic and expanding fracking and coal production on public lands. And oil spills occurred across the nation with little media attention including major spills in Arkansas and North Dakota. In Alabama, residents are still feeling the effects of a 2.7 million gallon oil spill after a train carrying the oil exploded back in November. Meanwhile the Keystone XL pipeline could still become a reality and activists refuse to remain silent having continued many actions to protest it.
In what was perhaps the most audacious action, a group of 30 people – mostly Greenpeace protesters and some journalists – were imprisoned by Russian authorities for challenging the oil prospecting in the newly exposed areas of the Arctic. The Arctic 30 as they were called, were finally released after being detained for two months in Russia.
And finally, a leaked portion of the United Nations’ International Panel on Climate Change or IPCC report which is due to fully come out in 2014 provided a grim look at the far-reaching effects of climate change that is most certainly being caused by humans. Despite the growing number of climate related stories, The New York Times eliminated its Environmental Desk this year.
GUEST: Kelly Mitchell, Coal Campaigner for Greenpeace. Since 2006, she has worked with citizen activists and organizations across the country to confront corporate polluters and transform US energy policy.
- See more at: http://uprisingradio.org/home/2013/12/30/the-top-climate-change-stories-of-2013/#sthash.UeorZciZ.dpuf




Pinoy Weekly | Daan-daang katao, dumalo sa pagdiwang ng ika-45 anibersaryo ng CPP sa Sierra Madre


Daan-daang katao, dumalo sa pagdiwang ng ika-45 anibersaryo ng CPP sa Sierra Madre
by Boy Bagwis


Daan-daang tao ang bumiyahe sa mabato, maputik at matarik na daan nitong nakaraang linggo sa kabundukan ng Sierra Madre sa Timog Katagalugan. Ang kanilang binisita: mga gerilya ng New People’s Army (NPA).

Nakiisa sila sa pagdiriwang ng Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) na nagdiriwang ng ika-45 anibersaryo ng nagsusulong ng rebolusyonaryong pagbabago sa bansa.

Nagbigay ng talumpati ang kinatawan ng iba’t ibang rebolusyonaryong organisasyon. May mga pangkulturang pagtatanghal din na tumatalakay sa kalagayan ng bansa. Kinondena rin nila ang Pangulong Aquino na nagpahirap umano sa mga mamamayan.

Sa opisyal na pahayag ng CPP para sa anibersaryo nito, isa sa mga ipinanawagan nito sa mga kasapi ang pagkampanyang patalsikin sa puwesto si Aquino.

“Organisahin (natin) ang pinakamalawak na pagkilos para ilantad at ihiwalay ang kabulukan ng rehimen ni Aquino at mobilisahin ang buong lakas ng bayan at kilusang masa upang patalsikin ito sa kapangyarihan tulad noong 1986 sa diktadurang Marcos at noong 2001 kay Estrada,” pahayag ng CPP-Southern Tagalog Regional Committee.

Nagtirik ng kandila ang mga nagsipagdalo para guintain at bigyan ng pugay ang anila’y lahat ng mga martir ng rebolusyon na mga kasapi ng CPP, NPA o mga organisasyon sa ilalim ng naturang partido.

Sa naturang pagtitipon, isang lider ng NPA ang nagsabing “marami na rin tayong napagtagumpayan sa mga takikang salakay at ambush ngayong 2013″. Aniya, lalo pa nila itong paiigtingin para sa kanilang adhikaing magtagumpay ang rebolusyon.

Isang lider naman ng CPP ang nagsabing ang malalaking tagumpay ng partido sa 45-taon ng puspusang rebolusyonaryong pakikibaka at determinadong pagsulong ang pambansang demokratikong rebolusyon sa gitna ng lumalalang pandaigdigang at lokal na krisis.

Sinabi pa niya, puspusan pa silang magpapasampa sa NPA upang makamit ang tagumpay.

Ipinahayag pa ng naturang rebolusyonaryong lider na lalabanan din nila ang mga hakbang ng rehimeng Aquino tulad ng programang kontra-insurhensiya na Oplan Bayanihan.

