BusinessMirror December 20, 2020

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Filipinos cling to faith, positivity during pandemic, as millions anxiously await first vaccine rollout

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By Erica Torres

AITH, positive outlook and cure from natural medicines emerged as survival guides of Filipinos during the Covid-19 pandemic, according to the sentiment analysis of a research firm.

Their sentiments provide a counterpoint to the mixed feelings people have for the vaccines being touted as the possible end to the pandemic, but also fraught with risks from side effects and unforeseen dangers. On Friday morning, radio reports cited the order of Manila City Hall for the police to track continuing information that unauthorized immunizations, allegedly involving Chinese-made vaccines, were being done in the Binondo district. The swirl of stories paints the double-edged promise posed by vaccines—a possible, early cure or shield against Covid-19, but also a solution fraught with risk for the early users. The public discussions on social-media platform Facebook, where Filipinos are engaged for more than nine hours a day, showed

apprehensions on the promises of anti-Covid-19 vaccines, even as the world grapples to find scientific solutions to the pandemic. “The public suspicion against the Covid vaccine is starting to be framed as an opportunity for the hospital to make money, generating potential ripple for upcoming vaccination, and Covid-related economic and public-order issues,” according to the analysis of BluPrint.PH on Filipino sentiments on health during the pandemic. BluPrint.PH with its Singapore-based partner on data mining and artificial intelligence analyzed 145 million native posts from September to November on how the Filipinos value their health during the pandemic. The data were gathered from the readers’ engagement based on likes, shares and complexity of comments. Continued on A2

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.0590

THE traditional belen is not spared from strict health protocols, as seen in this installation at the National Shrine of Our Mother of Perpetual Help, also known as the Baclaran Church, on Wednesday, December 16, 2020. BERNARD TESTA

n JAPAN 0.4661 n UK 65.2930 n HK 6.1996 n CHINA 7.3541 n SINGAPORE 36.2627 n AUSTRALIA 36.6258 n EU 58.9684 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.8106

Source: BSP (December 18, 2020)

NARUEMON MONDEE | DREAMSTIME.COM

SCIENCE FOR CURE, BUT ALSO, FAITH


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Health officials track safety as Covid-19 vaccines roll out

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By Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press

S Covid-19 vaccinations roll out to more and more people, health authorities are keeping close watch for any unexpected side effects.

On Tuesday, a health worker in Alaska suffered a severe allergic reaction after receiving the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine. Doctors already knew to be on the lookout after Britain reported two similar cases last week. In the US, vaccine recipients are supposed to hang around after the injection in case signs of an allergy appear and they need immediate treatment—exactly what happened when the health worker in Juneau became flushed and short of breath 10 minutes after the shot. Allergies are always a question with a new medical product, but monitoring Covid-19 vaccines for any other, unexpected side effects is a bigger challenge than usual. It’s not just because so many people

need to be vaccinated over the next year. Never before have so many vaccines made in different ways converged at the same time—and it’s possible that one shot option will come with different side effects than another. The first vaccine beginning widespread use in the US and many Western countries, made by Pfizer Inc. and Germany’s BioNTech, and a second option expected soon from competitor Moderna Inc. both are made the same way. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) says huge studies of each have uncovered no major safety risks. But the allergy concern “points out again the importance of real-time safety monitoring,” said Dr. Jesse Goodman of

“Balancing any potential risks with the benefits the vaccine provides in the pandemic is an ongoing process.”—CDC’s Dr. Jay Butler

CATALINA GONZALEZ-MARQUES, an emergency medical physician, receives the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, on Wednesday, December 16, 2020, in Boston. AP

Georgetown University, a former FDA vaccine chief. And authorities have multiple ways of tracking how people fare as these Covid-19 vaccines, and hopefully additional ones in coming months, get into more arms.

HOW WILL I FEEL AFTER VACCINATION?

THE Covid-19 Pfizer BioNTech vaccination waits to be administered at the Gwinnett, Rockdale and Newton County Health Department’s district office in Lawrenceville, Georgia, Wednesday, December 16, 2020. ALYSSA POINTER/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION VIA AP

GETTING either the Pfizer-BioNTech shot or the Moderna version can cause some temporary discomfort, just like many vaccines do. In addition to a sore arm, people can experience a fever and some flu-like symptoms—fatigue, aches, chills, headache. They last about a day, sometimes bad enough that recipients miss work, and are more common after the second dose and in younger people. These reactions are a sign that the immune system is revving up. Covid-19 vaccines tend to cause more of those reactions than a flu shot, about what people experience with shingles vaccinations. But some are similar to early coronavirus symptoms, one reason hospitals are staggering when their employees get vaccinated.

WHAT ABOUT SERIOUS RISKS?

THE FDA found no serious side effects in the tens of thousands enrolled in studies of the two vaccines. Still, problems so rare they don’t occur in even very large studies sometimes crop up when a vaccine is used more widely and without the stringent rules of a clinical trial. The first allergy reports from England were in people with a history of serious allergies, and British authorities warned those with severe prior experiences to hold off vaccination as they determine what ingredient might be a problem. US health authorities are giving more nuanced advice. People always are asked about allergies before vaccinations, and instructions for the Pfizer-BioNTech shot say avoid it if you’re severely allergic to one of its ingredients or had a severe reaction to a prior dose. Health workers can go over the ingredient list. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advises people to stick around for 15 minutes after vaccination, and those

Science for cure, but also, faith Continued from A1

“The sentiment analysis results warrant an open discussion on the efficacy of anti-Covid-19 vaccines developed by multinational pharmaceutical companies and concerns over corruption issues that undercut the messaging on the medical solution to the global pandemic,” said Eero Brillantes, Chief Executive Officer of BluPrint. PH research firm. He said Filipinos are still wary on anti-Covid-19 vaccines and possible corruption in the purchase of anti-Covid-19 vaccines because of the recent corruption issues on PhilHealth funds and the anti-dengue vaccine Dengvaxia, which was allegedly linked to deaths of children. Despite health concerns during the pandemic, Filipinos express

sentiments against Western treatment and the natural medicines. Brillantes said the popularity of online Masses and the socialmedia posts of the Quiapo church also figured in the sentiment analysis, reflecting the strong Catholic faith of many Filipinos. “On the issue of health, public support for the government’s plan to get as much as 70 percent of the population vaccinated against Covid-19 is hampered by counter-stories of natural cures or treatment,” Brillantes said. The BluPrint.PH research shows that Filipinos rely on reputable news agencies both online and television for information on how they and their families can stay healthy during the Covid-19 pandemic. However, most Filipinos are also

influenced by social-media posts of individuals and organizations. The Department of Health and the World Health Organization (WHO) only ranked 3rd and 4th in the Top Social Influencers on health issues, according to BluPrint.PH. Medical personalities are among the most influential to Filipinos during the pandemic. Dr. Willie Ong and his wife Liza, who have 15 million followers, ranked first and fifth in the top social influencers, while Dr. Gary Sy’s Gabay sa Kalusugan Facebook page ranked sixth. Local government leaders who post about Covid-19 issues are also influencing the public, with Manila Mayor Isko Moreno on seventh in the top social-media influencers followed by the Facebook pages of

Organic Living (8th) and My Mother Mary (9th). WHO cited step-by-step procedures before a vaccine on Covid-19 is used in an individual country. It said anti-Covid-19 vaccines must be proven safe and effective in large (Phase III) clinical trials. Also, it added that large clinical trials of Covid-19 vaccine candidates have reported encouraging preliminary results, and many other potential vaccines are being developed. For a vaccine on Covid-19 to be used, there must be a series of independent reviews of the efficacy and safety evidence, including regulatory review and approval in the country where the vaccine is manufactured, before WHO considers a vaccine product for prequalification. Part of this process also involves the Global Advisory Com-

with a history of other allergies for 30 minutes, so they can be treated immediately if they have a reaction. The Alaska health worker, who doctors said had no history of allergies, was following that advice and got prompt care for a particularly severe reaction called anaphylaxis. She has recovered after a night of observation in the hospital—but won’t be allowed a second vaccine dose. Alaska doctors alerted US authorities, who will continue the monitoring required to tell just how common this kind of reaction really is. That will be especially important as enough vaccine arrives for injections to be given outside of health care settings that have lots of experience handling this type of reaction. “Balancing any potential risks with the benefits the vaccine provides in the pandemic is an ongoing process,” CDC’s Dr. Jay Butler cautioned Wednesday. THE challenge is telling whether the vaccine caused a health problem or if it’s coincidence. Don’t

jump to conclusions that there’s a connection, health authorities stress. The way to tell: Comparing any reports of possible side effects with data showing how often that same condition occurs routinely in the population. The government has multiple ways to do that. Doctors are required to report any patient problems. But the FDA is scrutinizing massive databases of insurance claims for early red flags that any health problems are occurring more often in the newly vaccinated than everyone else. On its list to check is Bell’s palsy, a temporary facial paralysis that occurred in a handful of people in both vaccine studies. The FDA said it’s probably coincidence, but will track to be sure. Vaccine recipients can help with the extra safety tracking. Called “v-safe,” the program run by CDC automatically sends a daily text the first week after each vaccine dose asking how people feel, and then a weekly text for the next five weeks. Any responses that suggest concern prompt a phone call for further information.

mittee on Vaccine Safety, it added. The evidence must also be reviewed for the purpose of policy recommendations on how the vaccines should be used. The WHO then gathers an external panel of experts called the Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (SAGE) to analyze the results from clinical trials, along with evidence on the disease, age groups affected, risk factors for disease, and other information. The panel then recommends whether and how the vaccines should be used. Officials in individual countries decide whether to approve the vaccines for national use and develop policies for how to use the vaccines in their country based on the WHO recommendations. The vaccines must be manu-

factured in large quantities, which is a major and unprecedented challenge—all the while continuing to produce all the other important life-saving vaccines already in use. As a final step, all approved vaccines will require distribution through a complex logistical process, with rigorous stock management and temperature control. National Task Force (NTF) Against Covid-19 chief implementer and vaccine czar Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. said the full rollout of anti-Covid-19 vaccines can be made between next year until 2022. While countries have already been testing anti-Covid-19 vaccines, Filipinos remain trapped in a critical debate whether the vaccines are enough to contain the pandemic that has resulted in more than 1.5 million deaths globally.

WHAT IF OTHER RISKS CROP UP?


www.businessmirror.com.ph • Editor: Angel R. Calso

The World BusinessMirror

Sunday, December 20, 2020

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In a year dominated by pandemic, many other global dramas unfurled By David Crary

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Corn is harvested with a combine in Princeton, Illinois. Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

Without clearing any new farmland, we could feed two Earths’ worth of people

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y the end of this year, 270 million people could be living in famine conditions, according to the United Nations World Food Programme, up from an already staggering 149 million before Covid-19. Add in the disruptive effects of climate change and our planet’s ever-increasing population, and we’re looking at difficult times ahead. By 2050—the year when a growing list of nations aim to have zeroed out their contributions to climate change—the UN projects the global population will be 9.7 billion, on its way to topping out at 11 billion in 2100. The pressure to produce more food, or at least to make more money from agriculture, is driving nations to clear forests and wetlands for farms and divert scant freshwater to grow crops in the desert. But is that really necessary? Could we increase the food supply while also protecting precious wild resources? Bloomberg Green embarked on a thought experiment: Given the number of people on Earth and the amount each one typically eats, could we feed them all using just our existing agricultural infrastructure? The answer turned out to be yes—and then some. Hypothetically, at least, we could feed the population of two Earths without clearing a single new acre of land. Here’s how we’d get there. There are around 7.8 billion people on the planet now, and each needs about 1.4 kilograms of food on average per day, not including water. That means we require about 3.7 billion metric tons of food a year to feed everyone. At the moment, the world produces about 4 billion metric tons of food per year—but about 1.3 billion tons go to waste, according to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). One international study led by researchers from the University of Edinburgh put that number even higher, suggesting that as much as 44 percent of agricultural production is never consumed. Developing nations waste as much food as developed ones— what’s different is how it’s wasted. In rich countries, more than 40 percent of the losses occur at the retail and consumer levels. While some are trying to limit those losses by diverting expiring groceries to the poor, safety regulations often leave restaurants with little choice but to discard uneaten food. In poorer countries, where households waste far less, the UN estimates that more than 40 percent of crop losses occur between the fields and store shelves. In India, for example, some of the biggest losses occur during the harvest itself, and fresh produce often rots on the way to market because of transportation delays and a lack of refrigeration. Research by Esri, a global geographic data supplier, suggests that if we factor in wasted potential from illused agricultural land, then only 30 percent to 50 percent of what we could grow ends up in our stomachs. Most of the potential gains in production would come from farming the land we have more efficiently, through mechanization, better seeds and crop choices, and improved irrigation. Some waste and inefficiency is inevitable— poor harvests, pests, bad weather, and logistical difficulties are just functions of an imperfect system. But—in a perfect world, using Esri’s estimate, along with estimates of food waste from the UN and others—we could supply 9

billion metric tons of food a year, or 2.4 times as much as we’d need to feed every person on the planet. It’s possible to increase the world’s food supply without relying on improved efficiency or reduced waste. According to research cited by the UN, 2.2 billion acres of degraded former farmland could be restored through more responsible use of fertilizer and irrigation. Some of that land would be used for reforestation, but even so, the rest could produce about 500 million tons of food annually. Better eating habits cou ld also help. Research from Italy suggests that as much as 140 million metric tons of excess food—enough to feed more than 270,000 people—gets consumed each year, leading to obesity and chronic health problems such as high blood pressure and Type 2 diabetes. (Getting that food to the undernourished, of course, would be a whole other matter, and colossally complicated.) Not all edible crops are destined for the food shelf—almost 600 million hectares of land is used to grow crops for ethanol, for instance. That means vast quantities of corn, wheat, rice, sorghum, sugar cane, cassava, and sugar beets are going into cars’ fuel tanks instead of people’s mouths. The move toward electric and hydrogen-powered vehicles could take a significant chunk out of this market. If all of that land were converted back to food production—a big assumption, but go with it—we could feed 280 million more people, according to one study from the University of Virginia. Finally, there’s the food we grow to feed the animals we eat. Almost half the grain in the world goes to feed livestock, according to the UN. Animal husbandry is an ancient part of many cultures; livestock are used to produce other things besides meat, such as wool and dairy products; and many cattle, especially in developing nations, consume pasture or vegetable matter not eaten by humans. Still, reducing meat consumption by half could free up a quarter of the world’s grain supply for humans. Any number of combinations of the actions described here would put global food output well above the 7.4 billion metric tons needed to feed almost 16 billion people. Of course, these are just backof-the-envelope ca lcu lations. Politics, economics, culture, and commerce all play major parts in development and trade, ensuring that no agricultural system will ever be optimal. But even with more realistic targets for reducing waste, reclaiming lost farmland, and redistributing our food supply, we have more than enough land to take care of a growing global family. That’s not the only benefit that could come from better agricultural management. Ruminant animals alone—e.g., sheep, goats, and cows—account for at least 2.5 percent of global greenhouse gas production; eating less of them means raising fewer of them, so emissions would shrink. Meanwhile, the UN estimates that restoring carbon and nutrients to degraded soil for cultivation would cost a relatively reasonable $300 billion and suck up the equivalent of all our carbon emissions for the next two decades, buying us precious time to bring the rest of the global economy in line with net-zero. Bloomberg News

