Tag Archives: Manila

Amir’s brides

25 Jun

As a tribute to the Bride Month of June, I am featuring some of the best bridal works of Philippine’s Prince of Beads Amir Sali. I will be showcasing today why he is the top choice of ’s 500 elite circle when it comes to bridal gowns. His works are amazingly perfect and done exquisitely. And what I am really proud of is – he is one talented Tausug who has gained the respect and confidence of the who’s who in the spirited fashion circle. He is a good friend of fashion mogul Ben Chan, famous couturiers Inno Sotto and Rajo Laurel. His clients include the Ayalas, Sottos, Zobels, and the Roxas families. Showbiz personality KC Concepcion is his favorite model. Royal families from the Middle East and Europe come to and visit his atelier when they need dresses for special occasions.Amir will soon invade the local fashion scene of not to compete with our local designers but to inspire and convince them to create world class clothing apparels that we all can be proud of. He will be also launching his Make Me A Supermodel Competition– to discover male and female supermodels. Watch out for it.Amir’s shop is in Connecticut, Greenhills. He will be glad to see his kababayans visit him there.KC Concepcion as a bride.One of Amir’s real bride who got married in New York, USA.Elegance by Amir.Ciara Sotto in her Amir Sali’s divinity veil.Philippine’s Prince of Beads Amir Sali.Bridal couture by Amir.Amir Sali’s famous bridal bag.Baroque inspired beading for a wedding gown by Amir.A detail shoulder bridal work of Amir.Amir Sali’s bridal gown.

Via Zamboanga Times

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2 MNLF men killed in new fighting in Southern Philippines

23 Jun

CITY, Philippines (Mindanao Examiner / June 23, 2010) – Two Moro rebels were killed and four government soldiers wounded in a series of fighting in the southern Filipino province of Sulu, officials said Wednesday.
Officials said the fighting which began on Tuesday had killed two members of the Moro National Liberation Front in Talipao town where security forces captured a rebel encampment.

The fighting broke out after MNLF rebels and Abu Sayyaf militants attacked soldiers sent to work on a road project in the village of Tuyang. The Western Mindanao Command blamed MNLF leader Khabir Malik and Abu Sayyaf commander Yasser Igasan for the fighting.

“The operation was triggered when some combined partisan armed groups, rogue MNLF under Khabir Malik and ASG under Yasser Igasan resisted government-initiated development projects in southern Talipao,” it said in a statement released on Wednesday.

It said Malik also harassed military and government surveyors last month in Talipao town where a road project is underway to connect several villages to the town of Maimbung.

“Malik was previously reported by civilians on his opposition to road projects, and further warned construction workers not to pursue with these development plans,” the Western Mindanao Command said.

In Sulu, Brigadier General Rustico Guerrero, the local military chief, said fighting began at around 10 a.m. and erupted again later in the day after troops intercepted rebel forces headed by MNLF commanders Nidzmi Jabar, Maas Ejan and Jahid Susukan, and Abu Sayyaf militants.

“We cannot afford to delay progress that is already long overdue. The standpoint of these lawless elements in resisting government-initiated socio-economic and humanitarian projects is anti-people and counter progressive. Unless we will remove this perspective from the equation, hope for peace and development in Sulu is futile,” Rustico said.

He said troops also clashed with followers of a local politician who mistook security forces as their enemies, but there were no reports of casualties in the fighting.

The Western Mindanao Command under General Benjamin Dolorfino said Malik has a string of warrants of arrest and that the government put up a P1 million bounty for his capture.

Malik’s group had previously held hostage Dolorfino and Defense Undersecretary Ramon Santos, including more than a dozen soldiers in February 2007 while visiting Sulu province. Malik then demanded the release of jailed MNLF chieftain Nur Misuari in exchange for the hostages. The rebels wanted Misuari, who was then facing rebellion charges, freed so he can attend an important conference between the Organization of Islamic Conference, the Philippines and the MNLF in Jeddah in Saudi Arabia.