Mga larawan ng naturang pagtitipon:


Pormasyong militar ng mga miyembro ng NPA para sa anibersaryo ng CPP. (Boy Bagwis)


(Boy Bagwis)


Pagtirik ng kandila para sa mga martir ng rebolusyon. (Boy Bagwis)


“Tiger jump” ng isang gerilya. (Boy Bagwis)


(Boy Bagwis)







Short URL: http://pinoyweekly.org/new/?p=27156

- See more at: http://pinoyweekly.org/new/2013/12/daan-daang-katao-lumahok-sa-ika-45-anibersaryo-ng-cpp-sa-sierra-madre/#sthash.oqe9FtSh.dpuf






Pinoy Weekly | Kapirasong Kritika ni Teo S. Marasigan >> Twenty Porkteen



Twenty Porkteen




Konteksto ni Teo S. Marasigan

Tama si Dr. Carol P. Araullo: Taong 2013 nagkaroon ng malaking lamat ang imahen ni Pang. Noynoy Aquino. Syempre pa, dahil ito pangunahin sa isyu ng pork barrel. Mula sa eskandalo sa P10 bilyong pondong pork na kinakasangkutan ng negosyanteng si Janet Lim-Napoles, at ginamit ni Aquino laban sa malamang na maging mga karibal ng partido niya sa eleksyong 2016, pumutok ang galit ng mga mamamayan sa buong sistema ng pork barrel. Ipinagtanggol ni Aquino ang naturang sistema, nalantad ang napakalaking pork niya sa panukalang budget para sa 2014, at nalantad din, dahil kay Sen. Jinggoy Estrada, ang iligal niyang pork sa Disbursement Acceleration Program o DAP. Bumanda ang isyu kay Aquino; sa dulo, tinatawag na siyang Pork Barrel King.

Hindi kataka-taka na nitong Disyembre 20 inaprubahan ni Aquino ang panukalang badyet para sa 2014. Tirang magnanakaw ito, ginawa kumbaga sa kahimbingan ng gabi – nagdiriwang ang lahat ng Kapaskuhan at hindi mapapansin ang mga protesta. Taliwas sa panlilinlang na walang pork sa naturang pambansang budget, iba ang sabi ni Prop. Leonor Magtolis-Briones, punong tagapagtipon ng Social Watch Philippines at isa sa mga nagsagasa ng trak ng bumbero sa tarangkahan ng Malakanyang noong First Quarter Storm. Aniya, marami pa ring pork sa badyet: nakatago ang para sa mga kongresista at senador sa badyet ng mga ahensya at aabot sa P552 bilyon ang agad na matutukoy na pork ng pangulo, malaking bahagi ng P2.3 trilyon na kabuuang badyet.

Noong Nobyembre 19, idineklara ng Korte Suprema na di-konstitusyunal ang Priority Development Assistance Fund o PDAF, ang pork ng mga mambabatas. Resulta ito ng malawak na galit at protesta ng mga mamamayan sa sistema ng pork barrel. Resulta rin ito malamang ng sentimyentong kontra-Aquino sa Korte Suprema: Responsable si Aquino sa pagtanggal kay Renato Corona bilang Punong Hukom at pagpalit ni Maria Lourdes Sereno, pinakabago sa mga itinalaga sa korte at pinaka-hindi respetado ng mga naunang hukom. Maglalabas pa lang ng hatol ang Korte Suprema kung konstitusyunal DAP, pero kumikilos na ang pangkating Aquino: Sabi nga ni Fr. Joaquin G. Bernas, SJ, binabantaan ngayon ng impeachment ng Kongreso ang mga hukom ng Korte Suprema.

Interesante ang magiging hatol ng Korte Suprema sa DAP. Kapag sinabi nitong hindi konstitusyunal ang DAP, sinasampal nito sa mukha si Aquino, kahit hindi pa talaga natatanggal ang marami pang pork ng presidente. Makapangyarihan pa rin si Aquino dahil ang dating PDAF na naipailalim sa badyet ng mga ahensya ay kontrolado niya. Kapag sinabi naman ng Korte Suprema na konstitusyunal ang DAP, aani ito ng galit ng mga mamamayan. Paanong konstitusyunal ang DAP gayung hindi konstitusyunal ang PDAF? Mas maliit at matagal nang umiiral ang PDAF, bukod pa sa mas marami nang nangangailangan ang nakinabang dito. Magiging napakalaki ng pork barrel ng presidente; parang binigyan ng Korte Suprema si Aquino ng lubid para ibigti ang sarili.

