BusinessMirror December 06, 2020

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Sunday, December 6, 2020 Vol. 16 No. 59

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RESIDENTS travel via a small boat to their homes in San Miguel, Catanduanes, after receiving their kits from Save the Children.

SCAR UPON SCAR ROBINA and Adrian at their home in Catanduanes.

EDDIE and Maryjane, with their sons Sowee and Denver, pose for a photo with the items they received from Save the Children.

LEARNING modules are left out to dry in Catanduanes after getting soaked by heavy rains brought by Supertyphoon Rolly.

Children have been deeply impacted by the series of recent powerful typhoons, compounding the already severe socioeconomic and public health crisis from the Covid-19 pandemic. Their scars, piling on each other, are barely healing. By Estrella Torres

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Photos by Lei Tapang and LJ Pasion

ORE than a month since Supertyphoon Rolly, the world’s most powerful storm in 2020, hit the Bicol region, thousands of children and their families still live in makeshift homes, facing hunger and missing out on education as their learning modules were washed out by floodwater.

“Our house was destroyed because we are poor,” said nineyear-old Maria (not her real name), one of thousands of children left homeless in the town of Malinao in Albay when Supertyphoon Rolly (international name: Goni) made landfall. Maria said the sound of raindrops and roofs being torn made her and her siblings cry. Moreover, seeing her learning modules being washed away by flood broke her heart. “I hope to receive learning materials,” said Maria, who wants

to pursue her dream of becoming a policewoman. “I want to help those who are hurt.” The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) reported on November 11 that more than two million people were affected by Supertyphoon Rolly in the Bicol region, 450,000 of whom are children. The typhoon also left more than 170,000 houses partially damaged or destroyed, and the damage to agriculture has reached P5 billion. Continued on A2

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.0460

A SAVE the Children staff member surveys the destruction caused by Supertyphoon Rolly in Tiwi, Albay.

n JAPAN 0.4627 n UK 64.6507 n HK 6.1988 n CHINA 7.3445 n SINGAPORE 36.0219 n AUSTRALIA 35.7366 n EU 58.3471 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.8095

Source: BSP (December 4, 2020)


NewsSunday BusinessMirror

A2 Sunday, December 6, 2020

www.businessmirror.com.ph

Corporate America’s cash burn problem is getting worse

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By Paula Seligson Bloomberg News

ORE and more companies are burning through cash as the pandemic moves closer to being a year old.

A growing number of junkrated corporations including Delta Air Lines Inc. and Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. are losing money even before they pay interest and other necessary expenses like taxes. They’re covering those costs with cash they still have and with more borrowing in the bond and loan markets, where investors are willing to bet that companies will recover relatively fast after Covid-19 vaccines arrive. In the latest quarter, the number of junk-rated corporations that borrow in US dollars and lost money before paying interest and other required expenses, known as having negative Ebitda, reached an eye-popping 47, according to a Bloomberg Intelligence analysis. That’s nearly double the level in the second quarter, out of a universe of about 600 borrowers. These companies are doing worse than many other zombies, or corporations that have losses after covering interest expenses. In this case, the businesses are losing money even before servicing their debt. If they don’t turn themselves around, some could be part of another wave of bankruptcies next year. For now, the Federal Reserve is helping these companies limp along by keeping interest rates near zero and forcing investors that want decent returns to consider financing struggling businesses. But money managers won’t be willing to lend to weak corporations forever. Companies are trying to just hang on until life returns to normal. Debt markets may not be paying enough attention to the risk of cash and financing running out, said Noel Hebert, director of credit research at Bloomberg Intelligence who did the analysis. And even if the pandemic ends sometime next year, businesses will have to deal with their growing debt levels and an economy that may look very different after Covid-19, he said. “We’ve got companies where we don’t know if they’re functionally okay or not because we don’t know what the economy looks like on the other side of Covid,” Hebert said. “You’ve got companies that need a fast solution to figure out how to make their debt levels work, and absent that, those are companies that over the course of the next year may need to file for bankruptcy.”

Debt drag

COMPANIES that came out of the last big downturn with higher debt loads ended up performing worse than their peers, economists at the New York Fed wrote this week. In this cycle, firms in industries like tourism, travel and hospitality could grow as much as 10 percent slower than in ordinary times, based on figures seen after the financial crisis and companies’ debt levels coming into this downturn, among other factors, the economists found. Junk bonds meanwhile have gained around 5.5 percent this year, after returning more than 14 percent last year, according to Bloomberg Barclays index data. “Debt investors are willing to cross their fingers and go, ‘OK you’re not profitable, but we think someday you can be again,’ which is a tricky way to invest,” Hebert said. Corporations including Delta, Royal Caribbean and United Airlines Holdings Inc. are among those that have seen trailingtwelve-month Ebitda turn negative in the third quarter. Many of these are in industries hit hard by Covid-19, including tourism and live entertainment. And some of those companies may be eligible for government aid. The bipartisan stimulus proposal that congressional lawmakers released this week would give $45 billion of funding for transportation, including $17 billion for four months of payroll support to airlines. Representatives for Royal Caribbean and Delta declined to comment, while a spokesperson for United did not return a request for comment.

Cash flow proxy

EBITDA represents a company’s income before it pays taxes or interest on its debt, and ignores some expenses like depreciation and amortization, where the cash expenditure often came in prior periods. It can be used as a proxy for cash flow or earnings from the company’s main operating businesses. Bloomberg Intelligence looked at companies with negative Ebitda over the last 12 months. The 47 companies in the Bloomberg Barclays US Corporate High Yield Bond index that posted negative adjusted Ebitda for the 12 months ended in September compares with just 26 in the sec-

Scar upon scar Continued from A1

Both parents of Aldrian, 11, were not around when Rolly made landfall in their town in Tiwi, Albay. His mother was giving birth at the time and his father accompanied her in the hospital. Being the eldest, Aldrian knew he had to be strong for his three other sibling aged 9, 4 and 2, who were left in his care. Since their house is made of light wood materials, he and his siblings moved to the nearby concrete house of their grandmother. “But we also had to transfer to another house because my grandmother’s house got flooded with sea water,” recalled Aldrian. “When the typhoon passed, we tried to look for things that can still be used.”

Deep scars

ATTY. Alberto Muyot, Chief Executive Officer of Save the Children Philippines, said climate-related disasters disrupt children’s learn-

ing, destroy homes, educational facilities, health centers, and other infrastructure critical to children’s well-being. “Disasters leave deep scars on children’s well-being because they are exposed to traumatic events such as losing homes, seeing tremendous damages, and at times, witnessing the loss of lives,” said Muyot. Save the Children Philippines has launched a series of integrated response activities to support the needs of some 50,000 most vulnerable children and families in the provinces of Camarines Sur, Albay, and Catanduanes. These include education in emergencies, programs on child protection, health and nutrition, mental health and psychosocial support (MPSS), as well as water, hygiene and sanitation. “Children who were affected by disasters need to go back to learning, to establish normalcy and routine in their lives,” said Muyot. The child rights organization

TRAVELERS wait for flights as Delta Air Lines planes sit at gates on opening day of the Salt Lake City International Airport in Salt Lake City, Utah, on September 15, 2020. The $4.1-billion replacement of the old Salt Lake City International Airport, which is slated to be demolished and built over starting by the end of the year, opened its doors for the first time Tuesday to travelers. GEORGE FREY/BLOOMBERG

‘We’ve got companies where we don’t know if they’re functionally okay or not because we don’t know what the economy looks like on the other side of Covid. You’ve got companies that need a fast solution to figure out how to make their debt levels work, and absent that, those are companies that over the course of the next year may need to file for bankruptcy.’ —Noel Hebert, director of credit research at Bloomberg Intelligence ond quarter. And they reflect only a portion of the firms currently burning cash, given that the analysis excludes most companies that aren’t public and corporations in the financial sector. By other, more stringent definitions, such as subtracting expenses including interest and capital expenditure from Ebitda, even more firms are turning in a less-than-zero performance. Normally, corporations with negative Ebitda are on the road to bankruptcy, because they aren’t earning enough to make even partial debt payments. But in this downturn, some troubled companies have been able to raise equity. And many have successfully borrowed billions of dollars from investors betting that companies will rebound when the pandemic is over, probably around the second half of 2021. For example, Carnival Corp. borrowed about $2 billion in November in the corporate bond market, paying an interest rate of just 7.625 percent on unsecured notes

in US dollars and euros. That compared with the hefty 11.9-percent yield it had to pay on debt secured by its ships in April, when investors were less confident in the timing of a return to normality. “What these companies are going through is temporary, that’s the bottom line,” said Kevin Mathews, global head of high yield at Aviva Investors. “If they’ve raised enough money in the market to survive until their business comes back, then those default rates aren’t going to be as bad as we thought.” By one measure, high-yield companies were able to cut their aggregate debt burdens in the third quarter. The ratio of total debt to Ebitda on average for high-yield companies ticked down slightly to 5.27 times in the most recent quarter from the historic high of 5.57 times in the three months ended June 30. But that improvement is largely because of quirks in how aggregate leverage is measured. Any company with negative Ebitda was removed from the figures

because leverage becomes meaningless when that occurs, making the average look better. Also, a handful of companies left the index in the third quarter after filing for bankruptcy. There was also some improvement from a few companies that benefited from the pandemic and showed real financial gains, such as the strong quarter from consumer staples company the Kraft Heinz Co. While high-yield companies are struggling, investment-grade corporations are generally managing to tread water or even improve their situation slightly. Average total leverage ticked down to 3.5 times in the third quarter for the investment-grade Bloomberg Barclays US Corporate Bond index, from 3.54 times in the second quarter. The gains came from stronger earnings in the technology, utilities, and consumer staples spaces, some of the biggest sectors in the index, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Many companies have bor-

will also establish a satellite office in Catanduanes to support 1,200 families with unconditional multipurpose cash assistance to help them get back on their feet. The disbursement of cash assistance will be facilitated by the Philippine Postal Corporation. Save the Children Philippines immediately deployed a humanitarian response team to the typhoon-affected provinces of Camarines Sur, Albay and Catanduanes to conduct rapid assessment. The team also provided immediate assistance to some of the most affected families in the three provinces and is now focusing on longer-term programming in Catanduanes, where Rolly first made landfall and caused the most destruction. The humanitarian team helped some 2,000 families, including 4,800 children, by distributing life-saving items such as 3,000 plastic sheets for emergency shelter, family hygiene kits, water kits, and 1,000 household kits, as well as 2,000 boxes of face masks

and 4,000 bottles of alcohol for Covid-19 protection. Dr. Amado Parawan, Health and Nutrition Advisor of Save the Children Philippines, also provided support to the health personnel of Tiwi, Albay, in terms of screening, referral and treatment of severely acute malnourished and moderately acute malnourished children. Extreme weather events such as Supertyphoon Rolly and the compounding impact of the Covid-19 pandemic exacerbate poverty, displacement and inequalities. Children from poor households are also exposed to life-threatening diseases due to the breakdown of health services, and their lack of access to nutritious food and medicines. Robina, 58, now lives in a makeshift home in Catanduanes, along with her husband and children Adrian, 16, who was diagnosed with learning disability and speech delay, and Isabel, 10, who complains of blurred vision. Her husband is a carpenter while she

is raising one hog and two ducks at their backyard as a livelihood. She said her family moved to an evacuation center before the typhoon since their house is made of light materials. Robina said her husband had to break the window of the evacuation center when floodwaters started to rise and they all swam to the second floor of the barangay office. “When we finally reached the barangay office, I noticed that my children were shaking but still hadn’t uttered a single word,” said Robina. “I started hugging them and told them that we should pray together for our safety.” Robina’s eldest son works in Manila but got laid off when the pandemic started. “I haven’t heard from him since last month and I am also worried about him since he mentioned that he barely has any money for rent and food.” For fear of getting diseases including Covid-19, she said families left the cramped evacuation centers as soon as they could, and built

rowed in recent months and kept the cash on their books as a back up in case their situation gets worse. That money can be used to pay down debt in the future, unless it gets spent first. Those funds are partly why net leverage, which compares total debt levels minus cash to Ebitda, is lower than total leverage. For junk-rated companies, that ratio dropped to 4.17 times in the third quarter, from 4.39 times three months earlier. Large corporate debt loads will be a drag on the economy in the years to come and weigh on growth, said Michael Collins, senior multisector portfolio manager at PGIM Fixed Income. Companies hard-hit by the pandemic have been laying off workers and cutting back on investments to cut costs. “They really focus on survival rather than growth,” Collins said. Many companies should benefit when the global economy sees an expected rebound in the second half of 2021, but that won’t necessarily extend to businesses that might be facing long-term reductions in revenues as consumer habits change, according to Collins. “If you thought the last decade coming out of the financial crisis was a poor or weak recovery, which it was by historic standards, I think the recovery this cycle is going to be worse than that because of all the debt overhang,” Collins said.

makeshift homes from scavenged materials once the flood subsided. Robina is worried that Adrian was not brought to the barangay clinic and hospital for check-up since April, because they feared being exposed to the coronavirus. “The typhoon left us homeless in our own land,” said Robina. “All the money I saved were already used in buying food for our family and some nails to repair our home as we try to recover from the typhoon.” (About the authors: Estrella Torres is the Head of Media and Communication for Save the Children Philippines. Lei Tapang is Media and Campaigns coordinator and LJ Pasion, Information and Communication coordinator for Save the Children Philippines. They were part of the humanitarian response team deployed in Albay, Camarines Sur and Catanduanes from November 2 to December 4, 2020).


Editor: Angel R. Calso

The World BusinessMirror

Is Wall Street ready to work on China time? By Shuli Ren

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Bloomberg Opinion

h ree cheers for the US House of Representatives for passing a bill that could kick out Chinese companies listed on American exchanges. The tens of thousands of financial worker bees who have built their careers trading and servicing behemoths like Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and JD.com Inc. can finally get some sleep at night. Nearly a decade ago, I started my journalism career with Barron’s, the financial investment magazine. Based in Hong Kong, I would work well into the night calling emerging markets fund managers in New York, asking them for their views on China and their stock picks. Often, I went to bed at 2 a.m. I was no exception. Ringing the Nasdaq bell used to be every Chinese tech company’s Holy Grail and hundreds have managed to snag a prestigious listing in one US exchange or another. But that meant that Asia-based investors had to be vigilant at night in their quest to buy into the “China dream” being traded in the US daytime. The time zones are halfway around the world from each other. Few went to sleep before New York trading began, and some habitually woke up in the middle of the night checking markets on their phones. Now, the dynamic could change. If US-listed Chinese companies have no choice but to “return home,” they can’t, of course, be bought or sold in New York or other US exchanges. But many of the Chinese blue-chips have secondary listings in Hong Kong so stockholders should hold on to their shares because that’s how they can continue to chase the China dream. Hong Kong will be where the trading will flow. And the activity is bound to grow, despite being exiled from the US. That’s because mainland investors will be allowed to buy into the secondary listings via the Hong Kong Stock Connect, which links the city’s exchanges to those in Shanghai and Shenzhen. Right now, Hong Kong already hosts 29 percent of Alibaba’s outstanding shares, versus 22 percent a year ago, exchange data show. Why would Chinese companies want to be listed in the US, anyway? Prestige is intangible and fleeting. Five years ago, the more solid arguments were that the mainland exchanges lacked depth, or that Hong Kong was too obsessed with profitability, a requirement that discriminated against tech firms that had little yet to show but lots of potential. Those factors have changed dramatically because of listing rule changes in Hong Kong. A lot of trading in Chinese companies has already shifted from New York to Asia. The ostensible reason for the US ban—which passed the Senate months ago and will become law if and when Donald Trump signs the legislation—are the accounting scandals that have plagued Chinese companies. The

Securities and Exchange Commission blames them on Beijing’s refusal to allow the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board—an auditor of auditors set up after the Enron scandal— to inspect the work papers of its US-listed Chinese companies. While shifty accounting is certainly part of the problem, many fund managers based in New York never really looked deeply into where they were sinking their money. Distance is a factor. How would someone sitting in Park Avenue have any sense of what’s happening on the ground in China? Consider Luckin Coffee Inc., the disgraced Chinese coffee chain. Mainland investors never bought into the Luckin story; many said it was not B2B, or B2C, but business to “dumb-ass American money.” But Luckin figured out how to latch onto an emerging markets investment theme favored by American investors and raised over $1.6 billion in the US. Imagine: a morning cup much cheaper than Starbucks Corp., served to millions of Chinese who are switching from tea to coffee! There are plenty of other examples of US-based investors getting burned because they weren’t paying attention to facts on the ground in China. Qudian Inc., a fintech based in Xiamen, had a $1-billion IPO on the NYSE in October 2017, but tumbled shortly after because Beijing decided to cap the interest rate lenders could charge to consumers. Chinese education stocks were all the rage in the US until August 2018, when China decided to amend rules governing the country’s lucrative private education sector. The point is, China is an emerging market with fast and furious credit cycles and new regulations springing up alongside nascent industries. While Asia-based investors don’t know what’s on President Xi Jinping’s mind either, they at least have a better sense, having breathed the air and tried out all the new apps and concepts. Plus, new regulations in China never just come out of nowhere: They are often responses to social outcry over local problems. Investors in Asia can sense this in the atmosphere and thus have better risk control. To be sure, with the incoming Joe Biden administration, there might be compromises and conciliations in the implementation of the new bill. But Wall Street shouldn’t feel optimistic about business remaining as usual. China’s new securities law, which came into effect in March, states explicitly that overseas regulators can’t directly inspect or collect evidence on Chinese soil. Beijing considers this a sovereign issue. Chinese companies are coming home, whether you like it or not. In journalism, it’s valuable being on the ground. Shouldn’t that be the case with finance as well? If only to avoid pitfalls, it shouldn’t be this easy for Americans to purchase Chinese stocks. Visit the country and see what’s happening. To buy China, you need to work in its time zone.

Sunday, December 6, 2020

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With Covid-19 spreading in homes, US governors run out of weapons G

overnors and mayors have cracked down on schools, restaurants, gyms, nursing homes, places of worship and much more. But enforcement is proving almost useless in Americans’ homes, where some leaders insist that hang-out culture is a major source of pandemic risk. California Governor Gavin Newsom is the latest to try: On Thursday, he declared regional stay-home orders whenever intensive-care unit availability drops below 15 percent. Earlier this week, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti ordered 4 million residents to stay indoors without visitors or face fines and imprisonment. And New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is running ads warning of “living-room spread”—infection via small gatherings in homes and other private spaces that he says account for 70 percent of new cases. That’s hard to confirm, though, in part because contact tracing, an effective public-health tool early in the pandemic, is no longer fully illuminating the path of the disease. Even before Wednesday, when Kentucky reached record cases and deaths, the 1,600-person tracing team was so overwhelmed that officials started asking residents to do the job themselves for lower-risk contacts. In Pennsylvania, only about 25 percent of people with the virus are cooperating with tracers; New Jersey is only slightly better, with about 30 percent. Anthony Fauci, the US government’s top infectious-disease doctor, told ABC News last week that small groups aren’t as prominent a danger as, say, crowded bars. And even proponents of the most extreme distancing—locking down with one’s housemates—acknowledge that

strong encouragement or even legal orders carry only so much weight against constitutional rights. “There’s no amount of law enforcement in New Jersey or in any state in America that can effectively get inside everybody’s living room and ensure 100 percent compliance,” Governor Phil Murphy said Wednesday at a Trenton news conference. In an era when many Americans consider even mask mandates an affront to liberty, opponents of Covid-19 restrictions have a powerful ally in the US Supreme Court. On November 25, the justices ruled against Cuomo’s order to restrict the number of worshipers at religious ceremonies. Among the majority was Justice Amy Coney Barrett, whose confirmation in October gave conservatives a 6-to-3 majority on the court. And on Thursday, the court told a federal judge to re-examine assertions that California is infringing on religious rights by banning indoor worship services in most of the state. “Elected officials are in a very difficult situation, because they know that if they push too hard, it could lead to not just resistance, but possibly unrest,” said Dan Schnur, who teaches political communications at the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Southern California. “Their concern about that backlash ends up leading to further outbreaks.”

Looking foolish

And restriction backers look foolish when they don’t heed their own guidance. The French Laundry, the Michelin Guide-rated three-star Napa Valley res-

taurant, proved irresistible to Newsom and San Francisco Mayor London Breed, Democrats who attended group dinners there a day apart last month. Austin Mayor Steve Adler, another Democrat, warned residents to stay home—from a vacation in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. Democratic Mayor Sam Liccardo of San Jose was chastened when he gathered with relatives even though California officials had begged residents to skip Thanksgivings. “I understand my obligation as a public official to provide exemplary compliance with public health orders, and certainly not to ignore them,” Liccardo said in a press release. “I commit to do better.”

Party busters

And there are less intimate gatherings. In New Orleans, a swingers convention became a super-spreader event. In New York, officials have broken up several illicit parties where hundreds of revelers have gathered. In Chicago, authorities in Chicago’s Wicker Park neighborhood broke up a 300-person party on November 29 whose attendees had failed to distance and wear face coverings. The city business affairs and consumer protection department also performed more than 90 investigations over that weekend amid a ban on indoor dining and large gatherings. Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker, a Democrat, is considering stay-at-home rules because people who aren’t taking precautions in public “have an outsize effect” on spread, he told reporters Tuesday, a day before Illinois reported a record 238 deaths. “We need people to comply.” In Colorado, Democratic Governor

Jared Polis on April 27 replaced an early set of restrictions with what he called “Safer at Home” guidance on reopening for retail and personal services, offices and elective surgeries. Still, infection surged: On October 25, two days after the state capped “personal gatherings” at 10 people from two households, Colorado reported more than 2,100 cases, a singleday record. The most recent seven-day average is 4,179 cases. On Saturday, Polis disclosed on Twitter that he and his partner, Marlon Reis, had tested positive, were isolating at home and “feeling well.” Keith Baker, a county commissioner in Colorado’s Chaffee County, said policy can do only so much to arrest the rise. “It really comes down to the public—like people in a lifeboat, working together, each doing his or her part, keeping each other’s morale and spirits up,” Baker said. In Pennsylvania, Health Secretary Rachel Levine on Thursday said several counties are approaching intensive-care unit capacity while daily deaths and cases have hit record highs. Modeling projects 22,000 new cases a day this month. Democratic Governor Tom Wolf has issued an advisory against household gatherings with outsiders. Rachel Kostelac, a spokeswoman for the health department, said law enforcement officers are authorized to issue warnings or citations to anyone who fails to comply with an updated masking order. In the end, authorities have little choice but to rely on residents. “In Pennsylvania and nationwide,” Kostelac said, “our biggest tool is for individuals to stay home unless absolutely necessary.” Bloomberg News


A4

Sunday, December 6, 2020

The World BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

seen imposing ‘special’ Vaccine misinformation could create China regulations on fintech giants ‘second pandemic’–Red Cross chief C By Edith M. Lederer

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The Associated Press

NITED NATIONS—The head of the world’s largest humanitarian network is urging governments and institutions to combat “fake news” about Covid-19 vaccines which has become “a second pandemic” and start building trust in communities around the world about the critical importance of vaccinating people. Francesco Rocca, president of t he Inter nat iona l Federat ion of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, said in a virtual briefing to the UN Correspondents Association on Monday that “to beat this pandemic, we also have to defeat the parallel pandemic of distrust.” He said there is “a growing hesitancy about vaccines in general, and about a Covid vaccine in particular” around the world, pointing to a recent Johns Hopkins University study in 67 countries that found vaccine

acceptance declined significantly in most countries from July to October this year. In a quarter of countries, Rocca said, the study found that the acceptance rate for a vaccine against the coronavirus was near or below 50 percent, with Japan dropping from 70 percent to 50 percent acceptance, and France dropping from 51 percent to 38 percent acceptance. He stressed that the lack of trust “is by no means a Western phenomenon,” citing the federation’s research

in recent months in eight African countries—Congo, Cameroon, Gabon, Zimbabwe, Sierra Leone, Rwanda, Lesotho and Kenya—which showed a steady decline in the perceptions of the risk of Covid-19 infection. A growing number of people indicated the virus doesn’t affect young people or Africans, that the disease doesn’t exist now but did exist and the pandemic has ended, he said. “In several African countries, we have seen a common skepticism towards vaccines in general, with a common belief being that foreigners use Africa as a medical ‘testing ground.’” Surprisingly, Rocca said, some typically vulnerable and marginalized groups aren’t even aware of the pandemic, pointing to a federation survey in Pakistan which found 10 percent of respondents didn’t know about Covid-19. “We believe that the massive, coordinated efforts that will be needed to roll out the Covid vaccine in an equitable manner need to be paralleled by equally massive efforts to proactively build and maintain trust,” Rocca said. This will require the same kind of sustained community engagement that recently defeated Ebola in Congo, he said. The federation operates in 192 countries with almost 14 million volunteers and painstaking community outreach and engagement are at

the heart of its Covid-19 response, Rocca said. So far, Red Cross and Red Crescent S oc iet ies, w it h feder at ion support, have reached 243 million people w ith Cov id-19 activ ities including tracking community perceptions, responding to questions and sug gestions, “and prov iding accurate and timely information in local languages through diverse channels,” he said. Rocca said he has watched with concern in recent weeks “as the imminent arrival of a possible vaccine has, at least in some countries, washed away the commitments that were made over the summer to ensure an equitable distribution of vaccines between and within countries.” He said “politicizing the vaccines is a huge mista ke” and strongly backed the international initiative to distribute Cov id-19 vaccines to countr ies worldw ide know n as COVA X as “the correct approach both for rich countries and the rest of the world.” “If a few wealthy nations insist on a ‘vaccine nationalism’ approach, then many other countries—maybe even most other countries—will not be able to access them, both because of exclusive deals between wealthy countries and pharmaceutical companies and the inevitable lag in manufacturing enough doses,” he warned. AP

hina plans to impose “special and innovative regulatory measures” on financial technology behemoths such as Jack Ma’s Ant Group Co. to eliminate monopolistic practices and strengthen risk controls. Advances in technology have brought tremendous change to the financial sector, Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission and Party Secretary of the central bank, wrote in an article outlining regulations over the next five years. It was cited in the official Shanghai Securities News. Financial innovations are a “double-edged sword,” Guo said. There’s little “experience in legal standards and risk monitoring for mobile payments or Internet borrowing and insurance in our country,” he said. Guo is the highest-ranking regulator to weigh in on the issue after regulators last month halted the planned record initial public offering of Ma’s Ant Group. China has also called for deeper antitrust oversight of technology firms such as Alibaba Group Holding Co. and Tencent Holdings Ltd., which have expanded into finance with little oversight, posing a growing challenge to traditional banks and regulators. The article was published in conjunction with pieces by central bank governor Yi Gang and China Securities Regulatory Commission Chairman Yi Huiman. Having China’s top three financial watchdogs weigh in on regulations at the same time shows curbing financial risk has moved firmly to the center of the national agenda. Ant faces more regulations after the recent crackdown that derailed its $35-billion IPO. The chance that Ant will be able to revive its massive

stock listing next year is looking increasingly slim as China overhauls its rules, according to regulators familiar with the matter. In a rebuke to Ant’s founder Ma, Guo said that the core part of the global Basel Accords is to use capital requirements to constrain lending and keep leverage in a safe range. “Without adequate capital, financial services will get into trouble sooner or later,” Guo said. Ma riled regulators after he gave a speech in late October that blasted authorities and banks, comparing the Basel capital rules to a club for the elderly. Ant’s platform has provided quick loans to more than 500 million people. “The regulations should cover all financial institutions, businesses and products,” Guo wrote, saying online loan companies have skirted the rules under the camouflage of “financial innovation.” Guo also didn’t spare China’s property market. It’s the biggest “gray rhino” in terms of financial risks in China at this stage, he said. In his article, central bank governor Yi Gang said there should be more regulation of systemically important financial institutions as part of China’s five-year plan, which covers 2021 to 2025. Yi also called for a “firewall” between the government’s finances and the central bank to avoid monetizing the fiscal deficit, and said China will push forward with research and development of a digital currency “in a steady manner” and start trials “in an orderly way.” CSRC Chair man Yi ca l led for more direct financing and further bond market developments.