Misuari had signed a peace deal with in September 1996 ending more than 20 years of bloody fighting in the southern Philippines. After the peace agreement was signed, Misuari became the governor of the Muslim autonomous region.

But many former rebels were disgruntled with the accord, saying, the government failed to comply with some of its provisions and uplift their standards of living. They accused the government of failing to develop the war-torn areas in the south, which remain in mired in poverty, heavily militarized and dependent financially on .

Some of the disgruntled former rebels have either joined the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, the country’s largest separatist rebel group, and the smaller and ruthless Abu Sayyaf group.

In November 2001, on the eve of the regional elections, Misuari accused the government of reneging on the peace agreement, and launched a new rebellion in Sulu and City, where more than 100 people were killed. Misuari escaped by boat to Malaysia, but was arrested there and deported to the Philippines.

Under the peace agreement, would provide a mini-Marshal Plan to spur economic development in Muslim areas in the south and livelihood and housing assistance to tens of thousands of former rebels to uplift their poor living standards. And Muslims in the South are most likely to fight for or support an armed separatist front when they perceive no alternative means to overcome discrimination and improve their living conditions.

Misuari was eventually released in 2008 after dropped all charges against him in return for his political support to President Gloria Arroyo. (Mindanao Examiner)

Via Mindanao Examiner

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Complaints swamp DepEd Action center

16 Jun

Education Secretary Mona Valisno on Monday said the Department of Education (DepEd) action center in Pasig City continues to receive complaints and queries about illegal collection of school fees. As of 3 p.m. Monday, the action center received 150 complaints, some sent via text message through the OBE SMS number 0919-4560027, while others were walk-in complaints.DepEd Public Information Office chief Kenneth Tirado said Region III and Region IV-A topped the regions with the highest number of complaints as of Sunday afternoon with eight complaints each, followed by Region VI and the Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) with two each.The National Capital Region (NCR), comprising six cities and a single town registered only one complaint though majority of the complaints and queries made since the OBE action center opened last week came from the metropolis.Tirado reiterated the strict compliance of school officials to the “no collection” policy, adding that the action center had already received at least 86 complaints about the illegal collection of school fees of the 284 complaints regarding the school opening.Earlier, the DepEd said it was investigating 13 schools, 10 in NCR and three in the provinces for violating the “no collection” policy.Tirado said the public could reach the action center at the following phone numbers (02) 6361663 and at (02) 6387529.Queries may also be emailed to action@deped.gov.ph while those in Metro can walk in at the OBE action center located at the Bulwagan ng Karunungan at the DepEd main office along Meralco Avenue in Pasig City.He said any complaint will be treated with utmost confidentiality.DepEd Assistant Secretary and spokesman Jonathan Malaya said they have fielded Quick Response Team (QRT) in every regional and division offices to investigate the alleged illegal collection of fees.“We will ask these schools to explain why there are persistent and numerous reports from the public that collections are going on,” he said.Malaya also clarified anew that the schools could only collect authorized contributions from those in Grade 5 up to 4th year high school but only on the second month of classes and only on a voluntary basis. The authorized voluntary contributions are P50 for Girl/Boy Scouts of the Philippines; P5 for the anti-TB Fund; and P60 (elementary) and P90 (high school) for the school publication.He said that the Parents and Teachers Association (PTA) fee may only be collected after the PTA presented a report of the previous year’s collection to its members and the school administration.Any school official found violating the policy would be administratively sanctioned, DepEd said.

Via Zamboanga Times

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Rotary’s P1.2 million water project gives hope to deaf mutes