AP National Writer

ot since World War II has a single phenomenon dominated the news worldwide as the Covid-19 pandemic has in 2020. In the United States, a tumultuous presidential election and a wave of protests over racial injustice also drew relentless coverage. Overshadowed, to an extent, were other dramatic developments. A mong them: China’s c r a c k d o w n o n Ho n g K o n g ’s democracy; an apocaly ptic explosion in Beirut; the shocking helicopter-crash death of basketball icon Kobe Br yant and his daughter. Some seemingly epic events early in the year now seem dist a nt , l i k e P res ide nt D on a ld Trump’s impeachment trial and the January announcement by Prince Harry and Meghan Markle that they were exiting their prominent roles in Britain’s royal family. Just a few weeks later came the long-awaited Brexit, Britain’s formal withdrawal from the European Union. As most of the world battled Covid, armed conflicts broke out between Armenia and Azerbaijan and in Ethiopia’s Tigray region. Afghanistan’s seemingly endless war dragged on, even as the warring sides warily edged into peace talks. Massive protests challenged the ruling powers in Belarus and Thailand. Due to past instances of sexual assault and sexual abuse, Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein received a 23-year prison sentence and the Boy Scouts of America filed for bankruptcy protection. Some other major events of 2020: Iran: The year ended as it began with tensions between Iran and the US inflamed by the killing of a top official. On January 3, a US drone strike killed Revolutionary Guard Gen. Qassem Soleimani. Iran responded with a missile attack that injured doz-

ens of US troops in Iraq. In December, a mysterious attack near Tehran killed a nuclear scientist whom the US and others had identified as organizing Iran’s effort to seek nuclear weapons two decades ago. Iran blamed that attack on Israel. Immigration: T hroughout 2020, the Trump administration pushed to extend a wall along the US-Mexico border, even as it implemented immigration policies that outraged human-rights advocates. The targets included unaccompanied children seeking refuge in the US; hundreds were detained in hotels before being expelled. The administration also sought to suspend the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program that protects some young immigrants from deportation. But a federal judge ruled that new applications for the program must be accepted. Hong Kong: China imposed a sweeping nationa l secur it y law in Hong Kong. The ensuing crackdown on dissent effectively voided China’s pledge to allow the city to maintain rights promised for 50 years following the 1997 handover from British colonial rule. The arrests of leading opposition figures and the expulsion of local lawmakers—prompting the entire opposition camp to resign—led numerous countries to curtail lega l cooperation w it h Hong Kong. The US imposed travel bans and financial sanctions. Opioids: Purdue Pharma, the maker of OxyContin, pleaded guilty to three criminal charges, formally taking responsibility

for its part in an opioid epidemic that has contributed to the deaths of more than 470,000 Americans over two decades. Purdue admitted impeding efforts to combat the addiction crisis. The pleas arose from a settlement that includes $8.3 billion in penalties and forfeitures, but victims’ advocates worried that Purdue’s ow ners, the Sack ler family, might emerge with their fortune largely intact. Notable deaths: For sports fans worldwide, 2020 was sadly bookended by the deaths of two popular superstars—basketball’s Kobe Bryant, 41, and soccer’s Diego Maradona, 60. Among those killed along with Bryant in the helicopter crash was his 13-year-old daughter Gianna, herself a promising athlete. Other revered figures who died included US civ il rights leader John Lewis, guitarist Eddie van Halen, and actors Chadwick Boseman and Sean Connery. Many admirers of liberal US Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg not only mourned her death, but also deplored her replacement by a conservative, Amy Coney Barrett. Beirut explosion: Lebanon’s capit a l was devast ated in Aug ust by one of t he l a rgest non-nuc lea r e x plosions e ver recorded. A f ire detonated a stoc k pi le of nea rly 3,0 0 0 tons of a mmoniu m nit rates lef t to rot at a por t wa rehouse. T he ex plosion tore through Beir ut, suc k ing in t he a ir a nd blow ing up homes a s w i ndow s sh at tered for m i les a rou nd. More t ha n 20 0 people were k i l led a nd t housa nd s inju red, compou nd ing t he woes of a nat ion a lready beset by mass protests a nd econom ic meltdow n. France-Muslims: The October beheading of a teacher by an 18-year-old Chechen outside Paris, followed by the killing of three people in Nice by a Tunisian migrant, prompted France to declare its highest-level security alert. The attacks came amid a trial over the 2015 massacre at the satiric newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which had published cartoons of Islam’s prophet. The teacher was beheaded for showing the cartoons to his class while discussing freedom of expression—vigorously defended

by President Emmanuel Macron. The caricatures and Macron’s stance fueled calls from Muslim nations to boycott French products; and some French Muslims resented the security crackdown. Hurricanes: It was such a historically busy hurricane season that forecasters had to turn to the Greek alphabet after running out of assigned names. In the US, Louisiana took the brunt of the onslaught: three hurricanes and two tropical storms. The worst to hit the state was Hurricane Laura, which swept ashore in August. In November, several Central American countries were ravaged by two Category 4 hurricanes. In Tennessee, an outbreak of tornadoes in March killed 25 people. Israel-Diplomac y: Israel i Prime Minister Benjamin Neta nya hu scored a d iplomat ic coup in September by signing historic accords with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain at the White House. It was Israel’s first normalization deal with Arab countries in more than 25 years. Later, Sudan and Morocco also pledged warmer official relations with Israel. The moves enabled Netanyahu to deliver welcome accomplishments to his electorate while under fire for his handling of the coronavirus crisis and his ongoing corruption trial. Wildfires: Thousands of wildfires raged throughout the western US, claiming dozens of lives, destroying thousands of homes, and bringing apocalyptic scenes of orange skies and hazardous air. Months before the usual start of the wildfire season, drought, extreme warm temperatures and winds gusting up to 100 mph fueled some of the most destructive blazes in the region’s history. Scientists say climate change is responsible for more intense and frequent extreme events such as storms, droughts, flooding and w i ldf ires—inc lud ing massive brush fires that raged for months in Australia. The Associated Press reporters Jon Gambrell in the United Arab Emirates, Christopher Bodeen in Beijing, Zeina Karam in Beirut, Elaine Ganley in Paris, Rebecca Santana in New Orleans, Josef Federman in Jerusalem and Olga R. Rodriguez in San Francisco contributed to this report.

US cracks down on scams bilking desperate Americans By Marcy Gordon

AP Business Writer

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ASHINGTON—Federal and state authorities say they are cracking down on a wave of illegal schemes that have proliferated during the pandemic and prey upon the desperation of people who have lost jobs in the outbreak’s economic upheaval. The scams have ranged from the work-from-home reselling of luxury products, to pyramid schemes soliciting cash and that play on cultural norms in immigrant communities, to fraudulent investment rackets promising quick profits. Regulators recently unveiled what they are calling “Operation Income Illusion,” a yearlong n at ionw ide l aw- en forcement sweep targeting the scammers. Consumers lost an estimated $1 billion in the schemes since the start of 2020. Espec i a l ly v u l nerable t a r gets a re seniors a nd ret irees, imm ig ra nts, Bl ac k a nd L at ino

In this June 15, 2018, file photo, 20-dollar bills are counted in North Andover, Mass. Federal and state authorities say they are cracking down on a wave of illegal schemes, estimated to have bilked consumers out of more than $1 billion, that have proliferated during the coronavirus pandemic and prey upon the desperation of people who have lost jobs in the outbreak’s economic upheaval. AP/Elise Amendola

people, st udents a nd m i l it a r y fa m i l ies. Losses reported by consumers from the schemes rose to the highest level on record in the first nine months of the year at more than $150 million, Andrew Smith, director of the Federal Trade Com-

mission’s consumer protection bureau, told reporters in a conference call. Officials estimate only a small fraction of the burned consumers report their losses to authorities. “These scammers are taking advantage of a desperate situation to rip money from the hands of those

who most need it,” Smith said. The FTC conducted the sweep along with nine states, federal prosecutors in Arkansas, Arizona and California, several local law-enforcement agencies, and the US Securities and Exchange Commission a nd Commod it y Futures Trading Commission. “There are people out there whose job it is to steal your money,” Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh said on the conference call. He said his office is seeing growing numbers of cases involving affinity fraud, a form of pyramid scheme in which consumers are urged to tap friends, family, and church or ethnic-community members for money in addition to their own payment. A scam promoting investments in Bitcoin was among them, Frosh said. His office also has brought several cases against sellers of phony franchises. In addition to Maryland, the states participating in the sweep are Arizona, Arkansas, California, Florida, Indiana, New Hampshire, Oregon and Pennsylvania. AP


Journey

»life on the go

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Sunday, December 20, 2020

BusinessMirror

Editor: Tet Andolong

Five unique stays for your next weekend getaway

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REAMING of your next adventure? Agoda.com’s search data shows that people are hungry for travel whether they’re flying solo, as a couple, as a group, or with family. And Filipinos in particular, are keen to explore more domestic destinations once able to safely take trips again. Having stayed indoors for a good part of the year, who wouldn’t be looking for a completely different travel experience this time around? When it comes to traveling, tourist attractions and musttry food spots tend to be the highlight of every trip. Here’s a pro tip—you can actually make your holiday more memorable without having to go all-out with your itinerary, by choosing accommodation that is a destination in itself. Agoda brings you many spacious options for you to social distance in style, while enjoying unique experiences from your wildest dreams—without leaving the comfort of home away from home. So while scrolling for your next escapade, let your imagination free and check these out of the ordinary properties.

Palawan: Live that tent life at Dryft Darocotan Island

Glamp (glamorous camp) in style and comfort with an added treehouse vibe. Away from the crowds of El Nido and nestled on a private beach in the heart of Palawan, Dryft Darocotan Island offers three types of accommodation choices from teepee-style lodging to whimsical glamping tents, and spacious elegant “hive huts”—all with easy access to the ocean. It’s the perfect getaway for when travel opens up again.

Batangas: Re-center your mind and body at The Farm at San Benito

Feeling a little out of sync with your mind and body? With everything that’s happening around us and with gyms and spas having been closed for majority of

Re-center your mind and body at The Farm at San Benito

Go on an art-themed holiday at La Bella Boutique Hotel

Live your Malibu beach house dreams at Apsaras Tribe Resort

Settle in for a nice retreat at Good Morning Baguio Farmhouse

the year, it has been challenging to take care of our physical, mental, and emotional well-being. Now, as you try to get back on track, take this chance to detox and turn over a new leaf at The Farm at San Benito. With its calming ambience, award-winning restaurant “Alive” with great options for vegan and organic cuisine, and its Healing Sanctuary Spa, you can revitalize your body and soul as you go on a luxurious health retreat with assurance of the utmost care for sanitation and hygiene standards.

Siargao: Live your Malibu beach house dreams at Apsaras Tribe Resort

What better way to enjoy a holiday than to catch a wave or two in the surfing capi-

Invest for the future at Ridgewood Premier Hotel

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HILE the coronavirus pandemic continues to disrupt the economy, wise businesses and investors are expectedly hedging their bets. The more agile companies have taken steps to adapt to the new normal, but the objective has been the same: of outlasting the pandemic. Despite the general feeling of pessimism for the remainder of the year, there are signs that point to a better future. Governments have lowered interest rates and relaxed rules to provide relief on investment and financing activities. Select blue chip stocks trend higher in anticipation of an improving climate sooner than later. For most people, surviving 2020 is the only objective that matters. But for elite investors, 2020 may yet uncover distinct opportunities. Novel Residential Concepts Inc., a new property developer, is one of the investment lights shining brightly amid the pandemic. The company offers investors a sure return to profitability just in time for the country’s eventual recovery. Novel Treasurer Alfonso Keh Jr. sees opportunities even during the downturn. He said: “The economic slowdown due to the pandemic gives investors time to pick the best vehicles for their hard-earned money. When businesses get back to normal, those who bet on the right investments can hold on to that advantage.” Keh is referring to Novel’s Ridgewood Premier Hotel project, a 168-room prime facility along C-5 Road, near Bonifacio Global City or BGC. Scheduled for operations by 2022, which is well within the expected start of the global recovery period, Ridgewood Premier Hotel will occupy the 15th to 19th floors of the Ridgewood Towers Premier project of property developer C-5 Mansions Development Corp. Under Novel’s prospectus, investors will receive a condominium certificate of title (CCT) and a lease agreement. Investors can expect two types of returns: a guaranteed 6-percent annual return on their total investment, plus up to 6-percent occupancy bonus per annum based on audited hotel occupancy rates. “It is in times like this when our new, exciting investment concept will naturally stand out. The investment is safe as it is backed by a CCT, or condominium certificate of title, so you have in your hands a property that is appreciating in value. But as important, we give an annual return of up to 12 percent depending on the hotel’s occupancy,” Keh pointed out. A Ridgewood Premier Hotel investment takes the form

Live that tent life at Dryft Darocotan Island

tal of the Philippines? Make your stay in Siargao more memorable by checking in at Apsaras Tribe Resort with its structural design reminiscent of an LA beach house complete with stilt-elevated foundations, boxy profile, wooden decks, and bright blue paint. When you’re not hanging ten on the island’s famed waves, you can still channel the sweet vibes of that California life by lounging by the bar at the pool.

Tagaytay: Go on an art-themed holiday at La Bella Boutique Hotel

Looking to head out to Tagaytay for a

eclectic lounge areas.

Baguio: Settle in for a nice retreat at Good Morning Baguio Farmhouse

Ready for a change of pace and scenery? Check in at this quaint Agoda home for a night or two for a peaceful escape. Aside from offering cozy interiors and three sizable bedrooms, the Good Morning Baguio Farmhouse features a private herb greenhouse perfect for cozying up with a book and your morning cup of Joe, winding down the day with a cup of tea at dusk, or lazing around under a starlit sky.

Travel with Spacevue x Magicopper

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020 has been a landmark year for Filipinos for many sad reasons: In January, there was the Taal Volcano eruption. In March, the start of the community quarantine due to Covid-19. In November, the rampage of three typhoons (Quinta, Rolly, Ulysses) that left many homeless and without loved ones—and in the Christmas season, no less. At this point, the Filipino resilience is weary. The usual joyful Christmas that one can feel, see, and taste in the air is not there. People are praying nothing more comes to challenge our collective spirit, and we are torn between wanting this year to end already or putting all stops to still end 2020 with gratitude and a smile. But how can this still be done?

of any of the three units available: Standard, Deluxe, and Two-bedroom suites. The investment cost includes an interiors package to ensure that fixtures, furnishings and appliances are hotel-grade and up to par with Ridgewood Premier Hotel’s quality standards. The upkeep and operation of the units will be managed by professionals, freeing owners from the responsibility. Novel’s board members consist of veteran property developers who have made their names in building, developing and running hotels and concept restaurants, including the Ramada Manila Central Hotel in Binondo, so investors can be assured that competent and experienced leadership is at the helm. Compared to usual investment instruments such as time deposit, stocks, or bonds, a Ridgewood Premier Hotel investment can generate an ROI within nine years. Keh noted, “Stocks are very volatile right now and can go either way. Bonds meanwhile are giving out lower interest rates. A Ridgewood Premier Hotel investment offers a better alternative to time deposits that pay out up to 5 percent over a couple of years. For one, the yields are bigger and the ROI period is shorter.” The pandemic may have taken longer than anticipated and has taken many by surprise, but eventually, humans will find the solution. At this point, all signs point to an eventual recovery, and for those with a long-term view, getting ready for the future means taking advantage of outstanding offerings.

quick getaway from Manila? One might mistake La Bella Boutique Hotel for a Santorini-inspired hotel, but upon taking your first step within its threshold, you’ll find that it is more than that. Its interiors blend artistic styles beautifully for a minimalist aesthetic with just the right splashes of color. Each room is a feast to the eyes, with tasteful art touches exclusive to every single one. Well-curated painting, sculptures, and woodworks are displayed in common areas for everyone to enjoy. If that was not enough inspiration to travel to La Bella Boutique Hotel, do check out the glass walled swimming pool and

Meet Spacevue

Spacevue is dubbed “the most luxurious and sought-after full-face protective face shield in the market.” It has a higher price point than most face shields available today, but the benefits to choosing Spacevue are more than worth it: n Lightweight n Eyewear-friendly n Has glass-like optical clarity n Has an anti-fog feature

Many cheap and bootleg brands in marketplaces make the same claims, but when one has tried these and then gets to wear Spacevue, the difference is so stark and clear—like the Spacevue face shield itself! It also gets bonus points for offering not only safety but style, too. When one wears Spacevue, one often gets complimented for it. (And this, let’s admit, is a secret longing: to still look good even when wearing a face mask and a face shield on top of it.) Spacevue’s claims are supported by the fact that professionals and celebrities wear it: from doctors, to celebrities (the likes of Iya Villania, Toni Gonzaga, Willie Revillame, KC Concepcion to

name a few), musicians (South Border, Chito Miranda, Yeng Constantino) and politicians including no less than the Vice President of the Philippines herself, Ms. Leni Robredo.