Bloomberg News

Journalists from Pakistan, Nigeria and Syria win Kurt Schork Awards

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ONDON—Three winners of the Kurt Schork Awards that honor brave, yet often unrecognized journalists for their reporting on conflict, corruption and injustice were announced on December 3. Shah Meer Baloch, a journalist from Pakistan, wins the Kurt Schork Freelance Award for his reporting on child labor in the country’s coal mines, the persecution of the Kalasha community and systemic government negligence in the national polio vaccination program. The judges highlighted how “the high degree of personal risk involved in tackling such stories in Pakistan cannot be understated” and that Baloch “has demonstrated admirable moral determination” in bringing these stories to light. Nigerian journalist Fisayo Soyombo is the winner of the Local Reporter Award for his undercover investigation on the West African nation’s criminal justice system. Under a pseudonym, Soyombo feigned an offence for which he was arrested and spent five days in a Lagos police cell and then eight days in Ikoyi prison. The judges commended his “vivid and compelling three-part series” that exposed “the everyday corruption and abuses of Nigeria’s criminal justice system.” This year’s News Fixer Award goes to Kamiran Sadoun from Syria. The Kurdish fixer has worked with journalists from major news outlets reporting on conflict in north-eastern Syria and the enduring suffering following the collapse of the Islamic State—including Yazidi mothers forced to choose between their children born to IS fighters or acceptance back into their communities in Iraq. The judges applauded the caliber of the articles written by the reporters with whom Sadoun worked, which were “a testament to his exceptional ability as a fixer.” The News Fixer Award aims to recognize the rarely credited yet often atrisk individuals who typically act as the correspondent’s eyes and ears on the ground. It is the fixers’ local knowledge, as well as their network of official— and unofficial—contacts that helps to secure critical interviews and access

Photo from the Kurt Schork Memorial Awards Facebook page. for the out-of-town correspondents. The prize was inspired by the freelance journalist, author and friend of Kurt Schork, Anna Husarska, and pays tribute to the vital role that these unsung heroes play in coverage from difficult, dangerous and hostile locations. Now in their 19th year, the Kurt Sc hork Awards in Inter nat iona l Journalism are named in honor of American freelance journalist Kurt Schork who was killed in Sierra Leone while on assignment for Reuters in 2000. A shortlist of eight in both the Freelance and Local Reporter categories was judged by Pulitzer Prize-winning author and journalist Tina Rosenberg, The Intercept’s Peter Maass, and The New Yorker’s Jon Lee Anderson. The 2020 Freelance category finalists were Jiaming Xu (China), Xavier Aldekoa Morales (Spain), Jason Motlagh (USA), Kwasi Gyamfi Asiedu (Ghana), Pilar Cebrian (Spain), Mohamed Dawjee Haji (South Africa) and Philip Obaji (Nigeria). The Local Reporter category finalists were Olha Omelianchuk (Ukraine), Rafael Soares (Brazil), Kourosh Ziabari (Iran), Olatunji Ololade (Nigeria), Hisham Arafat (Syria), Riyaz Wani (India) and Tabassum Barnagarwala (India). The 2020 News Fixer category finalists were Abu Bakr Bashir (Palestine), Barzan Jabr Mohammed Barzan (Iraq), Kareem Sulaiman (Iraq), Khabat Abbas (Syria), Mohammed Hassan (Syria), Seme Luate Khemis (South Sudan) and Ossama Muhammad (Syria).

The judges in this category were CNN’s Christiane Amanpour, the BBC’s Jeremy Bowen and Lindsey Hilsum from Channel 4 News. The three winners will each receive a cash prize of $5,000. Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, in lieu of a physical award ceremony, the Thomson Reuters Foundation will be announcing the winners on its Twitter and Facebook social-media channels. Named in honor of American war correspondent Kurt Schork, the Kurt Schork Memorial Fund exists to keep the world aware of the debt we owe to brave journalists who work hard—often at great personal risk—to report on conflict, corruption and injustice. Its annual Kurt Schork Awards in International Journalism uniquely honor the work of freelance journalists, local reporters and news fixers, who often otherwise receive little recognition. The Thomson Reuters Foundation is the corporate foundation of Thomson Reuters, the global news and information services company. As an independent charity, registered in the UK and the US, it works to advance media freedom, foster more inclusive economies, and promote human rights. Through news, media development, free legal assistance and convening initiatives, it uses the combined power of journalism and the law to build global awareness of critical issues faced by humanity, inspire collective leadership and help shape a prosperous world where no one is left behind.


Science

BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion

Briones: Integrate master’s, PhD level researches into basic education curriculum

Education Secretary Leonor Briones

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asteral and PhD level researches should be translated into the curriculum and integrated into the curriculum for basic education so that we start off our learners early in their lives on being appreciative of the benefits of agriculture, of protecting our environment, and caring not only for the present but also for the future generations.” This was the call to action of Education Secretary Leonor Briones during a virtual event commemorating the 54th anniversary of the Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture (Searca) on November 27. Briones represents the Philippines in the Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organization (Seameo), of which Searca is the oldest regional center. As such, DepEd is the focal agency of Philippine government-hosted Searca whose main mandate has been to build capacities in agricultural and rural development in Southeast Asia since its establishment in 1966. Searca Director Glenn B. Gregorio said: “From 2020 to 2025, Searca’s programs are geared toward accelerating transformation through agricultural innovation (Attain) to elevate the quality of life of agricultural families through sustainable livelihoods and access to modern networks and innovative markets.” He added that Searca’s five-year development strategy is articulated through its core programs on research and thought leadership, emerging innovation for growth, and education and collective learning through graduate scholarship and institutional development as well as training for development. “As a region that is mainly agricultural and dependent on natural resources, we have benefited from the programs and researches that have been produced by Searca,” Briones noted.

She remarked: “Insofar as Seameo Searca is concerned, I have a very special interest… and I have given advice on how the products, outputs of research can be used for our curriculum requirements in the Department of Education at the basic education level.” The Education Secretary said, “DepEd’s School Plus Home Gardens project, on which we have been working with Searca and the University of the Philippines Los Baños, has been a shining example of our successful endeavors with the Center. And we are thankful for the support that it extends to our local agricultural institutions and we look forward to more years of partnership.” “Searca’s mission to help the agricultural communities improve their livelihoods is in line with the DepEd mission to improve the Filipino learners’ quality of life through holistic education,” Briones said. She added: “We are particularly interested in capacitating even more our farmer-teachers, our farmer-scientists, and teachers who start off our learners at the very basic levels of education on the joys and excitement of feeding our country and keeping it beautiful and also preserving the environment which they should learn at a very early stage.” Briones assured that “the government of the Philippines, and not only the Department of Education, strongly supports the Center’s programs and we’re always happy to partner with Seameo Searca whenever possible.” She emphasized: “In a world that is advancing towards technological innovations and skills development...we need to be reminded of inclusive and sustainable development to fully accomplish our development goals. “So we are pushing for inclusive and equitable Filipino learners. We acknowledge the significant impact of having an educated and skilled population for the nation to progress.”

IT-based method to tract insect, help to develop borer-resistant eggplant

A smartphone is tracking the movement of the EFSB larva CRD, PCAARRD

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he eggplant fruit and shoot borer (EFSB) is one of eggplant’s most destructive insect pests. It causes up to 90-percent yield loss at severe disease pressure. To prevent yield loss, farmers rely heavily on insecticides for EFSB pest management. However, this method is not environmentfriendly, not sustainable and may pose health hazards. Amid this backdrop, University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB) researchers developed a software to track EFSB. The study is a component of the project, “Development of Improved Eggplant Varieties with New Plant Defense Genes for Multiple Insect Resistance Using Innovative Technologies.” It is being implemented by UPLB and funded by the Philippine Council for Agriculture, Aquatic and Natural Resources Research and Development of the Department of Science and Technology (DOST-PCAARRD). According to Dr. Edna A. Anit, director of the Crops Research Division of DOST-PCAARRD, identifying eggplant varieties with tolerance or resistance genes are important in developing new varieties resistant to EFSB. She explained that development of resistant varieties would eventually increase the production of eggplant. Thus, the farmers’ profit will increase due to reduction in costs incurred from using insecticides.

Tracking EFSB behavior, feeding patterns

Called EFSB motion tracking software, the

A USB camera is tracking the movement of EFSB larva in four eggplant genotypes Dr. Val Randolf M. Madrid, UPLB

application is a low-cost innovative technology that would enable researchers to determine EFSB’s most or least preferred eggplant variety. Using a USB or a web camera, the software will track the movement, behavior and feeding patterns of EFSB. The software will track to which among the slices of different eggplant varieties the larva will probe or bury itself in. It will precisely, rapidly and simply document larval movement and feeding preference. Because the technology uses a software, the test samples and resources used for the study are minimized. Moreover, the software can be used to track other lepidopteran insects other than EFSB.

Innovative method

Information technology-based applications like the EFSB motion-tracking software is a new, innovative method to help researchers in developing new varieties of economically important crops, such as eggplant. The project uses technological innovations in other fields, such as computer science, in the pursuit of increasing agricultural productivity. This EFSB motion-tracking software is one of the technologies featured during the National Science and Technology Week from November 23 to 29. For more information about DOST-PCAARRD’s technologies, visit the virtual exhibits at https://bit. ly/PCAARRDExhibits. Val Randolf M. Madrid, Joel

Norman R. Panganiban, Rose Anne M. Aya/ S&T Media Services

Sunday, December 6, 2020 A5

A study found that Covid-19 symptoms significantly declined after volunteers took VCO for 18 days

‘VCO can be a supplement vs suspected Covid-19 cases’

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Photo from Searca

Sunday

By Lyn B. Resurreccion

irgin coconut oil (VCO) “could be used” as an adjunct supplement to probable and suspected Covid-19 cases because it could prevent such cases from becoming severe. Science Secretary Fortunato T. de la Peña made the statement on December 3 during a virtual briefing on the results of the Department of Science and Technology’s (DOST)led study on the efficacy of VCO as a supplement to help minimize the symptoms and prevent probable and suspected cases of Covid-19 from getting severe. He said the volunteers who took “VCO recovered from infection or inflammation approximately 14 days after being subjected to the intervention.” “Symptoms in the VCO Group significantly declined at Day 2 and no symptoms were observed at Day 18,” he added. He pointed out: “Thus, VCO could be used as an adjunct supplement to probable and suspect Covid-19 cases.”

VCO mixed in meals

The study on the “Effects of Virgin Coconut Oil among Suspect and Probable Cases of Covid-19” was held jointly by the DOST agencies Food and Nutrition Research Institute (DOST-FNRI), Philippine Council for Health Research and Development (DOST-PCHRD), DOST-Calabarzon, and the the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA) of the Department of Agriculture, the local government of Santa Rosa City, Laguna, and the Ateneo de Manila University. Started in May, the P5.3-million study was held for 28 days by the DOST-FNRI at the isolation units of the Sta. Rosa Community Hospital and of the Santa Rosa Community. It involved 57 suspect or probable Covid-19 cases, 29 of who were randomly assigned to the VCO group and 28 to the Control Group. The VCO Group were given “VCO mixed in standard meals” from recipes developed by the FNRI, while the 28-member Control Group received the same “meals without VCO.” Meals were cooked by a catering service in the area, with an amount of VCO mixed on-site by registered nutritionist-dietitians hired for the study, the DOST-FNRI said. The meals were served free of charge and delivered in the isolation facilities during the volunteers’ confinement, and later at their respective homes after being already discharged. Dr. Imelda Angeles Agdeppa, project leader, said at the webinar that the study was held in Sta. Rosa because there was a high prevalence of Covid-19 cases in the area when the research was being planned. She added t hat t he loca l

government unit, led by Mayor Arlene B. Arcillas, has a “high political will” to have the city as study site. She said that the Valenzuela City government is also interested in having similar tests done in the city.

Criteria for volunteers

The criteria for the volunteers included in the study were: considered being suspect or probable Covid-19 cases; no preference for gender; 20 years old and over. Volunteers were admitted in the quarantine facility three days or less at the time of baseline data collection; willing to participate with signed informed consent form; with controlled hypertension and maintenance drugs; and with normal liver enzyme tests. Excluded from the study were those with history of heart ailment; taking statins or medications for heart disease; histor y of hyperlipidemia or high cholesterol levels; asymptomatic and pregnant.

Procedure

The VCO Group received 0.6 milliliters (ml) of VCO per kilogram of their bodyweight (or 30 ml for 50 kg body weight) during breakfast on the first to the third day of the study. From Day 4 to Day 28, the VCO Group received 1.2 ml of VCO per kilogram of their bodyweight during breakfast and lunch. They were monitored daily for signs and symptoms of cough, colds, body aches, headache, loss of taste and fever.

Diminishing coronavirus signs, symptoms

De la Peña said: “Five of the 29 patients in the VCO Group manifested diminishing signs and symptoms as early as the second day, while only one from the Control Group showed similar improvement.” “The VCO Group showed no Covid-19 related symptoms at Day 18, while symptoms persisted in some patients of the Control Group until Day 23,” he added. He note d t h at t he me a n C-Reactive Protein (CRP) levels in the VCO Group normalized to 5 milligrams (mg) per liter or less as early as Day 14. A CRP equal or less than 5mg per liter “signifies recovery from inflammation or infection.” Their CRPs were monitored at Day 1, 14 and 28. Although there was a reduction to normal CRP levels in the Control Group from Day 1 to 14, it remained

Virgin coconut oil

Photo from PNA

at the borderline of 5 milligrams per liter from Day 14 until end of intervention, signifying presence of infection. De la Peña said the Control Group showed d iminishing symptoms only at Day 3 and no symptoms only at Day 23.

More studies needed

However, despite the favorable results, de la Peña said “more studies are needed to determine the effectiveness of VCO as adjunct therapy for Covid-19 patients and with other co-morbidities.” Study proponent Dr. Fabian Dayrit, agreed that studies indicate that VCO, as “prophylaxis,” decreases Covid-19 symptoms. He also concurred that it would require further studies on a high viral load, or among those with higher Covid-19 infection. Comparing the research in taking the stairs, Dayrit said, “we have taken a few good steps going up.” Dayrit, a member of the research team, provided research inputs and protocols in the study, including the correct VCO dosages and the analysis to be used based on previous VCO studies among HIV patients.

Quality VCO

The VCO used in the study were provided and “strictly analyzed” by the Laboratory Services Division of the PCA to ensure product quality and compliance to Philippine National Standard. DOST Calabarzon Regional Director Dr. Alexander R. Madrigal said only six local VCO producers passed the standard for the study. He urged the public who would use VCO home remedy to buy products with Food and Drug Administration seal. The PCA is urging the VCO producers to have their VCO samples analyzed by PCA prior to promotion and marketing. The PCA is also planning to develop a protocol in establishing the seal of quality for VCO.

Home remedy

Agdeppa clarified that VCO is not a treatment but a “functional food,” or supplement. For home use, she said, based on the study, 0.6 ml per kilogram body weight was used. Dayrit, who takes VCO daily to boost his immune system, told the webinar he takes 2 tablespoons a day, or about 30 ml.

PGH trial, in-vitro test

Meanwhile, the VCO clinical trials at the Philippine General Hospital (PGH) are seen to be completed by early 2021. This time, the PGH trials are checking the effects of VCO on Covid-19 patients with moderate cases of the disease in a hospital setting. Dayrit, a professor at the Ateneo de Manila University, led an invitro laboratory study of VCO in Singapore early this year to test if coconut oil compounds are effective antiviral agents to prevent or reduce Covid-19 infection, following reports of previous researches that VCO is effective at killing other viruses. The laboratory results showed that after six months of experiments, compounds from VCO decreased coronavirus count by 60 percent to 90 percent at low viral load, the DOST said when the result was released in October. The research also discovered that cell survival improved. However, more experiments are needed to determine whether higher concentrations of the compounds will further reduce the presence of the virus, the DOST said. “The results are very promising, as not only does it show that the VCO, by itself, can destroy the virus, but it also has a key mechanism in upregulating the immune response against Covid-19,” said Dr. Jaime C. Montoya, PCHRD executive director. Since the research was held in a laboratory, Montoya said they were “looking forward to the results of clinical trials on the various uses of VCO as an adjunct for the treatment of Covid-19,” one of which was the Sta. Rosa study. In a research published in January, Dayrit and Dr. Mary Newport of Spring Hill Neonatolody Inc. said coconut oil and its derivatives have been shown to be safe and effective antiviral compounds in both humans, like HIV patients, and animals. Lauric acid and monolaurin, its derivative, have been known for many years to have significant antiviral activity. Lauric acid is a medium-chain fatty acid which makes up about 50 percent of coconut oil, while monolaurin is a metabolite that is naturally produced by the body’s own enzymes upon ingestion of coconut oil and is also available in pure form as a supplement.

Atomic Energy Week features PHL nuke S&T innovations, 2nd R&D conference

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he Philippine Nuclear Research Institute (PNRI) of the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) will celebrate the 48th Atomic Energy Week (AEW) from December 7 to 11 though the online platform in order to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. The weeklong event will showcase the latest developments in the local nuclear science and technology (S&T) community. With the theme “Agham at Teknolohiyang Pangnukleyar: Sandigan ng Kalusugan, Kaayusan, Kabuhayan at Kinabukasan,” the institute highlights the atom’s role in addressing pressing problems

in the society and in responding to the Covid-19 pandemic. The theme also spotlights nuclear energy’s potential in contributing to economic recovery and adapting to the “new normal.” This include the government’s recent interest in nuclear power as the government studies its inclusion in the energy mix. The virtual events will feature contests, exhibits and a research conference. They will be simulcast across various social media platforms to reach more attendees while ensuring everyone’s safety against Covid-19.

2nd nuclear R&D conference

Part of the AEW is the Second Philippine Nuclear Research and Development Conference from December 8 to 10. Its plenary sessions will be made available to the public through the PNRI Facebook page. Filipino scientists, professionals and policymakers will present the latest nuclear and radiation-related innovations as well as the growing role of nuclear science in the country’s larger development policy. For individuals interested in the open-house exhibits, researchers will host virtual exhibits and demonstrations of DOST-PNRI’s latest technologies.

Completing the participants’ simulated visit experience is the PNRI virtual map which will be launched during the event. Guests will also be treated to a number of contests they can join to win exciting prizes. The annual AEW celebration, as mandated under Presidential Proclamation 1211 in 1973, aims to generate awareness of the Filipino people on the safe and beneficial uses of nuclear S&T. For more information, visit the DOST-PNRI Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/PNRIDOST/ or contact the institute at information@pnri.dost.gov.ph.

Hans Joshua V. Dantes/S&T Media Service


Faith

Sunday

A6 Sunday, December 6, 2020

Editor: Lyn Resurreccion • www.businessmirror.com.ph

Pope to new cardinals: May the cross and resurrection always be your goal

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ATICAN—Pope Francis created 13 new cardinals recently, urging them to remain vigilant lest they lose sight of their goal of the cross and resurrection.

“All of us love Jesus, all of us want to follow him, yet we must always be vigilant to remain on the road,” Pope Francis said at the consistory. “Jerusalem always lies ahead of us. The cross and the resurrection are…always the goal of our journey,” he said in his homily in St. Peter’s Basilica. In the seventh consistory of his pontificate, Pope Francis created cardinals from Africa, Europe, North and South America and Asia. In his homily, the pope warned the new cardinals of the temptation to follow a different road than the road to Calvary. “The road of those who, perhaps even without realizing it, ‘use’ the Lord for their own advancement,” he said. “Those who—as Saint Paul says—look to their own interests and not those of Christ.” “The scarlet of a cardinal ’s robes, which is the color of blood, can, for a worldly spirit, become the color of a secular ‘eminence,’” Francis said, warning them of the “many kinds of corruption in the priestly life.” Pope Francis encouraged the cardinals to reread St. Augustine’s sermon No. 46, calling it a “magnificent sermon on shepherds.” “Only the Lord, through His cross and resurrection, can save His straying friends who risk getting lost,” he said.

New cardinals

Among the new cardinals is Cardinal Wilton Gregory, archbishop of Washington, who became the first African-American cardinal in the Church’s history. He received the titular church of St. Mary Immaculate in Grottarossa. A rc hbi shop Ce lest i no A ós Braco of Santiago, Chile; Archbishop Antoine K ambanda of Kigali, Rwanda; Archbishop Augusto Paolo Lojudice of Siena, Italy; and Fra Mauro Gambetti, Custos of the Sacred Convent of Assisi also joined the College of Cardinals. Pope Francis placed a red hat on each cardinal’s head and said: “To the glory of almighty God and the honor of the Apostolic See, receive the scarlet biretta as a sign of the dignity of the cardinalate, signifying your readiness to act with courage, even to the shedding of your blood, for the increase of the Christian faith, for the peace and tranquility of the people of God and for the freedom and growth of the Holy Roman Church.” Each of the newly elevated cardinals received a ring, and was assigned a titular church, tying them to the Diocese of Rome. The new cardinals promised to obey the pope. Their main task is to offer him advice and eventually elect his successor.

Italian newly Cardinal Marcello Semeraro receives his biretta as he is appointed cardinal by Pope Francis, during a consistory ceremony where 13 bishops were elevated to a cardinal’s rank in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican, on November 28. Fabio Frustaci/POOL via AP

Cardinal Jose Advincula of Capiz watches livestream the consistory at his residence in Roxas City on November 28. PHOTO COURTESY OF CASAC

Nine of the new cardinals are under the age of 80, thereby, they are eligible to vote in a future conclave. A mon g t he m a re M a lte s e Bishop Ma r io Grec h, who be ca me secret a r y genera l of t he Sy nod of Bishops in Septemb e r, a nd t he It a l i a n Bi shop Ma rcel lo Semera ro, who was na med prefect of t he Cong re gation for t he Causes of Sa ints in October.

The cardinals who participated in the consistory in St. Peter’s Basilica all wore face masks due to the coronavirus pandemic.

PHL’s Advincula attended via video link

Two cardinal-designates were unable to attend the consistory because of travel restrictions. Cardinal-designate Cornelius Sim, the Apostolic Vicar of Brunei, and Cardinal-designate Jose F.

Advincula of Capiz, in the Philippines followed the consistory via video link and will each receive a biretta, cardinal’s ring and title connected with a Roman parish from their apostolic nuncio “at another time to be determined.” Italian Capuchin Fr. Raniero Cantalamessa, received a red hat in St. Peter’s Basilica while wearing his Franciscan habit. Cantalamessa, who has served as the Preacher to the Papal Household since 1980, told Catholic News Agecy on November 19 that Pope Francis had permitted him to become a cardinal without being ordained a bishop. Aged 86, he will not be eligible to vote in a future conclave. Three others who received the red hats are unable to vote in conclaves: Emeritus Bishop Felipe Arizmendi Esquivel of San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico; Archbishop Silvano Maria Tomasi, Permanent Observer Emeritus to the United Nations Office and Specialized Agencies in Geneva; and Msgr. Enrico Feroci, parish priest of Santa Maria del Divino Amore at Castel di Leva, Rome. Pope Francis and the 11 new cardinals present in Rome paid a visit to Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI at the Mater Ecclesiae Monastery following the consistory. Each new cardinal was introduced to the pope emeritus, who gave them a blessing after together singing the Salve Regina, according to the Holy See Press Office. With this consistory, the number of voting cardinals comes to 128, and the number of nonvoters to 101 for a total of 229 cardinals. Catholic News Agency

What’s next for U.S. evangelicals Cardinal Pell talks about the Vatican and vindication after Trump leaves office? R D

onald Trump, by his own words and actions, does not appear to be the most religious person. He has claimed he doesn’t seek forgiveness from God, and he once tried to put money in a Communion plate. Apart from his controversial photo op while holding up a Bible in front of St. John’s Episcopal Church, he doesn’t seem especially concerned with Christian symbolism. And yet 76 percent of white evangelical voters supported him in the 2020 election. It’s clear American evangelicals value something other than his religious devotion. As a Christian ethicist, I’m especially interested in the ways Christians seek to gain and use political power. Why did so many Christians vote for Trump? And what are they afraid of losing when he leaves? Many evangelical Christians are drawn to Trump’s promises to protect religious liberty. President-elect Biden, meanwhile, has also promised to protect religious liberty. But it might not be on evangelicals’ terms.