14 Jun

ROTARY INT’L PUTS UP P1.2 M WATER PROJECT FOR DEAF MUTES: It was a school unlike any other that I have previously seenlocated in the middle of nowhere, accessible only through a dirt road which only a mechanized tractor can negotiate, without any electricity whatsoever and, what is worst, it was without any water system for its 300 or so constituents although it is standing just a few kilometers away from a world-famous mountain lake resort. It is as if the whole world has completely forgotten that, on top of an unnamed mountain in Cavinti, Laguna (just 10 kilometers away from Lake Caliraya Resort in Caliraya, Laguna and only about a hundred or so kilometers away south of Metro ), the DEAF School for the deaf and the mute, although owned by a private foundation, is doing a great service to humanity by providing elementary, high school and college education to those who cannot talk or hear, from all over the Philippines yet.Up until a year ago, that is, when Rotary International, through its Past President Pepe Punzalan of the Rotary Club of Sta. Cruz, Laguna, took notice, by accident, of this sorry state of affairs for the school’s 220 students, 20 faculty members and about 25 management and administrative staff, and life started changing for the better for all of them.On Saturday, June 12, 2010, while the Philippines was celebrating its 112th year of independence, Rotarians from Australia (Batemans Bay), Intramuros, and Sta. Cruz, Laguna, completed this change for the better by turning over a brand-new P1.2 million solar-powered water system, liberating as it were the deaf and the mute from a water-starved life pock-marked by a daily two-hour ritual of fetching water from unsafe sources. “INTERNATIONAL H20 COLLABORATION” FOR CLEAN AND POTABLE WATER SUPPLY WORLDWIDE: This is a triumph, first and foremost, of Rotary International’s unrelenting desire, expressed through its multi-million dollar potable water supply projects worldwide designed to provide clean and safe drinking water to the poor and the deprived from all parts of the globe.Started in 2009 or thereabouts, this project was called “International H2O Collaboration”. This came about through the joint efforts of Rotary International, of its charity arm, the Rotary Foundation, and the US Agency for International Development.In a media announcement in May 2009, Past RI President Bill Boyd said: ““We intend these projects to be models for future projects with strategic partners and in this way to enhance our contribution to world understanding, goodwill, and peace.” Boyd is the chair of the “International H20 Collaboration”.Lyne Abanilla, the current South Pacific Regional Director of RI for Public Relations and a past District 3810 governor and three time chairman of RI’s Zone 7 (Philippines and Indonesia) PR Team, on the other hand explained that “International H2O Collaboration is dedicated to implementing long-term, sustainable water, sanitation, and hygiene projects in the developing world. “ NEW HOPE DAWNS FOR THE DEAF AND THE MUTE WITH SAFE AND POTABLE WATER: The turn-over of the spankingly-new water system at the DEAF School last Saturday turned out to be one big emotional affair, with all of the school’s students and staff in full attendance. Everyone but everyone expressed their full gratitude to the Rotarians who made sure that they would be given clean and safe water.Director Salvador Cuare, the top guy running DEAF School after its founder went into retirement at age 84, said a renewed sense of hope appears to have descended on the studentry and the staff with the installation of the new water system, especially because it did away with the daily two-hour fetching of water among its students, who said they could now devote more time to studying.The sense of drinking safe and potable water, not anymore water from the wells and springs whose water may even be contaminated, has made everyone visibly happy and light-hearted, Cuare added.Well, for all of these, they have the Rotary International to thank, and, also, the Rotary Clubs of Batemans Bay, Australia, Intramuros, and Sta. Cruz, Laguna, and Visionary Presidents Art Platon and Mila Lamb and their respective members who acted selflessly to lead the way in giving Rotary’s service above self.

Via Zamboanga Times

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IDP community journeys to recovery