Samantala, gumugulong sa usad-pagong na sistema ng hustisya sa bansa ang kasong iligal na pagdetine laban kay Napoles. May mga pagdinig sa Enero 17, Pebrero 18 at Marso 4, 18 at 25. Noon namang isinasampa pa lang ang kasong pandarambong laban sa kanya, may nagsabi nang aabot ang paglilitis hanggang pagkatapos ng termino ni Aquino. Anu’t anuman, dahil sa espesyal na pagtratong ipinakita ng gobyernong Aquino kay “Ma’am Janet” noong “sumuko” ang huli, malaganap ang duda kung seryoso itong hahatulang maysala at ikakalaboso si Napoles. Hindi kaila sa marami na ginagamit ang kaso ni Napoles para sa layuning pulitikal. Maaalala ang pagkulong ni Gloria Arroyo kay Erap Estrada at malamang ni Noynoy kay Gloria: pakitang-tao lang para sa pulitika.

Bubwelo rin sa 2014 ang People’s Initative laban sa pork barrel na pinapangunahan ni dating Chief Justice Reynato Puno at ng mga progresibong organisasyon. Saang anggulo man tingnan, maipagpapalagay na mananatiling buhay ang isyu ng pork barrel sa 2014. Para sa marami, hindi basta “kritisismo” ang isyu na pwedeng tugunan ng “Bahala na si Lord sa inyo, busy ako,” gaya ng gustong palabasin ni Aquino, kundi usaping dapat niya talagang pagkaabalahan. Kasama ng iba pang isyu tulad ng tumitinding kahirapan ng nakakarami at ng kapabayaan sa kalamidad ng gobyerno, dahilan ito ng paglakas ng disgusto sa kanya. Maaalala ang klasikong kasabihang Tsino: Nawa’y mabuhay ka sa interesanteng panahon! Sigurado: Magiging interesante ang 2014 para sa mga Pilipino.


- See more at: http://pinoyweekly.org/new/2013/12/twenty-porkteen/#sthash.dC7cjra1.dpuf


MANILA BULLETIN | POEA records decline in OFW deployment



The Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) reported a slight decline in the number of deployed overseas Filipino workers (OFW) abroad this year.
Citing the preliminary data, DOLE Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz said the number of hired OFWs in other countries decreased to 1.53 million.
Baldoz, who heads POEA governing board, said this was 8.96 percent lower compared to the 1.69 million last year.
This comes despite the increase in the landbased OFWs, which rose to 1.36 million from 1.34 million in 2012.
Majority more than 900,000 of these OFWs were rehires, while new hires only accounted for 419,257.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia remained as the most popular destination for the landbased sector with 351,470 OFWs despite its attempts to nationalize its workforce.
It was followed by the United Arab Emirates with 236,797 and Singapore with 123, 358.
Meanwhile, Baldoz attributed the lower deployment figures to the performance of the seabased sector, which showed a sharp decline from 344,169 OFWs last year to only 176,392 this year.
POEA administrator Hans Cacdac said this was caused by the failure of some manning agencies to submit their deployment reports on time to POEA.
“We have a drop box system where some manning agents are a month delayed in reports. We expect to finalize the seabased data during the first quarter of 2014,” Cacdac said.
Baldoz said they expect the deployment figures to pick up next year as the country.


Repost of Delmar Topinio Taclibon | Rizal's Condemnation of the Revolution of 1896




José Protacio Mercado Rizal Alonso y Realonda


José Protacio Mercado Rizal Alonso y Realonda’s Condemnation of the Revolution of 1896

Many Filipinos may react with shock and disbelief when they will learn that our national hero condemned the Revolution in a manifesto from Fort Santiago just two weeks before his execution. A translation of this manifesto follows:

On my return from Spain, I learned that my name had been used as a war cry among those in armed revolt. The news was a painful surprise for me; but believing that everything was already over, I kept silent in the face of an accomplished fact beyond repair. x x x x x x x x x x x . Since the beginning, when I heard of what is being planned, I opposed it and fought it. x x x x x x x x x. I was convinced that the idea was highly absurd and what was worse, fatal. x x x x x x x x x x x .

Fellow Countrymen: I have proofs as one who most wants liberties for our country and I continue wanting them. But I put as a premise the education of the people so that through education and work, they might have personality of their own and make themselves worthy of them. x x x x x x x x x . I have also written that reforms to be fruitful, must come from above, that those that come from below are shaky, irregular, and insecure. Nurtured in those ideas, I cannot but condemn and I do condemn that absurd, savage uprising, plotted behind my back that dishonors us Filipinos and discredits those who can intercede in our behalf. I abhor its criminal methods and I reject any kind of participation in it, deploring with all the sorrow of my heart that the unwary have allowed themselves to be deceived. Return then to your homes and may God forgive those who have acted in bad faith.