Diminishing power?

The power of evangelical Christians in the US has never been officially state sanctioned. The First Amendment to the US Constitution prohibits it. For over 200 years, American evangelicals have relied on Christianity’s cultural influence to preserve their vision of public life. And that influence is not to be underestimated. In his bestselling book, Dominion: How the Christian Revolution Remade the World, Tom Holland explains, “To live in a Western country is to live in a society still utterly saturated by Christian concepts and assumptions.” This is why so many refer to America as a “Christian nation” even though it has never officially recognized Christianity as the state religion. Conservative Christian political organizations have been buoyed by Christianity’s cultural capital. In the late 1970s and 1980s, for example, the Moral Majority formed a broad coalition of Christians to advance conservative social values across the nation. But that cultural capital has declined as America becomes more diverse. Today, far fewer Americans identify as Christian than 10 years ago, and only 1 in 4 Americans call themselves evangelical Christian.

Why evangelicals love Trump

American evangelicals, aware that their numbers and influence are in decline, have tried to undercut that decline through political means. Their highest priority is electing leaders whose policies will allow evangelicalism to flourish. Typically, this means that evangelicals prefer to vote for evangelical candidates. As Christian conservative leader Beverly LaHaye declared, “Politicians who do not use the Bible to guide their public and private lives do not belong in government.” But this is why President Trump has been such an anomaly. He has demonstrated a lack of familiarity with the Bible and basic Christian teachings. Yet, his religious supporters don’t seem to mind. Even among white evangelicals, only 12 percent believe he is “very religious.” This suggests that today’s evangelicals are unfazed by Trump’s apparent lack of personal piety. They believe religious liberty is under threat, and they want a president who promises to protect that liberty.

Protector in chief

Evangelical Protestants are more likely than any other large US religious denomination to believe their religious freedom is under attack, according to a recent Associated Press-NORC poll. Many people are puzzled by evangelicals’ anxiety over religious freedom. While it’s true that government restrictions on religion are rising across the globe, this simply isn’t the case in the US. As conservative Christian political commentator David French recently argued, “People of faith in the United States of America enjoy more liberty and more real political power than any faith community in the developed world.” He argues that while religious liberty has always been under attack in the US, Christians have no reason to fear that it’s going away anytime soon. But for many American evangelicals, the threat of attack is enough to create the need for a protector in chief. And President Trump has been happy to assume that role. In 2018, he signed an executive order that established the White House Faith and Opportunity Initiative. “This Initiative is working to remove barriers which have unfairly prevented faith based organizations from working with or receiving funding

from the federal government,” he explained.

Biden and religious liberty

President-elect Joe Biden has proposed his own plan for safeguarding religious freedom. It articulates a number of broad protections that most evangelicals would be likely to support, at least in theory. But in Biden’s plan to advance LGBTQ equality, he proposes the ver y thing many American evangelicals fear: “Religious freedom is a fundamental American value. But states have inappropriately used broad exemptions to allow businesses, medical providers, social service agencies, state and local government officials, and others to discriminate against LGBTQ+ people. “Biden will reverse Trump’s policies misusing these broad exemptions and fight so that no one is turned away from a business or refused service by a government official just because of who they are or who they love.” In an essay written just before the election, Al Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, warned, “The primary front of religious liberty controversy is likely to be related to LGBTQ issues, and both Biden and Harris are eager to advance the sexual revolution on every front.” Given what the incoming president and vice president have said on the issue, he is probably right. American evangelicals’ political power is in decline, and that decline would likely continue with or without Trump in office. His Supreme Court appointments have made evangelicals happy and will have a lasting impact. But changing demographics and a growing number of nonreligious voters mean that evangelicals will need to develop a strategy for the long game. In light of this, it may be wise for them not to direct all of their energy toward electing a protector in chief. Perhaps instead they might seek to answer a question posed by Christian ethicist Luke Bretherton: “In loving my neighbor, how can I keep faith with my distinctive commitments while also forming a common life with neighbors who have a different vision of life than I do?” Unless evangelicals can manage some major political victories in the coming years, they may not have much choice.

Stewart Clem/The Conversation-CC

OME—The pope’s former treasurer, Cardinal George Pell, said recently he feels a dismayed sense of vindication as the financial mismanagement he tried to uncover in the Holy See is now being exposed in a spiraling Vatican corruption investigation. Pell made the comments to The Associated Press (AP) in his first interview since returning to Rome after his conviction-turned-acquittal on sexual abuse charges in his native Australia. Pell told the AP that he knew in 2014 when he took the treasury job that the Holy See’s finances were “a bit of a mess.” “I never, never thought it would be as Technicolor as it proved,” Pell said from his living room armchair in his apartment just outside St. Peter’s Square. “I didn’t know that there was so much criminality involved.” Pell spoke to the AP before the December 15 release of the first volume of his jailhouse memoir, Prison Journal, chronicling the first five months of the 404 days he spent in solitary confinement in a Melbourne lockup. Pell left his job as prefect of the Vatican’s economy ministry in 2017 to face charges that he sexually molested two 13-year-old choir boys in the sacristy of the Melbourne cathedral in 1996. After a first jury deadlocked, a second unanimously convicted him and he was sentenced to six years in prison. The conviction was upheld on appeal only to be thrown out by Australia’s High Court, which in April found there was reasonable doubt in the testimony of his lone accuser. In the prison diary, Pell reflects on the nature of suffering, Pope Francis’s papacy and the humiliations of solitary confinement as he battled to clear his name for a crime he insists he never committed. Pell and his supporters believe he was scapegoated for all the crimes of the Australian Catholic Church’s botched response to clergy sexual abuse. Victims and critics say he epitomizes everything wrong with how the church has dealt with the problem. In the book, Pell makes repeated reference to his three years at the Vatican trying to impose international accounting, budgeting and transparency standards on the Holy See’s notoriously siloed bureaucracy, where prefects guard their money, turf and power as fiefdoms. That secretive culture has come under a microscope as Vatican prosecutors investigate the Vatican secretariat of state’s €350 investment in a London real-estate venture and the tens of millions of euros in donations from the faithful that it paid to Italian middlemen to manage the deal.

After more than a year of investigation, no one has been indicted, though a handful of Vatican officials and Italian businessmen are under investigation. Pell said he is watching the developments as they unfold. “It just might be staggering incompetence,” he said of the scandal, adding that he hoped eventual trials would ascertain the truth. “It would be better for the church if these things hadn’t happened, if I wasn’t vindicated in this way,” he said. “But given that they have happened, it’s quite clear,” that the reforms he sought to impose were necessary. Pell, with his rather brusque, no-nonsense Australian sensibilities, clashed frequently with the Vatican’s Italian old guard as he sought to get a handle on the Vatican’s assets and spending. His most well-known nemesis was the thenNo. 3 in the Vatican’s secretariat of state, Cardinal Angelo Becciu. Pell famously boasted in 2014 that he had “discovered” hundreds of millions of dollars that were “tucked away in particular sectional accounts and did not appear on the balance sheet”—a reference to the secretary of state’s in-house asset portfolio that Becciu controlled that never appeared on the Vatican’s consolidated financial statements. Becciu hasn’t been charged in the corruption investigation, but it came as little surprise that Pell issued a blistering statement after Francis on September 24 fired Becciu, over apparently unrelated allegations of embezzlement, which Becciu denies. Pell congratulated Francis then and said: “I hope the cleaning of the stables continues in both the Vatican and Victoria,” a reference to his home state of Victoria, where he was initially convicted. After Pell returned to Rome last month, he had a well-publicized private audience with Francis. “He acknowledged what I was trying to do,” Pell said of the pope. “And, you know, I think it’s been sadly vindicated by revelations and developments.” Pell and his lawyers have suggested a possible link between the resistance he faced in his reform efforts at the Vatican and his forced departure from Rome to face prosecution in Australia. “I hope for the sake of the church, there’s nothing in it,” Pell said. “In fact—I say that quite sincerely— because some Australian people, my own family, said to me: ’Well, if the Mafia is going after you or somebody else is going after you, that’s one thing. It’s a little bit worse if it comes from within the church.” Pell said he’s not sure if there is a connection or not. “But I think we will find out, whether there is or there isn’t,” he said. “Certainly the party’s not over.” AP

Indian state bans religious conversion by marriage

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EW DELHI—India’s ruling Hindu nationalist party has approved legislation in the country’s most populous state that lays out a prison term of up to 10 years for anyone found guilty of using marriage to force someone to change religion. The decree for the state of Uttar Pradesh was passed this week and follows a campaign by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party against interfaith marriages. The party describes such marriages as “love jihad,” an unproven conspiracy theory used by its leaders and Hindu hard-line groups to accuse Muslim men of converting Hindu women by marriage. Under the decree—which will become a law after its approval by the state’s governor, a formality—a couple belonging to two different religions will have to give two months’ notice to a district magistrate before getting married. The couple will be allowed to marry only if the official finds no objections. Uttar Pradesh government minister Siddharth Nath Singh said prison terms of up to 10 years would stop unlawful conversions and provide justice to women. Uttar Pradesh is the third Indian state ruled by Modi’s party after Haryana and Madhya Pradesh to approve such legislation to check what Hindu nationalist leaders call forced and unlawful religious conversions. Earlier, the state’s top elected leader, Yogi Aditynatah, a Hindu monk, said at a public meeting that those waging “love jihad” should either refrain from it or be prepared to die. Amid a rising tide of Hindu nationalism in India under Modi, Hindu hard-line groups have long accused minority Muslims of taking over the country by persuading Hindu women to marry them and convert to Islam. Although India’s constitution is secular and provides protection to all faiths, the issue of “love jihad” has gripped headlines and pitted Modi’s party leaders against secular activists. India’s investigating agencies and courts have, however, rejected the “love jihad” theory, which many see as part of an anti-Muslim agenda by Modi’s party. A court in Uttar Pradesh recently heard a case of interfaith marriage and said that “interference in a personal relationship would constitute a serious encroachment into the right to freedom of choice of the two individuals.” The court’s ruling came after a Muslim man was accused of forcibly converting his Hindu partner. India is a predominantly Hindu country, with Muslims making up about 14 percent of its more than 1.3 billion people. Hindu hard-line groups also oppose conversions to Christianity and have vowed to continue trying to prevent interfaith relationships. Critics of Modi—an avowed Hindu nationalist— say India’s tradition of diversity and secularism has come under attack since his party won power in 2014 and returned for a second term in 2019. They accuse the party of fanning religious passions and presiding over religious intolerance and sometimes even violence. The party denies the accusation. But an apparent mood of fear, anger and disenchantment is growing among ordinary Indian Muslims. They say Modi and his party are slowly disenfranchising them, leaving the community reckoning with a future as second-class citizens. The new decree comes at a time when Indian politics are increasingly becoming religiously charged. Police last week registered a case against two executives of online streaming service Netflix, after a leader of Modi’s party objected to scenes in the series A Suitable Boy, in which a Hindu girl and a Muslim boy kiss against the backdrop of what appears to be a Hindu temple. The police complaint was registered in Madhya Pradesh state for allegedly offending the religious sentiments of Hindus. A Netflix India spokesman declined to comment. Many Indians on Twitter demanded a boycott of Netflix and called for the series to be taken off the platform. Last month, jewelry brand Tanishq withdrew an advertisement featuring a Hindu-Muslim family celebrating a baby shower from TV channels and its social-media platforms, following a backlash from Hindu nationalists and Modi’s party leaders. They said the ad promoted “love jihad.” The withdrawal of the ad drew sharp criticism from many in India and shed light on the country’s growing religious polarization under Modi, whose party and supporters envision the country as a Hindu nation and are accused by critics of normalizing antiMuslim sentiment. AP


Biodiversity Sunday BusinessMirror

Asean Champions of Biodiversity Media Category 2014

Editor: Lyn Resurreccion

Sunday, December 6, 2020

Experts: Biotech crops benefit agri biodiversity

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UK-based agricultural economist and scientists from the University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB) reported that using crop biotechnology has reduced pesticide use associated with environmental impact and has been found to be beneficial for agricultural biodiversity. The experts discussed these during an online technical forum on “Greener Greens: Environmental Impact of Biotech Crops” convened by the Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture (Searca) in partnership with the Biotechnology Coalition of the Philippines, CropLife Asia, Program for Biosafety Systems, International Rice Research Institute, Philippine Rice Research Institute, Department of AgricultureBiotechnology Program Office, UPLB-Institute of Plant Breeding, and the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications. Graham Brookes, an agricultural economist at the UK-based PG Economics Ltd, presented the cumulative impact of using genetically modified (GM) crop technology in agriculture from 1996 to 2018. Besides significant net economic benefits at the farm level amounting to more than $200 billion over a period of 22 years, he also presented key environmental impac ts associated with using crop biotechnology, s u c h a s re d u ce d p e s t i c i d e a p p l i cat i o n by 775.4 million kg (8.3 percent). He said this resulted in the decreased environmental impact associated with herbicide and insecticide use on crops. “Genetic modification is an impor tant contribution to increasing world production of soybeans, corn, canola and cotton—resulting in higher yields, higher incomes, more reliable food supply, adoption of more sustainable farming systems, more environmentally-friendly farming methods, and reduction in carbon emissions,” Brookes said.

This was affirmed by a study on Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) corn and arthropod biodiversity in corn fields presented by Dr. Merdelyn CaasiLit and Dr. Ireneo L. Lit Jr., both professors and scientists at UPLB. Their study showed that as Bt corn ensures good yield by protecting the crop against corn borer infestation and reducing farm inputs for pesticide use, it has also proven to be beneficial for agrobiodiversity. “Increased arthropod diversity should be considered precious bonuses added to the economic gains of planting Bt corn. They make Bt corn farming more ecologically sound and environmentally sustainable,” Dr. Caasi-Lit explained. he three experts also addressed questions and concerns from participants that ranged from mitigating possible environmental impact of unauthorized GM seeds to recommendations on existing regulatory policies, status of CRISPR-Cas9 projects in the country, and effective means of promoting knowledge about the advantages of GMOs in agriculture and economy. The forum was as part of the 16th National Biotechnology Week led by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources. More than a thousand participants from Asia, Europe, and South America attended the forum, including a big turnout of students and teachers from different universities in the Philippines. In co-organizing the forum, Searca affirms its commitment to promote credible, science-based innovations said its Director Dr. Glenn B. Gregorio. “As current global pandemic and recent calamities put more pressure on every sector of society to be innovative, it is high time to emphasize the positive impacts of biotechnology on the various sectors especially in the area of environmental protection and sustainability, which also encompasses food production and consumption,” Gregorio pointed out.

PLDT-Smart to deploy drones for peatlands preservation

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he country’s largest integrated telecommunications company PLDT and its wireless subsidiary Smart Communications Inc. (Smart) will soon deploy digital innovations to help protect key biodiversity areas throughout the Philippines. PLDT-Smart’s most recent initiative under its Gabay Kalikasan environmental stewardship program is for the protection of the Caimpugan Pe a t l a n d s i n t h e Ag u s a n M a r s h Wi l d l i f e Sanctuary (AMWS). Named as a wetland of international importance by the Ramsar Convention, the area holds the only recorded remaining intact peat swamp forest—the largest of its kind—in the Philippines. “ We a re c o m m i t t e d t o h e l p c u r b t h e e f f e c t s o f c l i m a t e c h a n g e b y p ro t e c t i n g these fra gi l e e co s y s te m s, w h i c h p e o p l e s t i l l k n o w s o l i t t l e a b o u t,” s a i d P L DT C h a i r m a n a n d C E O M a n u e l V. Pa n g i l i n a n . Made of carbon-rich soil derived from dead and decaying plant matter under high water saturation condition, peatlands can store twice as much carbon as all the world’s forests combined. However, its crucial role in mitigating climate change, as well as the huge costs that arise when these natural carbon sinks are damaged, remains largely overlooked. The three -year peatlands conser vation program will be implemented by PLDT and Smart in partnership with the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), through its Biodiversity Management Bureau and Caraga Regional Office. PLDT is the first private company in the country to engage with DENR on peatlands conservation. “We will share our expertise on innovations that can help protect peatlands, and will deploy solutions that leverage on digital technology and our network,” Pangilinan added. P L DT a n d S m a r t w i l l a l s o s u p p o r t peatlands management strategies by equipping Bantay Danao volunteers with digital and communication tools such as radio devices, mobile phones, and drone equipment to support them in their enforcement activities. Formed in 2017, the Conservation Group was deputized by DENR- Caraga to protect the AMWS.

Guarding the rainforest A similar tech-based environmental stewardship program of PLDT-Smart is a collaboration with US-based nongovernment organization Rainforest Connection for an Internet of Things (IoT) solution of the same name. Launched in the first quar ter of 2020,

Rainforest Connection is a collaborative effort between Smart, the DENR and Huawei Technologies Philippines. The program makes use of old cell phones, powered by solar panels and wireless technology, to monitor and record ambient sounds of DENRidentified priority forest areas. The bio-acoustics are then uploaded to a cloud service using Smart’s mobile network connectivity. The collected data are accessible to DENR forest rangers, who also receive real-time alerts on sounds of chainsaws, trucks, and other sounds of forest destruction. Since the deployment, several alerts of illegal logging have so far been verified and foiled by the forest rangers.

Restoring mangroves The PLDT Group’s Chief Sustainability Office is also geared to scale up Smart’s joint initiative with network vendor Ericsson for Connected Mangroves. Deployed in the Bangkung Malapad Critical Habitat and Eco-tourism Area in Sasmuan, Pampanga, the IoT for mangroves protection uses wireless connectivity to collect critical data relevant to the survival of the plants, such as water level, temperature, soil moisture and other conditions in the mangrove area. The information, which is being collected by the mangrove sensor system, is transmitted over a cloud system to a dashboard accessible to the fisherfolk communities and authorities. Mangrove forests are deemed impor tant in the protection of seaside communities from typhoons, flooding, erosion and other coastal hazards, and serve as a vital habitat for various aquatic life forms.

Innovating solutions for the environment Both Rainforest Connection and Connected Mangroves were featured in the GSMA Digital Dividends report, released on World Environment Day 2020. The latter was also lauded by GSMA in its Case for Change initiative in 2019, as one of the global mobile industry’s contributions to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UNSDGs). “Innovative approaches to environmental concerns are believed to contribute to at least 10 of the 17 UNSDGs, as natural resources, livelihoods and poverty are interlinked,” explained PLDT-Smart Chief Sustainability Officer Chaye Cabal-Revilla, also concurrent PLDT SVP and Group Controller and Smart Chief Financial Officer.

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Here comes a family of otters By Jonathan L. Mayuga

1999, the TIWS is the only major nesting habitat of the green marine turtles (Chelonia mydas) in the Philippines and the only major nesting ground in the whole Asean region.

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eet the otter family on Taganak Island of the Turtle Islands. This family of five smooth-coated otters (Lutrogale perspicillata), composed of a couple and their three pups, have come to live on the island for quite some time now. First thought to be among Asian small-clawed otters (Aonyx cinereus), the couple was first spotted in May taking shelter in the crevices near a command post of the local police in the area. Until one day in August, three more members of the family were seem playing on the beach. The sighting of the otters was the first record of the species in the Turtle Islands Wildlife Sanctuary (TIWS), a protected area. This group of otters was the second otter species to occur in the Philippines. The first is the endemic Palawan otter.

Carnivorous mammals, a threatened species

Part of the Mustelidae family, which is composed of carnivorous mammals, otters are closely related to skunks, weasels, wolverines and badgers. There are 13 extant otter species that are semiaquatic, aquatic, or marine with diets based on fish and invertebrates, according to BBC Wildlife Magazine. The smooth-coated otters, BBC said, occur throughout much of the Indian Subcontinent in Java, Sumatra and Borneo, northward to southwestern China, east through Nepal and Bhutan and India to Pakistan, excluding the Indus Valley. Otters are targeted by illegal wildlife traders, Emerson Y. Sy, a researcher at the wildlife trade watchdog Traffic, told the BusinessMirror via Messenger on November 19. Otter pups have a big market in Japan and Indonesia, he said. “Especially in Japan, where customers play with them in otter cafés. Most of them are caught in the wild. In Indonesia, they are considered as are pets,” he said. Young otters can be trained to perform tricks and become domesticated, Sy added.

Mysterious visitors

As they come to live on the islands, these adorable creatures are an awesome addition to the biodiversity of Turtle Islands. Wildlife experts, however, are mystified by their emergence on the island. Crisanta Marlene Rodriguez, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources Region 9 executive director, explained that the otter couple may have been brought to the Philippine shores by the ocean current at the height of a storm in May. She told the BusinessMirror via Messenger on November 18 that upon consultation with the Otters Specialist Group of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in the Philippines, the proximity from where the otters may have come from and Taganak Island is close enough for them to swim across and survive the journey.

Well adjusted, settled in

Otters on Taganak Island, Turtle Islands.

Photo Courtesy of Adzmie Herrera/Emerson Sy

Little-known creatures

In the Philippines, not much is known about otters, especially their feeding and breeding habit, their habitat or even population and distribution in the wild. Jessa Garibay-Yayen, an IUCN Otter Specialist, said otters are indicators of a healthy river ecosystems, which is just one of the many ecological benefits or functions of the species. “However, as predators, they impact in the populations of species that they prey upon,” she told the BusinessMirror in an interview via Whatsapp on November 18. Garibay-Yayen, who also works for the Centre for Sustainability Philippines, said the Philippines has the Palawan otter which was the subject of a study of the Otters Specialist Group of the IUCN in the past. Yet, she said, even for the Palawan otters, a limited papers are available because there is very little study on the shy and elusive mammals. As for the otters found on Taganak Island, there is no evidence that they actually migrated or even swam across from Malaysia to Taganak, Garibay-Yayen said.

A need for investigation

For her part, Asean Centre for Biodiversity Executive Director Theresa Mundita S. Lim said otters are excellent swimmers. She said the Philippine government has the option to return them to their known natural habitat, which could be a good way forward as their progenies will eventually need to breed with otters unrelated to their family. However, Lim said there’s a need to understand what brought them to Taganak. “Was their habitat disturbed or they just accidentally migrated? Are they fit to be transported, based on the state of health of the family?” asked Lim, a licensed veterinarian, replied the BusinessMirror via Messenger on November 21. She said these are some of the important factors to consider on deciding and planning to relocate the otters, to avoid human-wildlife conflict considering that Taganak is a densely populated island.

Avoid human-otter contact

“Another option is setting aside an area in Taganak where they can have minimum contact with humans. But this could mean enclosing them, which will limit their opportunities to feed themselves, and affect their welfare and survival,” Lim added. Finally, Lim said a third option is for the community to try to live with the otters harmoniously. She pointed out, however, the need to establish guidelines to protect the mammals and allow researches and observations to be undertaken to better understand their behavior, their movement, and the circumstances behind their presence on Taganak. She said this could offer a deeper sense of how much more interconnected man and wildlife have in terms of biodiversity. It could “encourage more joint initiatives for species and ecosystems protection, transcending political boundaries,” she said.

Chances of survival

While Lim said individual otters could probably survive on the island, seeing the population thriving is a remote possibility, even if they have enough of their source of food in the wild. “As for the survival of the species on Taganak, a pair of otters will not make a viable population,” she said. She said the only way for the otters’ population to grow is through genetic infusion, or when more otters will, by chance, find their way to Taganak.

Marine turtles’ haven

Taganak Island, the largest and most populated island in the municipality of Turtle Islands, in Tawi-Tawi province in Mindanao, may not be the best place for otters as the area is the habitat of marine turtles. The Turtle Islands Heritage Protected Area (TIHPA), the first transboundary protected area of sea turtles in the world, was established through a memorandum of agreement signed by the governments of the Philippines and of Malaysia on May 31, 1996. Proclaimed as a wildlife sanctuary under Proclamation 171 on August 26,

TIWS Protected Area Superintendent Minda Bairula said otters, while generally shy and elusive at first, have already adjusted to people near them. So far, TIWS see no serious threat to the existence of the otters on the island, Bairula told the BusinessMirror in an online interview on November 18. They appear to be healthy and are often seen playing. “So far, based on our monitoring, we have not observed any threat. Their activities are more on searching for food, eating fish, rolling and playing on the sandy beach,” she said. Bairula added that while there are several biting incidents involving the mother, she described it as natural and a mother’s protective instinct to her three cubs. However, Lim cautioned that biting incidence should not be taken lightly as otters can also have rabies that can infect humans.

Tourist attraction

According to Bairula, on the Taganak Island and the entire Turtle Islands, the otters will be an added tourist attraction when tourism activities finally resume. However, she acknowledged that there will be a need to maintain distance from the otters. “We are still observing how long the mother’s instinct will last. We estimate that the cubs are already four months old already,” she said. Besides eating fish, they were once seen feeding on a sea snake. The otters are often seen playing on the beach.

Otters-turtle conflict

Asked whether the otters pose a threat to the turtles on the island, Bairula said they are still in the process of observing the feeding habit of the island’s famous guests. “We are continuously monitoring. We have only one report that the otters chased a turtle at sea,” she added. She said even dogs or water monitor lizards, which are natural predators of turtles, pose no threat to the otters. In fact, it could be the other way around. They could eventually pose as threats to turtling hatchings that are struggling to make their way to the ocean from their nests in the beach. With the family of otters being a welcome addition to the island’s biodiversity and tourist attraction, Rodriguez appealed to the people on the island to help protect them and let them be as they survive and thrive on the island. “We encourage the local community of Taganak Island in Turtle Islands, to let our otters be, do them no harm, and allow them to live freely without interference. Let us work together to create massive steps toward wildlife conservation that will create an impact not just in Tawi-Tawi but in the global community as well,” she said.