13 Jun

DATU PIANG, Maguindanao – Using a long, thin stick, fifteen-year-old Muhanna Mohammad patiently pointed at the letters written on a paper as around 30 children broke into a singsong, reciting the alphabets. The boys and the girls then took turns identifying the sets of alphabets before Muhanna declared a break. Rustles of feet can be heard as the children rushed to get their slippers left on the steps of a bamboo and concrete structure called as ‘safe space for children’ where, for the past four weeks, it serves as their classroom-cum-play area.“I like reviewing my alphabets,” said Asad Mohammad, 8, Muhanna’s younger brother, an incoming Grade 2 pupil at the nearby Datu Gumbay Elementary School.“We were taught how to be obedient to our parents,” quipped his playmate, Maguid.But for five-year-old Maira Abdumagid, her favorite part was doing action songs.The throng looked like they were having the regular summer classes as they waited for their snacks to be served.But the activities participated in by these children were part of the psychosocial sessions, a component of the integrated rehabilitation program designed for internally-displaced persons affected by the 2008 armed conflict and who are now starting to rebuild their lives and communities.The families of Muhanna, Asad, Maguid, and Maira are among the 50 families who resettled to this part of Barangay Buayan from the remote Sitio of Nimao, a sub-village of Buayan. Since February this year, they have been living in ‘core shelters’ provided in the rehabilitation program that is supported by the Strengthening Response to Internal Displacement in Mindanao (StRIDe-Mindanao) Project funded by the European Commission.StRIDE Mindanao Project is lodged within the Government and UNDP-managed Action for Conflict Transformation (ACT) for Peace Programme. The Programme is implemented by the Mindanao Development Authority (formerly Mindanao Economic Development Council) in partnership with the Regional Government of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.Also included in the rehabilitation package are installation of water system, construction of barangay health station with provision of medical equipment, establishment of botika ng barangay, conduct of supplemental feeding, provision of services to address reproductive health concerns of women and children as well as provision of livelihood support.The Project, through its local implementing partners, is also facilitating the formation and strengthening of community organizations such as the Barangay Water and Sanitation Association (BAWASA) and Neighborhood Association and Shelter Assistance (NASA). Trainings on sustainable operation of facilities, culture of peace, conflict resolution and management, disaster preparedness and risk reduction, early warning and preventive measures are also being conducted.A total of 30 communities in Sarangani, Sultan Kudarat, South Cotabato, Lanao del Norte, del Norte, Sibugay, Sulu, Basilan, Maguindanao and North Cotabato are being assisted for a multi-sectoral rehabilitation under StRIDe Mindanao.In this enclave in Buayan, the men and women are in the process of identifying the form of livelihood they wish to engage in.“The men wish to secure fishing gear and agricultural inputs while the women want to do mat weaving. But we will still conduct another round of consultation to finalize the livelihood assistance,” said Fairudz Rose Ebus, executive director of Mindanao Tabang Bakwet (MTB), the local implementing partner of StRIDE Mindanao in Buayan and convenor in Central Mindanao of the Mindanao Emergency Response Network (MERN).IDP-farmers till their lands in sitio Nimao, which is still considered as highly-conflict vulnerable area, and come home to the relocation site at sundown. They are also cultivating vegetable garden in their backyards.“Our condition is far better here than at the evacuation center,” said Sijasmin Makmod, 39, who lives with her elderly parents and two siblings in one of the shelters.She would know better as she and her family had stayed at the evacuation center in the town proper for a year and a half.Now, their shelter featured a two-meter extension to accommodate a receiving area and a kitchen. The length of expansion to the shelter was agreed by the IDPs in a consultation, Makmod said.Assistance from other programs and government agencies also poured into this small community.Oxfam provided four latrines and one from Lutheran World Relief Save the Children gave non-food items to the families while UNICEF trained MTB staff on psychosocial processes and in turn, trained young IDP youths, like Muhanna and three others from Buayan.The various trainings do not only benefit the IDPs but also the local government unit officials.“The trainings help us improve our skills in dealing with displacement such as in camp management and addressing IDP needs,” said Musib Tan, Datu Piang municipal administrator who serves as the LGU’s focal person on IDP concerns.He remembered that in 2008, when IDPs started to pour into the town, they would just be placed anywhere. The National Disaster Coordinating Council report showed that in December 2008, Datu Piang was hosting around 8,000 families or 41,000 persons.During the course of displacement, the town, located on the banks of Rio Grande de Mindanao, also suffered from floods that worsen the condition of the IDPs.“Now, we know what to do to respond to specific problems and we are improving in terms of dealing with IDPs and partners,” Tan said.“This thriving community here shows how the government and partners help one another to support the IDPs in bringing them back to their feet,” he added.It may be a long journey for these IDPs to full recovery but they have made significant steps.For now, Muhanna, Asad, and Maguid are looking forward to the opening of classes in next week. — ACT for PeacePLAY TIME. IDP youth volunteers (back to camera) lead the performance of an action song for fellow IDPs during a psychosocial session in Brgy. Buayan, Datu Piang, Maguindanao. — ACT for PeacePAY IT FORWARD. Muhanna Mohammad (right, standing) teaches alphabets to fellow IDPs at a ‘safe spaces for children’ in Brgy. Buayan, Datu Piang, Maguindanao. — ACT for PeaceWATER, MA, PLEASE. A young girl takes a bath as her mother pumps water for her at the relocation site in Brgy. Buayan, Datu Piang, Maguindanao. — ACT for PeaceALL SMILES. IDP children take a break from a psychosocial session in Brgy. Buayan, Datu Piang, Maguindanao.