Signed: Jose Rizal

Real Fuerza de Santiago
15th December 1896
(Political and Historical Writings, pp. 348-349)




These strange words coming from a man whom we honor as our foremost patriot. How could Jose Rizal have written such harsh words against the Revolution and its leaders when that revolution was the supreme expression of a national consciousness that he himself had done so much to nurture through his novel Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo?

Research:

Delmar Nur Faramarz Ferdowsi Salah Ad-Din Tomasa Gomez de Molina Costa Sanchez de Cassa Fajardo Lopez Roldan Martinez Simarro Mondejar del Castillo Balera Chumilla Portal Ynarejos Ramos de Losa del Pozo Africa Bautista Rubio-Escrivano Bucad Calaycay Alcaraz “RAPASAKDALSAKAY” Topinio Taclibon, Bt., KRSS, MBA, Ph.D.D.A.

References:

Austin Coates, Rizal, Philippine Nationalist and Martyr, Hong Kong, Oxford University Press, 1968
Leon Maria Gurrero, The First Filipino, A Biography of Jose Rizal, Manila National Heroes Commission, 1963
Jose Rizal, Political and Historical Writings, Vol. VII, National Heroes Commission, 1964
The Rizal-Blumentritt Correspondence, Vol. II, Part I, 1886-1899, Manila, Jose Rizal National Centennial Commission, 1961
Renato Constantino, “The Rizal Course,” Bulletin Today, March 21, 1985
Rizal’s Condemnation of the Philippine Revolution – Renato Constantino, “Veneration Without Understanding,” in Dissent and Counter-Consciousness, Quezon City, Malaya Books, Inc., 1970
Issues Without Tears, Volume V

Sunday, December 29, 2013

RAPPLER | PORK TALES: How it began

How it began

The exposé of the country’s grandest corruption scandal this year begins with the unlikeliest of events in the unlikeliest of places. It results in the detention of a wealthy woman whose sphere of influence spans the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government.
The story opens with 31-year-old Benhur Luy, a medical technology graduate and trusted cousin of Janet Lim Napoles. Starting out as her personal assistant, Benhur becomes her bookkeeper and later president of a fake non-governmental organization created to divert public money from the lawmakers’ Priority Development Assistance Fund into personal pockets.
Because of suspicions he was attempting to fleece his wealthy cousin, he is allegedly kept against his will on Dec 19, 2012, as punishment. He would not be seen by his parents and be brought to different places in a span of 3-4 months, prompting fears of a kidnap. Benhur is unheard from for days. His parents Arturo and Gertrudes, as well as his siblings Arthur and Annabelle, seek help from the justice department and say they lost contact with Benhur starting December 15.
Unknown to them, Benhur is brought to at least 4 important places that are witness to alleged collusion, thievery, and deception.

Was Benhur held against his will?

1) 25th floor, Discovery Suites, Ortigas Center, Pasig CityHeadquarters of JLN Corporation, Napoles' primary business

  • Where lawmakers, government officials, and their aides go to collect kickbacks
  • Luy is detained on December 19, his belongings seized, and some P800,000 (suspected to be earnings from his own private deals) forcibly taken from his Metrobank account
  • From here, Luy is moved to a nearby hotel; this is the last time fellow employees see himuntil his rescue

2) Lafayette Condominium, Eastwood, Quezon CityCondominium allegedly owned by Napoles but occupied by Luy

  • Also on December 19, several JLN employees search the unit for Luy’s laptop, which they believe contains confidential files, but don’t find it
  • Luy’s childhood friend Mariaflor Villanueva eventually delivers the laptop to his mother Gertrudes.
  • On February 23, Gertrudes goes to lawyer Levito Baligod seeking help to rescue her son. They eventually go to the National Bureau of Investigation on March 1 to plan a rescue that takes place one month later. The files in the laptop provide basis for possible motives for Benhur’s detention.