‘Hope in a Box’ bags ‘Best CSR Initiative’ in Global Water Drinks Awards 2020

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op e recently bagged the “B est CSR Initiative” award in the prestigious Global Water Drinks Award 2020 by Zenith Global for its “Hope in a Box ” Tetra Pak water carton. “We are grateful and humbled to have a Philippine initiative recognized as the Best CSR for 2020 at the Global Water Drinks Award,” said Hope Chairman and Founder Nanette Medved-Po. “We Hope to continue to deliver on our mission to not only positively impact education in the poorest communities through the building of public school classrooms, but to safeguard the environment as well through packaging innovations like Tetra Pak’s carton for water,” Medved-Po added. Hope is the first company in the Philippines to donate 100 percent of its profits to build classrooms and other nation-building initiatives. “We are proud to be a partner of Hope and delighted to see Hope in a Box winning such a prestigious award,” said Michael Wu, managing direc tor of Tetra Pak Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines and Indonesia.

“At Tetra Pak, we are committed to protecting the planet through sustainable packaging solutions. We value the partnership with Hope who shares the same goal,” Wu said. Together with Tetra Pak, Hope launched “Hope in a Box ” in 2018 as the first cartonpacked drinking water in the country. Aiming to offer consumers environmentfriendly options to their day-to-day choices, Hope in a Box was created as an alternative to the default plastic packaging for water. The carton packaging for Hope in a Box is comprised of 75 percent of renewable resources and it carries the FSC label, ensuring that the paperboard is sourced from responsibly managed forests and other controlled sources. Medved-Po explained that the company reached out to Tetra Pak due to its renowned paper-based environment-friendly packaging, creating a visually appealing, struc turally different and sustainably innovative design. A p a r t f ro m e d u c at i o n , H o p e h a s a l s o extended suppor t to coconut farming communities by providing increased market

access, farmer training, and replanting and intercropping initiatives through the Hope in a Coconut project. As a response to Covid-19, the organization also reached out and donated to frontliners and communities heavily affected by the pandemic. Th e G l o b a l Wa t e r D r i n k s Aw a rd , t h e

industry’s only event series of its kind, celebrates excellence across every category of the packaged water industry. The award recognizes industry leaders and innovators as the world’s best-in categories, including marketing, packaging, social media, corporate social responsibility, and more. It is open to entrepreneurs and wellestablished brands from around the globe. It attracted 160 entries from 27 countries worldwide this year. The “Best CSR Initiative” award recognizes c o r p o r a t e re s p o n s i b i l i t y c a m p a i g n s a n d initiatives that bring positive impact to society, co m m u n i t i e s a n d t h e e nv i ro n m e nt o n a n international or local scale. Submitted entries were judged on their innovation, sincerity to the commitment, as well as the effectiveness of their campaign. Hope products are available in retail outlets, hotels, restaurants, cafes, and recreation centers around the country. You may also support Hope and help make a difference by purchasing Hope in Box at their web site https://www.generationHope.ph/shop.


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Sports BusinessMirror

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unday, December 6, 2020 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

MOBILE HEALTH APP EYED FOR FANS’ USE THE Olympic rings float in the water with town’s landmark “Rainbow Bridge” as background in the Odaiba section. AP

Popovich faces big challenge in filling up US Olympic roster

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AME Seven of the 2021 National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals, as of now, would be played on July 22. The opening ceremony of the Tokyo Olympics, as of now, would be the next day. And when presented with this potential scheduling conundrum, San Antonio Coach Gregg Popovich—who will coach USA Basketball men’s national team at the next Olympics—came up with a very quick, very lighthearted solution. “I don’t think we’re going to let the finals go seven games,” Popovich said. All jokes aside, Popovich knows that the NBA schedule and how it comes very close to the start of the rescheduled Tokyo Games will be a challenge for USA Basketball to navigate next year when choosing the 12 players who will try to win a fourth consecutive men’s Olympic gold medal. Popovich will be head coach of the Olympic team for the first time, succeeding Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski. “The Olympics is always on my mind, just as Coach K told me it would be,” Popovich said Tuesday. “You can’t get away from it. So, this scenario, as it stands right now, does seem problematic in the sense that organizing things and figuring out who’s going to be part of the team is yet to be determined.” There is a plan. As with everything else in a coronavirus world, it’s tentative, but there is a plan. The pool of finalists—if past form holds, it’ll be around 40 or 50 names—will be revealed by USA Basketball sometime in early 2021, the first step in what the Americans

OKYO—A mobile app could be among the measures used to track the health of fans from abroad if they are permitted to attend next year’s Tokyo Olympics. An interim report on contingencies for holding the Tokyo Games was released on Wednesday. It was compiled by the Japanese government, the Tokyo city government and local organizers. The portion concerning the app was leaked earlier in the day by Japanese newspaper Nikkei. It was met on social media by unhappy replies from Japanese citizens who fear the Olympics could put their health in jeopardy. Japan, with a population of 125 million, has controlled the virus better than most countries with just over 2,100 deaths attributed to Covid-19. But Tokyo has seen record numbers of infections in recent weeks. Toshiro Muto, the CEO of the local organizing committee, explained some findings of the report. But he was short on specifics in the online briefing. Some proposals might be discarded as conditions change, and almost everything is subject to revision. “In general, I think we would like to be able to work out the details by next spring,” he said, suggesting the groundwork had been prepared for many contingencies with the possibility of vaccines and rapid testing on the horizon. It was in the spring eight months ago when organizers and the International Olympic Committee (IOC) finally decided to postpone the Olympics after repeatedly saying they would go ahead this year. Muto hinted again that the Tokyo Olympics may not be much fun. Athletes will compete and then be expected to go home. “The basic principle is that the accommodation period in the Athletes Village is supposed to be minimized as much as possible,” Muto said. “We want to be sure that the Athletes Village doesn’t get too dense. And after the games we would like them [athletes] to go back [home] as early as possible.”

hope is a somewhat normal sequence of events leading up to the Tokyo Games. The 2016 Olympic team was picked about six weeks before the start of the Rio Games, allowing time for a training camp and exhibitions before heading to Brazil. If the same timetable holds next year—and assuming the NBA schedule isn’t changed along the way—the US Olympic team could be picked in mid-to-late June, around the end of the second round of the NBA playoffs. “We know there’s so many variables,” said Sean Ford, USA Basketball’s men’s national team director. “We’re going to talk to all the organizations that we can, to try to find a pathway to include as many NBA players in our final roster as possible.” Plenty of elite NBA players like LeBron James, Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, Devin Booker, James Harden and more all said entering last season that they were interested in playing in the Tokyo Games. That, of course, was months before the coronavirus struck and changed so much. The complexities aren’t just limited to US players. Many international players—like Milwaukee’s two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo of Greece and Denver’s Nikola Jokic of Serbia—have said they would like to play, but their nations need to still qualify next summer just to get to Tokyo and those qualifying rounds will take place during the NBA playoffs. Toronto Coach Nick Nurse is slated to coach Canada in its efforts to qualify—he, too, may face a schedule conflict if the Raptors go deep into the playoffs again.

He was asked point-blank if the Olympics would have a “celebratory atmosphere.” “If the games are to be held under the Covid-19 pandemic, I don’t think the Olympics will be as festive as they have been in the past,” he said. “We decided to hold a simplified Olympics. Therefore, as you can see in the planning for the opening ceremony, the Tokyo Olympics will be simplified rather than celebratory.” Muto was also asked about the cost of the one-year postponement, but said he didn’t know yet. Some Japanese newspapers reported several days ago, citing unnamed sources close to the organizing committee, that the cost of the delay will be about $3 billion. “We are in the process of the calculation of how much the cost is,” Muto said. “We would like to reach a decision as soon as possible but when it will come—I can’t give you a specific date. But by the end of the year we’d like to make an effort to come up with an answer.” He was also asked if fans from abroad would be required to be vaccinated. “This is a scenario we will start to examine once the vaccine is actually available,” he said. The International Paralympic Committee (IPC), meanwhile, pledged on Thursday to give members and athletes their biggest ever grants fund of €1.8 million ($2.2 million) next year. The IPC said it would begin awarding grants in February, six months before the August 24 opening ceremony of the Tokyo Paralympic Games delayed one year by the coronavirus pandemic. “This is the IPC’s biggest ever one-off investment into its members at a time when they need it the most,” the Germany-based organization’s president, Andrew Parsons, said in a statement. The funding was announced on the United Nations’ International Day of Persons with Disabilities. It was supported by IPC sponsors Toyota and Citi. AP

Popovich sounded confident that the US is more than capable of figuring things out. “The timing does make everything difficult,” Popovich said. “And it will demand some real soul-searching and out-of-the-box type of thinking to put together the best team we possibly can.” The NBA said Wednesday that 48 players have tested positive for the coronavirus since testing resumed last week. The league and National Basketball Players Association said 546 players were tested between November 24 and 30 in the initial phase of testing after returning to team markets. That means about 9 percent of the tests were positive. Any player with a confirmed positive test is isolated until cleared by rules established by the league and union, in accordance with CDC guidance. The league’s health and safety protocols for this season say that anyone with a positive test in this pre-camp phase “must receive medical clearance from a team-designated physician and a league-designated physician prior to entering a team facility, participating in inperson team-organized activities, or interacting in-person with other” members of their team. The league, in its preseason guidance to teams sent late last week, made clear that some players testing positive was to be expected. “During this pandemic, all this stuff is going to be different this season,” Dallas All-Star Luka Doncic said Tuesday. “Some players might get corona, get sick, not be able to be with the team for 10 days. So, I think that’s going to be a big part—which team is not going to have positive people. It’s going to be a lot of time together. I think that’s going to be key.” AP

Premier League gives $330-M package for smaller clubs

L

ONDON—The Premier League agreed to a rescue package Thursday worth £250 million ($330 million) to ease the financial burden on lower-division teams in English soccer as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. After months of negotiations, Premier League clubs gave their approval for a loan of 200 million pounds ($265 million) that second-division Championship clubs will be able to utilize interest free. A fund of £50 million ($65 million) will go to clubs in League One and League Two—the third and fourth divisions. “Our commitment is that no English Football League club need go out of business due to Covid-19,” said Premier League Chief Executive Richard Masters, noting the importance of the lower-division clubs to their communities. The Premier League has committed to cover up to £15 million ($20 million) in interest and arrangement fees to enable the loan to be secured for Championship clubs, which will allow them to meet their tax

liabilities up to June 30, 2021. The British government has consistently said that the Premier League—rather than the taxpayer—must provide assistance to lower-league

clubs, who have been stricken primarily by their inability to have fans in stadiums since March because of social restrictions amid the coronavirus outbreak. Limited numbers of supporters are being allowed to return to grounds from this week, depending on the rate of infection in the local area. “I’m glad that football has come together to agree this substantial package,” said Oliver Dowden, Britain’s culture secretary. “Fans are starting to return and we look forward to building on this as soon as it’s safe. “With a £250 million support package for men’s elite football and £300 million government funding for women’s football, the National League and other major spectator sports, we have fuel in the tank to get clubs and sports through this.” AP PLAYERS of Argentina’s Defensa y Justicia celebrate after defeating Brazil’s Vasco da Gama, 1-0, during a Copa Sudamericana match in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Thursday. AP


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LAM KAH LEONG Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

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LI, RUI Chinese

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134.

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138.

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CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

139.

LIU, LU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

140.

LIU, XINGQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

141.

LU, JIAZHI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

142.

LU, YENING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

143.

REN, LONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

144.

WANG, GANG Chinese

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WANG, XIAOLONG Chinese

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WENG, XIUQING Chinese

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XIAO, LONGJIE Chinese

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150.

XU, SANG Chinese

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YANG, ZHIYUAN Chinese

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154.

YANG, PEI Chinese

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YANG, YAJIN Chinese

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156.

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157.

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159.

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160.

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161.

ZHANG, DAN Chinese

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BUI THI HUE Vietnamese

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165.

CHEN, LEI Chinese

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166.

CHEN, LIYU Chinese

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167.

CHEN, YINCAN Chinese

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87.

LIU, QINGTAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

43.

HE, WEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

88.

LIU, SHIYIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

44.

LI, WEIYI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

89.

MAO, XI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

90.

PAN, JINLONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

91.

WANG, LILI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

92.

WANG, ZHONGYU Chinese

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93.

WANG, MINGMING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

94.

WU, SHENGQIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

95.

XIAO, KE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

96.

YI, NA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

97.

ZHAN, QING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

98.

ZHANG, LIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

99.

ZHAO, GAOWEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

100.

BE THI NGOC LAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

101.

CHEN, YUNLEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

102.

TAN, QINWU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

103.

XIAO, LIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

104.

CHEN, JIANFU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HUANG, TING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

45.

LI, HUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

46.

SHI, YOQI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

47.

TANG, KEXIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

48.

WANG, JIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

49.

WANG, QIULIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

50.

YU, QING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

51.

ZHAO, JUANHONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

52.

ZHOU, LI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

BAI, JUNGANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

53.

YANG, TAO Chinese YANG, HEREN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

FAN, JIA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HE, XI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HU, PENGFEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HUANG, YIXUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HUANG, GUISHAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LAN, ZHIWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LEI, XIAOYUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

68.

LIU, ZHIQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

69.

TANG, YANGYANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

54.

CHEN, JUNTAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

CONG, JIALIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

DENG, SHIHUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

DING, WENPENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

DUAN, SHAORUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

105.

DUAN, GENGGENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

106.

HE, QIULI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

107.

HU, TIANLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

108.

HU, FENGCHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

109.

JIANG, CONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

110.

LIU, XINGGUANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

111.

LIU, XINGLEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

112.

MA, JIANHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

113.

NAN, JIAHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

114.

PAN, SHIFANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

115.

QIAO, ZHENCHUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

116.

SHI, CHENXING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

117.

SONG, QIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

118.

WANG, JIANGWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

119.

73.

WANG, RONGLIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

57.

58.

59.

60.

61.

62.

63.

64.

65.

66.

67.

70.

71.

72.

ZHANG, SHIMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

74.

BAI, GUANG Chinese

LI, ZHIJIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

75.

CHENG, HAILIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WANG, FENGZHEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

76.

HUANG, GUANGCHUAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

77.

HUANG, XUEWEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

78.

LI, XIAOBANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

79.

LI, YANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

80.

LI, YUNLONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

81.

LI, HANGYU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

36.

132.

42.

GAO, YANSHUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

YU, BO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

XIE, JINLIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

JIANG, BEI Chinese

LI, DINGSHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

XU, WENLIANG Chinese

131.

86.

31.

35.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LONG, ZHUZHOU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HUANG, KECHENG Chinese

FENG, KUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

130.

41.

LI, MENGNA Chinese

WANG, YAZHEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

34.

HUANG, LINENG Chinese

LI, WEISEN Chinese

YOU, JIA-XIANG Taiwanese

33.

129.

85.

30.

32.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

29.

HU, YUQUAN Chinese

CUI, HAIYANG Chinese

56.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

128.

40.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

YANG, MEI Chinese

NO.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LI, SHUANGFENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

POSITION

LI, LYUHONG Chinese

55.

YAN, HUAN Chinese

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

84.

JIANG, JIAHAO Chinese

28.

NO.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

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POSITION

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CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

DIAO, LIMEI Chinese

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39.

JIANG, TAO Chinese

27.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

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37.

ZHUANG, KUNSHU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

82.

LI, XIANGYU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

38.

CHEN, PENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

83.

LI, YI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

120.

121.

122.

123.

JIANG, ZELAI Chinese JIN, KAIXIANG Chinese LI, ZHENFENG Chinese LI, CHANG Chinese LIN, JINGMENG Chinese LIU, PENGFEI Chinese LIU, FENGNI Chinese TU, XIANCONG Chinese WANG, XIAOLI Chinese WANG, ZIYONG Chinese WANG, ZHENYUN Chinese WANG, HAOTIAN Chinese XIA, SHUTING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

XU, YI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHANG, BO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHANG, MAN Chinese ZHANG, XIAOLONG Chinese ZHAO, WENCHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

124.

ZHENG, JUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

125.

CAI, ZHIHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

126.

CHEN, SHUANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

CONG, ZHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

127.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION


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DENG, XIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ACQUIRE ASIA PACIFIC PHILIPPINES INC. Lg-c Worldwide Corporate Center Edsa Cor. Shaw Blvd. Mandaluyong City

169.

DENG, ZONGBO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

211.

170.

FANG, KAI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ALL ASIA AIR CENTRAL, INC. Unit 4a & 5a Bldg. 4 Salem Com Domestic Rd. Brgy. 191 Pasay City

171.

GAN, YAOYAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

212.

172.

GAO, YANAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

173.

GAO, FENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

174.

GUO, DONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

175.

HU, YANGHUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

176.

HUANG, YU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

177.

HUANG, JIAQUAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

178. 179. 180. 181. 182. 183. 184. 185. 186. 187. 188. 189. 190.

LI, XUEJUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LIANG, XIAOQING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LIU, SHUANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LIU, CHAOYU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LU, XUEFENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

OUYANG, FUPING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

PENG, CHENCHEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

SUN, WEI Chinese WANG, BINYANG Chinese WANG, BO Chinese WANG, YUE Chinese WU, LINCHUANG Chinese WU, WEIMING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NDOM BANBE, SERGE BENOIT Cameroonian

OTANI, SHUNSUKE Japanese

FRENCH ACCOUNTS PAYABLE ANALYST

JUNIOR FLIGHT INSTRUCTOR

AGRITERRAPHILS INC. Unit 8-a Abj Building No. 107 Don A. Roces Ave. Laging Handa 4 Quezon City 213.

VOETS, MAIK MARTINUS JOHANNES Dutch

BUSINESS ADVISOR

AMAZON OPERATION SERVICES PHILIPPINES, INC. B21 Three E-com Moa Complex Harbour Drive Cor. Bay Shore Brgy. 076 Pasay City 214.

LA TRUNG KIEN Vietnamese

INVESTIGATION SPECIALIST

AMB HK ENTERPRISES INC. 6 Felipe Pike St. Bagong Ilog Pasig City 215.

KUMAR, AKHILESH Indian

INTERNATIONAL REGULATORY AFFAIRS CONSULTANT

AMDOCS PHILIPPINES INC. 23/f, 25th And 26th Floors Eco Tower 32nd St. Cor. 9th Ave. Bonifacio Global City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 216.

CHOPRA, SHILPA Indian

BUSINESS ANALYST

AMUSETECH BUSINESS OUTSOURCING 6, 7, 8th Flr. (np) Moa Arena An J.w. Diokno Blvd. Brgy. 076 Pasay City REN, WEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

218.

CHANG, YAN-RUEI Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

219.

CHEN, YING-LIANG Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

220.

CHEN, TSAN-YU Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

221.

CHEN, JIA-RUEI a.k.a. CHEN, KUAN-CHUAN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

222.

HSU, CHI-EN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

223.

HUA, YI-MIN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

224.

LIN, CHIA-HSIEN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

225.

LIN, TZE Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

217.

191.

WU, YUNHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

226.

SU, MENG-HUANG Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

192.

XIE, JINZHONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

227.

WANG, MING-HUI Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

193.

XU, KAIWEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

228.

WANG, JHIH-KAI Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

194.

YANG, MEIRU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

229.

XIANG, LI Chinese

195.

YANG, DALIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

230.

YEH, MENG-TA Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

196.

YEOH KHAI WEN Malaysian

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

231.

ZENG, XIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

197.

ZHANG, GE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

232.

ZHOU, NAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

198.

ZHANG, JIANGHUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

233.

HSU, SHIUE-YANG Taiwanese

199.

ZHANG, CHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HUNG, YU-LIANG Taiwanese

ZHANG, QIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHANG, YONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LAI, ZHI-HAO Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

202.

ZHONG, XUAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

203.

ZHU, QIJIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

200. 201.

A-LINK STEEL MANUFACTURING CORP. Unit 1403-1404 14/f Bdo Equitable Bank Tower 8751 Paseo De Roxas Bel-air Makati City 204.

CHEN, YINHUA Chinese

ROVING PROJECT INSPECTOR

205.

OUYANG, FENG American

CHINESE EQUIPMENT SUPERVISOR

ACADEMY FOR THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY IN ASIA - AICA INC. No. 53 Mayaman Street Central 4 Quezon City 206.

MATSUO, TOMOYUKI Japanese

207.

208.

209.

RIBEIRO RAVEDUTTI, RAFAEL Brazilian MASIWAL, MUKESH Indian

ESCRIBANO ARAGON, GABRIEL-MANUEL Spanish

236.

237.

238.

239.

240.

241.

LEE, TZU-FANG Taiwanese LIAO, JHE-WEI Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LIN, CHUN-YEN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LU, CHIH-AN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

SIAO, BO-WUN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

WU, ZONG-HAN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

243.

CHU, WEN-HSIEN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

BUS AND TECHNOLOGY DELIVERY ASSOCIATE MANAGER

244.

DENG, QICHUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

SW/APP/CLOUD TECH SUPPORT SR ANALYST

245.

JHAN, FU-KAI Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

246.

LEONG WENG CHUN Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LY BA THANH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

WANG, MENG-CHIA Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

CHIEF MARKETING AND STRATEGY OFFICER AND DIRECTOR

BUSINESS OPERATIONS SENIOR MANAGER

ACCIONA CONSTRUCTION PHILIPPINES INC. 21/f Tower 2, The Enterprise Center 6766 Ayala Ave. Cor. Paseo De Roxas San Lorenzo Makati City 210.

235.

YANG, PO-CHUN Taiwanese

ACCENTURE, INC. 7f Robinsons Cybergate Tower 1 Pioneer St Mandaluyong City MALVIA, DIPESH Indian

234.

SENIOR SUPERINTENDENT

242.

247.

248.

www.businessmirror.com.ph

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

249.

WANG, JUI-YANG Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

305.

RIEKA ULI BORU SAMOSIR Indonesian

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER - MULTILINGUAL SPEAKING

250.

YO, CHIA-YEN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

306.

CHOTCHUANG, PROMMANAI Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER - THAI SPEAKING

251.

ZHANG, XINYI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

307.

LUANGJUNRAM, PLOENTA Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER - THAI SPEAKING

252.

ZHENG, FANGWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

308.

THAMPIYANAN, NATTANICHA Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER - THAI SPEAKING

ANOC99 CORPORATION 5/f Ayala Malls Manila Bay Building D. Macapagal Blvd. Cor. Aseana Street Tambo Parañaque City

309.

YAMSAKUL, MAYRISA Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER - THAI SPEAKING

ASK ASIA SOLUTIONS INC. 1608 16/f New World Manila Bay Hotel 1588 M. H Del Pilar Cor. Pedro Gil Sts. 076 Bgy. 699 Malate Manila

253.

ANDROS DESTARIUS Indonesian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

254.

LI, YONGQIONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

255.

LIN, MINLING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

256.

QING, MINGFEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

AVANTICE CORPORATION 19/f Pbcom Tower Ayala Ave. Bel-air Makati City

257.

TIAN, ZEKUO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

311.

CHEN, YAN Chinese

OPERATIONS EXECUTIVE

258.

TRAN MINH TRONG Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

LE TRAN PHUONG KIM YEN Vietnamese

OPERATIONS EXECUTIVE

259.

ZHANG, QIKANG Chinese

312.

260.

HTWE HTWE Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

313.

NGUYEN THANH DANH Vietnamese

OPERATIONS EXECUTIVE

261.

JI, HONGWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

314.

TRAN THAO VY Vietnamese

OPERATIONS EXECUTIVE

262.

KHUN THAR Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

315.

OPERATIONS EXECUTIVE

263.

LE THI HANG Vietnamese

XIE, WENJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

264.

LI, YUANZHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

316.

JIANG, YAHUA Chinese

OPERATIONS SENIOR EXECUTIVE

265.

LI PAIN PHA Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

317.

MERIANA NG Indonesian

BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE EXECUTIVE

266.

LIN, GUIFEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

318.

MARKETING EXECUTIVE

267.

LOKE CHUN WAH Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

SUTTISARAKORN, PHANINTORN Thai

268.

LUO, YANUO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

319.

TANG, JIAQI Chinese

MARKETING EXECUTIVE

269.

PHYO WAI OO Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

320.

CHOKTANASUKARN, NUTCHARAPONG Thai

OPERATIONS EXECUTIVE

270.

QIU, HONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

321.

OPERATIONS EXECUTIVE

271.

SHAO, LI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

MAI VIET HOANG PHUONG ANH Vietnamese

272.

SHEN, JIANBAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

322.

NOVITA INGGRIANI YAONATHA Indonesian

OPERATIONS EXECUTIVE

273.

SHI, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

274.

SU, GUISHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

275.

SU SU HTWE Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

276.

SUN, GUIHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

277.

TAN, XIAOHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

278.

TIEW SHEN YANG Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

279.

WU, MUSHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

280.

WU, SIWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

281.

WU, XIAOBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

282.

YOON NANDAR Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

283.

ZENG, JUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

284.

ZHANG, TIANTIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

285.

ZHANG, SHUAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

286.

ZHENG, XIANDUO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

287.

ZHENG, XIUWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

288.

ZHENG, GUOQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

289.

ZHOU, HANGYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

290.

ZHOU, XIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

291.

CHEN, WAN-YU Taiwanese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

292.

HTWE HTWE AYE Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

293.

NGUYEN KHANH HUYEN Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

294.

NGUYEN TUONG VAN Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

295.

NI NI OO Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

296.

PA PA MOE Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

297.

PAN, BEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

298.

SUN, YANGYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

299.

WANG, QINGLIN Chinese

300.

310.

LI, WENGUANG Chinese

IT TECHNICIAN

BAYVIEW TECHNOLOGIES, INC. 43/f Yuchengco Tower Rcbc Plaza Ayala Ave. Cor. Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. Bel-air Makati City 323.

ATIKA AFIDAH Indonesian

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

324.

BENKASEM, PORAMIN Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

325.