Spacevue x Magicopper limited edition

Spacevue takes their brand a notch higher by partnering with Copper Defense PH. The company has been bringing in copper technology to the Philippines from Korea since June. Copper Defense PH is the official distributor of the highly popular Magicopper mask. These masks are made in South Korea by Korean brand Magicopper. Magicopper combines copper technology against the virus, a sleek design that makes it less clinical and more stylish, and properties that make it a joy to wear all day long: deodorizing and good for the skin by helping prevent mask acne and dermatitis. The Spacevue x Magicopper Limited Edition box is a beautiful package that would be good to remember 2020 by: the style, function, and

effectiveness of all the items inside perfectly symbolize the spirit that kept the Filipino afloat through the year, and even stronger for the years to come. This is why it is the best Christmas gift one can give this season for family, friends, and loved ones. It is like giving them a piece of your heart and care, and also a symbol of how each one of us has victoriously survived a once-in-a-century pandemic and all the other calamities that went with it. The Spacevue x Magicopper Limited Edition box is a collector’s item that deserves a place in your shelf, like a trophy that reminds you every day of your winning spirit. As any collector would, one can buy a box to open and another box to keep— use it as a tool to tell future generations the story of 2020 and how it changed humanity for good. For more information, visit their web site at www.thespacevue.com their Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/spacevue or their Instagram account at https://instagram.com/ spacevue_.


Science

BusinessMirror

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

Local firms turn waste to wealth through Cradle program

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ocal companies, including small-to-medium enterprises, find value through innovation. This is made possible through the Collaborative Research and Development to Leverage Philippine Economy (Cradle) Program of the Department of Science and Technology (DOST). The program recently approved a research for a local company to turn materials previously unused and disposed into a profit-generating endeavor. One of the recently approved DOST-Cradle projects is with Aegina Organic Farm Products, manufacturer of coconut milk and cacao powder products, who partnered with University of the Philippines-Diliman (UPD) to undertake research and development (R&D) in converting liquids unused in their normal operations into nutritious and delicious beverages. Another streamlined production made possible through Cradle is the Batangas Egg Producers Cooperative (Bepco) and UPD partnership. With the project, the excess supply of eggs is turned into powdered or granulated chicken egg whites from low-value eggs (cracked/dirtied or soft shell). The prototype was already given to Bepco and is now being evaluated for industrial use. One of the potential uses is for baking purposes. “R&D enables local companies to find hidden opportunities for additional income and even the possibility to delve into unique product lines,”said DOST Undersecretary for R&D Rowena Cristina L. Guevara. “Innovation is a key element to survive and succeed. An R&D investment is an investment to change for the better,” Guevara added. Under the Cradle Program, a local industry partner determines a problem/need which requires an R&D solution. The partner higher education institution (HEI) or research and development institution (RDI) undertakes the R&D to solve the problem or need. The DOST-Cradle Program will fund up to P5 million for a period of one to three years R&D projects aiming to solve problems of local businesses. In the last three years, the program has funded 63 projects worth P285 million and partnered with 29 HEIs/RDIs and 63 companies. DOST-Cradle is one of the four sub-programs of Science for Change Program (S4CP) that is geared to significantly accelerate science, technology and innovation in the country through massive increase in investment on S&T Human Resource Development and R&D. Other sub-programs include Niche Centers in the Regions for R&D (Nicer) Program which provides institutional grants for HEIs to undertake quality

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Sunday, December 20, 2020 A5

Beyond power plants, nuclear tech has various peaceful applications

T Fresh buko, or young coconut, used in one of the projects in the DOST-Cradle Program. DOST photo research that will catalyze and promote regional development. The R&D Leadership (RDLead) Program engages local experts to lead and strengthen the research capabilities of academic institutions, R&D centers, and nongovernment agencies located in any part of the country. The Business Innovation through S&T (BIST) for Industry Program facilitates the acquisition of strategic and relevant technologies by Filipino companies to support R&D activities. As of the moment, the S4CP bill is still in the third reading in both houses of Congress. Interested companies who wish to avail themselves of the DOST-Cradle Program must belong to the following priority areas: 1) agriculture, fisheries and forestry; 2) agri-processing; 3) drug and herbal development; 4) food and nutrition; 5) information and communications technology (including artificial intelligence); 6) integrated circuit design; 7) semiconductor and electronics; 8) infrastructure and logistics; 9) manufacturing; 10) environment and climate change; 11) industrial waste treatment; 12) renewable energy; 13) creative industries/knowledge-based services. The DOST-Cradle Program is accepting R&D proposals for 2021 from HEIs/RDIs together with their partner company until February 5, 2021. Proposals must be submitted electronically through the DOST Project Management Information System (https:// dpmis.dost.gov.ph/).

SE Asian body promoting quality education turns 55 he Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organization (Seameo), of which the Philippines is a chartered member, celebrated its 55th year in November. Seameo has 26 regional centers across Southeast Asia, three of which are hosted by the Philippine government. The country is represented in the Seameo Council by the Secretary of the Department of Education (DepEd), a news release said. “Indeed, Seameo has come a long way since its inception in 1965 and has taken pride of its achievements over the years as Southeast Asia’s longest running regional organization for promoting quality education, science and culture,” said Dr. Ethel Agnes P. Valenzuela, a Filipino and the director of the Bangkok-based Seameo Secretariat (Seames). The event has the theme, “Stronger Together for Quality, Accessible, and Responsive Education.” Founded on November 30, 1965, Seameo has grown from six founding member countries—the Philippines, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand—to 11 current members, which include the 10 Asean members plus Timor-Leste, the news release said. Seameo also has eight associate member countries: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United Kingdom, as well as affiliate member institutions. As such, Seameo can be considered as one of the most resilient and viable inter-government treaty bodies of nations. The Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture (Searca), founded on November 27, 1966, and based on the University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB) campus, is the oldest Seameo center. Also hosted by the Philippine government are the Regional Centre for Educational Innovation and Technology (Innotech) in the University of the Philippines Diliman, and the Regional Centre for Public Health, Hospital Administration, Environmental and Occupational Health (Tropmed Philippines) in UP Manila, the Searca news release said. According to Seameo, its “centers and network have been both think tanks and implementing arms of Seameo in its own specialty through policy advocacy, technical and consultancy services, as well as capacity building programs and activities, fora, research, and other intellectual and practical platforms and networks.” “For almost six decades, Seameo has been at the forefront of education in the region and beyond,” said Searca Director Dr. Glenn B. Gregorio. He added that Seameo “has perfectly exemplified the importance of interconnectivity among different sectors and stakeholders of the society while taking multi- and interdisciplinary approaches in dealing with various issues and challenges.” Gregorio pointed out that “it has evolved with the changing times without losing its relevance,

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making education as an enabling vehicle for growth and sustainability.” Ed u c a t i o n S e c re t a r y Le o n o r B r i o n e s congratulated Seames and the Seameo centers for “the long years of collaboration.” “The Covid-19 pandemic has pushed and encouraged and perhaps even inspired the education sector to develop and innovate ways to resume teaching and learning safely and inclusively,” Briones said. “We appreciate the initiatives of the Seameo Secretariat and the regional centers in promoting distance learning and providing our teachers with capacity-building webinars this year. And we look forward to more years of partnership with Seameo,” Briones added. “Seameo’s strength lies in the 26 regional centers and network in Southeast Asia through programs, projects, and activities that follow the lead of education ministers to support countries in achieving educational objectives as well as regional vision through bilateral and multilateral programs and activities in and beyond Southeast Asia,” Valenzuela said. “I am proud to say that Searca, Innotech and Tropmed have contributed a lot to the region through your programs, research, scholarships and partnerships,” she added. Tropmed Philippines Director Dr. Vicente Y. Belizario Jr. said, “We realize that our theme for this anniversary—stronger collaboration and cooperation among Seameo networks—already offers us an approach in implementing our mandate and addressing the many concerns in these very uncertain times. More than ever, we need to come together as One Seameo.” The need to rely on and share among Seameo centers in the face of current challenges, particularly those brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic, was also emphasized by Innotech Director Dr. Ramon C. Bacani. “I do hope we will continue with this spirit of regional cooperation, learning and sharing from one another in the many activities we will undertake together under Seameo… in education, science, and culture,” Bacani said. To memorialize Seameo’s 55th anniversary, the respective director of Innotech and Tropmed Philippines planted a tree in their compound, while the Searca directorate along with some heads, staff, and scholars planted 10 Taiwan bamboo within the Center’s complex in Los Baños, Laguna. The spirit of the tree-planting was best articulated by Dr. Belizario when he said: “We planted a tree that symbolizes our collective aspiration as one Seameo community to help address the challenge of our time, that we can bear fruit together and be of better service to the country and of our people in the Southeast Asian region better if we grow together.”

he most familiar application of nuclear science and technology (S&T) in the Philippines is nuclear power. But beyond this controversial application nuclear S&T, it has many other peaceful applications for the betterment of the people and for the growth of many sectors of society.

The various contributions of nuclear researches in the Philippines were discussed during the recent 48th Atomic Energy Week virtual celebration. According to Science Secretary Fortunato T. de la Peña, nuclear S&T continue to contribute in various developments in health, livelihood, public order, agriculture and the future prosperity of the country, the Department of Science and Technology’s Science and Technology Information Institute (DOST-STII) said in a news release. “Nuclear and radiation applications have long since [been] proven instrumental in various applications. These include raising the yield of our crops, diagnosing and treating various diseases, and improving the competitiveness of our products,” said de la Peña said at the virtual celebration. The DOST’s Philippine Nuclear Research Institute (PNRI) has been spearheading new frontiers in research on nuclear and radiation applications in the Philippines that have potential contributions to the economic and societal progress. The DOST-PNRI Director Carlo A. Arcilla pointed out that the agency has been harnessing the benefits of nuclear S&T far beyond power generation. “We are proud at DOST-PNRI spearheading another great leap in our country’s nuclear medicine capabilities. With enough support, PETCT and Cyclotron facilities will rise here in Quezon City, which will make the diagnosis of diseases like cancer

more affordable to Filipinos,”Arcilla said at a virtual news conference. He said the building of the facilities will start next year. He added that the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency has checked the plan for structure in order to “future proof ” the facility. A rcilla said the DOST-PNR I continues to apply the unique advantage of nuclear technology for noble applications. These include increasing crop yield with irrigation process and formula, extracting uranium from seawater and developing native fabrics for treating wastewater. He added that DOST-PNRI is looking forward to expanding irradiation processing with the upgrading of Cobalt-60 into a fullyautomated facility. “While the Cobalt-60 was for the longest time the only facility of its kind in the Philippines, we are proud to report that technology adaptors are now planning to establish their own commercial irradiators in different parts of the country,” Arcilla said at the virtual news conference. Irradiation is the process by which an object is exposed to low radiation to remove bacteria and other impurities in food, herbs and spices, medical supplies and gemstones. Arcilla said the personal protective equipment of medical frontliners were subjected to irradiation to sterilize them. Meanwhile, in her video message at the opening ceremonies of the event, Sen. Nancy Binay said

DOST-PNRI Director Carlo A. Arcilla shares the relevance of nuclear S&T in the country and how it could help key sectors in the society.

Sen. Nancy Binay said in her video message that nuclear and radiation research products has far-reaching effects on society, yet, the value of nuclear research beyond power generation is often overlooked. DOST-STII

that nuclear and radiation research products had far-reaching effects on society, yet the value of nuclear research beyond power generation are often overlooked. “The ongoing Covid pandemic has emphasized how crucial nuclear technology is, not only in protecting and improving our way of life but in safeguarding our life itself,” Binay said. She cited the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction test for Covid-19 as an example, which is a key element in the government’s efforts to combat the spread of the coronavirus is a nuclear application. Its derived techniques continue to serve as reliable tools in investigating, detecting, preventing, and containing the outbreak of various diseases, she said. Binay also said there is growing evidence of how isotope and radia-

tion techniques contribute to our agriculture and guarantee food security. “ Through these, we were able to help our farmers through the development of crop var iet ies that yield more and can withstand pests, diseases and harsher effects of climate change,” Binay added. The recent AEW celebration had the theme, “Agham at Teknolohiyang Pangnukleyar: Sandigan ng Kalusugan, Kaayusan, Kabuhayan at Kinabukasan.” It highlighted the latest developments in the local nuclear S&T and its role in addressing the pressing problems through virtual fora and exhibits. The annual AEW celebration is mandated under Presidential Proclamation 1211 in 1973, which aims to generate awareness on the safe and beneficial uses of nuclear S&T.

RITM’s Espino gets scientist rank By Claudeth Mocon-Ciriaco

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ne of the homegrown scientists of the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine (RITM), Dr. Fe Esperanza Caridad Espino, has been conferred the rank of Scientist I by the Scientific Career Council (SCC). “Doctor Espino brings so much pride and honor to RITM. She has been with us since the growing years of the Institute. I am happy that this well-deserved recognition was conferred to an outstanding public servant,” commended RITM Director Celia Carlos. Espino, the country’s leading expert on malaria, has been with RITM for more than 30 years. “May her achievements inspire more Filipino scientists to persevere for public health and the greater good,” Carlos said. The scientist devoted majority of the years with RITM working with communities affected by malaria, dengue, and other neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) across the country. She currently leads the institute’s Parasitology Department in steering public health research

Dr. Fe Esperanza Caridad Espino

initiatives. Her most recent feat includes being one of the six finalists contending for the 2020 Newton Prize, a £1 million (approximately P65.08 million) grant for research with excellent implementation and impact. Espino is the third researcher from RITM to be conferred with a Scientific Career System (SCS) Scientist rank. She joins Scientist II Dr. Maria Rosario Capeding, retired head of the Microbiology Department and accomplished dengue expert; and Scientist I Dr. Marilla Lucero, retired head of RITM’s Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics. The SCS is a recognition program that acknowledges the contribution of career researchers and scientists in the government workforce. Besides giving incentives to scientific output, the system is likewise a platform to attract and retain highly qualified persons in the science and technology sector. The SCC is being chaired and co-chaired by the Civil Service Commission and the Department of Science and Technology, respectively.