3) Bahay ni San Jose, 52 Lapu-Lapu Street, Magallanes Village, Makati CityRetreat house run by Monsignor Josefino Ramirez, one of Napoles' favored priests

  • Napoles’ brother Reynald “Jojo” Lim chooses to transfer Luy here because a retreat house is the least likely to be raided by authorities. This will later be used as a defense in the illegal detention case: that Luy was on spiritual retreat.
  • Luy, guarded by Lim, is brought here to see his family on a few occasions. He is warned, however, not to tell them that this is where he is staying.

4) South Garden Unit, Pacific Plaza Towers, Fort Bonifacio, Taguig CityResidential unit owned by Napoles but occupied by Reynald Lim

  • Luy is brought here on Jan 9, 2013, to meet and speak to his parents and siblings. Luy is described by his mother as looking sad and scared. During the meeting, Reynald Lim talks to the Luy family about Benhur’s “transactions.” Lim warns them not to go to the authorities.
  • On February 23, the family gets to see Benhur Luy again. He gives sister Annabelle a letter, which he hopes will give her a clue that he’s being held against his will in Magallanes.
  • On March 22, Luy is rescued by NBI agents, Lim is arrested and taken to nearby St. Luke’s hospital, but is released months later after the Justice Department junks the NBI’s complaint
After Benhur’s rescue, he exposed their intricate web of corruption whose magnitude was unimagined. Never in their dreams did those in this exclusive circle think that their biggest secret would be found out.
The whistleblowers’ tales – recorded in affidavits – detail a perfected art. From accomplices who knew the inner workings of what operated like a syndicate, the whistleblowers turned state witness. And like thieves, they split millions of pesos among lawmakers, private individuals and their principal, Janet Lim Napoles.
To this day, the story remains unfinished, as Senate investigations into unexplained wealth, conspiracy among lawmakers, government officials and private individuals to pocket funds supposed to go to development projects, remain uncompleted.