DONSILA, PUNYATIN Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

326.

FANFUA, CHUTIPON Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

327.

KAMNERDKAN, SITTIPONG Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

328.

LAKKHOT, KHACHANON Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

329.

LAOPRASERTSUK, ROMMANEE Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

330.

NANTICHAI, PATIPAN Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

331.

PHANON, MAYTHAWEE Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

332.

SITTHIKAI, SOMRUETHAI Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

333.

SONKLIN, OATCHARA Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

334.

STELLA VIRGINIA KOROH Indonesian

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

335.

JOSHUA FITZGERALD AGRIANO TAMPA Indonesian

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

336.

SRITHONGKHAM, WORALAK Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

337.

WU, MEILING Chinese

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

338.

GAO, XIUCHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

339.

NONG VU LAP Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

340.

YOON, ILNOH South Korean

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

341.

XIONG, XIANG Chinese

QUALITY ANALYST (MULTILINGUAL)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

342.

SALES EXECUTIVE (MULTILINGUAL)

WANG, YIBIN Chinese

LERTCHAI-URU, SAOWALAK Thai

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

301.

WANG, YUEHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

BETCONSULT INTERNATIONAL CONSULTING, INC. Office #01 20a/b Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City

302.

ZHOU, XIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

343.

WU, EN Chinese

ASSISTANT MARKETING MANAGER (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

344.

CHEN, HONGQUAN Chinese

MARKETING MANAGER (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

345.

ZHENG, JINGJING Chinese

MARKETING SPECIALIST (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

APPTECHURE CORP. Units A&b 20/f Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. San Lorenzo Makati City 303.

WU, KUI Chinese

MANDARIN OPERATING SYSTEM SPECIALIST

304.

GU, JICHENG Chinese

MANDARIN SERVICE DESK ANALYST

AQUOZ SOLUTIONS, INC. 28/f Units-5,6,7&8 Zuellig Bldg. Cor. Makati Ave. & Paseo De Roxas Urdaneta Makati City

BIG EMPEROR TECHNOLOGY CORP. Eastfield Center Cbp1, Macapagal Blvd. Brgy. 076 Pasay City 346.

CHEN, FUJUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE


BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

347.

DING, TING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

348.

GAO, JIAN Chinese

349.

Sunday, December 6, 2020 A11

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

395.

LIU, RENFANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

396.

LIU, HAIXIA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

HAN, DONGLI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

397.

MENG, DONGLIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

350.

HONG, YONGHUANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

398.

TAN, XINGSHENG Chinese

351.

HU, XINGQI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

399.

352.

HUANG, YUE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

400.

353.

LI, HECHUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

354.

LIN, SHULONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

355.

LIU, SHIHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

356.

TAN, BILU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

357.

TIAN, HAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

358.

WANG, BING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

451.

QI, YINXIA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

452.

QI, LONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CAPGEMINI PHILIPPINES CORP. 12f, Ten West Campus Bldg. Le Grand Avenue, Mckinley West Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

453.

QIN, ZUOYI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

454.

QIN, KANGTAI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CAPSLOCK INC. 7th & 8th Flr. Y Tower Bldg. Coral Way Drive Cor. Macapagal Brgy. 076 Pasay City

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

455.

QU, SHUO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

501.

FAN, HUIYING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

WU, QILIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

456.

SHEN, YUNHUA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

502.

HUANG, JIANXIONG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

ZHANG, XINLONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

457.

SONG, ZHILIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

503.

LEI, BEN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

458.

SU, ZHIMIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

504.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

401.

BAI, WEIZHEN Chinese

LU, XU Chinese

459.

SUN, BO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

505.

MENG, YAO Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

402.

LIU, RUIYUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

460.

TAN, JIAWEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

506.

WANG, WENJIANG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

CHINESE SPEAKING TRANSLATOR

461.

403.

LIN, GUIHUI Chinese

WANG, YADONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

507.

XIONG, XIANGFENG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

462.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

508.

ZHOU, QIANG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

404.

LUONG NGOC DUNG Vietnamese

WANG, YOUBO Chinese

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

463.

WANG, JIANGBIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

509.

ZHU, TING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

405.

DAI JIANWEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

464.

WANG, JIAQI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

510.

LI, XIDOU Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

406.

HUANG, SHULIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

465.

WU, XIAOLU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

511.

WU, MEI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

466.

XIANG, GUOCHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

512.

ZHANG, WENJING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

467.

XIE, YUANQIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

513.

ZHAO, KAISHENG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

468.

XIE, RUJIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

514.

CHAN CHUAN WEI Malaysian

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

469.

XIE, GUICHUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

515.

SAW CHIN HENG Malaysian

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

470.

XIONG, KESHUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

516.

TAN AI WEAI Malaysian

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

471.

XU, SUEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CBN ASIA, INC. Unit B 3 Sagittarius Bldg. 111 H.v Dela Costa St. Bel-air Makati City

472.

YANG, LIQIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

517.

473.

YANG, XINGUO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

474.

YU, SONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

475.

ZENG, SHOUFU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

476.

ZHAO, ERQIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

519.

CASPERSEN, KEVIN LENNART Norwegian

MULTILINGUAL SERVICE DESK MEMBER

500.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

MYLABATHULA, SWETHA Indian

POSITION

ASSOCIATE CONSULTANT

359.

WANG, GANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

407.

LAN, CHANGHUA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

360.

WANG, DONGHAI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

408.

LIN, HONGSEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

361.

XIE, XINGYU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

409.

LIU, QIQI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

362.

YU, XUWANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

410.

LIU, BENFU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

363.

ZHANG, CAIYING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

411.

LONG, HEPING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

364.

ZHANG, SHICHUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

412.

LONG, MEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

365.

ZHANG, TIANJIAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

413.

MAO, HONGTING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

366.

WANG, YONGYANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

414.

PING, ANQI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

367.

WANG, JIALI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

415.

SU, AIXI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

477.

ZHENG, WEIQIANG Chinese

368.

XU, DECAI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

416.

SUN, RUIJIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

478.

ZOU, BOCHENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

520.

CHOI, HYUNKYU South Korean

MULTILINGUAL SERVICE DESK MEMBER

417.

SUN, JIANWEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

479.

LIU, JUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

521.

FOGO, EDEN Cameroonian

MULTILINGUAL SERVICE DESK MEMBER

418.

WU, SHANGJI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

522.

JONSTERHAUG, TOMMY MERCADER Norwegian

MULTILINGUAL SERVICE DESK MEMBER

419.

YANG, SHENGKANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

420.

YUAN, TAORUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

421.

ZHAO, CHUNXIAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

481.

HUANG, BIN Chinese

422.

HA MY CHAU Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

482.

CHEN, YONGQUAN Chinese

423.

BAO, BOQIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

483.

WANG, XUANHUI Chinese

424.

CHEN, XINGJIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

425.

CHEN, QINGHONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

BITESTOGO, INC. U-202 1125 J.p Rizal Street Guadalupe Viejo Makati City

426.

CHEN, QIAOBIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

XU, SHIXU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

370.

XU, WEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

371.

ZHANG, QIUQIU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

369.

ZHANG, JIAXIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

ZHU, JUNHUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

374.

LU, QIUYAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

375.

WANG, SONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

376.

THET NAING Myanmari

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

377.

GUO, JIANBO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

378.

LI, TING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

379.

LIU, GUIRONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

380.

LUO, ZHIQIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

381.

SHEN, JINSONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

372. 373.

382.

SUN, PEIXUAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

383.

TENG, JINHAI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

384.

WANG, JIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

385.

WANG, HAIPENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

YAN, JUNQUAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

387.

YANG, ZHENGHE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

388.

ZHOU, JIANMIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

389.

ZHANG, YONGFU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

390.

ZHENG, XUEWEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

391.

GUO, LIZHEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

392.

LI, JUNJIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

393.

LIANG, JUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

394.

LIN, SHIJIA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

386.

BIG PHILIP HEAVY EQUIPMENT CORPORATION Unit 25-c Cleveland The Asia World City Don Galo Parañaque City 480.

XIE, CHENGSHENG Chinese

ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGER

BILLION DRAGON OUTSOURCE PHILS., INC. One Townsquare Place Bpo Bldg. Alabang Zapote Rd. Almanza Uno Las Piñas City

484.

ANDRIOLO, ALESSANDRO Italian ROVERE, IACOPO ALFONSO Italian

JUNIOR OPERATIONS MANAGER CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER

XIE, LANG Chinese

PROJECT COORDINATOR FOR CHINA

CENTURY PEAK CEMENT MANUFACTURING CORP. U-1403/140 14f Equitable Bank Tower 8751 Paseo De Roxas Bel-air Makati City 518.

LIAN, HONGJUN Chinese

CHINESE EQUIPMENT SUPERVISOR

CGI IT UK LIMITED INC. 2/f One World Square Bldg. Mckinley Hill Pinagsama Taguig City

CH-MEILING INTERNATIONAL (PHILIPPINES) INC. Units A&b 20/f Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. San Lorenzo Makati City 523.

XU, YANG Chinese

MANDARIN HEAD OPERATIONS MANAGER

CHINA RAILWAY GROUP LIMITED PHILIPPINE BRANCH U-a &b 20/f Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. San Lorenzo Makati City 524.

LEI, PEIJUN Chinese

MANDARIN GENERAL MANAGER

CHROMELAB TECHNOLOGIES INC. 25/f Techzone Bldg. 213 Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. San Antonio Makati City 525.

PIAMMAHAMONGKOL, CHAYANUT Thai

BI-LINGUAL SPEAKING DATA ANALYST OFFICER

526.

WELSON YEE WEI SIONG Malaysian

BI-LINGUAL SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

527.

MICHAEL MOH TZE TONG Malaysian

BI-LINGUAL SPEAKING DATA ANALYST OFFICER

427.

CHEN, YONGFA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

485.

428.

CHEN, QIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

429.

DONG, QIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

BO TONG TECHNOLOGIES INC. 2nd And 3rd Floor Shaw Plaza, 561 Shaw Blvd. Brgy. Wack Wack Mandaluyong City 486.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SPECIALIST

CIPEC CONSTRUCTION INC. U-1202 Global Tower Condo Gen. Mascardo Cor. Capt. M. Reyes Sts. Bangkal Makati City

430.

FANG, SHUANG Chinese

XIAO, KAITAO Chinese

487.

431.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SPECIALIST

528.

FENG, ZHENZHENG Chinese

XIE, CHUANGDONG Chinese

488.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SPECIALIST

432.

GUO, LIZHI Chinese

LIU, MINYI Chinese

489.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SPECIALIST

433.

HE, XINPEI Chinese

YANG, QIXIAN Chinese

490.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SPECIALIST

434.

HUANG, LINBIN Chinese

ZHOU, BAOJUN Chinese

435.

LI, XIANGLU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

436.

LI, LIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

437.

LI, XIUJIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

438.

LI, WAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

439.

LIANG, ZHENHUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

440.

LIAO, PEIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

441.

LIN, JINMING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

442.

LIN, WEISHANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

443.

LIU, PENGFEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

444.

LU, CHENGCHENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

445.

LU, PENG Chinese

446. 447.

BOSCH SERVICE SOLUTIONS, INC. 23rd Floor, W Fifth Avenue Building 32nd Street Corner 5th Avenue Bonifacio Global City Taguig City 491.

KONG, JOOWON South Korean

ASSOCIATE

BOWENHILLS TECH INC. 19/f Lepanto Bldg. 8747 Paseo De Roxas Bel-air Makati City 492.

LUONG CHI DUNG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE SPEAKINGMARKETING MANAGER

C’EST LA VIE EVENT MANAGEMENT INC. 230 Narra Street Marikina Heights Marikina City

CHIANG, PO-LIN Taiwanese

FIELD INSTRUMENT SPECIALIST

CLOVERSENSE TECHNOLOGY INC. 29/f Robinsons Summit Center 6783 Ayala Center Bel-air Makati City 529.

KHAMTA, SIRILUK Thai

SPORTS TRADER -THAI SPEAKING I

530.

OOI CHOOI CHOOI Malaysian

SPORTS TRADER-BAHASA SPEAKING I

531.

SRI AYU Indonesian

SPORTS TRADER-BAHASA SPEAKING I

532.

CHEW CHOON XIAN Malaysian

SPORTS TRADER-BAHASA SPEAKING I

533.

NGUYEN NGOC KHANH UYEN Vietnamese

SPORTS TRADER-VIETNAMESE SPEAKING I

534.

LEE SAI HONG Malaysian

SPORTS TRADER - BAHASA SPEAKING II

CND PHL INC. 19/f Marco Polo Ortigas Office Tower Sapphire Road Ortigas Center San Antonio Pasig City

493.

LI, JUN Chinese

CHINESE - FIELD SALES CONSULTANT

494.

SU, HANWEN Chinese

CHINESE-BOOTH FABRICATION SPECIALIST CONSULTANT

495.

SHI, SHAOXING Chinese

CHINESE-GENERAL TRADE MARKETING SPECIALIST CONSULTANT

496.

DAI, YAOXIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SUPPORT TRAINOR-MANDARIN SPEAKING

536.

JOHNSON, NATHAN SCOTT American

ENGAGEMENT DELIVERY LEAD

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

497.

LIU, KUNPENG Chinese

CHINESE - KEY ACCOUNTS SPECIALIST CONSULTANT

537.

DIAZ SANDOVAL, GUILLERMO ARISTIDES Salvadoran

SYSTEMS ENGINEER

LU, JIAOYAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

538.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

GUARIN LLANES, EUDALDO ANIBAL Colombian

SYSTEMS ENGINEER

MA, HONGRI Chinese

C3/CUSTOMERCONTACTCHANNELS PHILIPPINES LTD. 11/f, 17/f, 18/f, 19/f, 20/f Bonifacio One Technology Tower 3030 Rizal Drive Cor. 31st St. Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

448.

MENG, GUOLIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

449.

NI, LIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

450.

OU, HAILONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

498.

CHOUBAL, BHUSHAN SUBODH Indian

SENIOR MANAGER WORKFORCE MANAGEMENT

CALTON WELLS TECH INTERNATIONAL INC. 18/f Gt Tower International 6795 Ayala Ave. Bel-air Makati City 499.

NGUYEN HUU MAI Vietnamese

MULTILINGUAL DATA ANALYST

535.

YU, YOUNGHAN South Korean

MARKETING MANAGER

COGNIZANT TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS PHILIPPINES, INC. 5th And 6th Floors, 8/10 Upper Mckinley Building Mckinley Hill Cyberpark Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

COLLABERA TECHNOLOGIES PRIVATE LIMITED, INC. U-40 A-d 40/f Rufino Pacific Tower, 6784 Ayala Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City 539.

ANGO ZEH, LAETITIA Cameroonian

FRENCH SERVICE DESK SPECIALIST

540.

BAYU IKAVIRNO Indonesian

BAHASA INDONESIAN SERVICE DESK


BusinessMirror

A12 Sunday, December 6, 2020 ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

COLDSTREAM MARKETING SOLUTION INC. 603-4 Eastfield Ctr. Moa Comp. Macapagal Ave. Brgy. 076 Pasay City 541.

XIONG, LEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CONCENTRIX CVG PHILIPPINES, INC. 25/f Ayala North Exchange Tower 2, 6796 Ayala Ave. Cor. Salcedo & Amorsolo Streets Makati City 542.

TCHAWOE KAMENI, FRANCIS Cameroonian

TECHNICAL SUPPORT ADVISOR I

COSMOLINK GLOBAL SOLUTIONS INC. Flr. No. 6th, 7th & 8th Bldg. No. 100 Necc Bldg., Andrews Ave. St. Newport City Subd. District 1, Barangay 183 Pasay City

NO.

www.businessmirror.com.ph

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

599.

XU, BOHUA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

600.

XU, YANWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

601.

XU, AILI Chinese

602. 603.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

655.

HUANG, WANLING Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 2

656.

LI, YU Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 2

DIGISPARK TECH CORP. Unit 1618 High Street, South Corporate Plaza, Tower 2 26th St. Corner 9th Ave. Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

657.

SU, ZHICAN Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 2

XU, HUAJIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

658.

SUN, YINGAO Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 2

XU, HUICHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

659.

LI, FALIANG Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 3

604.

XUE, TENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

660.

TANG, YIN Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 3

716.

CHU KOK WAI Malaysian

SENIOR NETWORK SYSTEM ADMINISTRATOR

717.

LI, HUANGJIE Chinese

TECHNICAL OPERATIONS OFFICER

DKT HEALTH, INC. #80 E. Rodriguez Jr Ave. Bagumbayan 3 Quezon City 718.

KANG, SOVANROTH Cambodian

CONSULTANT FOR BRAND MARKETING RESEARCH AND EVENTS MARKETING

543.

BAI, BAOPING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

605.

YANG, HONGQING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

661.

TAI SENG HONG Malaysian

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST -TEAM 2

DYNA BINARY HOLDINGS INC. 18/f Tower 2 The Enterprise Center, 6766 Ayala Ave., Cor. Paseo De Roxas San Lorenzo Makati City

544.

CAO, CHUNBO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

606.

YANG, LONGYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

662.

TANG, PUXINZHI Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST -TEAM 2

719.

ZHANG, DONGBEI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS ANALYST

545.

CHE, JINWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

607.

YAO, ZHIMIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

663.

YAO, WENMING Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST -TEAM 2

720.

VENNY PRAJNAWATI Indonesian

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

546.

CHEN, LIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

608.

ZENG, HUA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

664.

YU, RONGZU Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST -TEAM 2

721.

HUANG, YU-CHUN Taiwanese

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK

547.

CHEN, RIXIONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

609.

ZENG, CUIHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

665.

ZHANG, MING Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST -TEAM 2

722.

XU, YANDONG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK

548.

CHEN, ZHIJIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

610.

ZHANG, WENSEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

666.

NANG WAI Myanmari

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

EASTERN GOLD CORPORATION 503 Nueva St Binondo Manila

549.

CHEN, SHUTING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

611.

ZHANG, FUYUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

667.

NU LAR Myanmari

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

723.

CHEN, WENZHANG Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

550.

CHEN, YEWANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

612.

ZHANG, HANGYUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

668.

SAI SOE MOE NAING Myanmari

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

724.

CHEN, YIPENG Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

551.

CHEN, YAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

613.

ZHANG, YUJIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

669.

XIAO, PAN Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

725.

DAN, QUNQIAN Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

552.

FAN, BO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

614.

ZHAO, QIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

670.

YAN YEE MAKE Myanmari

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

726.

JIANG, YUCHI Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

553.

FAN, LIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

615.

ZHAO, LIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

671.

ZAY YA Myanmari

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

727.

PAN, JIAHUI Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

554.

GAN, YUE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

616.

ZHAO, ZHONGJIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

672.

ZHONG, CHANGHONG Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

728.

WANG, ZHEN Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

555.

GAO, KE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

617.

ZHENG, AO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

673.

LIN, ZHONGQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE - TEAM 4

729.

WANG, YANFANG Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

556.

GAO, MENGYIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

618.

ZHI, SHANGSHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

674.

YANG, JINZHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE - TEAM 4

730.

YANG, LIJUAN Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

557.

GONG, ZHENGZE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

619.

ZHOU, SHITUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

675.

CHAN WENG HONG Malaysian

ONLINE PROGRAMING ANALYST -TEAM 3

731.

ZHANG, XILONG Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

558.

HU, MINGXING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

620.

ZHU, ZHIHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

676.

FU, LEI Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 1

732.

WANG, JINRONG Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

559.

HU, XUANGANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

621.

ZHU, SHIBO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

677.

LI, SIHONG Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 1

733.

FANG, QINGJUN Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

560.

HUANG, YINENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

678.

YU, DEWANG Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 1

734.

SUN, HUJIAO Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

561.

HUANG, JIMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CSSCORP ICT SERVICES, INC. 3rd Flr. Bonifacio Technology Center 31st. Corner 2nd Avenue Crescent Park Bonifacio City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

679.

ZHANG, LINGLI Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 1

735.

ZHANG, CHUANHUA Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

562.

JING, JIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

680.

ZHANG, CHUNYING Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 1

563.

KONG, XIANGZHEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

681.

HONG PEI SHI Malaysian

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 2

682.

HUANG, LONGFENG Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 3

736.

683.

LEI, GONGSHUO Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 4

684.

LYU, WAN Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 4

ENOVELL-TECH Unit 1105 One Park Drive 9th Ave. Cor. 11th Drive Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 4

564.

LI, HAORAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

565.

LI, PING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

566.

LIANG, ZHENHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

567.

LIAO, YUANQI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

568.

LIAO, QIUYIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

569.

LIU, JUNKAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

570.

LIU, MIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

571.

LIU, ZHENDONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

572.

LIU, QIUZHEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

573.

LIU, KANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

574.

LONG, GANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

575.

LU, QIANRU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

576.

LUO, PAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

577.

LUO, YANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

578.

MO, CHUNGUANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

579.

PENG, ZHIFENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

580.

QIU, MAOSHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

581.

SONG, BIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

582.

SUN, XI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

583.

SWE SHO JAUNG Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

584.

TAN YUAN LING Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

585.

TIAN, WU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

586.

WAN, ZIXUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

587.

WANG, SONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

588.

WANG, XIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

589.

WANG, CHUNYANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

590.

WANG, YANLIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

591.

WANG, ZHENHUA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

592.

WANG, DU Chinese

593.

622.

BHATIA, RAJIV ASHOK Indian

ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR TRAINING & QUALITY

CVN PHILS. CONSTRUCTION INC. 4/f Insular Healthcare Bldg. 167 Dela Rosa Cor. Legaspi Sts. San Lorenzo Makati City 623.

PLACINTA, NICOLAE Moldovan

FORMWORK DEVICE GENERAL FOREMAN

DA SUCCESS BUSINESS TRADING INCORPORATED Unit 25d 2/f Zeta Ii Bldg. 191 Salcedo St. San Lorenzo Makati City

EASTVANTAGE BUSINESS SOLUTIONS INC. 11/f Fort Legend Tower 3rd Ave. Cor. 31st St., Bonifacio Global City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City JEYAMANI, SUNDARESAN Indian

TECHNICAL LEAD

624.

HUANG, HAIFENG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

625.

PAN, ZHIHUI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

685.

626.

PENG, XIANFEI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

MA, YIJUN Chinese

686.

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 4

627.

ZHANG, LEI Chinese

SU, JIAKUN Chinese

687.

628.

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST -TEAM 3

738.

LI, SHANGHUI Chinese

CHEN, CUITING Chinese

688.

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST -TEAM 3

FAREAST OUTSOURCE PROCESSING INC. 7th, 8th, 9th Flr. Nu Tower Moa Coral Way Brgy. 076 Pasay City

629.

SAI KHAY SHANG Myanmari

HUANG, JINMING Chinese

689.

CAO, YUHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

630.

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST -TEAM 3

739.

ZHOU, SHAOFEI Chinese

SU, DEQIANG Chinese

690.

CHAU TO PHUONG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

631.

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE

ONLINE PROGRAMMING SUPPORT - TEAM 4

740.

ZHANG, LIMIN Chinese

CHEN, YATING Chinese

691.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

741.

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK

CHEN, HEZHANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

632.

CHE, PENG Chinese

ASTER Myanmari

692.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

742.

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

CHEN, YUANBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

633.

HE, MIAO Chinese

CHEN, WEISHUAI Chinese

693.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

743.

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

CHEN, SHIQIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

634.

JIN, LILI Chinese

HUANG, JIANZHI Chinese

694.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

744.

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

CHENG, XIAOJIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

635.

WANG, YONGSHENG Chinese

HWAN MO SHEIN Myanmari

695.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

745.

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK

DING, WENHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

636.

BI, MEIYU Chinese

KHIN HNIN YEE Myanmari

696.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

746.

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK

DOU, XURONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

637.

CHEN, MENGYAO Chinese

LI SHAUNG SHIN Myanmari

697.

SU, BINGREN Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

747.

FU, CEBAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

698.

DONG, YUNJIE Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

748.

FU, YONGBAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

699.

HE, GUOYI Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

749.

GUO, YUNHE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

DAXIFA CORPORATION Mpire Center 93 West Avenue Project 7 Bungad 1 Quezon City

737.

HUSSAIN, AMJAD Pakistani

PROJECT CONSULTANT

ERICSSON TELECOMMUNICATIONS, INC. 22/f Two/neo Bldg. 3rd Ave. Cor. 28th St. Crescent Parkwest Fort Bonifacio Taguig City HARITS FADILLAH SOETJIPTONO Indonesian

DPM ERISITE SME

638.

CHEN, JIABAO Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

639.

YUE, LINLIN Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST -TEAM 3

700.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

750.

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST -TEAM 3

HUANG, DAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

640.

ZHAO, XICHANG Chinese

LI, JIN Chinese

701.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

751.

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST-TEAM 4

HUANG, MENGCHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

641.

CAI, JIANYING Chinese

LIANG, HAIYUAN Chinese

702.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

752.

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST-TEAM 4

JU, XIAOLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

642.

CHEN, WEIFENG Chinese

OU, XUTAO Chinese

703.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

753.

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST-TEAM 4

KOU, SIYI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

643.

ZHOU, YAN Chinese

RAN, JIE Chinese

704.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

754.

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST-TEAM 4

LI, ZEHUA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

644.

ZHU, JIANYAN Chinese

WANG, CONG Chinese

705.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

755.

LIAO, LIANZHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

645.

KYAUK SAN Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE - MYANMAR TEAM 5

WANG, QIANG Chinese

706.

WEN, NAIFU Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

756.

LIN, SHIH-WEI Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

646.

KYAW THEIN Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE - MYANMAR TEAM 5

707.

WEN, RULIANG Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

757.

LIU, JIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

708.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

758.

THIDAR KHAING Myanmari

WU, YU Chinese

LIU, YUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

647.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE - MYANMAR TEAM 5

709.

YANG, CHENGCHUAN Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

759.

LIU, JINTUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

648.

WIN KYAW Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE - MYANMAR TEAM 5

710.

YANG, QINGCHUN Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

760.

LIU, JIANGLIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

WEN, HAOBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

649.