Mapua University inks scholarship pact with Huawei

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uawei Technologies Phils. Inc. recently signed a scholarship agreement with Mapúa University via a virtual ceremony. The pilot scholarship grant will cover full tuition that will benefit third- to fifth-year engineering students majoring in Electronics Engineering, Computer Science, Information Technology, and Computer Engineering. Representing Mapua during the ceremony were President and CEO Dr. Reynaldo B. Vea, Dean for Admissions and Scholarships Dr. Dionisia Lanuza,

Dean for School of Information Technology Engr. Ariel Kelly Balan, and Dean for School of Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering Engr. Alejandro Ballado, Huawei said in a news release. “I would like to thank Huawei for the generous offer of scholarship for Mapúa students, especially at this time when most people may be suffering some hardships because of the current situation,” Vea said. He added: “Scholarships are important for the continuity of learning of Mapúa students.”

Huawei Human Resource Director Jade Cao said, “Huawei’s mission is to expand the benefits of technology for everyone, everywhere, which is exemplified in our vision to bring digital to every person, home, and organization for a fully connected and intelligent world.“ She added: “We know that education is a key component in bridging this digital divide.” “By providing opportunities for intelligent and deserving students to finish their college education, we hope to help the Philippines build

its local talent ecosystem and contribute to the continued growth of the Philippine economy,” Cao pointed out. Huawei is a leading global provider of information and communications technology infrastructure and smart devices. With integrated solutions across four key domains—telecom networks, IT, smart devices and cloud services—it is committed to bringing digital to every person, home and organization for a fully connected, intelligent world, the news release said.


Faith A6 Sunday, December 20, 2020

Sunday

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

The Gospels disagree over the circumstances of Christ’s birth

Was Jesus really born in Bethlehem?

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very Christmas, a relatively small town in the Palestinian West Bank comes center stage: Bethlehem. Jesus, according to some biblical sources, was born in this town some two millennia ago.

The Nativity scene at the Basilica of the National Shrine of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in New Manila, Quezon City, in December 2019. Lyn B. Resurreccion Yet the New Testament Gospels do not agree about the details of Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem. Some do not mention Bethlehem or Jesus’ birth at all. The Gospels’ different views might be hard to reconcile. But as a scholar of the New Testament, what I argue is that the Gospels offer an important insight into the Greco-Roman views of ethnic identity, including genealogies. Today, genealogies may bring more awareness of one’s family medical history or help uncover lost family members. In the Greco-Roman era, birth stories and genealogical claims were used to establish rights to rule and link individuals with purported ancestral grandeur.

Gospel of Matthew According to the Gospel of Matthew, the first Gospel in the canon of the New Testament, Joseph and Mary were in Bethlehem when Jesus was born. The story begins with wise men who come to the city of Jerusalem after seeing a star that they interpreted as signaling the birth of a new king. It goes on to describe their meeting with the local Jewish king named Herod, of whom they inquire about the location of Jesus’ birth. The Gospel says that the star of Bethlehem subsequently leads them to a house—not a manger—where Jesus has The newly built St. John the Baptist Parish Church on the historic Homonhon Island in Guiuan, Eastern Samar. FR. CHRISTIAN OFILAN

to a census that the Roman emperor Caesar Augustus required for all the Jewish people. Since Joseph was a descendant of King David, Bethlehem was the hometown where he was required to register. The Gospel of Luke includes no flight to Egypt, no paranoid King Herod, no murder of children and no wise men visiting baby Jesus. Jesus is born in a manger because all the travelers overcrowded the guest rooms. After the birth, Joseph and Mary are visited not by wise men but shepherds, who were also overjoyed at Jesus’ birth. Luke says these shepherds were notified about Jesus’ location in Bethlehem by angels. There is no guiding star in Luke’s story, nor do the shepherds bring gifts to baby Jesus. Luke also mentions that Joseph, Mary and Jesus leave Bethlehem eight days after his birth and travel to Jerusalem and then to Nazareth. The differences between Matthew and Luke are nearly impossible to reconcile, although they do share some similarities. John Meier, a scholar on the historical Jesus, explains that Jesus’ “birth at Bethlehem is to be taken not as a historical fact” but as a “theological affirmation put into the form of an apparently historical narrative.” In other words, the belief that Jesus was a descendant of King David led to the development of a story about Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem. Raymond Brown, another scholar on the Gospels, also states that “the two narratives are not only different—they are contrary to each other in a number of details.”

Mark’s and John’s Gospels been born to Joseph and Mary. Overjoyed, they worship Jesus and present gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh. These were valuable gifts, especially frankincense and myrrh, which were costly fragrances that had medicinal use. The Gospel explains that after their visit, Joseph has a dream where he is warned of Herod’s attempt to kill baby Jesus. When the wise men went to Herod with the news that a child had been born to be the king of the Jews, he made a plan to kill all young children to remove the threat to his throne. It then mentions how Joseph, Mary and infant Jesus leave for Egypt to escape King Herod’s attempt to assassinate all young children. Matthew also says that after Herod dies from an illness, Joseph, Mary and Jesus do not return to Bethlehem. Instead, they travel north to Nazareth in Galilee, which is modern-day Nazareth in Israel.

Gospel of Luke The Gospel of Luke, an account of Jesus’ life which was written during the same period as the Gospel of Matthew, has a different version of Jesus’ birth. The Gospel of Luke starts with Joseph and a pregnant Mary in Galilee. They journey to Bethlehem in response

What makes it more difficult is that neither the other Gospels, that of Mark and John, mentions Jesus’ birth or his connection to Bethlehem. The Gospel of Mark is the earliest account of Jesus’ life, written around AD 60. The opening chapter of Mark says that Jesus is from “Nazareth of Galilee.” This is repeated throughout the Gospel on several occasions, and Bethlehem is never mentioned. A blind beggar in the Gospel of Mark describes Jesus as both from Nazareth and the son of David, the second king of Israel and Judah during 1010-970 BC. But King David was not born in Nazareth, nor associated with that city. He was from Bethlehem. Yet Mark doesn’t identify Jesus with the city of Bethlehem. The Gospel of John, written approximately 15 years to 20 years after that of Mark, also does not associate Jesus with Bethlehem. Galilee is Jesus’ hometown. Jesus finds his first disciples, does several miracles and has brothers in Galilee. This is not to say that John was unaware of Bethlehem’s significance. John mentions a debate where some Jewish people referred to the prophecy which claimed that the messiah would be a descendant of David and come from Bethlehem. But Jesus according to John’s

Gospel is never associated w ith Bethlehem, but with Galilee, and more specifically, Nazareth. The Gospels of Mark and John reveal that they either had trouble linking Bethlehem with Jesus, did not know his birthplace, or were not concerned with this city. These were not the only ones. Apostle Paul, who wrote the earliest documents of the New Testament, considered Jesus a descendant of David but does not associate him with Bethlehem. The Book of Revelation also affirms that Jesus was a descendant of David but does not mention Bethlehem.

Ethnic identity During the period of Jesus’ life, there were multiple perspectives on the Messiah. In one stream of Jewish thought, the Messiah was expected to be an everlasting ruler from the lineage of David. Other Jewish texts, such as the book 4 Ezra, written in the same century as the Gospels, and the Jewish sectarian Qumran literature, which is written two centuries earlier, also echo this belief. But within the Hebrew Bible, a prophetic book called Micah, thought to be written around BC 722, prophesies that the messiah would come from David’s hometown, Bethlehem. This text is repeated in Matthew’s version. Luke mentions that Jesus is not only genealogically connected to King David, but also born in Bethlehem, “the city of David.” Genealogical claims were made for important ancient founders and political leaders. For example, Ion, the founder of the Greek colonies in Asia, was considered to be a descendant of Apollo. Alexander the Great, whose empire reached from Macedonia to India, was claimed to be a son of Hercules. Caesar Augustus, who was the first Roman emperor, was proclaimed as a descendant of Apollo. And a Jewish writer named Philo who lived in the first century wrote that Abraham and the Jewish priest and prophets were born of God. Regardless of whether these claims were accepted at the time to be true, they shaped a person’s ethnic identity, political status and claims to honor. As the Greek historian Polybius explains, the renown deeds of ancestors are “part of the heritage of posterity.” Matthew and Luke’s inclusion of the city of Bethlehem contributed to the claim that Jesus was the Messiah from a Davidic lineage. They made sure that readers were aware of Jesus’ genealogical connection to King David with the mention of this city. Birth stories in Bethlehem solidified the claim that Jesus was a rightful descendant of King David. So today, when the importance of Bethlehem is heard in Christmas carols or displayed in Nativity scenes, the name of the town connects Jesus to an ancestral lineage and the prophetic hope for a new leader like King David. Rodolfo Galvan Estrada III/The Conversation, CC

‘Simbang Gabi’

Devotees of Our Mother of Perpetual Help attend the devotional novena Mass in preparation for Christmas at Baclaran Church. These two churchgoers take a selfie after attending the Mass. The faithful are advised to wear face masks and face shields to protect them from being infected with Covid-19. Bernard Testa

Is the ‘Christmas Star’ the Star of Bethlehem?

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ATICAN—The “Great Conjunction” of Jupiter and Saturn taking place this month—dubbed the “Christmas Star”—is a pretty sight, but it is impossible to know for sure if it has any connection to the Star of Bethlehem, a Vatican astronomer said. On December 21, the planets Jupiter and Saturn will appear a tenth of a degree apart in the night sky, something called a “Great Conjunction.” This conjunction happens approximately every 20 years, but this year the two planets will appear the closest they have been in almost 400 years. To the naked eye, they will look like one, bright star, thus, earning the nickname the “Christmas Star.” Br. Guy Consolmagno, S.J., told Catholic News Agency (CNA) that the conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter doesn’t have a religious significance, but “nonetheless, it is a pretty sight that everyone should have a look at.” The Catholic priest is an astronomer and director of the Vatican Observatory, which has research sites outside Rome at Castel Gandolfo and in Tucson, Arizona. To see the conjunction, he recommended looking just after sunset for Jupiter, “the bright ‘star’ low to the west; nearby is a fainter ‘star,’ Saturn.” All of December, “Jupiter will be creeping closer to Saturn,” he explained. “On December 21, they’ll be so close together that your naked eye won’t be able to tell them apart.” Some astronomers have theorized that this conjunction of the two bright planets could be what the three “wise men from the East” saw in the sky and followed, leading them to find the Child Jesus, as recounted in St. Matthew’s Gospel. “Is this really what the Star of Bethlehem was?” Consolmagno asked. “No one knows for sure what the star was,

and until we have a time machine where we can go back and interview Matthew with a video recorder, no one ever will know for sure!” He recalled that the Star of Bethlehem itself was not the focus of the account, but at whom the star pointed. “The important thing to remember is that the Star of Bethlehem is just a small part of the infancy narrative in Matthew’s Gospel. The point of his story isn’t the star. It’s the baby,” he said. “Whatever the Magi would have seen … it was something that nobody looking at the sky would have noticed, but they did,” Consolmagno told the CNA Newsroom podcast in December 2019. “The shepherds in the fields where it was dark, where they didn’t have city lights, they knew the sky. What was it the Magi saw that everybody else didn’t see?” Consolmagno asked. “The Magi are seeing something in the sky which is interpreted in terms of astrology. Now, astrology is specifically forbidden in the Hebrew Scriptures,” he explained. “It was being used as a reason to worship the stars rather than God, and as a way of denying human freedom.” He said that you can download a program on your computer which tells you the position of the stars and roll it back to April of the year 6 B.C. What you will see is “all of the planets rising with the sun.” “And our understanding of what the ancients thought of astrology is they thought this would be significant, but you could only know that it’s happening if you’ve calculated it, because the sun is there! You can’t actually see the planets,” he said. “And this is a relatively rare event, it all fits,” he continued. “Is that really what Matthew was talking about? I don’t know. It’s fun to play with the idea.” Hannah Brockhaus/Catholic News

Agency via CBCP News

NASA/JPL-Caltech

NHCP: Homonhon as site of ‘first Mass’ in PHL still an ‘academic discussion’

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t remains an “academic discussion” whether or not the “first Mass in the Philippines” took place on Homonhon Island off Eastern Samar province, a government agency said. The National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) said it has refrained from using the “trivial and debatable phase” so as not to preempt other claims on the historic Mass. “This not to preempt the possible Christian celebration conducted in the Philippine territory prior to the one in Limasawa, such as this claim in Homonhon,” said NHCP Chairman Rene Escalante.

The official was responding to a position paper by Fr. Neil Tenefrancia, chancellor of the Diocese of Borongan, on the supposed first Mass on Homonhon. In his 15-page paper, the priest argued for the logical possibility of at least four unrecorded Masses on Homonhon based on the pre-Tridentine liturgical calendar in use during 1521. “Nevertheless, the case of Homonhon shall remain an academic discussion,” Escalante said. “In actively advancing this claim, the Diocese of Borongan has to guarantee that the public must appreciate it methodologically,” he added.

Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan and his crew including an Augustinian missionary reached the Philippines nearly 500 years ago. The expedition first landed on March 16, 1521, in Homonhon, where they stayed for eight days before heading to Limasawa Island in Southern Leyte province. The NHCP has earlier affirmed that the “First Easter Sunday Mass” was held in Limasawa on March 31, 1521. The week prior to March 31 was a Holy Week, wherein Catholics commemorate the suffering and death of Jesus Christ. Some theorists claim that the first

Mass may have been celebrated in Homonhon, where Magellan and his men took a weeklong respite. The Catholic Church in the Philippines is celebrating the fifth centenary of the arrival of the Christian faith in the country in 2021. Fr. Christian Ofilan of St. John the Baptist Parish in Homonhon, expressed hope that the site of the first Mass in the country may finally be resolved. “It is our hope and prayer that the historical recognition that the island of Homonhon rightfully deserves may finally be accorded to her,” Ofilan said.

Roy Lagarde/CBCP News


Biodiversity Sunday BusinessMirror

Asean Champions of Biodiversity Media Category 2014

Editor: Lyn Resurreccion

Sunday, December 20, 2020

A7

‘The discovery of the birds on Mt. Apo only proves it still has a very healthy forest’

7th PHL eagle family found on Mt. Apo

I

By Jonathan L. Mayuga

Based on their observation and assessment, the members of the team believed that the juvenile eagle would soon be hunting on its own and the eagle pair could be laying an egg soon. Besides the Philippine eagle, the team was able to spot seven other raptors during the expedition. They were the Philippine serpent eagle, Philippine honey buzzard, brahminy kite, Philippine falconet, Chinese sparrow hawk, crested honey buzzard and the peregrine falcon.

n July and September last year, a team of explorers climbed steep slopes and lush forest vegetation on Mt. Apo Geothermal Reservation in Kidapawan City in search of a rare find—a pair of Philippine eagle and their nest to confirm sightings in a completely new and unexplored territory. The expedition not only confirmed the existence of the pair of Philippine eagle, it also confirmed the pair’s lone progeny—a juvenile eagle that is beginning to learn how to hunt on its own. The newly discovered Philippine eagle family is the seventh recorded and documented on Mt. Apo, said Jayson Ibañez, director for Research and Conservation of the Philippine Eagle Foundation (PEF). “It was an international expedition to look for the pair. We suspected there was a pair there because of previous sightings,” Ibañez told the BusinessMirror said via Messenger on December 3.