RAPPLER | SCIENCE & NATURE| Let’s call storm surges 'silakbô' in Pilipino


BY KELVIN RODOLFO
POSTED ON 12/27/2013 9:04 AM  | UPDATED 12/28/2013 1:42 PM
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RodolfoRodolfoAntonio Oposa’s November 25 article, “Victims or victors of the climate crisis?” published on Rappler and republished in thePhilippine Daily Inquirer on December 7 was profound and thought-provoking, and raises many important points. It is good that he is seeking a Pilipino name for “storm surge”.
At Pinatubo during the 1990s, we inadvertently stumbled upon one of our most valuable educational tools, when we introduced ”lahar” to the people threatened by that phenomenon. It was a real word, commonly used in Indonesia, and already had been adopted in scientific circles after we started using it in our scientific papers about our work at Mayon.
But it was new to people around Pinatubo, whose attention and interest were aroused when they first heard it. And when they would eagerly ask, “What does ‘lahar’ mean?” the learning process would begin naturally.
So we do need a good Pilipino word. Unfortunately, “tsu-alon” or “tsu-balod” is not very appropriate.
Tsunami comes from the Japanese tsu meaning “harbor”, and nami meaning “wave”. So tsu-alon would be a “Japalog” word that would back-translate into tsunami in pure Japanese.
In naming “storm surge” in Pilipino, we must get away entirely from “tsunami” or anything like the term. This is because tsunamis and storm surges differ in very important ways, and conflating them can create serious problems.
Tsunamis are generated by four different and unpredictable triggers: Undersea volcanic eruptions, earthquakes and landslides, and, much more rarely, by large meteorite impacts in the ocean. Tsunamis can come with very little warning. For example, the 11 March 2011 tsunami that devastated Fukushima occurred only about an hour after the Tohoku earthquake.
People know about the very short lead times of tsunamis, and if told a tsunami is coming, they can easily panic, which by itself can be lethal. On December 1, residents of Iloilo, Antique, and Capiz were needlessly panicked by a false “tsunami” alarm. This happened again in Basey, Samar on December 12. This is because people think storm surges and tsunamis are the same thing.
Unlike tsunamis, thank goodness, storm surges are preceded by several days of lead time, during which the approaching typhoon can be closely monitored, and orderly preparations can be made to evacuate the people in harm’s way and minimize both panic and the impact itself.
Mahar Lagmay of Project Noah and I have also been looking for a Pilipino word for “storm surge”. We were glad to learn that historian Jaime Tiongson of Bahay Saliksikan ng Kasaysayan (BAKAS), had put forward humbak. But it turns out to be even more inappropriate than “tsu-alon” – humorously so, as I will show.
Creating or choosing a Pilipino term is serious business. We want it to be new, to arouse interest; and tosound like something serious, a hazard. But we must also be respectful of the language, protective of our linguistic heritage; it should be a real word, preferably one that currently is rarely used, so it is new to most people. Finally, it must be faithful to the nature of the thing we are defining.
To begin a serious search for a proper word, I consulted the very best English-Tagalog and Tagalog-English dictionaries available, those of Father Leo English, a Redemptorist priest from Australia.
Fr. English began compiling his Tagalog-English and English-Tagalog dictionaries during World War II in Los Baños where he was a prisoner of the Japanese. It took him 30 years to complete them while he lived with and ministered to Batangueños. These superb lexicons give examples of proper usage. No other dictionaries are as complete; his English-Tagalog Dictionary boasts 1,211 pages; his Tagalog-English Dictionary is 1,583 pages long.
In 1960, when Jose Villa Panganiban, Director of the Institute of National Language, first saw Fr. English’s Tagalog-English dictionary in manuscript, the INI English-Tagalog Dictionary had just been published. Panganiban, however, concluded that Fr. English’s work was more complete and displayed “profound scholarship”, and he encouraged the priest to continue his work. The only edition of the INIEnglish-Tagalog Dictionary was its run of 13,000 copies in1960. Effectively, INI yielded the field to Fr. English, whose English-Tagalog Dictionary was first published by Kalayaan Press in 1977. The Australian Government has subsidized many subsequent printings; my copy is from the 19th printing in 1994.
Fr. English’s Tagalog-English Dictionary took longer to publish, also by Kalayaan Press. Its first printing was in 1986, and my copy is of the 9th printing, dated 1994. In that lexicon, Humbak is defined as “trough between waves”. Its other meaning is “depression in a surface”. Fr. English gives humpak as a synonym. But he separately translated “humpak” in its own right as an adjective meaning “hollow”, “sunken”, or “concave”, as in reference to cheeks hollowed by sleeplessness: Humpak ang mga pisngi niya dahil sa kapupuyat. This enforces the fact that humbak is the exact opposite of “wave”!
This has been corroborated by National Artist Virgilio Almario: “Ang humbak ay pagitan ng dalawang alon. Ito yung cavity na tinatawag. Walang laman.
So how did Fr. English translate the noun “surge” into Tagalog? Turning to his English-Tagalog Dictionary:
“surge: (2) n. a wave; a sweep or rush of waves: Paggulong ng alon, Daluyong. The surge of the sea: Ang daluyong ng dagat.”
Can daluyong serve? Unfortunately, the term is widely understood to simply mean “large ocean wave”, and storm surges are more complicated than typical water waves that repeatedly arrive every few seconds.
To learn the difference between a storm surge and storm waves, video footages of the surge and storm waves in Manila Bay generated by Typhoon Pedring in December 2011 are very instructive. These are widely available on the internet: youtube.com/watch?v=KVqOVR9lytk and youtube.com/watch?v=UlhncBQE8-A.
Most viewers mistakenly think that the gigantic storm waves, following each other every several seconds, smashing against the breakwater and sending huge plumes up higher than the tallest coconut trees along the boulevard, are separate storm surges, but they are not. A single surge takes hours and even days to pass, depending on the motion and duration of the generating typhoon, and its timing with respect to the tides. Project Noah has determined that the Pedring surge lasted about 36 hours and was only 1.8 meters high.
During the short periods of the footages, the surge has already raised the water level and has flooded inland to inundate the U.S. Embassy and areas beyond it. But its height doesn’t change while we watch. What inspires our awe are not storm surges, they are regular storm waves riding atop the storm surge.
Continuing Fr. English’s definition of “surge”:
(3) something like a wave: Silakbô. Bugso. A surge of anger: Silakbô ng galit.
“Bugso” is already widely used by Pagasa, in reference to cloudbursts and thundershowers, “pabugso-bugso”. This leaves silakbô.
Fr. English’s example of surging anger suggests violence, and the stress on the last syllable may also euphonically suggest suddenness.
So how about Silakbô ng bagyo? That would literally mean “storm surge”. With continued use, Silakbôalone would eventually suffice.

Kelvin S. Rodolfo is a Professor Emeritus at the Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He is also a corresponding member of the National Academy of Science and Technology (Philippines).