HTAN LI YWAY Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE - TEAM 4

711.

ZENG, HUIFANG Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

761.

LONG, JIANJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

594.

WU, HAIJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

650.

CHEN, JINXIN Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 1

712.

GONG, PENG Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

762.

LUO, CHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

595.

WU, YIDONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

651.

LUO, GUI Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 1

713.

TAN, SHA, Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

763.

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

596.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

TANG, SHAOHUI, Chinese

LUO, JINPENG Chinese

WU, DAN Chinese

714.

652.

LUO, KAILONG Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 1

764.

MEI, YUXIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

597.

WU, WENHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

653.

QIAN, XI Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 1

765.

NIU, YUCAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

598.

XIAO, YONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

654.

ZHANG, QIKUN Chinese

ONLINE PROGRAMMING ANALYST - TEAM 1

766.

QIU, ZHILONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

DIAGEO PHILIPPINES, INC. Unit 1 17th Floor, Ore Central 9th Ave. Cor. 31st Street Bonifacio Global City, Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 715.

CHENG, CHENG-CHI a.k.a. JESSE CHENG Taiwanese

RESERVE LUXURY SALES CONSULTANT


BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

767.

QU, YAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

768.

SHU, TAO Chinese

769.

Sunday, December 6, 2020 A13

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

826.

JEE YAO BOON Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

877.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

827.

LOW WEE KEE Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

SUN, GUANGXU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

828.

NGUYEN THI THUONG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

770.

TRANG QUOC HUNG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

829.

TRAN VAN THAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

771.

WANG, LULU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

830.

BUI QUANG TUYEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

772.

WANG, SHANGPING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

831.

LE VAN KHANH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

773.

WANG, MENGMENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

832.

TRAN DUC DONG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

774.

WANG, QUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

833.

TRINH THI THUY Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

775.

WANG, SHAOFA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

834.

HOANG VAN MEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

776.

WEN, BINHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

835.

NONG VAN THUONG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

777.

WU, YONGRUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

778.

WU, KUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

779.

XING, FULONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

FIRST GREAT COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES INC. Lot 5 Sta. Agueda Cor. Queensway Pagcor Drive Sto. Niño Parañaque City

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

WANG, XIAOYANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE- MANDARIN SPEAKING

925.

LI, XIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

878.

JIAO, BIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

926.

LI, JUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

879.

LUO, MAOZHI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

927.

LIANG, DEMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

880.

LUO, GANGYI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

928.

LIAO, LISHA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

881.

SONG, CHENGHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

929.

LU, WENWANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

882.

SU, SHAOPENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

930.

LU, FEIBING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

883.

WANG, LYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

931.

LU, JIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

932.

LU, XIONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

933.

MA, TAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

934.

NING, YINGFEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

935.

OUYANG, YONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

936.

PENG, YIMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

937.

TANG, JINQIU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

938.

TIAN, ZHIWEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

939.

WANG, YANNI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

940.

WANG, YU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

941.

WU, JIANYI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

942.

YAN, SHANGYANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

GATEWAYSOLUTIONS CORP. 8/f Edsa Cor. Sultan Brgy. Highway Hills Mandaluyong City 884.

CHEN, CHUANGHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENATATIVE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

836.

LI, QILIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

885.

837.

LIU, YANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHEN, SHAOKUN Chinese

886.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

838.

PHAM CHI AN Vietnamese

WANG, XIAOFANG Chinese

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

887.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

839.

XU, RUI Chinese

ZHANG, BILAN Chinese

780.

XU, DALIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

781.

YANG, YANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

782.

YIN, TIANWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

783.

ZHANG, CHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

784.

ZHANG, ZIYAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

840.

785.

ZHAO, HAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

786.

ZHAO, CHANGWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

841.

787.

ZHAO, KUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

788.

ZHOU, XIANBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

842.

789.

ZHOU, JIANZHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

790.

BU, JIANPU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

FLYING DRAGON NETWORK PHILIPPINES INC. 4th-11th Floor Aseana 3 Building Aseana Avenue Corner Diosdado Macapagal Tambo Parañaque City

791.

CHEN, LIBO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

792.

CHEN, FENGHAO Chinese

793.

FLUOR DANIEL, INC. - PHILIPPINES 2nd, 7th-17th/f Polaris Corporate Center Lt 6&7 Blk 1, Spectrum Midway Fcc, Alabang Muntinlupa City

GLOBALLGA BUSINESS PROCESS OUTSOURCING Ground Level, Level 2-5 Floor Silver City 4, Ortigas East Ugong Pasig City 888.

CHEN, GONGBIN Chinese

889.

GU, YANG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

FLY ASIAN INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION Eighty One Newport Blvd. Newport City Va, Brgy. 183 Pasay City

890.

LUO, JIAHAO Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

CHANG, CHIA-CHIEN Taiwanese

MARKETING CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING CLIENTS)

891.

WANG, FUDE Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

892.

WEI, CAIFEN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

LIN, CHIN-FENG Taiwanese

MARKETING CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING CLIENTS)

893.

WENG, MINQING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

894.

WU, WENGUI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

RUTLAND, CHARLES ANTHONY American

GENERAL MANAGER

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

POSITION

GONG, GANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

895.

WU, YANMING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

844.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

896.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

LI, WENLEI Chinese

ZHONG, XIAOJIANG Chinese

845.

897.

CHEN, GUANGPENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

YAN, YUANYUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

943.

GUO, YI Chinese

HE, TINGTING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

846.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

898.

795.

HOU, SHICHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

847.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

YI, DELONG Chinese

LI, YANXING Chinese

JIANG, SHUN Chinese

944.

794.

GUO, YUNLONG Chinese

LAI, TAO Chinese

899.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

796.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHANG, DESHENG Chinese

HUANG, XIANGYU Chinese

MEI, HAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

945.

848.

LIU, ZHIWEI Chinese

849.

900.

LUO, FUWU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

797.

850.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

901.

799.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LI, QINGYUN Chinese

HOU, CHUNCHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHANG, ZHIKANG Chinese

851.

MO, HUIDA Chinese

947.

798.

LI, DAN Chinese

ZHOU, XINGQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHANG, XIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

946.

HUANG, HOUHUA Chinese

WANG, QINJUN Chinese

852.

SUN, LIUJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

948.

ZHENG, TAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

800.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

902.

LIN, YIHAN Chinese

HOU, ZHIJUN Chinese

853.

903.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

854.

MARKETING STAFF MANDARIN SPEAKING

803.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LONG, ZHIJUN Chinese

LI, HAILIANG Chinese

WANG, SHENGHONG Chinese

WEI, LONGCAI Chinese

855.

904.

950.

802.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LIU, GE Chinese

HUANG, CHUANJIANG Chinese

TAN, XING Chinese

ZHU, KAI Chinese

801.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

949.

LIU, PENG Chinese

HU, SHENGBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

804.

MA, YUCHAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

AI, PENGXIAO Chinese

856.

LI, ZHENRONG Chinese

951.

857.

CHEN, ZHEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

805.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

952.

PENG, LANG Chinese

LIU, JIE Chinese

858.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

953.

806.

SAMAKOVA, ARUNAI Russian

LYU, HUASHUAI Chinese

CHEN, ZHICONG Chinese

859.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

807.

SHOU, DALI Chinese

PAN, WEIJIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

860.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

808.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

JIANG, YANQING Chinese

SUN, WEIZHI Chinese

RAO, JIBING Chinese

954.

861.

JIANG, BIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

809.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

955.

WAI PHYO AUNG Myanmari

WU, SIRUN Chinese

862.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

956.

810.

WANG, JINYAN Chinese

XU, WEI Chinese

863.

811.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

WANG, WEI Chinese

YU, SHITAO Chinese

JIANG, MENGZHEN Chinese

864.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

812.

WANG, YIFAN Chinese

ZHANG, DECUN Chinese

865.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

813.

WU, BO Chinese

ZHANG, YU Chinese

866.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

814.

XU, XINGXING Chinese

CHEN, GENGWU Chinese

867.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

815.

YAN, LI Chinese

HAO, SHUAI Chinese

868.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

816.

YANG, KEKE Chinese

HUANG, CHONG Chinese

869.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

817.

YUN, WEILAI Chinese

SUN, HONGBIN Chinese

870.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

818.

ZHANG, YANGCHAO Chinese

WEI, ZHENXIANG Chinese

871.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

819.

ZHANG, WEN Chinese

YANG, CHENXUE Chinese

872.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

820.

ZHAO, GUANGHUA Chinese

ZHANG, YA Chinese

873.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

821.

ZHAO, HUATING Chinese

HENDRY Indonesian

822.

ZHAO, HUILING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

823.

ZHOU, HAILONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

FIRST BALFOUR INC. Km 19 West Service Rd. Marcelo Green Parañaque City 824.

HOLZERLAND, CHRISTIAN DIRK Deutsch

CONSULTANT

FIRST GENPACT INFORMATION TECH. INC. Unit G-16/ M01 019/ M02 G25 Solemare Parksuites Units Bradco Avenue Tambo Parañaque City 825.

DAO TUAN VU Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

843.

FORMUNIA CORPORATION Units A&b 20/f Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. San Lorenzo Makati City 874.

LIU, YANG Chinese

INFORMATION SYSTEM SPECIALIST

FRK BUILDERS AND TRADERS INC. Units 20 A & B, 20/f Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City 875.

KALANTARI, ALI Iranian

BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT SPECIALIST

FUXINGYING CAIYUN HENTONG, CORP. 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th Floor Eton Ewestpod Chino Roces Avenue Cor. Yakal & Malugay Streets San Antonio Makati City 876.

LAN, HUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE- MANDARIN SPEAKING

YAN, FANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

906.

ZENG, LIUQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

907.

LI, QIUNAN Chinese

MARKETING STAFF MANDARIN SPEAKING

908.

LUO, DEHUAN Chinese

MARKETING STAFF MANDARIN SPEAKING

909.

WANG, DEXING Chinese

MARKETING STAFF MANDARIN SPEAKING

910.

ZHONG, CHAO Chinese

MARKETING STAFF MANDARIN SPEAKING

911.

LIU, JINLAN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

912.

AN, SIJIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

957.

LI, JUNHUA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

913.

CHEN, XIAOWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

958.

LI, BINGQING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

914.

CHENG, MUDAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

959.

LIANG, GUOLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

915.

DAI, SHENGJIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

960.

LIU, XIUWU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

916.

DENG, HUINI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

961.

LIU, YANZHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

917.

DONG, ZHE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

962.

LUO, MENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

918.

DU, XIANGXIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

963.

PAN, TUHUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

919.

DU, JIANGTAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

964.

QIN, FEIJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

920.

FAN, LICHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

965.

SU, ZHIWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

921.

FANG, XIAODONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

966.

WANG, TIANCAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

922.

HE, GUIHAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

967.

WENG, YE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

923.

HU, SONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

968.

YAO, WEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

924.

HUANG, LEZHANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

969.

CHANG, QIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

905.


BusinessMirror

A14 Sunday, December 6, 2020 ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

970.

HE, HANKAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

971.

HE, ZEQUN Chinese

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1019.

DAO THI QUYEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

INTERCOMP LINK SOLUTIONS INC. 14th Floor, Filinvest Three Bldg. Northgate Cyberzone Filinvest Alabang Muntinlupa City

LI, LINGYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

973.

LI, FUYI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1021.

LIANG, JUNHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

974.

LIANG, LONGFEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1022.

TRAN ANH TUAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LIN, XIAOJIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1023.

WANG, MINGYANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LIU, ZUNCHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1024.

WEI, YONGBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

977.

SU, YUTING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1025.

WU, KAISHI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

978.

TANG, JI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1026.

XIE, YU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

WANG, CONGCONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1027.

XUE, PENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

980.

WU, HONGFEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1028.

YANG, PENGCHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

981.

YANG, NA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1029.

YANG, FENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1030.

FANG, YULIN Chinese

MARKETING STAFF MANDARIN SPEAKING

982.

YANG, SEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

983.

YAO, YAMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHANG, LIMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

985.

ZHANG, LIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

986.

LUO, JINBAO Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

987.

YAN, YAN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

988.

YU, XIANGWEI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

989.

CHEN, JIANGFENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

990.

CHEN, WANYAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

991.

CHEN, CHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1036.

992.

DAI, MACHUNXU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HAMMERTIME CONSTRUCTION INC. Unit 203-s3 2nd Flr. Fbr Arcade Bldg. #317 Katipunan Ave. Loyola Heights 3 Quezon City

FAN ZHI SONG Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

FENG, ZHIJIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1038.

HO TRIEU DINH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HCL TECHNOLOGIES PHILIPPINES, INC. Net Cube Center, 3rd Avenue Corner 30th Street, E-square Zone Bonifacio Global City Taguig City

984.

993.

994.

995.

GMO GLOBALSIGN INC. Units 7&8, 23/f Zuellig Bldg. Makati Ave. Cor. Paseo De Roxas Urdaneta Makati City 1031.

SANTOS CARAMEL, BEATRIZ Brazilian

MULTILINGUAL TECHNICAL SUPPORT SPECIALIST (PORTUGUESE)

GOFLUENT PHILIPPINES, INC. 10/f Ibm Plaza Building Eastwood City Cyberpark Bagumbayan Quezon City 1032.

CASTRO BEJARANO, JUDY VIVIANA Colombian

TRAINING CONTENT SUPERVISOR

GOLDENSKY INTERNATIONAL GROUP INC. Midas Hotel 2702 Roxas Blvd. Brgy. 076 Pasay City 1033.

CAO, WEILI Chinese

CALL CENTER AGENT MANDARIN SPEAKING

1034.

CHEN, HAIBO Chinese

CALL CENTER AGENT MANDARIN SPEAKING

1035.

ZHANG, SHUANG Chinese

CALL CENTER AGENT MANDARIN SPEAKING

GURU MEHAR INT’L. CORP. Unit T1a Poblete Cmpd. West Service Road Sun Valley Parañaque City

1037.

CHANDNANI, ANIL Indian

LI, MINGQIANG Chinese

INTERNATIONAL TRADE OFFICER

PROJECT CONSULTANT

HAOLI BUILDERS CONSTRUCTION CO. INCORPORATED 1219 Soler Cor Masangkay St. 028, Bgy 294 Binondo Manila ZHU, PENGZE Chinese

ASSISTANT OPERATING MANAGER

996.

HOU, ZHEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1039.

997.

LI, ANJING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HELLOCONNECT, INC. 7/f Inoza Tower 40th St., Bonifacio Global City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

998.

LI, JIANGYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

999.

SONG, SHIXU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1000.

SU, HANXIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

SUN, YUNLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1002.

WEI, LEILEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1003.

XIE, MING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1004.

XING, YALIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1005.

XU, PENG Chinese

1006.

1001.

SITE MANAGER

1053.

1020.

979.

NO.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LINTARRIO SYOFRIE RINHO Indonesian

ANALYST

1040.

BOISEN, SIMONE Danish

CUSTOMER CARE - DANISH

1041.

HORNBAEK, THOR EMIL Danish

CUSTOMER CARE SPECIALIST - DANISH

1042.

MALMROS, JOHANNES WILHELM Swedish

CUSTOMER CARE - SWEDISH

HEIGH IT SOLUTIONS AND SERVICES CORP. Level 26-a Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City

MATSUMURA, KENJI Japanese

POSITION

TONG, CHENGXIN Chinese

LI, JIAJUN Chinese

976.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

1018.

972.

975.

www.businessmirror.com.ph

1054.

CHAE, HYOUNMI South Korean

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

1055.

LI, TAIYONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

1056.

PARK, IN YOUNG South Korean

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

ITECHNO SPECIALIST INC. 7/f Aseana I Bldg. Bradco Avenue Aseana Business Park Tambo Parañaque City

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

1108.

KE, YAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1109.

KO KO OO Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1110.

KONG, LONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1111.

KUANG, CHUNJUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1112.

KUANG, JIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1113.

LAI, YANGYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1114.

LAI, HUIHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1057.

LIN, YUNCHENG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1115.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1058.

LU, NA Chinese

LE THI HOA Vietnamese

1116.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1059.

SHAO, HUANGJIN Chinese

LE VAN HOA Vietnamese

1117.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1060.

TAN, XIAOKUN Chinese

LE VIET CON Vietnamese

1118.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1061.

WU, GUANGCHENG Chinese

LI, HAIFENG Chinese

1119.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1062.

LAI LUONG MINH Vietnamese

LI, HENG Chinese

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1120.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1063.

TIN CHIEU CAM Vietnamese

LI, WANJIE Chinese

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1121.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1064.

VONG MUC SANG Vietnamese

LI, YINLONG Chinese

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1122.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1065.

QU, XINXIN Chinese

LIANG, HUIHAI Chinese

1123.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1066.

TANG, WENFENG Chinese

LIANG, HUAZHEN Chinese

1124.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1067.

WANG, YONGKUN Chinese

LIN, JIAMIN Chinese

1125.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1068.

YU, MEILING Chinese

LIU, XIUJUAN Chinese

1126.

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1069.

ZOU, WEIPING Chinese

LIU, YUTAO Chinese

1127.

MO, MAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1128.

MO, HAORONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1129.

NIE, KUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1130.

NIU, TIANLANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1131.

PHUNG LE BINH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1132.

QI, DONGYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ITOCHU CORPORATION 16/f Oledan Square 6788 Ayala Avenue San Lorenzo Makati City 1070.

SHINOHARA, TAKAO Japanese

GENERAL MANAGER

JAWOON PHILS. INC. Unit 1201a Richville Corporate Tower Alabang-zapote Road Mbp Ayala Alabang Muntinlupa City 1071.

KIM, SANGJOON South Korean

PRODUCT MANAGER

JINDINGYUAN BUSINESS SUPPORT, INC. 3-9/f Filinvest Cyberzone Bldg. A, Bay City Brgy. 076 Pasay City 1072.

CHEN, MINGRONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1133.

RAO, TIANTIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1073.

LEE WEI SEONG Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1134.

REN, YUEQUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1074.

LIN, WENHE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1135.

SAW NAING OO Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1075.

MIAO, BO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1136.

SHA, SONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1076.

SU, GUIFA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1137.

SU, JINGJING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1077.

SU, YONGQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1138.

SUI, JIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1078.

TAI BOON JACK Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1139.

TIAN, CHONGCHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1140.

TRAN NHAT QUANG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

JINSHENGLONG BUSINESS SUPPORT, INC. 3rd, 4th, 5th, 7th, 8th, 9th Flr. Filinvest Bay City Brgy. 076 Pasay City 1079.

CAI, ZIHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1141.

TRUONG VAN DUNG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1080.

CAI, LIQIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1142.

VONG SAU DAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1081.

CHIENG SIU PHUNG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1143.

VONG TO QUYEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1082.

DANG VAN DUC Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1144.

WANG, FAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1083.

DING, CHENGXIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1145.

WANG, YUQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1084.

DING, KUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1146.

WANG, ZIWEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1085.

DO VAN THIEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1147.

WANG, PEIJIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1086.

DU, JIANGUO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1148.

WANG, XUEFENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1087.

FAN, JIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1149.

WEI, QINGSONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1043.

WANG, YOU Chinese

CHINESE TRANSLATOR STAFF

1088.

GAO, SUYUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1150.

WEN, SIMIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1044.

ZHEN, LIANG Chinese

CHINESE TRANSLATOR STAFF

1089.

GAO, LITAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1151.

WU, HUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1090.

GAO, NING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1152.

WU, CHEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1091.

GONG, TAILIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1153.

XIA, WEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1092.

GUI, XIA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1154.

XIANG, WENHUA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1093.

GUO, CHEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1155.

XIANG, JIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1094.

GUO, CHENGJI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1156.

XIE, SHAOAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1095.

HO DINH BAC Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1157.

XU, CHANGYUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1096.

HOKYANTO Indonesian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1158.

XU, JICHANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1097.

HONG, SHANPIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1159.

YANG, LINTING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1098.

HOU, JIAHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1160.

YANG, JINDE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1099.

HU, FANGQIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1161.

YANG, MIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1100.

HUANG, MEIJIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1162.

YU, LUMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1101.

HUANG, XITING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1163.

ZENG, JINTENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1102.

HUANG, YUANMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1164.

ZHANG, DI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1103.

HUANG, YUJIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1165.

ZHANG, CUNLIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1104.

HUANG, HEXIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1166.

ZHANG, YANGYANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1105.

HUANG, SHIWU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1167.

ZHANG, QIANNING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1106.

JIN, PENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1168.

ZHAO, JINXIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1107.

KE, MIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1169.

ZHENG, ZHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HUAWEI TECHNOLOGIES PHILS. INC. U-5302, 53/f Pbcom Tower 6795 Ayala Ave., Cor., V.a. Rufino St. Bel-air Makati City 1045.

PANG, AN Chinese

CHANNEL MANAGER FOR HUAWEI P40 SERIES

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1046.

LI, LONGXING Chinese

DELIVERY AND SERVICE DIRECTOR FOR GLOBE KEY ACCOUNT PROGRAM

YU, QIUXIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1047.

LIN, LI Chinese

FINANCE MANAGER FOR SUBSIDIARY FINANCE MANAGEMENT PROJECT

1007.

ZHANG, KAIZHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

IBON.INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION INC. 3/f Ibon Center #114 Timog Ave. Sacred Heart 4 Quezon City

1008.

ZHAO, SHIHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1009.

TAO, LAOER Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

1010.

YU, ZERONG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

1011.

ZHAO, XU Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

1049.

1012.

HE, KUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ILJIN WALL TECH INC. Unit D, 7/f Suntree Tower Sapphire Road Ortigas Ctr. San Antonio Pasig City

1013.

WANG, RUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

1014.

SU, ZHIXIANG Chinese

MARKETING STAFF MANDARIN SPEAKING

1015.

CHEN, HONGBIN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

1016.

LI, DAHUA Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

1017.

PAN, BO Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT

1048.

POROT, FANNY French

FRENCH COMMUNICATIONS OFFICER FOR CSO PARTNERSHIP FOR DEVELOPMENT EFFECTIVENESS

IKANO (PHILIPPINES), INC. U-17b 17/f, 8 Rockwell Bldg. Hidalgo Drive, Rockwell Center Poblacion Makati City

1050.

PLATZER, GEORG Austrian

KIM, TAEHO South Korean

STORE MANAGER

GENERAL MANAGER

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION ACADEMY OF SAN JUAN INC. 10 Grant Street Greenhills San Juan City 1051.

ZAN, NAIHUI Chinese

CHINESE LANGUAGE SPECIALIST

INTEGRATED SYNERGY CONSTRUCTION CORPORATION 21 Floor Tower 1 Insular Life Corporate Centre, Insular Life Drive, Fcc Alabang Muntinlupa City 1052.

YAMAMOTO, KEIICHI Japanese

CIVIL SENIOR MANAGER


BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO. 1170.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

ZHONG, HAIPING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

JIU ZHOU TECHNOLOGIES INTERNATIONAL, INC. U-2801 28/f Pbcom Tower 6795 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. Belair Makati City

Sunday, December 6, 2020 A15

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

1216.

HUANG, JIAQIANG Chinese

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

1217.

WANG, ZEHUA Chinese

1218.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

1274.

WU, XIAOAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1336.

GENG, WENHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MANDARIN MARKETING SPECIALIST

1275.

XIONG, HUOQUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1337.

LIU, ZHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

YANG, HUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1276.

XIONG, KUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1338.

TAN, BANGQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1219.

LI, ZHUOHAO Chinese

MANDARIN MARKETING SPECIALIST

1277.

XU, MEIFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1339.

XU, SHILONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1220.

MENG, XIN Chinese

MANDARIN OPERATION SPECIALIST

1278.

XU, TAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1340.

LIU, HUICHUAN Chinese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1221.

ZHANG, WEI Chinese

MANDARIN PRODUCT DEVELOPER

1279.

YANG, JIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1341.

VAN NGOC XUYEN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1222.

CHEN, JIALIAN Chinese

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

1280.

YANG, MINGXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1342.

FANG, SHUIJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHEN, ZHUANLONG Chinese

1171.

HUYNH NGOC THACH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1172.

LUU PHU TOAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1173.

NGUYEN CAM CUONG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1174.

NGUYEN DANG KHUONG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1175.

NGUYEN VAN CHINH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1223.

1281.

YANG, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1343.

GAO, YIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1176.

YANG, CHING-CHUN Taiwanese

CHINESE MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

MING YANG MINING CO., INC. 910 Sunset View Tower 2230 Roxas Blvd. Brgy. 013 Pasay City

1282.

YAO, JUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1344.

LYU, QIANGMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1177.

LIU, MENG-TING Taiwanese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1224.

ZHANG, YANZHI Chinese

GENERAL MANAGER

1283.

YUAN, XIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1345.

MA, YE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1178.

HSIEH, YI-TANG A.K.A DICKY Taiwanese

CHINESE MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1225.

LIU, BIN Chinese

MATERIALS MANAGER

1284.

YUAN, YU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1346.

MA, QINGPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1226.

LU, LIANJUN Chinese

MATERIALS MANAGER

1285.

ZHANG, NAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1347.

QIN, SHANGJI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1179.

DAO DUC TRUNG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1227.

LYU, TIEDONG Chinese

MATERIALS MANAGER

1286.

ZHANG, JINWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1348.

REN, XIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1180.

NGUYEN TUAN DUC Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1228.

GAO, HEQI Chinese

SAFETY OFFICER

1287.

ZHANG, HAIBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1349.

WANG, JINLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1181.

PHAM THI TIEU LINH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1229.

LIU, TANGSHUN Chinese

SAFETY OFFICER

1288.

ZHANG, XIONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1350.

WANG, ZUJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1182.

PHAM VAN TIEN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1230.

LIU, YANG Chinese

SAFETY OFFICER

1289.

ZHENG, DENGYAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1351.

WANG, XINXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1183.

VU MANH THANG Vietnamese

MITSUI & CO. (ASIA PACIFIC) PTE. LTD. MANILA BRANCH 36/f Gt Tower International 6813 Ayala Avenue Bel-air Makati City

1290.