Continuing quests The PEF, the longtime institutional partner of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) for the conservation of the Philippine eagle and their habitats, aims to find all eagle nesting sites within the Mt. Apo Key Biodiversity Area (KBA) and help protect each of the nest sites. According to the PEF, the Philippine eagle nest sites are ancient breeding areas, believing that generations of eagle pairs have occupied the same nests over and over again. As such, PEF conservation experts believe that conserving the nest sites where eggs are laid, hatched and chicks are nurtured until they grow is key to the success of saving the species from extinction. PEF Executive Director Dennis Salvador told the BusinessMirror in a telephone interview on December 16 that the discovery of the Philippine eagle family is proof that the technical

capacity of the PEF has improved significantly over the years, particularly in finding the eagles. He said finding the Philippine eagles and their nest are very important “for us to be able to protect them,” he said.

Strong partnership Salvador underscored the need for a strong partnership between the government, nongovernment organizations, private sector and communities in saving the Philippine eagle. “Primarily, we need the support of the private sector because of the logistical requirements,” he said. Tagged rescued or captive-bred eagles, which the PEF have released into the wild, are monitored through radio transmitters. This, he said, is the single major and expensive, but most reliable system adopted by the PEF to identify the location and the behavior of the eagles. O n t he ot her h a nd , work i ng with communities in protecting the eagles and their habitat could not be overemphasized, Salvador said, He added that the communities, particularly the indigenous people (IP) who live in the area, are in the best position to protect the species and their habitats from various threats.

In the brink of extinction Considered critically endangered, only around 400 pairs of the Philippine eagles are left in the wild. The population decline was attributed by experts to habitat destruction, hunting for trophies, illegal wildlife trade and accidental bycatch. Of late, however, sightings of juvenile Philippine eagles in completely

Welcome development

Philippine eagle Photo from Philippine Eagle Foundation new territories with no history or record of the species are offering exciting news about their existence. The Philippine eagle, considered the largest bird of prey in the world, pairs for life. They produce only one offspring every two to three years which sometimes die of natural death because of the brutal conditions in the wild.

‘Search for King of Birds’ The expedition began when the PEF, the DENR and the Energy Development Corp. (EDC) launched a project dubbed “Search for the King of Birds” along the western slopes of Mt. Apo. The expedition team targeted the Mt. Apo Geothermal Reservation in Kidapawan City where eagles were seen in the past. The project, which primarily aims to confirm the existence of the Philippine eagle in the area, also targets to enhance the local awareness about the critically endangered bird of prey, and explore the community’s capacity for eagle conservation.

Confirmation The 2019 expeditions that confirmed the sighting of one eagle close to the reservation, discovered that the eagle, believed to be not more than a year old, is a floater, or still sexually immature and unpaired, according to PEF experts. The presence of an immature eagle, however, indicates that its parents could be nearby.

The expedition, however, was inadvertently put on hold, said Ibañez, due to the community lockdowns imposed to prevent the spread of Covid-19.

Braving Covid-19 It was only last November when the PEF and EDC was able to resume the search owing to their observance of health Covid-19 protocols. PEF team members—Senior Biologist Ron Taraya and Field Intern Keanu Sitjar—underwent mandatory 14-day quarantine in Kidapawan City, had themselves tested for the virus and other medical screenings. Together with EDC Forest Aides Climclim Lumayon and Renjie Sinding, the team embarked on the monthlong expedition, and picked up where they stopped last year. The team had to climb steep terrains en route to the survey site and had to squeeze their way through lush forest vegetation.

Eagle stakeout Finding and documenting the Philippine eagle that is considered the rarest of all birds of prey is easier said than done. The species tend to fly away, making the team stake out in four observation posts, where they suspected the eagle might be lurking. Three of the observation posts were on the ground, while one is on an elevated platform, which gave the team the closest view of the narrow valley and the

surrounding forests. The team spent 192 observation hours, documenting under frequent rains every bit of information and the events that unfold until they were able to document the Philippine eagle family. The eagles were documented at least eight times—with an accumulated observation hours of 26.5, less than 15 percent of the total 192 observation hours of the entire month-long expedition.

Breeding, hunting Ibañez and Taraya’s narration of the expedition was posted on the PEF’s official web site. It was on November 4 when the team got their first glimpse of the pair of eagles exhibiting courtship behavior “We could hear our hearts pumping as we witnessed an unmistakable breeding behavior of two mature eagles” Ibañez said. The following day, as the team was documenting the pair anew, the team heard loud, crying calls from another eagle nearby—similar to a young or juvenile eagle begging for food from its parents. They finally spotted the third member of the family a week later as it emerged on a tree directly above the falls, loudly calling out for its parents. The juvenile eagle was observed to be in its post-fledging stage and could be starting to hunt on its own. One time was observed to attempting to target a long-tailed macaque.

Sought for comment, DENR Assistant Secretary said the discovery of the seventh Philippine eagle pair in Mt. Apo KBA is a welcome development. “This means that our wildlife, specifically the Philippine eagle, is able to enjoy our resources. This means that in this area, our management is effective. It also means that threat, as far as expansion, appears to be under control given the increasing number of Philippine eagle in the area,” Calderon told the BusinessMirror in a telephone interview on December 3. Calderon, concurrent Biodiversity Management Bureau director, credited the PEF and the EDC for their successful program to save the country’s National Bird from extinction.

A company advocacy Allan Barcena, head of EDCs Corporate Social Responsibility Public Relations Group, said via text message on December 10 that the discovery has only proven that Mt. Apo, which is the habitat of the Philippine eagle, still has a very healthy forest. He also credited EDC’s strong commitment and advocacy of environmental sustainability in protecting the environment, particularly the Geothermal Reservation on Mt. Apo. “EDC has been protecting and nurturing the forest within its 700-hectare Mt. Apo Geothermal Reservation with the help of its Manobo IP Communities,” he said. He said various initiatives of the company, one of Asia’s leading geothermal energy producers, “elevate the environment and communities they work with as part of its mission of forging collaborative pathways for a decarbonized and regenerative future.” “Biodiversity conservation and monitoring has always been one of our priorities, along with bridging forest gaps and propagating 96 of our Philippine native tree species under our Binhi greening legacy program,” he said.

U.N.: Buildings-related emissions hit record high E

missions from the operation of buildings hit their highest-ever level in 2019, moving the sector further away from fulfilling its huge potential to slow climate change and contribute significantly to the goals of the Paris Agreement, according to a report released on Wednesday. However, pandemic recovery packages provide an opportunity to push deep building renovation and performance standards for newly constructed buildings, and rapidly cut emissions, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) said in a news release. The forthcoming updating of climate pledges under the Paris Agreement—known as nationally determined contributions (NDCs)—also offer an opportunity to sharpen existing measures and include new commitments on the buildings and construction sector. The “2020 Global Status Report for Buildings and Construction,” from the Global Alliance for Buildings and Construction (GlobalABC), found that while global building energy consumption remained steady year-on-year, energy-related carbon-dioxide (CO2) emissions increased to 9.95 GtCO2 in 2019. This increase was due to a shift away from the direct use of coal, oil and traditional biomass towards electricity, which had a higher carbon content due to the high proportion of fossil fuels used in generation. When adding emissions from the building construction industr y on top of operational emissions, the sector accounted for 38 percent of

total global energy-related CO2 emissions. “Rising emissions in the buildings and construction sector emphasize the urgent need for a triple strategy to aggressively reduce energy demand in the built environment, decarbonize the power sector and implement materials strategies that reduce lifecycle carbon emissions,” said UNEP Executive Director Inger Andersen. “Green recovery packages can provide the spark that will get us moving rapidly in the right direction,” Andersen added. “Moving the buildings and construction sector onto a low-carbon pathway will slow climate change and deliver strong economic recovery benefits, so it should be a clear priority for all governments,” she pointed out. To get on track to net-zero carbon building stock by 2050, the International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates that direct building CO2 emissions need, by 2030, to fall by 50 percent and indirect building sector emissions by 60 percent, the report said. This equates to building sector emissions falling by around 6 percent per year until 2030, close to the 7 percent decrease in 2020 global energy sector CO2 emissions due to the pandemic. Worryingly, the GlobalABC’s new Buildings Climate Tracker—which considers measures, such as incremental energy efficiency investment in buildings and the share of renewable energy in global buildings—finds that the rate of annual improvement is decreasing. It in fact halved between 2016 and 2019. To get

the buildings sector on track to achieving net-zero carbon by 2050, all actors across the buildings value chain need to increase decarbonization actions and their impact by a factor of five. Even though progress in efficiency efforts has not kept up with an increase in sectoral growth, there are positive signs and opportunities to catch up on climate action, the report finds.

Green recovery potential The recent Emissions Gap Report 2020 from UNEP found that a green pandemic recovery could cut up to 25 percent off predicted 2030 green-house gas emissions, and bring the world closer to meeting the 2°C goal of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change. Much more needs to be done to get to the 1.5°C goal, UNEP said. Governments can help achieve these gains by systematically including building decarbonization measures into recovery packages. The measures are increasing renovation rates, channelling investment into low-carbon buildings, providing jobs, and increasing real-estate value. While construction activities have dropped by 20 percent to 30 percent in 2020 compared to 2019 as a result of the pandemic and around 10 percent of overall jobs have been lost or are at risk across the building construction sector, stimulus programs for the building and construction sector can create jobs, boost economic activity, and activate local value chains, UNEP said. It added that under its Sustainable Recovery

Plan, the IEA estimates that up to 30 jobs in manufacturing and construction would be created for every million dollars invested in retrofits or efficiency measures in new builds. “ B u i l d i n g s a re a s t r a t e g i c s e c t o r t o simultaneously address various global challenges, such as climate change, the economic crisis resulting from the Covid 19 pandemic, improve living conditions and the resilience of our cities,” said Sergio Israel Mendoza, general director of Environmental, Urban and Tourism Promotion, Mexico’s Secretariat of Environment and Natural Resources. “For Mexico, the implementation of mitigation measures that improve the thermal and energy performance of buildings is a key ingredient for sustainability,” Mendoza said.

NDC updates open window for faster action Most countries have yet to submit their second NDCs. Buildings remain a major area that lacks specific mitigation policies, despite its importance to global CO2 emissions, UNEP said. Of those who have submitted an NDC, 136 countries mention buildings, 53 countries mention building-energy efficiency, and only 38 specifically call out building energy codes. N a t i o n a l g o ve r n m e n t s m u s t s t e p u p commitments in NDCs, longer-term climate strategies and support for regulation to spur uptake of net-zero emissions buildings, it said in the news release.

This means prioritizing performance-based, mandator y building energy codes alongside wide-spread certification measures and working closely with sub-national governments to facilitate adoption and implementation. “We urgently need to address carbon emissions from buildings and construction, which constitute almost 40 percent of global carbon emissions. We must give governments visibility of this at COP26 [26th UN Climate Change Conference of Parties in November 2021], to inspire policies and decisions that result in the significant decarbonization of this sector,” said Nigel Topping, United Kingdom High-Level climate champion. “We need to challenge the incumbency of steel and concrete. Whether or not zero carbon steel and concrete become the materials of the future will depend on how fast those industries innovate in the face of new and disruptive technologies,” Topping said. He added: “We have some far-reaching commitments under the Science-Based Targets Initiative by leading materials companies which can serve as examples pushing the industry to go further, together.”

Energy-efficient building investment rising In 2019, spending on energy-efficient buildings increased for the first time in three years, with building energy efficiency across global markets increasing to $152 billion in 2019, or 3 percent more than the previous year, UNEP said.

This is only a small proportion of the $5.8 trillion total spent in the building and construction sector, but there are positive signs across the investment sector that building decarbonization and energy efficiency are taking hold in investment strategies, the UN agency said. For example, of the 1,005 real- estate companies, developers real estate investment trust, and funds representing more than $4.1 trillion in assets under management that reported to The Global ESG Benchmark for Real Assets in 2019, 90 percent aligned their projects with green building rating standards for construction and operations. Green buildings represent one of the biggest global investment opportunities of the next decade, estimated by the IFC to be $24.7 trillion by 2030.

Recommendations Besides calling for a green recover post-pandemic and updated NDCs, the report also recommends that owners and businesses use science-based targets to guide actions and engage with stakeholders across the building design, construction, operation and users to develop partnerships and build capacity. Investors should reevaluate all real-estate investment through an energy-efficiency and carbon reduction lens. Other actors across the value chain should adopt circular economy concepts to reduce the demand for construction materials and lower embodied carbon and adopting nature-based solutions that enhance building resilience, the report added.


Sports

PGA Tour hopeful for return of fans

BusinessMirror

A

A8 | S

unday, December 20, 2020 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

BOLD OFFSEASON MOVES T

HE Phoenix Suns haven’t been to the National Basketball Association (NBA) playoffs in more than a decade, back when players like Amar’e Stoudemire, Steve Nash and Grant Hill were running up and down the court in Arizona. In an effort to break out of its constant state of mediocrity, the franchise made some of the boldest moves around the league during the NBA’s coronavirus-condensed offseason. The Suns traded for 10-time All-Star point guard Chris Paul in November, a move that started a flurry of offseason deals as Phoenix worked to build around its young core of guard Devin Booker and forward Deandre Ayton. While all teams are looking to get better, a few standout: including the Los Angeles Lakers, Atlanta Hawks, Portland Trail Blazers, Milwaukee Bucks and Philadelphia 76ers. In Phoenix, Booker has been a beacon of light during the Suns recent playoff drought. He has toiled through five straight losing seasons in the desert since being drafted 13th overall in 2015 out of Kentucky. He made his first All-Star game last season and is thrilled with the offseason additions. But Booker knows a lot of moves look good on paper and a lot of hard work is ahead.

“You’ve got to build and nurture and grow,” Booker said. “We’ve taken tremendous steps. And with the players we added, we’ve got a deep team with a lot of IQ and guys who know how to play the game. I think everyone in this locker room is locked in.” The Suns didn’t stop with Paul. Soon after his arrival, Phoenix signed a handful of veterans including, forward Jae Crowder and guards Langston Galloway and E’Twaun Moore. The 35-year-old Paul is reunited with Coach Monty Williams, who is in his second season with the Suns. Williams coached Paul in New Orleans during the 2010-11 season and the two have stayed in touch. Paul said he loves the way Williams builds teams and the Suns match his personality. “We’ve got a lot of pros,” Paul said. “Anybody who plays in the league, or is around the league knows what I mean when I say that. Guys come in and prepare, they work. When we have shootarounds and practice, it’s hard to get guys out of the gym. “When you’ve got guys like that, you build.” A look at a few other NBA teams that made some of the biggest offseason moves:

LOS ANGELES LAKERS

LEBRON JAMES and Anthony Davis have a few

new teammates as they try to repeat as NBA champions. The Lakers added guard Dennis Schröder in a trade and bulked up the frontcourt by signing Montrezl Harrell, the NBA’s reigning sixth man of the year, and three-time All-Star Marc Gasol. Schröder averaged nearly 19 points per game last season for the Thunder and is still just 27 years old. Harrell averaged a career-high 18.6 points and 7.1 rebounds for the Clippers last season. The 6-foot-11 Gasol is nearly 36 years old, but has been a key factor on the Raptors the past two years, including during their championship run in 2019. The Lakers also added veteran guard Wesley Matthews, who averaged 7.4 points per game for the Bucks last season.

ATLANTA HAWKS

THE Hawks have had three straight losing seasons but made offseason moves to build around their young core of Trae Young and John Collins. General Manager Travis Schlenk brought in a load of veterans, including Danilo Gallinari, Bogdan Bogdanovic, Rajon Rondo and Kris Dunn. Gallinari and Bogdanovic bring plenty of shooting and combined to hit nearly six

THE Phoenix Suns Chris Paul (right) drives against Utah Jazz forward Georges Niang during the first half of their preseason game last week. AP

3-pointers per game last season. “On paper you see everything. You see the sky. You see everything is in front of us,” Young said. “Whatever we want, it’s up to us to go get it. I don’t know if there is a bar we can set.”

PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS

STAR guard Damian Lillard wanted a little more help to compete in the Western Conference and got it. The Blazers added two potential starters in the offseason with Robert Covington and Derrick Jones Jr. They also signed Enes Kanter, who can be a prolific offensive force in the paint. The new additions will join holdovers CJ

McCollum, Jusuf Nurkic, Rodney Hood and Carmelo Anthony. Lillard, a five-time All-Star, is in his prime and averaged a career-high 30 points per game last season.

MILWAUKEE BUCKS

THE Bucks hope the addition of veteran point guard Jrue Holiday, along with a revamped bench, can help the franchise take the next step to becoming NBA champions. Milwaukee believes its close, especially after reigning MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo signed a five-year extension worth $228 million. Holiday has averaged more than 19 points per game for the Pelicans over the past three seasons. The Bucks also have a large group of new reserves, adding forwards Bobby Portis and Torrey Craig, along with guards D.J. Augustin and Bryn Forbes.

PHILADELPHIA 76ERS

THE 76ers overhauled the supporting cast for are still built around the duo of Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid in push to go further in the playoffs. Philadelphia made it a priority to get more shooting, adding Seth Curry, Danny Green and first-round draft pick Tyrese Maxey. The 76ers also added veteran Dwight Howard to back up Embiid. Howard did well in a similar role with the NBA champion Lakers last season, averaging 7.5 points and 7.3 rebounds in about 19 minutes per game. Philadelphia also hired veteran Coach Doc Rivers. who led Boston to a championship in 2008. AP

Russia gets victory in doping decision

R

USSIA and its detractors found some rare common ground regarding the doping scandal that has engulfed the Olympics and the international sports world for the past six years. The Russians portrayed Thursday’s decision to reduce their penalties at the Olympics and other major events from four to two years as a victory. “And this is the first time they’ve been accurate and truthful during this whole sordid affair,” said Travis Tygart of the US Anti-Doping Agency. While Russia mostly celebrated the two-year sanction handed down by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, others labeled the decision a watereddown miscarriage of justice that falls far short of making the country account for its transgressions. “I am left puzzled by how a system considered dishonest, deceitful and seeped in systematic doping by CAS gets away with a two-year ban,” said Linda Helleland, a former vice president at the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada). Or, put more succinctly: “My point is, this is not really a sanction,” said retired US cross-country skier Noah Hoffman, who represents the Global Athlete advocacy group. CAS did, indeed, conclude that Russia did everything it was accused of— violations that prompted Wada to hand down the initial four-year penalty after its investigations wrapped up last December. But the highest court in international sports

MID hopes for the return of fans on the Professional Golfers’

Association (PGA) Tour next year, Commissioner Jay Monahan says tournaments are prepared financially to do without and still break even on operating costs. In a conference call Thursday to look back at a year dominated by the Covid-19 pandemic, Monahan said the tour was encouraged that a vaccine could lead to a “slow and steady increase” in how many fans are allowed at tournaments. Still, he said that would not be a decision by the tour alone. The tour for the last five years had been pushing its tournaments—most are run autonomously—to build reserve funds to cope with a situation like what the pandemic presented. By the end of the year, corporate sponsors were allowed to invite a limited number of clients. Pro-ams returned. The Houston Open was the first domestic event that had fans, selling 2,000 tickets a day. For early next year, most West Coast events have said they will not have fans. The Phoenix Open is building a singlestory structure for its rowdy 16th hole at the TPC Scottsdale, instead of what had been an enclosed stadium with seating for thousands. “I would say that our tournaments are prepared to operate without fans and to do so on a break-even basis which, like reserves, allows you to continue to operate and continue to move your tournament forward,” Monahan said. “And we will try and be more creative and innovative about additional ways to raise money and help them.” The tour has a remarkable model in which all income once operating costs are met is donated to local charities, and collectively it has raised more than $2 billion in its history. With various programs that touched on longtime support, Monahan said PGA Tour events combined to raise $160 million this year, down from $204 million the previous year before the pandemic cut off a huge source of revenue. “That’s not a record,” Monahan said. “But it’s certainly an accomplishment.” The pandemic shut down golf on March 13 after one round of The Players Championship. The tour resumed three months later and played every week except for Thanksgiving through December 6, with 18 players testing positive away from home. The most notable was Dustin Johnson, who returned from isolation and won the Masters. Monahan was bullish on 2021 even amid uncertainty. The season starts January 7 to 10 at Kapalua for the Sentry Tournament of Champions, which expects no more than 200 fans in a seating area around the 18th green with no access to the rest of the golf course. The biggest chunk of revenue in golf is from television. Tournaments also make money from ticket sales and related concessions, corporate hospitality and pro-ams. Monahan said it was too early to determine how or when the vaccine would help with the full return of fans. He said the tour would not require vaccination to attend a tournament, and it would work with each community’s health officials before deciding anything. He said limited ticket sales at some events, the return of pro-ams and some corporate presence has been a step for tournaments being able to operate next year. AP did not release its entire 186-page decision, which would shed light on its reasons for cutting the sanction in half. It offered a statement from the arbitrators, who said they “considered matters of proportionality and, in particular, the need to effect cultural change and encourage the next generation of Russian athletes to participate in clean international sport.” Leaders of the Olympic movement have been hoping for “cultural change” in the Russian sports system for years now, but any sense that it was occurring suffered a massive setback in the incident that led to the case that CAS considered. It centered around Russia’s promise to give Wada access to more than 23 million megabytes of digital files that would help detail and prosecute some of the doping violations that stemmed from the country’s widespread cheating scheme that began early in the 2010s. But when Wada finally got access to the files—in January 2019, long after many of the reforms and institutional cleanup were supposedly well underway—it found that Russian authorities were busy right up to the deadline scrubbing and altering those files. Wada’s four-year sanction was less draconian than it could’ve been but still booted most Russian dignitaries along with the country’s flag, though not all its athletes, from the Olympics. AP

THE Olympic Rings and a model of Misha the Bear Cub, the mascot of the Moscow 1980 Olympic Games, are seen in the yard of Russian Olympic Committee building in Moscow. AP


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92.

SHEN, CHUANXIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

134.

LO, CHIA-ZE a.k.a. LO, WEN-CHENG Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

93.

SONG, ZHEYI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

135.

LU, FENGMIN Chinese

94.

SONG, YIYI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

95.

SU, YUNNAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

136.

TANG, TIANDONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

96.

SU, LILI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

137.

WANG, GANGLEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

97.

SUN, CHENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

138.

98.

WANG, CAIHUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LE THI KHANH NGOC Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

99.

WANG, QIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

139.

LIU, YANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

100.

WANG, YU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

140.

LUONG THUC VAN Vietnamese

101.

WANG, SHANSHAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LUONG TUAN HAI Vietnamese

102.

WANG, HAICHAO Chinese

141.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

142.

TENG, YADONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

143.

TRAN THUAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

144.

YONG KAI SHENG Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHU, YI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

50.

ZHANG, ZHONGHAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

51.

ZHENG, ZHIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

103.

WANG, LIANGJUN Chinese

52.

CHEN, JIAQI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

104.

WANG, WENYAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

53.

TU, LIYUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

105.

WU, YIJIA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

54.

WANG, JINZHONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

106.

XIE, ZEKUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

49.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

AMAZON OPERATION SERVICES PHILIPPINES, INC. B21 Three E-com Moa Complex Harbour Drive Cor. Bay Shore Brgy. 076 Pasay City 132.

BACK, KYUNG AA South Korean

HR SERVICES ADMINISTRATOR -SCREENING SERVICES-KOREAN

WANG, RENTAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CHINESE ACCOUNTS)

16.

WANG, YINGYING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CHINESE ACCOUNTS)

17.

WEI, DONGLING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CHINESE ACCOUNTS)

55.

YANG, CHONGCHONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

107.

XU, JING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CHINESE ACCOUNTS)

56.

LIU, XIANAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

108.

XUE, SHUANGSHUANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

57.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

109.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CHINESE ACCOUNTS)

ZHANG, YANNI Chinese

YANG, SHIJIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

110.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CHINESE ACCOUNTS)

58.

SHEN, YANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

YANG, MING Chinese

111.

YANG, YANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

146.

HUANG, PENGZHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

59.

WANG, KAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

112.

YANG, XINYU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

147.

MAO, XIANJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

113.

YU, NANSONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

148.

WANG, LONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

60.

BIAO, CHUNNAN Chinese CHEN, PEIYUAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHANG, XIANGHUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

149.

CHENG, SHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

61.

114.

62.

CHEN, HAIBAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

115.

ZHANG, YUANSHUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

63.

FENG, YUXI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

116.

ZHANG, JIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

64.

FENG, FEICHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

117.

ZHANG, XIAOXIAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

65.

FU, YUE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

118.

ZHU, SHOUSONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

66.

GAO, YAJUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

67.

GAO, YANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

119.

68.

GUO, FEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

69.

HE, BAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ABC ABSOLUTE BEST CHOICE CONSULTING INC. 14/f 88 Corporate Center 141 Sedeño Cor. Valero Sts. Bel-air Makati City

70.

HE, KUIKUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

71.

HU, JIANAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HUANG, MENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

73.

JIAO, YU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

74.

KE, JIAO Chinese

75.

15.

18.

19.

20.

XU, TAO Chinese YANG, WENCHENG Chinese ZHANG, LONGWEI Chinese

3D ANALYZER INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES INC. 7-8/f Double Dragon Plaza 255 Edsa Cor. Macapagal Blvd. Brgy. 076 Pasay City 21.

22.

CHEN, YI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

GUAN, WEIHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

KIM, SANGA South Korean

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LI, ZHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

25.

LIANG, YIMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

26.

LIAO, JIAQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

27.

LIN, ZHIQUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

23.

24.

28.

29.

30.

31.

32.

SUN, XIANGLEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

YAN, SHENGWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

YANG, LIJUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHANG, ZHIHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHAO, LIJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

8 STONE BUSINESS OUTSOURCING OPC 5-10/f Tower 1 Pitx Kennedy Road Tambo Parañaque City 33.

WANG, LIJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

34.

CHEN, WEIJIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

35.

HE, CHAOHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

36.

HE, FURUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

A.S.T. WORLD FASHION INC. Unit No. A 02, Flr. No. G/f, Baclaran Bagong Milenyo Bldg. F.b. Harrison St., Zone 10 Barangay 076, District 1 Pasay City

120.

ROHAN, MD Bangladeshi

ZHU, XINGXING Chinese

MARKETING STAFF

FINANCE OFFICER

ACCENTURE, INC. 7f Robinsons Cybergate Tower 1 Pioneer St Mandaluyong City SINDOH, EVELYNE MAGLOIRE Cameroonian

SERVICE DESK ANALYST

122.

KANG, MINHO South Korean

KOREAN PROGRAM & PROJECT MANAGEMENT SENIOR ANALYST

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

123.

KEJA, MALVIS KEFUM Cameroonian

SERVICE DESK ANALYST

LI, SHUXIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

124.

NSEUFU, OMER KETCHA Cameroonian

SERVICE DESK ANALYST

76.

LI, WENBIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

125.

KOROLEVA, ELENA Russian

RUSSIAN LANGUAGE RESOURCE/SPECIALIST

77.

LI, YANSEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

78.

LI, ZIMIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

79.

LIU, HUA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

80.

LIU, GANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

81.

LIU, WEIJIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

82.

LIU, BINLONG Chinese

83.

LIU, RONGKE Chinese

72.

121.

ALFANET GLOBAL SOLUTIONS, INC. Flr. No. 4th & 5th W Mall Bldg. Diosdado Macapagal Ave. St. Zone 10. Barangay 076, District 1 Pasay City 126.

FOX, JAMES PAUL British

CHIEF GOVERNMENT RELATIONS OFFICER

ALTECH INNOVATIONS BUSINESS OUTSOURCING 8th Floor Aseana One Building Aseana Business Park Bradco Avenue Baclaran Parañaque City 127.

DONG, RUIHONG Chinese

MARKETING STAFF

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

128.

SHI, JUNFENG Chinese

MARKETING STAFF

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

129.

WANG, YONGCHUN Chinese

MARKETING STAFF

ANCHOR LAND HOTELS & RESORTS, INC. G/f 69 Solemare Park Suites Bradco Avenue Tambo Parañaque City 145.

BUSSCHAERT, MATTHIEU EMMANUEL JEAN MARIE French

GENERAL MANAGER

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

APPTECHURE CORP. Units A&b 20/f Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. San Lorenzo Makati City 150.

LI, WEI Chinese

MANDARIN IT PROJECT MANAGER

ARCHEV INC. Unit 1 & 3 14/f Syciplaw Center 105 Paseo De Roxas San Lorenzo Makati City 151.

CHEN, XIYU Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS ANALYST

ASCENT DEVELOPMENT CONSTRUCTION INC. 5th Floor Strata 100 Bldg. F. Ortigas Jr. Ave. Ortigas Center San Antonio Pasig City 152.

KO, PEOMSU South Korean

PLANNING SUPERVISOR

153.

SONG, CHIHUN South Korean

PROJECT SCHEDULER

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 154.

WEI, ZHAOHUI Chinese

MANDARIN HUMAN RESOURCE (HR) OFFICER

ATOMY PHILIPPINE DISTRIBUTION TRADING INC. U5007, 12/f A-place Bldg. Coral Way Drive, Cbp 1 Brgy. 076 Pasay City 155.

LEE, DAEUN South Korean

ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGER

B5 FITNESS GYM MANAGEMENT INC. 5 Gen. Luna St. San Agustin Malabon City 156.

KANEKO, SHOICHI Japanese

MARKETING MANAGER

157.

IWAI, SHOTA Japanese

SALES MANAGER

BAYVIEW TECHNOLOGIES, INC. 43/f Yuchengco Tower Rcbc Plaza Ayala Ave. Cor. Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. Bel-air Makati City 158.

ENG CHEE HOO Malaysian

ASSISTANT MARKETING MANAGER (MULTI-LINGUAL)

159.

LV, WEI Chinese

ASSISTANT SALES MANAGER (MULTI-LINGUAL)

160.

MASUDA, YASUHIRO Japanese

CS ASSISTANT MANAGER (MULTI-LINGUAL)

161.

KUMAR, UMESH KUMAR Indian

CS PROJECT MANAGER (MULTI-LINGUAL)


BusinessMirror

A10 Sunday, December 20, 2020 ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

162.

AOKI, ERIKO Japanese

CS SHIFT LEADER (MULTILINGUAL)

209.

163.

YAN, LEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SUPPORT (MULTILINGUAL)

164.

SHAO, JIGUANG Chinese

ELITE ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE (MULTI-LINGUAL)

165.

KATAYAMA, SEIKO Japanese

MARKETING MANAGER (MULTI-LINGUAL)

166.

LEE, SANGJEE South Korean

MARKETING MANAGER (MULTI-LINGUAL)

167.

SAEKOW, SORAKRAI Thai

QUALITY ASSISTANT MANAGER (MULTI-LINGUAL)

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

www.businessmirror.com.ph

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

AGUSTINA Indonesian

BAHASA INDONESIAN LANGUAGE- PRODUCT MANAGER

210.