Via Zamboanga Times

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The Jumalons at Bacolod’s Orange Gallery

10 Jun

The famous father-daughter duo, Edwin Jumalon and Amihan, had a successful run of their side-side solo exhibit at Orange Gallery in Bacolod City with renowned director Peque Gallaga as guest of honor recently. Bacolod’s art lovers and collectors raved about their paintings. The Jumalon Family whose house is an art haven itself in Pasonanca, City is getting to be known in the art circle around our country. Only son, Winner Jumalon, is a renowned figure in and in international auction houses, honored last year as a Thirteen Artists awardee; Jana Jumalon-Alano, who creates bold terra-cotta sculptures, writes music and has made Dumaguete her home; and Lorna Fernandez, Edwin’s wife, has just completed her eighth solo exhibit at Gallery of Davao.While the family of artists expanded their territories outward, Edwin and Amihan continue to plumb inward, plunging into the unconscious to surface with works that are compelling and relevant. Together, as fellow artists who share their love for the romantic and the surreal, they exhibit their solo shows, entitle Tinged Illusions by Edwin Jumalon and Queen Building by Amihan.In “Tinged Allusions,” Jumalon’s 10th solo exhibit, Edwin continues to churn out visual images and styles with restless abandon. This time, still denying overt design and plunging into the absurd, he shuffles figures and objects together and paints them in wildly different styles so they no longer retain their logical meaning. Instead, the resulting associations create a powerful dream-sense.As in his last exhibit, Jumalon incorporates the figure of a child in his canvases. We get a sense of nostalgia from the artist and the father over the loss of these innocent years, and he imbues children, whose senses not yet fully grounded in reality, with the gift of prophecy.In the whimsically titled “But This Time You Give Me 13 Apples,” we see a young boy gazing at a vision of forbidden fruit. He contemplates a cornucopia of images, which include floating apples, a frog, a remote control and a faceless trio of women.Visions of impending time are also hinted in “A Day in Bethany,” which hints at young girls awakening into womanhood. We see them walking in a garden of bizarre-looking flowers. We see a group of men sweating and lifting boxes as they are boxed themselves. In the foreground, we see a nude statue of a woman, a Venus de Milo.In “Queen Building,” Amihan chronicles the clash of roles she experienced as a new mother and a mature artist, and personifies the inevitable battles as archetypes or daimons which have become her subjects for the exhibit.She presents her all-female cast of muses, and steers clear of the expressionist style that has become the signature of most young artists. She has opted instead to present her work in clean lines and textures, like illustrations of the past.In “Iron Maiden,” “Gatekeeper” and “Watchwoman,” she parades her female figures—victorious and imperial-looking, emphasizing animus and drawing strength from their qualities of invincibility and will power.It is a proclamation that the artist is here, that she has been marshalling her forces, and that she has never gone away. It is here that we catch an inkling of why the show is called “Queen Building”: It is a metaphor of women’s roles and art, of the journey across the board to gather power, and to realize that an empress must have authority to protect not only her children and family, but the things which she loves. In her case, art itself.Captions:Amihan, Peque Gallaga, Edwin Jumalon, and Razcel Salvarita.Iel Jumalon Fernandez, Bendix Fernandez, Amihan, Is Jumalon, and Edwin Jumalon.Watchwoman by Amihan.GarteKeeper by Amihan.Edwin Jumalon and Amihan.But Now You Give me Thirteen Apples by Edwin Jumalon.A Day in Bethany by Edwin Jumalon.ABS-CBN interviews Edwin Jumalon.