ZHOU, FANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1352.

WU, ZHIMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

IWASATO, NAOFUMI Japanese

GENERAL MANAGER CORPORATE PLANNING AND ADMINISTRATION DIVISION

1291.

ZHOU, GUANGDE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1353.

XIA, YUMENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1292.

SUGIANTO Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1354.

XIE, YONGJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

KAWAGUCHI, TAKUYA Japanese

GENERAL MANAGER - MINERAL & METAL RESOURCES AND IRON & STEEL DIVISION

1293.

YANTO Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1355.

ZHANG, XIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1294.

KYAW WIN Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1356.

ZHAO, JIANGSHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1295.

MYINT LWIN Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1357.

ZHOU, RONGJI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1296.

NAN MOWE PHAUNG Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1358.

ZHOU, XIAOSHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1297.

WIN MYINT TUN Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1359.

AUNG THURA Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1298.

WITTHAWINTRAKUL, PURIMPRATCH Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1360.

BONE MYAT PHOO Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1361.

CHEN, YONGQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1362.

CHEN, SHIKANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1363.

CHENG, YITING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1364.

DAI, DONGPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1365.

DENG, YUTING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1366.

DI, HAOKUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1367.

DING, JIANFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1368.

EI EI KHAING Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1369.

EI EI PHYO Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1370.

FAN, XIAOYAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1371.

GENG, QIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1372.

GUO, SONGBAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1373.

HE, HONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1374.

HUANG, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1375.

HUANG, ZHENHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1376.

KONG, XIANGDING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1377.

LEE KYI Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1378.

LI, WENJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1379.

LIU, HUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1380.

MAY HNIN OO Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1381.

NAING TUN Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1382.

NGUYEN VAN BANG Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1383.

OHNMAR AYE Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1384.

SAI KYAW MAIN Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1385.

SAI ZAW MYINT Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1386.

TANG, BIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1387.

WANG, JINTING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1388.

WIN NAING @ AUNG MYINT Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

K.L.M. ROYAL DUTCH AIRLINES 39/f Yuchengco Tower Rcbc Plaza Ayala Cor. Sen. Gil J. Puyat Ave. Bel-air Makati City 1184.

PLUGGE, ARTHUR CORNELIS Dutch

COUNTRY SALES MANAGER

KEPCO PHILIPPINES HOLDINGS, INC. 18 Fl Citibank Tower 8741 Valero/villar Bel-air Makati City 1185.

KO, HYEON GU South Korean

SENIOR MANAGER, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT GROUP

KYMCO PHILIPPINES INC. Tpi Bldg. Mañalac Ave. Cor. Sta. Maria Industrial Estate Bagumbayan Taguig City 1186.

CHEN, MING-TIEN Taiwanese

HR/ADMIN AND FINANCE GENERAL MANAGER/CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER

LG ELECTRONICS PHILIPPINES, INC. 15 Francisco Legaspi St. Maybunga Pasig City 1187.

KWON, YOUNGSOO South Korean

1231.

CHIEF FINANCE OFFICER

LOGICALSOURCE1 CALL CENTER INC. 8/f Sultan Cityland Central Brgy. Highway Hills Mandaluyong City

1232.

MOA CLOUDZONE CORP. 4th-11th Flr. Nexgen Tower C4 Rd. Edsa Ext. Brgy. 076 Pasay City 1233.

CHEN, KANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1234.

CHEN, LINXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1235.

CHEN, ZHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1236.

CHEN, YONGFANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1237.

CHEN, YUANJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1299.

BUI THI HANG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1238.

CHEN, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1300.

DOAN HUU THINH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1239.

CHEN, QIONGLAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1301.

LU THE CUONG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1302.

LUU THI QUYET Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1188.

CHEN, YIQING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1189.

CHEN, SIYONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1240.

1190.

LIN, JINGWEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHU, ZHONGCHAO Chinese

1241.

LY THIN PHOC Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1191.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1303.

JED, JASON Dominican

DONG, HAORAN Chinese

1242.

TRINH THI NHU TRANG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1192.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1304.

LI, NA Chinese

DONG, JUNYI Chinese

1243.

VU THI HUE Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1193.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1305.

MENG, JIE Chinese

GE, FANGMIN Chinese

1244.

CAI, GUOQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1194.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1306.

WENG, DELIN Chinese

HAN, LEI Chinese

1245.

CUI, WENJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1195.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1307.

WU, RONGCHANG Chinese

HAO, WEI Chinese

1246.

HU, XINJIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1308.

JIANG, JIANJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1247.

HU, QIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1309.

LAN, CANYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1248.

HUA, JIDA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1310.

LI, SHISHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1249.

HUANG, RONGLI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1311.

MO, GUOFAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1250.

HUANG, JIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1312.

SONG, HANYING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LUCKY365 CONSULTING LIMITED CORP. U/18a 18/f 18/f Trafalgar Plaza 105 H.v. Dela Costa St. Bel-air Makati City LEE JIE SHI Malaysian

MEDIA ARTIST

1197.

WU, HAO-KUAN Taiwanese

OUTBOUND SALES SUPERVISOR (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

1198.

XIA, XUEYING Chinese

CLIENT SUPPORT OFFICER (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

1251.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1313.

MAGSAYSAY PEOPLE RESOURCES CORP. 520 Magsaysay Bldg. T.m. Kalaw St. 072, Bgy. 666 Ermita Manila

HUANG, XI Chinese

WANG, XU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1252.

HUANG, HAICHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1314.

WANG, ZHE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1196.

1199.

BERTUZZI, FILIPPO Italian

DIRECTOR OF TRAINING FOR HOTEL AND F&B CONSULTANT

1253.

WANG, YIHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1200.

MARKETING AND BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CONSULTANT

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1315.

TABATA, MASAKI Japanese

LI, DAYONG Chinese

1254.

LIANG, HAISHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1316.

DENG, CHENGMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1255.

LIANG, ZHIHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1317.

GAN, YU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1256.

LIU, SHAOZHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1318.

GUO, YANQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1319.

HE, CHENGZHOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

MEGA-WEB TECHNOLOGIES INC. 6,7,8,9,10,11/f Met Live Bldg. Edsa Cor. Macapagal Blvd. Brgy. 076 Pasay City 1201.

HUANG, QINGNA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1202.

LI, QUANLI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1257.

MA, YUHONG Chinese

1203.

XU, HANSHENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1258.

MA, ZHUYONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1320.

HE, PENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1204.

ZHANG, MIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1259.

PENG, TAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1321.

HUANG, HONGMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1205.

CHEN, LINYU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1260.

QIN, LEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1322.

LI, CHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1206.

HE, GUORONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1261.

SHANGGUAN, JIALIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1323.

LI, CHUANGFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1207.

HUANG, DANDAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1262.

SHOU, YING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1324.

LI, MEIZHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1208.

LU, YOULI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1263.

SONG, CHUNXIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1325.

LIN, GUANGFU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1209.

REN, YUANHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1264.

SONG, ZHAOXIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1326.

HE, JIANZHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1210.

SHAN, TONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1265.

SUO, NINA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1327.

LI, BIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1389.

WU, WUQUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1211.

TRAN CONG TRANG Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1266.

TAN, SUIXING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1328.

LI, HAIZHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1390.

XI, LU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1212.

XIE, SUICHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1267.

TAN, YIMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1329.

LI, WEIHAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1391.

XIE, JIACHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1213.

YE, CHAOYUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1268.

WANG, JIALONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1330.

NONG, TAOXU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1392.

XIE, WENLEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1214.

ZONG, HANGFEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1269.

WANG, LING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1331.

TAO, ZHIWU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1393.

YANG, ZHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

METROGLOBAL SERVICES, INC. Unit 2209-2210 Antel Global Corporate Center Julia Vargas Ave., Ortigas Center San Antonio Pasig City

1270.

WANG, MINGBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1332.

YE, JIAQI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1394.

YUAN, ZHUJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1271.

WANG, JIANXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1333.

ZHUO, WEIJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1395.

ZHANG, SHUAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1272.

WANG, JIANQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1334.

CHEN, MUJING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1396.

ZHANG, YONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1273.

WANG, YUNQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1335.

FANG, HAIBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1397.

ZHANG, ZHUOZHUO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1215.

SINGH, DEEPAK KUMAR Indian

RADIO NETWORK OPTIMIZATION CONSULTANT

MINDSCAPE CREATIVES INC. Unit 19-o, Burgundy Corporate Tower 252 Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City


BusinessMirror

A16 Sunday, December 6, 2020 ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

1448.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

www.businessmirror.com.ph

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

HAN, RUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1496.

1449.

HAO, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1450.

HU, ZILONG Chinese

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

ZHANG, XIAOGUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1544.

ZHANG, ZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1497.

ZHANG, HONGJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1545.

ZHAO, XIAOPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1498.

ZHANG, ENYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1546.

ZHAO, WENLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1398.

ZHANG, SHUXIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1399.

ZHOU, MEIHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1400.

FAN, XINYUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1401.

FANG, ZHENZE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1402.

FU, WANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1451.

HU, KAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1499.

ZHAO, YIZHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1547.

ZOU, XIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1403.

GUAN, XIAODONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1452.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1500.

1548.

CHONG KOH HOU Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1404.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHAO, YUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

HUANG, JIAN Chinese

HUANG, YAN Chinese

1405.

HUANG, LI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1453.

HUANG, YANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1501.

ZHAO, XILIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1549.

CHE, CHANGHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1406.

LI, FUJING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1454.

HUANG, YINGYAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1502.

ZHENG, ZHENMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1550.

GUO, CHENYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1407.

LIN, CHAOJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1455.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1503.

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

HUANG, JINFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1408.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HWAN KYIN YOPE Myanmari

1551.

LIN, HONGCAN Chinese

HUANG, PANSHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1456.

JIANG, SHUYAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1504.

KHIN KHIN OO Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1552.

LUO, SHIPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1409.

LIN, XIAOBIN Chinese

1410.

PENG, SHIQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1457.

LI, ZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1505.

KHIN MAR OO Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1553.

PENG, JIWU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1411.

WANG, GUISHUAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1458.

LI, TE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1506.

MOE MOE PHYU Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1554.

QIAN, ZHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1412.

XIA, BING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1459.

LI, YONGJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1507.

NANG KHAM OO Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1555.

SHI, CHANGHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1413.

XIANG, DIANHE Chinese

1414.

XU, WENLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1460.

LIN, SHIREN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1508.

SAI HTOO ZAW LWIN Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1556.

WU, YIXU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1415.

ZHANG, YUNHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1461.

LIN, QIANGHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1509.

THAN MYINT Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1557.

GUAN, HONGLIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1416.

ANTHONY KONG QI HONG Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1462.

LIN, WEICHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1510.

YAN CHWAY LAUK Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1558.

KONG, FENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1417.

HWAY SHAN Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1463.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1511.

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

LAN, NINGZHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1418.

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

YAN MYIN TEL Myanmari

1559.

YAN KWAN LAWY Myanmari

LIU, XU Chinese

HY QUAY HUNG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1464.

LIU, LIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1512.

BUI THI TRUC NHA Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1560.

LI, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1419. 1420.

NGUYEN THI HUONG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1465.

LIU, CHANGLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1513.

LE THE VIET Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1561.

LI, LIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1421.

NGUYEN THI THANH MO Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1466.

LIU, HUAXI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1514.

CHEN, ZHIPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1562.

LI, XIAOFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1422.

NGUYEN THI THANH NGOC Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1467.

LUO, DEYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1515.

CONG, JUNJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1563.

XIE, HUIHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1423.

TRAN TSUI SENH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1468.

MAO, XIAOYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1516.

DENG, HAIYUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1564.

XING, KAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1469.

OU, XIALAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1517.

GAO, SAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1565.

AN, ZHETING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1470.

QIAN, ZHONGKAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1518.

HAO, GUOYING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1566.

CHEN, XIAOJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1471.

QIN, XINLIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1519.

HUI, LINA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1567.

DONG, ZHUANGZHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1472.

QIN, FUJING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1520.

LEI, SHIZE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1568.

GUO, QIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

NEC PHILIPPINES, INC. 7/f 111 Paseo De Roxas Bldg. Paseo De Roxas San Lorenzo Makati City 1424.

KONISHI, YUGO Japanese

ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR, CORPORATE STRATEGY

NEPC POWER CONSTRUCTION CORP. 15/f Cyber One Bldg. Eastwood Cyberpark City Bagumbayan 3 Quezon City 1425.

GUO, LIYING Chinese

ELECTRICAL AND CONTROL MAINTENANCE SYSTEM ANALYST

1426.

JI, HUAWEI Chinese

ELECTRICAL AND CONTROL MAINTENANCE SYSTEM ANALYST

1473.

REN, ZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1521.

LI, YAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1569.

HUANG, JIALIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1427.

LIU, ZHAO Chinese

ELECTRICAL AND CONTROL MAINTENANCE SYSTEM ANALYST

1474.

SHANG, LIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1522.

LI, KEPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1570.

HUANG, BO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1428.

ZHANG, DUHUA Chinese

ELECTRICAL AND CONTROL MAINTENANCE SYSTEM ANALYST

1475.

SHAO, HANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1523.

LI, JINLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1571.

HUANG, XI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1429.

ZHOU, HAIDONG Chinese

MANDARIN OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE RECORDING SYSTEM ANALYST

1476.

SHEN, WENSHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1524.

LI, JIATAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1572.

JIA, CHUNFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1430.

NIE, ZHENDONG Chinese

MANDARIN POWER PLANT BOILER MAINTENANCE SPECIALIST

1477.

SHI, GUOQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1525.

LU, MEIJUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1573.

JIANG, TAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1431.

SUN, JINGXIN Chinese

MANDARIN POWER PLANT BOILER MAINTENANCE SPECIALIST

1478.

SHI, LIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1526.

NIE, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1574.

LEI, YANMEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1432.

ZHANG, XIAOMIN Chinese

MANDARIN POWER PLANT BOILER MAINTENANCE SPECIALIST

1479.

SHU, YULIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1527.

SHI, XIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1575.

LIAO, QIAOCHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1433.

LIU, YANJUN Chinese

MANDARIN STRUCTURAL MAINTENANCE SPECIALIST

1480.

SU, BINGSHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1528.

WANG, YUNXUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1576.

WANG, QIUSHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1434.

SHAO, TIANGANG Chinese

MANDARIN STRUCTURAL MAINTENANCE SPECIALIST

1481.

SU, QISONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1529.

WANG, JING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1577.

WANG, LIJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1435.

ZHANG, HAILIN Chinese

MANDARIN STRUCTURAL MAINTENANCE SPECIALIST

1482.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1530.

1578.

WANG, QINGYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1436.

MANDARIN QUALITY CONTROL INSPECTOR

WEI, HONGJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

ZHANG, BAIJIN Chinese

WANG, HUAJIE Chinese

1483.

WANG, JIAMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1531.

XIONG, BENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1579.

WANG, SIYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1484.

WANG, JINGJIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1532.

XU, XIUXIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1580.

WANG, LICHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1485.

WANG, RUOLAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1533.

YANG, YOUQUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1581.

WU, YICHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1486.

WANG, XIAOXUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1534.

YANG, XIAOQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1582.

XU, YANGKUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1487.

WANG, CAIJIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1535.

YANG, HU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1583.

XU, MUYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1488.

WEI, JINGZHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1536.

YE, MAOWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1584.

XU, ZHONGNAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1489.

WU, YONGXI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1537.

YE, LINQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1585.

YANG, DAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1490.

WU, PEIYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1538.

YIN, LETAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1586.

YANG, LIRONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1491.

XIA, YU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1539.

YIN, LIPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1587.

YE, SHANRU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1492.

XIAO, DONGRONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1540.

YU, YANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1588.

ZHANG, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1493.

XIN, YE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1541.

YUAN, DECHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1589.

ZHOU, FAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1494.

YANG, GUOLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1542.

ZENG, XIANGBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1590.

ZHOU, MINGLIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1495.

ZHANG, HONGYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1543.

ZHANG, HUIJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1591.

ZOU, FANGLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

NEW CROSS CREDIT GATE PH INC. 10-1 One Global Place 5th Cor. 25th St. Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 1437.

TURNBULL, JACK British

HEAD OF TECHNOLOGY

1438.

HUTCHINSON, LIAM British

VP OF PRODUCT

NEW ORIENTAL CLUB88 CORPORATION 1331 Pearl Plaza Bldg. Quirino Ave. Tambo Parañaque City 1439.

CAI, BIHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1440.

CUI, WENQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1441.

DENG, JIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1442.

FAN, YUANYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1443.

GAO, FAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1444.

GONG, ZERUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1445.

GONG, FANYAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1446.

GUAN, QINGCHUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1447.

GUO, HUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE


BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

Sunday, December 6, 2020 A17

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

1592.

CHEN, SULING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1639.

TANG, LI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1684.

QUE, RUIWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1721.

DAI, SHULIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1593.

SHEN, JIANBAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1640.

TAO, YE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1685.

RAO, YINYAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1722.

HUYNH THI NGOC NHI Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1594.

SONG, PAIHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1641.

TIAN, SHUNYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1686.

SHI, SHANGPAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1723.

LE THI NGUYET HUE Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1595.

YANG, YI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1642.

WANG, PENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1687.

SU, JIONGCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1724.

MO, GUANYONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1596.

TEW XHIN HUI Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1643.

WANG, CANGQIONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1688.

WANG, DEYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1725.

NGUYEN THI KIM TUYEN Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1597.

CAI, YING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1644.

WANG, GUODONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1689.

WEI, SIFEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1726.

NGUYEN THI PHUONG Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1598.

CHEN, ZHIXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1645.

WEI, BO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1690.

WU, MAOMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1727.

PHAM THI NGOC BICH Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1599.

CHEN, JUNWU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1646.

WU, ZUODONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1691.

YANG, CHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1728.

TAI, CHENWEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1600.

CHEN, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1647.

WU, TIANCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1692.

ZHENG, LIMAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1729.

CHEN, YUNFEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1601.

DING, XIAOHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1648.

XIAO, GUANGHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

NOKIA SOLUTIONS AND NETWORKS PHILIPPINES, INC. 18/f The Curve Bldg. 32nd St. Cor. 3rd Ave. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

1730.

DAI, YIZHONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1602.

DUAN, CHENGLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1649.

XU, KE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1693.

1731.

WANG, WEILONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1603.

FAN, PANPAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1650.

XU, CHENGCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

NOCMAKATI, INC. 8,9,10,11,12,14,15,16,17,18 & 19 Floors Century Diamond Center Kalayaan Ave. Cor. Salamanca St. Poblacion Makati City

1732.

WANG, ZHIXIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1604.

FANG, HUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1651.

YAN, TINGSONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1694.

FAN, SHAOHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1733.

WEI, LIBO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1605.

FENG, SHANGSHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1652.

YAN, HAITAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1695.

LI, GANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1734.

YANG, HUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1606.

GAO, SHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1653.

YAO, ZHOUJING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1696.

LI, HAOJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1735.

LI, FANGPENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1607.

HU, MINGDAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1654.

YAO, DONGMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1697.

LIU, FEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1736.

LI, HUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1608.

HUANG, CHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1655.

YIN, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1698.

LIU, XIAOFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1737.

ZHANG, ZENGMING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1609.

JIA, KANGKANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1656.

YU, YUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1699.

LIU, YIZHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1738.

MAO, WENQIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1610.

JIANG, SHIGUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1657.

YU, BOAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1700.

XIONG, ZIHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1739.

NGUYEN THI YEN THANH Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1611.

JIANG, PEIYING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1658.

ZHANG, XIAOMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

ONPOINT CORP. Unit Ug-11 Ug/f Cityland 10 Tower 2 154 H.v. Dela Costa Cor. Valero Sts. Bel-air Makati City

1740.

ZHONG, GUOQING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1612.

JIN, HAIFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1659.

ZHANG, WENBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1701.

WANG, YA Chinese

MANDARIN ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT

1741.

FAN, CHAOZONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1613.

LEI, CHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1660.

ZHANG, JINGLI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1702.

YU, HAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1742.

GAO, HUA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1614.

LI, YUNLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1661.

ZHANG, LEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1703.

LI, PU Chinese

MANDARIN OFFICE SUPERVISOR

1743.

MA, SHIBING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1615.

LI, TAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1662.

ZHANG, ZHENGMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

ORBIUM INC. 26/f Robinsons Summit Center 6783 Ayala Ave. Bel-air Makati City

1744.

WANG, RUIMING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1616.

LI, JUNPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1663.

ZHANG, YANGYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1704.

1745.

GAO, QIXUE Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1617.

LIANG, KANGTAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1664.

ZHAO, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1746.

CHEN, XINWEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1618.

LIANG, HAIYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1665.

ZHAO, JIULONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1747.

YE, FUSHENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1619.

LIANG, YONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1666.

ZHENG, JUNZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1620.

LIN, ZHENBIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1667.

ZHOU, JIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1621.

LIN, BINGRONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1668.

ZHOU, YANZHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1622.

LIN, GUIZHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1669.

ZUO, YA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1623.

LIN, QIMENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

NEWBAY INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGY INC. 2/f Mezzanine Tower 1 The Enterprise Center 6766 Ayala Ave. Cor. Paseo De Roxas Makati City

1624.

LIU, HAIKUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1625.

LIU, HUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1626.

LU, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1627.

MA, YU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1628.

PEI, DONGLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1629. 1630.

PENG, CHUNYAN Chinese QIN, JIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1631.

QUAN, HONGSHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1632.

RAO, YANGBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1633.

1634.

1635.

SHEN, QING Chinese SONG, SHENGWEI Chinese SU, RUNHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1637.

SUN, YANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1638.

TANG, HONGPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

WU, WEI Chinese

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

NOCMAKATI, INC. 8,9,10,11,12,14,15,16,17,18 & 19 Floors Century Diamond Center Kalayaan Ave. Cor. Salamanca St. Poblacion Makati City 1671.

1672.

WANG, ZEMING Chinese XU, QIUXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1673.

ZHANG, TAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1674.

ZHU, YIJUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1675.

FAN, JUNBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1676.

HU, HAIYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1677.

KUANG, YULONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1678.

LI, YONGQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1679.

LI, ZIPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1680.

PAN, YANWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

SUN, GANG Chinese

1636.

1670.

NEERAJ Indian

GAUTHAM GIRISH Indian

CONTRACT MANAGER

SENIOR MANAGER

ORION OUTSOURCING SERVICE INC. Unit 1701 17/f The Pearlbank Centre, 146 Valero St. Bel-air Makati City 1705.

LUU TIEU LINH Vietnamese

FINANCE SPECIALIST

PACIFIC SEA BPO SERVICES, INC. 16/f Pbcom Tower 6795 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. Bel-air Makati City

RAISING Y CORPORATION G/f King’s Court 1 Bldg. Chino Roces Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City CHEN, ZHICHAO Chinese

PURCHASER / PURCHASING STAFF

1706.

HARRINGTON, ASHISH Indian

DATA ANALYST OFFICER

1748.

1707.

LEE KOK WAI Malaysian

SENIOR DATA ANALYST EXECUTIVE

RAPOO PRO TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION Unit 8 Robinsons Cybergate Plaza Pioneer Brgy. Barangka Mandaluyong City

PHILIPPINES E-SKY COMMUNICATION INC. U504p-508p Five E-com Ctr. Bld Pacific Drive Ext. Brgy. 076 Pasay City

1749.

ZHOU, MIN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING GRAPHIC DESIGNER

1708.

ZENG, RIJUN Chinese

BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER

REPRISK PHILIPPINES, INC. Unit 20-02, 20th Floor Accralaw Tower 2nd Ave. Cor. 30th St. Crescent Park West Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

1709.

HUANG, XINGHU Chinese

CHINESE TELECOM SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1750.

1710.

PI, GUOZHENG Chinese

CHINESE TELECOM SUPPORT SPECIALIST

RIGHT CHOICE FINANCE CORP. 5e-1 Electra House Bldg. 115-117 Esteban Street San Lorenzo Makati City

1711.

XIONG, BIN Chinese

CHINESE TELECOM SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1751.

PAN, HUIYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1712.

WU, CHANGHONG Chinese

PROJECT CONSULTANT

1752.

LIN, XIUTING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1713.

XIONG, QIU Chinese

PROJECT CONSULTANT

1753.

ZHANG, HANXING Chinese

FINANCE MANAGER

1714.

HUANG, MINHUAN Chinese

TECHNICAL DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

ROCK SPACE, INC. 9th/f Picadilly Star Bldg. 27th St. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

1715.

ZHANG, ZHONGKANG Chinese

TECHNICAL DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1754.

PIONEER INSURANCE & SURETY CORPORATION Pioneer House Bldg. 108 Paseo De Roxas San Lorenzo Makati City 1716.

HU, FLORENCE Chinese

CONSULTANT

PORTAL STEELS INC. B2 Tatalon St. Ugong Valenzuela City 1717.

JIA, BINGBING Chinese

DAAMEN, MITCHELL Dutch

LAI, HAITAO Chinese

SENIOR ESG RESEARCH ANALYST

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

S DIVISION HOLDINGS INC. U-gf A & 2-cd Seibu Tower 24th St. Cor. 6th Ave. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 1755.

TAKASAKI, AI Japanese

SALES ASSISTANT MANAGER

S&P GLOBAL PHILIPPINES INC. G/f Silver City 2 Frontera Drive, Ortigas East Ugong Pasig City SUPERVISOR

PRIME GREAT COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES INC. 3/f To 8/f, Nissan Sucat Zentrum Building 8390 Dr. A Santos Avenue Bf Homes Parañaque City

1756.

LEE, DAHEE South Korean

DATA RESEARCHER I

SECURITY BANK CORPORATION Security Bank Centre Bldg. 6776 Ayala Avenue San Lorenzo Makati City

GOH LU CHIN Malaysian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1757.

BALAJI, BINDIGINAVALE VIJAYAN Indian

SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT AND RETAIL CREDIT RISK MANAGEMENT DIVISION HEAD

1681.