CRISTIANI LIOW Indonesian

BAHASA INDONESIAN LANGUAGE- SUPERVISOR FUND MANAGEMENT

211.

LIU, CHIH-TENG a.k.a. LIU, CHING-YEN Taiwanese

MANDARIN LANGUAGEMARKETING OFFICER

212.

PENG, YU-TA a.k.a. PAUL PENG Taiwanese

MANDARIN LANGUAGEMARKETING OFFICER

BILLION DRAGON OUTSOURCE PHILS., INC. 3/f Ayala Mall Southpark National Road Alabang Muntinlupa City

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

256.

DING, WEITAO Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

EASTERN GOLD CORPORATION 503 Nueva St Binondo Manila

257.

FAN, WENJUAN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

292.

LIU, SHUANG Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

258.

LI, YUNLING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

293.

PARK, KEUNKYOUNG South Korean

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

259.

LIU, YINGTAO Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

294.

WANG, YIRONG Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

260.

MING, LI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

EMERSON ELECTRIC (ASIA) LIMITED 9f To 16f Sm Cyberwest E. De Los Santos Ave. Cor. West Ave. Bungad 1 Quezon City

261.

ZHANG, XIAOMING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

262.

ERVYNNA ANAK STEPHEN Malaysian

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

263.

ZHU, JIAWEI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

SALES EXECUTIVE (MULTILINGUAL)

213.

GONG, YINGJUN Chinese

SALES EXECUTIVE (MULTILINGUAL)

214.

LIU, CHAOFAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

170.

ZHANG, BINGMEI Chinese

TRANSLATION SERVICES EXECUTIVE (MULTI-LINGUAL)

215.

CHIU, SHIN-TUNG Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

171.

YOONG WAI LOON Malaysian

SENIOR ELITE ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE (MULTI-LINGUAL)

216.

LI, JINTAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

217.

PENG, HUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

264.

218.

PENG, YAOFANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL MANILA, INC. Upper Mckinley Roadmckinley Hill Pinagsama Taguig City

219.

WANG, JINGZHUO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

265.

220.

WANG, ZHIQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

221.

WEI, ZHONGZHI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

222.

ZHENG, HE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

223.

ZHU, JIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

224.

HUANG, ZHIBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

225.

WU, JINGDONG Chinese

226.

XIONG, LIYING Chinese

168. 169.

DAI, YU Chinese WANG, ZENGJIN Chinese

BEAUTIFUL PHILIPPINE TRAVEL AND CONSULTANCY SERVICES, INC. Unit Ug-50 Cityland Dela Rosa Condo., Dela Rosa St. Pio Del Pilar Makati City 172. 173. 174. 175.

ZHANG, LINLIN Chinese

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

ZHAO, HAO Chinese

ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGER

WANG, YONG Chinese

OPERATIONS MANAGER

LIU, RUI Chinese

TRAVEL CONSULTANT

BEST RELIABLE RESOURCES CORP. Ub 111 Paseo De Roxas Bldg. Paseo De Roxas San Lorenzo Makati City 176.

ZRIAN, MAOR Israeli

MARKETING RESEARCH ANALYST

177.

BASSA, DOR Israeli

SALES MANAGER

BIG EMPEROR TECHNOLOGY CORP. Eastfield Center Cbp1, Macapagal Blvd. Brgy. 076 Pasay City 178.

LIN, KAICHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

179.

LYU, QIJIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

PAN, JUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

181.

PENG, JIAPING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

182.

QU, XIUQIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

183.

WANG, XIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

184.

YANG, JUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

180.

185.

YI, ZHIPENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

186.

GUO, KANGLE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

187.

HAO, XINTAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

188.

HONG, WEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

189.

HUANG, SHAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

190.

LUO, JUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

191.

MENG, LONGLEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

192.

OU, RUOTUO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

193.

WANG, HAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

194.

XIAO, LONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

195.

XIE, LINGBO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

196.

XU, ZIFU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

197.

ZHAN, ZEXIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

198.

ZHAO, ZHIWEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

199.

AGUSTINA Indonesian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

200.

DAI, YUE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

201.

FAN, QIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

202.

HUANG, HUILI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

203.

HUANG, JIANING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

204.

YANG, HAOTAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

BIG PHILIP HEAVY EQUIPMENT CORPORATION Unit 25-c Cleveland The Asia World City Don Galo Parañaque City 205.

CHUONG NHUT PHAT Vietnamese

LEASING OF EQUIPMENT OFFICER

206.

SU, YUAN Chinese

PURCHASING SUPERVISOR

BIGCAT SOFTWARE SOLUTIONS, INC. 18/f Pbcom Tower, 6795 Ayala Avenue Cor. Rufino Street Salcedo Vill. Bel-air Makati City

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

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

296.

CHEN, HONGDA Chinese

STORE MANAGER

297.

HU, SHIMIN Chinese

STORE MANAGER

FAREAST OUTSOURCE PROCESSING INC. 7th, 8th, 9th Flr. Nu Tower Moa Coral Way Brgy. 076 Pasay City 298.

KANG, WEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

299.

LI, XUEJIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

300.

LIN, YANZHU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

301.

WANG, CHENGPIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

302.

YANG, DONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

303.

JIANG, GUANGLIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

267.

BUI HOANG THAO NGUYEN Vietnamese

SR. PROCESS EXECUTIVE

268.

RIVAS MESTANZA, ANA CLARIBEL Salvadoran

SR. PROCESS EXECUTIVE

304.

LI, LELE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CRIMSON GROUP, INC. 2/f First Lucky Place 2259 Chino Roces Ave. Ext. Magallanes Makati City

305.

SHEN, SUHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

269.

306.

ZHANG, LIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

ASSOCIATE

228.

TAKAHASHI, HIDEO Japanese

ASSOCIATE

C’EST LA VIE EVENT MANAGEMENT INC. 230 Narra Street Marikina Heights Marikina City 229.

GAO, HONGJUN Chinese

CHINESE - BOOTH FABRICATION SPECIALIST CONSULTANT

230.

KIM, MINSUNG South Korean

KOREAN - BOOTH FABRICATION SPECIALIST CONSULTANT

231.

AN, SEONGHO South Korean

KOREAN - CUSTOMER SUPPORT TRAINOR

232.

KIM, MYOUNGHWAN South Korean

KOREAN - FIELD SALES CONSULTANT

233.

LEE, JINHA South Korean

KOREAN - KEY ACCOUNTS SPECIALIST CONSULTANT

234.

WANG, JIALI Chinese

CUSTOMER SUPPORT TRAINOR - MANDARIN SPEAKING

CAPSLOCK INC. 7th & 8th Flr. Y Tower Bldg. Coral Way Drive Cor. Macapagal Brgy. 076 Pasay City 235.

BI, NING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

236.

CHEN, ZHIPENG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

237.

FU, WENSHI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

238.

HUANG, HAIKUN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

239.

LI, QIUFENG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

240.

LIU, DONGHUA Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

241.

PEI, HAO Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

242.

TANG, YASONG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

WANG, GUOHUI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

XIA, XUEQIANG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

XIAO, YAO Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

246.

XU, LIANGLIANG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

247.

ZHENG, YUNYAO Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

248.

CHANG FOOK SENG Malaysian

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

GOH PING YEW Malaysian

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

250.

KYAR SHI Myanmari

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

251.

LE HWAY KYWON Myanmari

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

252.

LOW CHON CHU Malaysian

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

253.

TAN CHUNG HIENG Malaysian

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

249.

MANDARIN LANGUAGE PROGRAM DOCUMENTATION COORDINATOR

FABROS LTD. INCORPORATED (YOYOMARKET) 2nd Floor South Global Forum 7th Avenue Corner Federacion Drive Bgc, Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

INFRA. TECH SPECIALIST

LI, XIAOQING Chinese

245.

XIANG, YUNING Chinese

AUTHORIZED MANAGING OFFICER

FRENCH TECHNICIAN 2, MONITORING SERVICE

266.

227.

244.

LIU, XUFENG Chinese

NIBA NWICHAMBI, HANANEEL Cameroonian

POSITION

CHAVAN SHAROF, RAJESWARA RAO Indian

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

243.

CHINA RAILWAY NO.3 ENGINEERING GROUP CO., LTD. PHILIPPINE BRANCH Unit A&b 20/f Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City

295.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

O’CONNELL, CLINTON PATRICK British

CONSULTANT

CROSSCOOP PHILIPPINES INC. 23/f Gt Tower Int’l. 6813 Ayala Ave. Cor. H.v. Dela Costa Sts. Bel-air Makati City 270.

NANKI, KARINA Japanese

TREASURER & GENERAL MANAGER

CROWN WORLDWIDE GLOBAL BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. 11th Floor Menarco Tower 32nd Street, Bonifacio Global City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 271.

AIYER, VANDANA Indian

REGIONAL ACCOUNT MANAGER

CSCEC STRAIT CONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT CO., LTD (PHILIPPINES BRANCH OFFICE) Units A&b 20/f Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. San Lorenzo Makati City 272.

REN, CHAO Chinese

MANDARIN PROCUREMENT SPECIALIST

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

FIRST GENPACT INFORMATION TECH. INC. Unit G-16/ M01 019/ M02 G25 Solemare Parksuites Units Bradco Avenue Tambo Parañaque City 307.

KAY KAY KHAING Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

308.

HNIN WUT YI Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

FIRST GREAT COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES INC. Lot 5 Sta. Agueda Cor. Queensway Pagcor Drive Sto. Niño Parañaque City 309.

LI, XIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

310.

WEI, JIAOQIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

311.

XIANG, FUYANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

312.

ZHANG, LIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

273.

SOONG, TEEIN Taiwanese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

313.

ZHENG, YUANFENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

274.

ZHANG, HUA Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS ANALYST

314.

LI, CHUANQIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

315.

GUO, ZIQI Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

ZHANG, LIDA Chinese

IT Technical Mandarin

DAXIFA CORPORATION Mpire Center 93 West Avenue Project 7 Bungad 1 Quezon City 275.

LI, WANWEI Chinese

CSR MANDARIN SPEAKING

316.

276.

DONG, HAO Chinese

ONLINE SUPPORT ANALYST

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

277.

LI, YUANYOU Chinese

ONLINE SUPPORT ANALYST

317.

HUANG, QIAOHE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

278.

OUYANG, ZIDAN Chinese

ONLINE SUPPORT ANALYST

318.

SU, JISHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

279.

SU, JIZHENG Chinese

ONLINE SUPPORT ANALYST

319.

WAN, FANRONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

280.

TANG, YUNXI Chinese

ONLINE SUPPORT ANALYST

320.

WANG, YONGJIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

281.

VONG MY DIN Vietnamese

ONLINE SUPPORT ANALYST

321.

XIONG, YUNJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

282.

YIN, SHIBAO Chinese

ONLINE SUPPORT ANALYST

322.

YU, XINGLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

283.

YIN, CUNLONG Chinese

ONLINE SUPPORT ANALYST

323.

ZHONG, HUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

324.

CHIT THEIN Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

325.

HTAY HTAY MOE Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

DENSO TECHNO PHILIPPINES INC. 2/f Sm Jazz Residences N. Garcia Cor. Jupiter Sts. Bel-air Makati City 284.

KIKUCHI, KOICHI Japanese

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR/ GENERAL MANAGER/ TREASURER

285.

ISHIGAMI, MAKOTO Japanese

GENERAL MANAGER OF POWERTRAIN SYSTEM TOYOTA

326.

TUN TUN NAING Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

286.

TANABE, YOSHITAKA Japanese

SENIOR MANAGER FOR POWERTRAIN SYSTEM TOYOTA

327.

LIU, ZHILING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

SENIOR MANAGER FOR SOFTWARE PRODUCTION INNOVATION

328.

287.

KUBOTA, YASUHIRO Japanese

CHEN, XIANGBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

329.

CHEN, ZHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

330.

CHENG, SHUAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

331.

DING, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

332.

DU, XINBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

333.

FAN, ZHENGNA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

334.

FENG, NONGHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

DIGISPARK TECH CORP. Unit 1618 High Street, South Corporate Plaza, Tower 2 26th St. Corner 9th Ave. Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 288.

TSE, TAN WAI POLLY Chinese

GENERAL AFFAIRS SPECIALIST

DIMENSION-ALL INC. Unit 906, One Corporate Center Meralco Ave Cor. Julia Vargas San Antonio Pasig City 289.

SUETSUGU, RYUSUKE Japanese

ASSISTANT MANAGER FOR MURAMOTO PROJECT

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

207.

POTHIPONGSA, RAWEEPAPA Thai

THAI LANGUAGE-MARKETING OFFICER

254.

CAI, SHENGBIN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

290.

ZENG, XIANXIAN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING ADMIN ASSOCIATE

335.

GAO, JUNYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

208.

PUTUT DWI HANDOYO Indonesian

BAHASA INDONESIAN LANGUAGE- OFFICER CUSTOMER SERVICE

255.

CHEN, GUOTAO Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

291.

YUAN, SHIYU Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT

336.

HE, CHUNYAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE


BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

337.

HONG, CHANYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

385.

338.

HOU, DEWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

339.

JIANG, LANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

340.

LAN, CHENYIXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

341.

LI, XIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

342.

LI, XINGGAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

343.

LI, YUNHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

344.

LIAO, FEIHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

345.

LIU, JINLING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

346.

LONG, BIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

347.

LYU, JIAOJIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

394.

348.

MA, KAIFU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

349.

MA, CHENGLONG Chinese

350.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

PONCHALEE, BOODSAYA Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

426.

386.

PUTSAKUM, SUTARINEE Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

387.

SOISA-NGIM, THANCHANOK Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

388.

SORNPANU, PHANTHASITH Thai

389.

LU DINH VUI Vietnamese

390.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

KWONG MUN YEE Malaysian

Sunday, December 20, 2020 A11

POSITION

NO.

LI, SHUAI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

475.

427.

LI, SHULIN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

428.

LI, YULIN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

429.

LU, KANGYONG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK

CUSTOMER SERVICE VIETNAMESE SPEAKING

430.

LUONG KIET NHI Vietnamese

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK

431.

WU, DONGDONG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK CHINESE SPEAKING GRAPHIC DESIGNER

ADMIN SUPERVISOR

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

391.

LIN, PEI-CHI Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE CHINESE SPEAKING

432.

QI, ZHUANG Chinese

392.

WENG, HUI-YI Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE CHINESE SPEAKING

433.

YANG, QING Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING GRAPHIC DESIGNER

393.

NOVIANNA CAROLINTINA Indonesian

434.

YU, ZHENG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING GRAPHIC DESIGNER

435.

ZHOU, WENHUA Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING GRAPHIC DESIGNER

436.

NIE, HAORAN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING PROGRAM DESIGNER

437.

YING, CONGXIN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING PROGRAM DESIGNER

CUSTOMER SERVICE INDONESIAN SPEAKING

AKSURIYACHAI, CHATHINA Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

395.

CHAISURA, SARAWUT Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

396.

TAMPROMRIN, KANTINAN Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

QIAN, HONGCHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

397.

UNTARABOOT, ARISARA Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

351.

QUAN, WEILONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

398.

BUI NGOC SON TUNG Vietnamese

352.

WANG, XINWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

353.

WANG, ZHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

354.

WANG, YUAN Chinese

355.

INTEGRITY GLOBAL GROUP, INC. 2/f-3/f Ayala Malls Circuit A.p. Reyes Ave. Carmona Makati City 438.

CHEN, CHANGYIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE VIETNAMESE SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

439.

DAI, JINYUAN Chinese

399.