Via Zamboanga Times

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Amnesty International calls on new government to address justice gap in the Philippines

7 Jun

CITY, Philippines – Amnesty International Philippines is touring eight major cities around the Philippines this June to launch its Report 2010 on the State of the Worlds Human Rights, which documents abuses in 159 countries and territories around the world, including the Philippines.

Amnesty International’s human rights report comes at a time before the officials of national and local governments start their governance following the May 10 elections.

“We want to share our report to the widest possible audience in our country in order that the new government, national as well as local, can consider the human rights trends in the Philippines and the world in shaping the governance of our nation in the next six years. We also want to show how civil society organizations and journalists have contributed to human rights even as they face repression and sometimes death,” said Dr. Aurora Parong, Section Director of Amnesty International Philippines.

The report exposes evidences of repression, injustice, oppression and poverty in various parts of the world. Amnesty International highlighted abuses in the country that worsens the situation of the poor and marginalized.

“The Amnesty International Report for the year 2009 highlights a global justice gap that is made worse by power politics. Powerful governments are blocking advances in international justice by standing above the law on human rights, shielding allies from criticism and acting only when it is politically convenient.

Repression and injustice have flourished in the justice gap and power politics in the Philippines. There is politicizing of justice and pushing for accountability mainly when politically expedient. In the last nine years, the Arroyo government has widened the justice gap in the country. The tortuous road to justice for the victims of the Maguindanao massacre is
a good example,” explained Parong.

According to the report:

• Estimated 125,000 internally displaced people in Maguindanao province with only 20% of them living in centers for the displaced while many lived in tents unsuitable for long-term shelter, especially given typhoons and floods. It further said that living conditions were poor, with unclean water, inadequate sanitation and high levels of malnutrition.

• Unlawful killings by paramilitary groups, private armies and un-identified assailants continued with impunity, highlighting the killing of anti-mining activist Eliezer Billanes of South Cotabato, suspected MILF Katog Sapalon in Maguindanao province, human rights defender priest Father Cecilio Lucero in Samar, and the Maguindanao massacre.

• Indigenous Peoples living in remote areas throughout the country, and the Moros were particularly affected. Indigenous Peoples suffered both as a result of the conflict and from forced evictions from their lands in the interest of extraction industries. About 100 armed police and a demolition crew violently dispersed protesters in a site in Didipio, Nueva Vizcaya where indigenous peoples were forcibly evicted.

• The government accused activists and left-leaning NGOs of being MILF or
communist supporters, some of whom were subjected to torture.

“Human rights organizations and human rights defenders came under attack in many countries. Amnesty International highly recognizes the contributions of civil society organizations and journalists to improve human rights situations of countries, thus we are particularly concerned that the government’s failure to fulfill its obligations to resolve human rights issues negate efforts made by human rights defenders.Inadequate protection for sectors like the media and other activist organizations is a weakness in governance. Many of these human rights violations are preventable under a rights-based governance where the people are at the center and accountability at its heart,” added Parong.

Locally, City and its neighboring provinces served as an arena for clashes between government troops against Muslim insurgents fighting for the secession of the Bangsamoro Nation.

became the deployment center of military troops tasked to curb armed attacks. That being the situation, the presence of highly acclaimed peace advocate groups increased. The city now plays a very important role in forwarding the peace talks becoming the usual venue for negotiations between the Moro Islamic Liberation Front and the Government of the Republic of the Philippines,” Parong reported.

Although, the relations between Muslim rebels and the government has been improving, there still have been reports of unlawful killings, illegal detention and migration due to displacement as a result of armed conflicts in neighboring areas.