QIN, CHUNHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1718.

1682.

QIN, XINGWANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1719.

LIU, JIAMING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

SKY DRAGON GLOBAL TECHNOLOGIES CORP. # 103 Mezzanine Floor Edsa Mandaluyong City

1683.

QU, CHENGCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1720.

REN, ZHIQIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1758.

MENG, LEI Chinese

CHINESE RESEARCH ANALYST


BusinessMirror

A18 Sunday, December 6, 2020 ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

1759.

XIE, SHOUHAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1806.

1760.

LUO, WEN Chinese

CHINESE RESEARCH ANALYST

SNAKEJOY TECHNOLOGY INC. 15th Floor Unit 1501 Bonifacio Prime Bldg. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

1761.

CHEN, BORONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1807.

1762.

HAN, LUXIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1763.

HUANG, QIAOYING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1808.

YANG, JINFU Chinese

MANDARIN FINANCE ANALYST

1764.

HUANG, JIANING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1809.

CHEN, ZONGHAI Chinese

MANDARIN PRODUCT SUPERVISOR

1765.

JIANG, SHILIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1810.

WANG, ZHIFENG Chinese

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SPECIALIST

1766.

JIANG, HUA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1811.

WU, WENBIN Chinese

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1767.

LI, CONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1812.

LIN, FUQIANG Chinese

MANDARIN WEB DESIGNER

1768.

LU, SHIZHOU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1769.

LU, PENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1770.

MA, LI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1771.

QIN, NING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1772.

SU, SHENGWEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1773.

TONG, YAJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WANG, YUNNA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1775.

WANG, SHICHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1776.

WANG, FENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1774.

1777.

XIE, HUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1778.

YANG, KAIDI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1779.

YU, SONGTAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1780. 1781.

ZHENG, JIANTING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHOU, YUKUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

SKYLUCK CORPORATION #360, Unit 243 Shaw Center Mall Shaw Blvd. Penthouse Shaw Lt. Mandaluyong City 1782.

CHA, SANGJIN South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SUPPORT STAFF

1783.

CHUN, TAENYOUNG South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SUPPORT STAFF

1784.

EOM, TAEWON South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SUPPORT STAFF

1785.

LEE, TAEYANG South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SUPPORT STAFF

POSITION

NO.

KIM, JUNGHYO South Korean

KOREAN TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF

STA. CLARA INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION 2f, Unit 7, 8, & 9 Highway 54 Plaza Edsa Cor Stanford Brgy. Wack Wack Mandaluyong City

WOO PING WAI Malaysian

HUMAN RESOURCE & ADMINISTRATION MANAGER

SPARVA INCORPORATED 7/f Insular Life Bldg. 6781 Ayala Ave., Cor. Paseo De Roxas Bel-air Makati City 1813.

DESI MARTINI Indonesian

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

1814.

RINI APRYANI Indonesian

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

1815.

DEVIN Indonesian

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

1816.

LENNIE CHONG KUAN HUA Malaysian

ACCOUNTS OFFICER

1817.

YANTI Indonesian

ACCOUNTS OFFICER

1818.

EDY GUNAWAN Indonesian

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

1820.

JULI YANTO Indonesian

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

SUSANTO Indonesian

CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

SPEED QUALITY TECH INC. 3/f Eco Plaza Bldg. 2305 Chino Roces Ave. Extn. Magallanes Makati City 1822.

CHEN, LEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1823.

DU, HUA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1824.

CAO, HENGYI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1825.

HSIAO, LI - WEI Taiwanese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1826.

SONG, MENGYUE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1827.

ZHU, LIPING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

CAI, YUE-HAO Taiwanese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1828.

1850.

CONSTRUCTION SPECIALIST FOR EHV SUBSTATION

1851.

BALAKRISHNAN, VARUN Indian

LEAD CIVIL DESIGNER FOR EHV SUBSTATION

SHAH, ANKIT KUMAR Indian

PROJECT COST CONTROLLER

1852.

SUNLIGHT EXPRESS AIRWAYS CORPORATION 10/f Ri-rance Bulding Block 2, Lot 16 Macapagal Avenue Tambo Parañaque City 1853.

1829.

DENG, JUNYOU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1830.

GAO, HANGFEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1831.

QIAN, WEILIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

DHITAL, PRAKASH Nepalese

CAPTAIN

SUNNY DAY 360 MEDIA INC. No.100 M. Concepcion Ave. Buting Pasig City 1854.

YAO, WEIHU Chinese

ADVERTISING PERFORMANCE SPECIALIST

SUNWORLD INDUSTRIAL GROUP CORP. Rm 2510 The Sunview Palace Condo. 1015 Mh Del Pilar St. Cor. Tm Kalaw St. 072, Brgy. 666 Ermita Manila 1855.

PAN, CHAOFAN Chinese

DEHYDRATION SECTION LEADMAN

SUTHERLAND GLOBAL SERVICES PHILIPPINES, INC. 12th Floor Philplans Corporate Center Kalayaan Avenue & Triangle Drive Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 1856.

GARG, AKASH NATH Indian

PRINCIPAL - PROCESS IMPROVEMENT

1857.

KOBAYASHI, KEN Japanese

ASSOCIATE - CS INTERNET

1858.

LEE, HANMIN South Korean

ASSOCIATE - CS INTERNET

SUPERANTS INC. Unit 2802 The Trade And Financial Tower 7th Ave. Cor. 32nd St. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City VU TUAN KHOI Vietnamese

SENIOR CONSULTANT

TATA CONSULTANCY SERVICES (PHILIPPINES) INC. 8th-12th, 14th & 15th Floors Panorama Tower 34th St. Cor. Lane A Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 1860.

1819.

POSITION

AIYANAR, MUTHU RAMALINGAM Indian

1859.

JHONSON TASLIM Indonesian

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

SOUTHERN MOUNTAIN ENTERTAINMENT SOFTWARE CORP. U-901 9/f Bpi-philam Life Makati 6811 Ayala Ave. Bel-air Makati City

1821.

www.businessmirror.com.ph

MARIMUTHU, HARISH KUMAR Indian

SYSTEM ANALYST

TDCX (PH) INC. 21/f-24/f Robinsons Cyberscape Gamma Ruby & Topaz Rds. Ortigas Center San Antonio Pasig City 1861.

ESPINOZA AYALA, CHRISTIAN ALEXANDER Honduran

ONLINE ADVERTISING SPECIALIST - SPANISH

1862.

MARTINEZ GONZALEZ, HUGO EFRAIN Mexican

ONLINE ADVERTISING SPECIALIST

TECSCO GLOBAL SOLUTIONS INC. Flr. No. 2nd-5th, Bldg. No. 2264, Tecsco Tower Bldg. Aurora Blvd. Cor. Edang St., Zone 16 Barangay 149, District 1 Pasay City 1863.

WILLIAM Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

TELCO SERVICES INTERNATIONAL PTY LTD-BRANCH OFFICE 14/f Five E-com Center Bldg. Pacific Drive Ext. Brgy. 076 Pasay City 1864.

STEWART, JESSICA SARAH New Zealander

GROUP MANAGER OPERATIONS

TELEPERFORMANCE GLOBAL SERVICES PHILIPPINES INC. Ground To Fifth Floor Five West Campus, Le Grand Ave. Mckinley West Taguig City 1865.

SAWAI, VRISHALI DEVIDAS Indian

SITE DIRECTOR

TELOQUET OUTSOURCING SERVICES INC. Upper 2/f Unit B 2444-a Burgundy Transpacific Place Taft Ave. 079, Bgy 727 Malate Manila 1866.

HOU, JINXIU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

TELUS INTERNATIONAL PHILIPPINES, INC. Units 23/f, 31st/f - 37th/f Discovery Centre Adb Avenue, Ortigas Center San Antonio Pasig City

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

1886.

TANG, YONGLIANG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1887.

WU, GUANGMING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

TIGER RESORT, LEISURE AND ENTERTAINMENT, INC. Okada Manila, New Seaside Drive Entertainment City Barangay Tambo Parañaque City 1888.

TAM, SHIRLEY PIK KWAN Canadian

SVP, PREMIUM MARKETING

TOPRATED SOLUTION CONSULTANCY INC. Unit 25d Zeta Ii Bldg. 191 Salcedo St. San Lorenzo Makati City 1889.

GUO, LIANG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMINISTRATION MANAGER

TRANSCOSMOS ASIA PHILIPPINES, INC. Units 3201-3205, 32/f One Corporate Center Doña J. Vargas Cor. Meralco Avenues Ortigas Ctr. Pasig City 1890.

IWASAKI, JUN Japanese

DIGITAL EXPERIENCE DIRECTOR

TRIPLE J GO’S CONSTRUCTION AND MACHINERY INC. N 1803 A Vasquez St. Corner Julio Nakpil St. 076, Bgy. 697 Malate Manila 1891.

BI, JIEPENG Chinese

COMMERCIAL MANAGER

UNITELLER FILIPINO, INC. Unit 2403 24/f The Trade And Financial Tower 7th Ave. Cor. 32nd St. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 1892.

TRUONG VAN LANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSOCIATE

UNIVERSAL LEAF PHILIPPINES, INC. U-2405, 24/f Discovery Centre 25 Adb Ave., Ortigas Center San Antonio Pasig City 1893.

DOIG, JEREMY DAVID South African

DIRECTOR FOR BROADLEAF CROP PRODUCTION

VAN GOGH BUSINESS PROCESS OUTSOURCING INC. Starmall Las Piñas It Hub Alabang-zapote Rd. Cor. C.v. Starr Ave. Pamplona Dos Las Piñas City 1894.

DING, FUQIANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1895.

LI, JINLONG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1896.

LIU, HAO Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1897.

WANG, JINCHENG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1898.

YANG, JIANWEI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1899.

ZHANG, XILIANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1900.

ZHAO, LEI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1901.

ZHOU, XIAOGUANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1902.

WANG, XIAOJING Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1903.

YU, XINGQUAN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1904.

CHEN, XIUMEI Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1905.

FU, MUSEN Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1906.

HUANG, XINLONG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1907.

HUANG, DAN Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1908.

JIANG, XIAOLONG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1909.

LIN, JIAHE Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1910.

SU, MINGFU Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1911.

WANG, YAWEI Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1912.

WU, CHON KIT Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1913.

WU, JIAYUE Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1914.

YI, YINGMING Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1915.

GUO, XUYAN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1916.

HU, LIFANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1917.

LI, HUIYAO Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1918.

LIU, GUIXIAN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1919.

XIA, YINGJIAN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1920.

ZHENG, LINA Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1786.

KONG, SUNGPEAL South Korean

KOREAN MARKETING CONSULTANT

1787.

LEE, HYEONHO South Korean

KOREAN MARKETING CONSULTANT

1788.

KIM, JUYOUNG South Korean

KOREAN TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF

1789.

HA, YOUNG JO South Korean

KOREAN MARKETING CONSULTANT

1790.

LEE, DEOKHEE South Korean

KOREAN RESEARCH ANALYST

1791.

HAN (SPOUSE OF JANG), MIRAN South Korean

KOREAN TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF

1792.

JEON, CHANHO South Korean

KOREAN TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF

1836.

DIEP TRI VINH Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1870.

CLIENT RELATIONS MANAGER

1921.

ARR CHIN Myanmari

CHINESE SPEAKING TRANSLATOR

1793.

KANG, HYOJIN South Korean

KOREAN TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF

1837.

DINH XUAN THANG Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1922.

CHEN, JIALAN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1794.

LEE, DONGHYUN South Korean

KOREAN TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF

TIAN XIA TECHNOLOGIES INTERNATIONAL, INC. 9/f Pbcom Tower 6795 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. Bel-air Makati City

1838.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1871.

LAI, BO-YE Taiwanese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1923.

LIN, LIXING Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1795.

SHIN, GUKTAE South Korean

KOREAN TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF

HOANG THI PHONG LAN Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1872.

1839.

LI, HUI Chinese

PHAM VAN LUONG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1924.

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1873.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1840.

LIU, BING Chinese

CHEN, LI-JEN Taiwanese

QU, LIANGCHENG Chinese

1874.

JIANG, CHANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1925.

TANG, LONG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1841.

LUO, CHI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1875.

ZHENG, XIAOHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1926.

WANG, ZHENG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1842.

NIN TIEN HAO Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1876.

DUONG HUU HUNG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1927.

ZHOU, ZHISHENG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1928.

HAN, SHUAI Chinese

QA (QUALITY ASSURANCE) SPECIALIST

1867.

AZANG AMBA, LYDIE NIKITA Cameroonian

FRENCH OPERATIONS CSR II

1868.

MOUNDZELE, AIME YANNICK STEPHANE Congolese

FRENCH OPERATIONS CSR II

QIU, LILI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1833.

XU, YING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

THE JIANGSU MUYANG GROUP CO., LTD.-PHILIPPINE REPRESENTATIVE OFFICE Unit 2005, 20/f Jollibee Plaza Cond. Don F. Ortigas Jr. Rd. Ortigas Ctr. San Antonio Pasig City

1834.

YU, CHANG-YAO Taiwanese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1869.

1832.

1835.

COONG MY LINH Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

JU, GUANLIANG Chinese

PROJECT SPECIALIST

THE PENBROTHERS INTERNATIONAL INC. 6/f Opl Bldg. 100 C. Palanca Cor. Dela Rosa & Gil Sts. San Lorenzo Makati City HO BOON KANG a.k.a. HE WENKANG Singaporean

CHOI, SUNGHYEOK South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SUPPORT STAFF

1797.

PARK, JINSUNG South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SUPPORT STAFF

1798.

KWAK, EUNSEON South Korean

KOREAN EXECUTIVE SECRETARY

1799.

LEE, DONGHOON South Korean

KOREAN MARKETING CONSULTANT

1843.

TRINH KIET Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1877.

LE THI HONG THUY Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

KOREAN MARKETING CONSULTANT

1844.

WANG, SHUANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1878.

1800.

YOON, JUNSIK South Korean

LE THI THANH HUYEN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1845.

WANG, TIANYI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1879.

LUONG NGOC MAI Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1846.

WANG, JIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1880.

NGUYEN VAN MANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1847.

XUE, ZHIZHI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1881.

NGUYEN VAN TUAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1882.

CHEN, JUNYU Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1883.

CHEN, KAI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1884.

JIANG, HANG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1885.

LI, SHIJIE Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

1796.

1801.

KIM, HYEONU South Korean

KOREAN RESEARCH ANALYST

1802.

KIM, MINKUK South Korean

KOREAN RESEARCH ANALYST

1803.

JUNG, OHSUNG South Korean

KOREAN TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF

1848.

SS COMMERCIAL, INC. Sew #5 Sanford Compound Km. 14 Edison Ave. Sun Valley Parañaque City

1804.

KIM, JINHWAN South Korean

KOREAN TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF

1805.

KIM, SEUNG RI South Korean

KOREAN TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF

1849.

YEH, HUAN-CHI Taiwanese

CHANDWANI, HITESH Indian

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

AREA SALES MANAGER

*Date Generated: Sept 18 to Sept 29, 2020

Any person in the Philippines who is competent, able and willing to perform the services for which the foreign national is desired may file an objection at DOLE-NCR Regional Office located at DOLE-NCR Building, 967 Maligaya St., Malate Manila, within 30 days after this publication. Please inform DOLE-NCR if you have any information on criminal offense committed by the foreign nationals.

ATTY. SARAH BUENA S. MIRASOL REGIONAL DIRECTOR



2

BusinessMirror DECE MBER 6, 2020 | soundstrip.businessmirror@gmail.com

YOUR MUSI

SoundSampler by Tony M. Maghirang

ADIOS, JAMIR | Legacy of Slapshock’s fallen frontman lives on ‘W

Publisher

: T. Anthony C. Cabangon

Editor-In-Chief

: Lourdes M. Fernandez

Concept

: Aldwin M. Tolosa

Y2Z Editor

: Jt Nisay

SoundStrip Editor

: Edwin P. Sallan

Group Creative Director : Eduardo A. Davad Graphic Designers Contributing Writers

Columnists

: Niggel Figueroa Anabelle O. Flores : Tony M. Maghirang, Rick Olivares, Darwin Fernandez, Leony Garcia, Stephanie Joy Ching Pauline Joy M. Gutierrez : Kaye VillagomezLosorata Annie S. Alejo

Photographers

: Bernard P. Testa Nonie Reyes

Y2Z & SOUNDSTRIP are published and distributed free every Sunday by the Philippine Business Daily Mirror Publishing Inc. as a project of the

The Philippine Business Mirror Publishing, Inc., with offices on the 3rd Floor of Dominga Building III 2113 Chino Roces Avenue corner Dela Rosa Street, Makati City, Philippines. Tel. Nos. (Editorial) 817-9467; 813-0725. Fax line: 813-7025 Advertising Sales: 893-2019; 817-1351,817-2807. Circulation: 893-1662; 814-0134 to 36. www.businessmirror.com.ph

E will survive/We will never die’ - Slapshock Jamir Garcia wrote those words for the title track of his nu metal band Slapshock’s “Night Owls” EP released in 2014. He did not live long enough to see his dream of deathlessness come true. On November 26, Jamir was found dead at his aunt’s home in Quezon City. The authorities suspect suicide. With his untimely passing at the still tender age of 42, Jamir, Slapshock’s chief songwriter and lead singer, will be remembered and remain immortalized in the hearts of his loved ones and in the songs he composed to mass popularity over the past two decades. I first saw Jamir fronting Slapshock sometime in 1998 in an up-and-coming rap metal band showcase at the Music Museum. Slapshock was the last band to show their original stuff and there was Jamir strutting about the stage in rap’s standard live gig apparel – sando, jeans and rubber shoes. It was a memorable performance because the crack band sure knew how to rock hard, and Jamir, with his gangly frame and warm personality, was a magnetic frontman. He had the moves of a future rock star and he certainly spoke the language of a seasoned lead singer beguiling the audience with his witty stage patter and the way he introduced each song. A year later, Slapshock released their debut album titled “4th Degree Burn” and while the record featured a sonic affinity to foreign nu metal bands such as Korn and Limp Bizkit, chief lyricist Jamir Garcia roared and spewed lines closer to Rage Against the Machine. Most memorable track, “Agent Orange” concluded with these fiery anti-authoritarian lines: “Save the fuckin day like yo master kojak As the clock tigiditac you be runnin’ like a maniac

You be talking shit up Well I just think you suck”

By their sophomore release, the band nailed a template for their own sound—an eclectic mix of raging rockers and emotive slow numbers. It’s the melodies and hooks though that would allow them to straddle the shifty divide between pop fans and rock freaks, including punks and metalheads. Jamir also found his gift to write intense lyrics and poignant love songs in the same album. His fine songwriting skills thread through “Swallow” to “Anino Mo” and “Luha.” His poignant lyrics hit the heart as hard and loud as the “Fuck you” and “Shit” scattered around the band’s extensive discography and raucous live performances. In the ensuing years, I would write about the band for various publications and review their latest recordings, which never fail to impress the ageing metal head in me. I remember the occasional interviews to be fun as Jamir and the other band members would usually talk about the NBA and computer games in between my questions. I am now particularly reminded of a time when the group animatedly discussed a new studio they were building somewhere in

Pag-asa, Quezon City. I never got around to visiting the studio as I had gone back to more mundane occupations than freelancing for rock and roll. My last writing assignment featuring Slapshock was a review of their 2017 album titled “Atake!” I wrote on the very pages of Business Mirror’s Soundstrip: “As the world turns and fresh noise spews forth from the scrap heap, the proud traditionalists in Slapshock refuse to bend to the call of doom, death or black metal eruptions. Twenty years on, the five-man band continues to wipe out the competition with their “oldschool” take on thrash metal.” Early this year, the band released a new single; “Sana Pag Gising” leading to a new album. Its chorus goes: “Sana pag gising bumalik sa dati ang lahat Sana pag mulat, ikaw ay kasama ko” It’s a sad coda to a life welllived and well-loved. I would rather think now that with Jamir up there, the great beyond has become a noisier, louder final resting place for immortal souls. Till we see you again, dude!

Photos of Jamir Garcia by Bart Manoguid from Slapshock’s performance in Muziklaban 2015


IC

soundstrip.businessmirror@gmail.com | DECE MBER 6, 2020

3

BUSINESS

PEACE, LOVE AND MUSIC Celebrating the life of Jamir Garcia

PHOTO of Jamir Garcia courtesy of Team Manila

‘G

By A Member of the Slap Army

OD exists 360 degrees’ – “Agent Orange” by Slapshock. 4th Degree Burn. 1999.

A hush settles over the crowd at a concert whenever heavy metal kings Slapshock were about to go on. Concertgoers who were hanging out at the back would jostle for their space at the very front in anticipation. Backstage, even musicians from other bands would stare up at the stage, waiting for them to start. For the past 23 years, Slapshock has been the biggest draw at any metal or rock concert, here in Manila and all over the Philippines. To be a successful metal band in the Philippines, with decades of touring and performing under its belt, seems like an impossible notion - it somewhat defies logic, what with the country’s tendency to support lighter musical fare. But there Slapshock were. Lording it over the rock music scene since the early 2000s like the kings they had become. Truth be told, fans were drawn in by one thing - one man in fact. The band’s music is amazing, heavy and loud and brash, and knows just how to delight mu-

sic fans. Each of the members brought something that made this musical quintet so popular. However, it cannot be denied that everyone in the crowd and even backstage was there for this man. He approaches the stage as if like a magnet. People gravitate towards him, wanting to shake his hand, and patting his back. Everyone paid their respects. It wasn’t hard to imagine why he would need his very own Bouncers or security personnel as the years went by. He was THE main attraction. Jamir Garcia. “Idol” people would call him. Rock Star, Rock God. The GOAT. But most importantly, one of the best human beings to walk this earth. “Bawat lungkot bumabalot ang iyong tuwa. Napapawi ang lumbay, dahil sa’yo, dahil sa’yo.” – “Misterio” by Slapshock. Novena. 2004. You didn’t have to be Jamir’s friend to know he was a good person. He always wanted the audience to have a good time. He gave it his all onstage, to give the fans

what they want. When you attened one of his shows, you could expect a total rock experience for everyone. Drenched in sweat at the end, screaming at the top of his lungs, jumping up and down to rev up the energy. He would call out fans who made banners declaring their names and location. “Slap Army ng Rizal” “Carino Brutal ng Caloocan” and “Misterio ng Camarin” were just some of the names fans painted on home made banners, just to get a moment of his time onstage. And he would call them all out. He admonished everyone to take care of each other during the show. Slapshock’s music drove people in a frenzy, and more often than not, someone would get hurt. He didn’t want that. He wanted everyone to go crazy and move to the music, but never forget the person beside them. One time a fellow musician jumped off the stage into the crowd and lost a shoe. Jamir asked the crowd to throw the shoe back onstage. About 10 pairs of shoes went flying. None of them was the right one though. They just really wanted to do what Jamir asked. Here was this King of the stage who evoked a strong and angry persona. But he was loved by his crew. Strong onstage and gentle in real life, he was called. I had never seen anyone go onstage, have a loose shoelace, step on a speaker in the front, and have a muscle-bound Bouncer tie his shoelace gently and diligently. Many dressed up like Jamir. The baggy pants, the colored hair, and the tattoos. Years later that would turn into red pants, white shirts and chains. He made trucker hats work - only he could do that. He was a trendsetter not only in music but also in swagger. And fans went crazy for it. I have seen many tattoos of famous persons on other people’s bodies. But these were mostly of global giants like Elvis or Marilyn Monroe. Locally, I can confidently say Jamir’s face has been tattooed on the bodies of fans more times than any other celebrity or musician, or perhaps anyone since. He was Jamir, he went by a one-name moniker, he was THE man. “Ito and pagkakataon, upang galit ay itapon. Wala ng pipigil ngayon, umpisa na ang pag-ahon.” “Ngayon Na” by Slapshock. Kinse Kalibre. 2011. Such has been the success of Slapshock that they have been welcomed by the music industry not only here but all around the world. If the idea of a successful metal band in the Philippines was hard enough to imagine, more so a tour-

ing metal band. Each week Slapshock would be off in a different locale in the Philippines, attracting thousands in provinces were there was only one central square. But they also got out to other countries like the US, Australia, Qatar, to name a few to share their music. And were praised for it. Slapshock were the first Asian band to play in the Dubai Rock Fest, alongside such giants as Korn, Killswitch Engage and Muse. They were unstoppable. They were admired for their unbelievable success, even scoring two long-standing brand sponsorships with a beer brand and a clothing brand. The success of the band was only eclipsed by the growing love for Jamir as he worked with the likes of apl.de.ap, Southeast Asia band Project E.A.R. and being front and center of large billboards in Metro Manila. Even mainstream showbiz stars could not claim to such feats. That this heavily tattooed man would be so admired could be attributed to his persona; and he was nothing like his physical image projected. Interviews showed him as a thoughtful, funny and charismatic person. And fans just gobbled up his every article, video and more recently social media post. It seemed nothing could stand in Slapshock and Jamir’s way. They were unbreakable, unshakeable. They were brothers. Alas, the events of recent days have shown that not everything lasts forever however much we want them to. “Iniwan ka sa pag idlip. Ako’y di na magbabalik. Paalam na sayo.” “Adios” by Slapshock. Silence. 2006. In the afternoon of November 26, 2020, fans and national media were stunned by the news. Jamir Garcia, 42, beloved frontman of the band Slapshock, had left this earth. He leaves behind family, friends, and millions of fans who loved him dearly. He also leaves behind a strong legacy, perhaps stronger than it has ever been despite the challenges this pandemic year has brought the music industry. Everyone who knew him is heartbroken, the pieces of which may never heal or be replaced by anyone else. In loving memory of Vladimir “Jamir” S. Garcia. As he says at the end of every event, may Peace, Love and Music rule your lives. To Jamir: “Pagtila ng ulan, Ika’y di na luluha. Pagsikat ng araw, Ika’y di na luluha.” “Pagtila” by Slapshock. Silence. 2006.



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