“These reports of human rights violations are not unique in Mindanao alone but the rest of the country as well. Amnesty International calls on the incoming Aquino government and local government units to ensure that no one is indeed above the law in the Philippines and that all the long-standing problems of internal displacement, counter-insurgency campaign-related abuses, unlawful killings, torture and ill treatment, enforced disappearance and repression will be adequately and promptly addressed. The responsibility of setting a good example to end human rights violations lies heavily on the national leadership,” added Parong.

In a campaign on Making Human Rights a Priority in the yet to be concluded May 2010 elections, a human rights agenda for presidentiables were put forward by Amnesty International. The launch of the report also appealed to Presidential front-runner Noynoy Aquino for a concrete first 100 days human rights agenda.

Despite failures in justice last year, Amnesty International recognizes some progress in various parts of the world. In the Philippines, Amnesty International welcomes the passage of an Anti Torture Law and a law penalizing crimes against humanity, genocide and other violations of international humanitarian law. But enforcement must be ensured and the Indigenous Peoples’ rights to free, prior and informed consent must not be circumvented or denied in practice.

“For us in the Philippines, the need for justice is a key lesson in the last nine years. Justice provides fairness and truth to those who suffer violations, it deters human rights abuses and ultimately delivers a more stable and secure Philippines.” concluded Dr. Parong.

Via Mindanao Examiner

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1ST-APLUMA supports Abunda’s appointment to Noynoy Cabinet

7 Jun

As fellow “probinsiyanos”, a group of community media practitioners has thrown its support behind the appointment of television personality Boy Abunda to any Cabinet position, describing him as “a whiff of fresh air in the incoming government” “Consideration for a government position should not be personality based but qualifications based,” said Ismael Amigo, national president of Unang Alyansa ng Pambansa at Pamprobinsiyang Lupon at Ugnayan ng Makatao at Maka-Diyos na mga Mamamahayag or 1ST-APLUMA.The group is composed of community writers, columnists and provincial correspondents from Visayas and Mindanao.“Based on his vast experience, Abunda is very capable and competent and that could shine in any capacity in government,” added Amigo, who like Abunda, hails from Eastern Samar.Abunda’s roots are traced from Borongan while Amigo is from Sulat.1ST-APLUMA’s statement came at the heels of criticisms thrown at Abunda after incoming President Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III announced that he is contemplating on giving the talent manager a position in his Cabinet.Amigo emphasized that Abunda’s educational background and capacity should not be put in question as he studied at Ateneo de University and was working on a master’s degree in international relations.“As a television host, publicist and talent manager, Boy Abunda, time and again, has proven in competence and grace under pressure which is what the Aquino Cabinet needs,” Amigo added.Also, Abunda’s resilience and diligence would be an asset to Aquino government, Amigo added, saying that the “talent manager displayed great perseverance when he worked in odd jobs to support himself and his family after his father died”.Amigo’s statement is echoed by 1ST-APLUMA’s spokesman Fitzgerald Cecilio, who said that Abunda would serve as the new face of the Aquino administration, especially now that the public is tired of traditional politicians or trapos in government.“President Aquino should prove that he is out to change the government and appointing Abunda to any position in his Cabinet would be best,” Cecilio said.Abunda became a host of Show and Tell, a late night variety talk show with Gretchen Barretto, and Startalk, an entertainment talk show. In 1999, he moved to GMA Network’s competitor ABS-CBN where he hosted The Buzz, Private Conversations, Home Boy and Kontrobersyal.Abunda now hosts The Bottomline with Boy Abunda, a talk show interview. He also produced an album titled Melodic Conversations.

Via Zamboanga Times

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Police holds Sayyaf man in Zamboanga City

4 Jun

CITY, Philippines (Mindanao Examiner / June 4, 2010) – A Muslim family whose son was seized by police agents in City in the southern Philippines appealed to authorities to free the man accused as being a member of the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf group.

The suspect, George Nambi, was seized by armed men near the village of Santa Barbara earlier this week. His companion managed to escape and sought police protection only to learn that Nambi is being held on suspicion of being a militant responsible in 2002 kidnappings of civilians in Sulu province.

Nambi’s family denied the accusations and insisted the man was innocent and so were nine other Muslim men who are also being hunted down by the police on the same allegations.

“Our son is innocent. He is a good man with no criminal records,” Nambi’s mother told reporters.

Nambi’s friends also denied the police accusations. “If we are members of the Abu Sayyaf, we will not go to the police and seek assistance to locate George,” one of Nambi’s friends, said. “Every day we go to the mosque and pray – five times a day – and then sit and relax under a tree, but now we are being hunted like criminals.”

Police and military agents previously seized at gunpoint suspected Abu Sayyaf members and charged them with kidnappings and terrorism, among others, and flown to where they are locked-up along with other criminals. Many of them were illegally arrested and complained of being tortured into admitting they are Abu Sayyaf members.

Authorities linked the Abu Sayyaf, a small, but the most violent Muslim rebel group fighting for independence, to the spate of terrorism and kidnappings-for-ransom in the southern Philippines.

The group, whose original name is “Al-harakatul al-Islamiya,” which means “bearer of the sword,” was also linked by the military to the Indonesian terrorist organization the “Jemaah Islamiya,” blamed for the deadly bombings in Bali in 2002. (Mindanao Examiner)

Via Mindanao Examiner

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Captured Sayyaf militant dies in military custody in Mindanao

21 Apr

CITY, Philippines (Mindanao Examiner / April 21, 2010) – One of two captured Abu Sayyaf militants tagged as among those behind twin bombings in Basilan province in Mindanao had died from his wounds at a local military hospital, officials said Wednesday.

Officials said Umbar, who was wounded in a firefight with troops last week, died late Tuesday in hospital at the military’s Western Mindanao Command headquarters.

“An Abu Sayyaf member captured by government troops after the attack in Isabela City in Basilan died of cardio respiratory arrest secondary to sepsis due to his infected wounds,” said First Lieutenant Steffani Cacho, a regional military spokeswoman.

She said the body of the militant was handed over to an imam and buried in a coastal village called Caragasan, west of City.

Cacho said another militant, Ajib Hainal, who was also wounded in the fighting and captured by the military in Basilan province, would soon be handed over to the police.

“Hainal is ready for release to the police,” she said.

Police have filed criminal charges against more than a dozen militants blamed for the deadly attacks April 13 in Isabela City where the Abu Sayyaf detonated bombs and opened fire on fleeing civilians. It said 14 people were killed in the violence.

Relatives of civilians killed in the attacks blamed police and military for their failure to prevent terrorism and public outrage is steadily growing.

Family members of those killed in the Abu Sayyaf attacks wore black shirts with markings “No Order” during the burial of four victims over the weekend – referring to the unstable peace and order condition in Basilan, one of five provinces under the Muslim autonomous region, wrecked by clan war and terrorism and kidnappings for ransom.

Others carried streamers: “Game of the Generals,” “Give justice to the victims” and Justice of Tubigan massacre.” Tubigan is a village in Isabela City where militants opened fire on innocent civilians as they flee from pursuing government troops.

“I am from Isabela City and I really cannot understand why it took the military and the police so long to react on the attacks. The attackers were just walking in the village as they opened fire on hapless and innocent civilians.”

“They even shot and killed one policeman, took his weapon and chopped off his hand and this happened 30 minutes after the bombing and they continued their killing spree,” one woman said.

Many residents also blamed the failure of government officials who allegedly spend more time in vacation in rather in the province and attend to the needs of their constituents and some only reports to sign important documents or collect their salaries.

Isabela, one of two largely Christian cities in Basilan, is host to a military camp and a police base, but the province is also a stronghold of the Abu Sayyaf group and Moro Islamic Liberation Front rebels, which were blamed in previous attacks and kidnappings.

Basilan had been attacked many times in the past by the Abu Sayyaf and Moro rebels and security problems still remain the same and military and police authorities also failed to improve the peace and order situation. (Mindanao Examiner)

Via Mindanao Examiner

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