NGUYEN THI HONG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE VIETNAMESE SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

440.

DONG, JIANLIANG Chinese

400.

PHAM MINH NGOC Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE VIETNAMESE SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

441.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

GONG, ZUXIAO Chinese

401.

TO HOAI QUYNH NHU Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE VIETNAMESE SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

442.

XIAO, LANGQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LAM CHI THAN Vietnamese

402.

TRAN THI HANG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE VIETNAMESE SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

443.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

403.

TU GIA CHINH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE VIETNAMESE SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

356.

XIE, JUNDONG Chinese

LI, PENG Chinese

444.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

404.

ONG SIOW EE Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

357.

XU, JUNCHANG Chinese

LI, XINGYUN Chinese

FINANCE SUPERVISOR

445.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

358.

XU, JUN Chinese

LIU, YANG Chinese

446.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

359.

YI, XIAOZHOU Chinese

XU, HUI Chinese

447.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

360.

YUAN, WEI Chinese

ZHANG, BO Chinese

448.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

361.

ZENG, QI Chinese

ZHANG, YAXIONG Chinese

449.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

362.

ZENG, SHUPING Chinese

ZHANG, YONG Chinese

450.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

363.

ZHANG, HUIYAN Chinese

ZHAO, SHENG Chinese

451.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

364.

ZHANG, ZHEN Chinese

ZHAO, XIONG Chinese

452.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

365.

ZHANG, TING Chinese

ZOU, PING Chinese

366.

ZHANG, MINGLIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

367.

ZHANG, CHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

368.

ZHAO, JINYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

369. 370.

LIN, LEJIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

SHEN, XIAOYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

FREYSSINET INTERNATIONAL MANILA, INC. U-5b-9 5/f The Pearl Bank Centre 146 Valero St. Bel-air Makati City 371.

COEVOET - SZECSENYI, REKA Hungarian

TECHNICAL ASSISTANT

FYNTEGRATE INC. 22nd Floor Marajo Tower 26th Street Corner 4th Avenue Bonifacio Global City, Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 372.

KUMAR, ADARSH Indian

FRONT-END SOFTWARE DEVELOPER

GLOBAL B2B CONSULTANCY, INC. 50/f Pbcom Tower 6795 Ayala Avenue Bel-air Makati City

GLOBE TELECOM, INC. 2/f, Globe Telecom Plaza Pioneer Cor. Madison Brgy. Barangka Mandaluyong City 405.

MAHESHWARI, GOVIND Indian

GRANDTECH SUPPORT SERVICES INC. 4/f U-2c One E-com Ctr. Bldg. Ocean Drive Brgy. 076 Pasay City 406.

YANG, PAN Chinese

407.

CHEN, JIE Chinese

408.

PIMCHAN, NARUEBET Thai

LIN, HUAIYUE Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SEPCIALIST

477.

CHEN, LIANG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

478.

JIANG, WEIYI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

479.

LI, SHUAI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

480.

MA, CHENGCHENG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

481.

ZHANG, YULONG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

482.

GUAN, YITONG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

483.

HU, SHUMIN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

484.

JIANG, SHAOHONG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

485.

LIU, LEI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

486.

LYU, HAIKANG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

487.

SHAO, XIONGXU Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

488.

WANG, YUANCHEN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

489.

WEI, JIANFENG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

490.

XIE, YONG Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

491.

ZHANG, SHIHUA Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

492.

ZHANG, NING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

493.

HSIEH, WAN-YUN Taiwanese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

494.

HU, LI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

495.

LI, XIAOQING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

496.

LING, RONGFEN Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

497.

OUYANG, HUI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

498.

SUN, BAOYU Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

499.

TIAN, PING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

500.

XIE, AILING Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

501.

ZHANG, ZHENGHUI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

502.

ZOU, HUIQI Chinese

CHINESE IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

503.

NGUYEN THI TUONG VI Vietnamese

IT SUPPORT SPECIALIST

J-NA ALLOUT TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS CORP. 3/f Lipams Bldg. #48 President Avenue Bf Homes Parañaque City

454.

HUANG, QIONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

AGUSTINA Indonesian

INDONESIAN COSTUMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

410.

MANDARIN OPERATING SYSTEM SPECIALIST

455.

504.

JIANG, SHULIANG Chinese

QI, QINGJIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

505.

MANDARIN SERVICE DESK ANALYST

456.

ANDI SATRIAWAN Indonesian

INDONESIAN COSTUMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

457.

WANG, MENGLIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

506.

AGUS SURYANTO Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

458.

XIA, HUAQIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

459.

YANG, BAIFENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

460.

ZHANG, HEWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

461.

ZHANG, JINSHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

411.

DAI, LI Chinese

HELLOCONNECT, INC. 7/f Inoza Tower 40th St., Bonifacio Global City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 412.

MADSEN, OLE HARDEGE Danish

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE - DANISH SPEAKING

HUAWEI TECHNOLOGIES PHILS. INC. U-5302, 53/f Pbcom Tower 6795 Ayala Ave., Cor., V.a. Rufino St. Bel-air Makati City 413.

414.

LI, HUI Chinese

PRODUCT MANAGER FOR GLOBE INTELLIGENT COLLABORATION PROJECT

LIANG, JIE Chinese

CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER FOR CARRIER NETWORK BUSINESS GROUP (CNBG)

HSIAO, YU-JEN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE CHINESE SPEAKING

415.

ZHANG, TUANWEI Chinese

376.

JAIMAN, NAPAPORN Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

416.

377.

KAEWVUNNA, WIMONMAT Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

378.

KASIWAT, JANTIWA Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

379.

KEAWCHAROEN, SIRINYA Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

INVECH TREASURE PROCESSING CORPORATION Ground, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th Floor Six West Campus Mckinley West Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

512.

HO THIEN VAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

513.

HOANG THI NHUNG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

514.

HOANG THI UYEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

515.

HU, ZHIWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

516.

LY TIEU TRINH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

517.

MA, RUOQI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

518.

PHUNG NGOC KY Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

519.

RAO, TONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

FANG, CHUNYAN Chinese

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

520.

SU VAY PHAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHANG, DONGGEN Chinese

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

521.

ZHANG, YANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

SHAO, DONG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING PROGRAM DESIGNER

465.

NAING NAING AUNG Myanmari

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

417.

CAI, LEI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE

466.

TUN TUN NAING Myanmari

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

418.

CHEN, ZIXIANG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE

467.

YOHANES STEVEN Indonesian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

419.

DENG, YANNI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE

468.

LI, WANYOU Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

420.

DING, YANZHANG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE

469.

LIN, YINGXIONG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

421.

FU, LEI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE

470.

XING, MIAOHUI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

422.

LI, LEI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE

471.

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

423.

MA, YONGSHENG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE

LAWRENCE NGU ING HUI Malaysian

472.

YULI YANTO Indonesian

473. 474.

PHUBANRATTANAKUL, ANGSUMALEE Thai

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

425.

LI, JIACHENG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

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

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHANG, TING Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ASSISTANT TECHNICAL MANAGER

HO NGOC DUY Vietnamese

464.

JIN, XIN Chinese

MANNAN Bangladeshi

511.

CHINESE SPEAKING GRAPHIC DESIGNER

424.

508.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

JILANI AND MANNAH BD CORPORATION Unit No. L-08, Terminal Plaza Bldg. Taft Ave. Ext. St. Zone 10 Barangay 078, District 1 Pasay City

GAO, ERLI Chinese

ZHANG, WEI Chinese

383.

STRATEGY AND FACILITATION CONSULTANT

510.

463.

NIYOMKAN, THANAPORN Thai

KALSI, GURPREM SINGH Indian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

382.

507.

CHU NGOC HOA Vietnamese

CHEN, JINLONG Chinese

INFOVINE INC. 9/f Y Tower, Moa Complex Coral Way Drive Cor. Macapagal Brgy. 076 Pasay City

JDB MANAGEMENT AND CONSULTANCY CORP. 107 T & D House Magallanes St. 069, Bgy. 655 Intramuros Manila

509.

462.

MANURASDA, WASINEE Thai

384.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

476.

MANDARIN NETWORK ADMINISTRATOR SPECIALIST

375.

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

ITECHNO SPECIALIST INC. 9/f 100 West Building Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City

MA, BIN Chinese

374.

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

453.

AN, XINGYONG Chinese

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

409.

CUSTOMER SERVICE CHINESE SPEAKING

381.

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

ZHANG, PENG Chinese

POSITION

GUO, ZHIHONG Chinese

CHOO WEI JIE Malaysian

KRAIBUMRUNG, RATCHANOK Thai

ANALYST

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

CUSTOMER SERVICE CHINESE SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE THAI SPEAKING

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

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

CHANG, FANG-YI Taiwanese

KIRDNUAL, SUTHIRAT Thai

SITE TECHNICAL SUPPORTMANDARIN

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

373.

380.

CONSULTANT

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY


BusinessMirror

A12 Sunday, December 20, 2020 ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

JIU ZHOU TECHNOLOGIES INTERNATIONAL, INC. 31/f Tower 6789 6789 Ayala Avenue San Lorenzo Makati City 522.

ONG TING CHUN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

523.

CHAYO, PHONTHIP Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

SAEYANG, SUPITCHAYA Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

524.

JS BOUTIQUE FASHION INC. Unit No. 11-12. Two Shopping Center Bldg. Taft Ave. Ext. St., Zone 10 Barangay 078, District 1 Pasay City 525.

UDDIN, G M JASIM Bangladeshi

OPERATIONS MANAGER

KONGANBUDDIES MARKETING INC. 48/f Lower Ground Pbcom Tower 6795 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. Bel-air Makati City

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO. 607.

563.

LI, QIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

564.

LIN, TIANCI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

565.

LIN, JIAJIA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

LIU, ZENGLU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

567.

LIU, SHAOXIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

568.

LUO, JIA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

569.

MA, XIAOHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

570.

NIU, TIANYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

PAN, ZHE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

572.

PAN, DATIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

573.

SU, ZIJIAN Chinese

566.

www.businessmirror.com.ph ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

ZHAO, ZIZHENG Chinese

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

659.

LI, YANPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

660.

LI, JINGJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

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

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

608.

AUNG MYO HAN Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

661.

LI, LI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

609.

BAO, MULIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

662.

LI, HONGWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

610.

CAI, ZHIHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

663.

LI, MAOLIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

611.

CAO, ZHICHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

664.

LI, XINGCAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

612.

CHE, JINGZHE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

665.

LI, CHAI Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

613.

CHEN, DONGMEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

666.

LI, YUEMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

614.

CHEN, HANLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

667.

LIN, YISHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

615.

CHEN, HUALI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

668.

LIN, XIONGZHOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

616.

CHEN, HUAMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

669.

LIN, HUIMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

617.

CHEN, LONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

670.

LIN, WENLIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

618.

CHEN, LONGTAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

671.

LINGHU, YANXIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

619.

CHEN, XINYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

672.

LIU, LI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

526.

WIENGKEAW, TANAPOP Thai

HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGER

527.

NEOH WEI CHIANG Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

528.

NAIYASAP, TEERADA Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

529.

TOHMAD, THITI Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

530.

JIASATID, WATCHARA Thai

THAI MARKETING EXECUTIVE

531.

CHRISTOFER Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

532.

STEVEN Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

574.

SUN, ZHENJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

533.

CHRISTINA Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

575.

WANG, XIAOMENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

620.

CHEN, YIFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

673.

LIU, SHUMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

534.

HERMAN Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

621.

CHEN, XI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

674.

LIU, GANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

576.

WANG, XIN Chinese

535.

TIFFANI MARGO Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

622.

CHEN, SHUBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

675.

LIU, JUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

WANG, JIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

623.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

676.

LIU, TAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

578.

WANG, XUANJU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

CHENG, LONGQIANG Chinese

624.

DAI, WU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

677.

LIU, XIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

579.

WEI, YUNING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

625.

DAO PHUONG THANH Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

678.

LIU, XIAOTIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

580.

WEI, XIAOPU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

626.

DENG, YAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

679.

LIU, SHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

581.

WEN, YUNDAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

627.

DU, CHENGWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

680.

LOUK SAN Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

628.

ENG CHEE WOEI Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

681.

LU, FULI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

582.

WEN, CHING Taiwanese

FANG, MINGXIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

682.

LU, SHAOHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

WU, RENGPING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

629. 630.

FANG, DONGTONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

683.

LU, ZHENJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

584.

XIE, DAHAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

631.

FENG, LIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

684.

LUO, HUAJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

585.

XIE, XIONGSHI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

632.

FU, XIAOTONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

685.

LUO, HAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

586.

XIONG, YONGJIU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

633.

GAN, XIULI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

686.

LUO, LISI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

634.

GUO, ZHE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

687.

LUO, MINDAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

587.

XIONG, ZHIGUO Chinese

635.

GUO, SHAOFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

688.

LYU, HAIJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

XUE, YUSONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

636.

HAN, GUANGYOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

689.

MA, YUJUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

637.

HAN, GUANGLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

690.

MENG, KAIFANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

638.

HE, YUXIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

691.

MENG, LINGMEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

639.

HOANG VAN KHUONG Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

692.

MENG, LINGQIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

640.

HOANG VAN THANG Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

693.

NGUYEN NGOC SAN Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

641.

HU, JIYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

694.

NGUYEN THI THUY Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

642.

HUANG, LINMAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

695.

NIE, QING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

643.

HUANG, YIWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

696.

NING, QIBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

644.

HUANG, MEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

697.

PHAM VAN QUAN Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

645.

JIANG, MENGYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

698.

RAO, PENGCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

646.

JIANG, PING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

699.

SAI KYAN AUNG Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

647.

JIANG, ZHIQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

700.

SHI, XIANGQUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

648.

KAN, SHUAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

701.

SHI, XUDONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

649.

KE, JINLIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

702.

SHI, YONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

650.

KYAW LWIN OO Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

703.

SHI, DONGSHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

651.

LANG, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

704.

SHWE MYINT ZU Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

652.

LE TRONG DAI Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

705.

SONG, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

LEE TIME TRAVEL TOUR AND TRANSPORT, INC. Unit F, 2/f #31 Aguierre Avenue Cor P. Benzon St. Bf Homes Parañaque City 536.

LEE, JI YOUNG South Korean

538. 539.

PARK, SEONGJUN South Korean KO, JEONGMIN South Korean KIM, JONGIN South Korean

577.

INBOUND MANAGER

LERIB SERVICES CORPORATION U-3d Rose Industries Bldg. Choice Market Ortigas Kapitolyo Pasig City 537.

571.

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST TECHNICAL SUPPORT SPECIALIST

540.

LIM, HYOMIN South Korean

TECHNICAL SUPPORT SPECIALIST

541.

YU, HYERIN South Korean

TECHNICAL SUPPORT SPECIALIST

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

583.

542.

TOH SZE HAO Malaysian

ADMIN EXECUTIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

543.

GUO, YANLING Chinese

CHINESE MARKETING ASSISTANT

LIU, JIANING Chinese

CLIENT SUPPORT SENIOR OFFICER (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

545.

LAN, LIUQING Chinese

MARKETING ANALYST (CHINA MARKET)

546.

XING, LINFENG Chinese

MARKETING COORDINATOR (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

589.

HUYNH QUOC LUC Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (TIENG VIET SPEAKING)

MAC’S DOING BUSINESS SUPPORT CORP. Unit 1803 18/f Cityland Pasong Tamo Tower 2210 Chino Roces Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City

590.

TU CHI SAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (TIENG VIET SPEAKING)

544.

547.

TAYLOR, JEFFERY AARON American

IT SPECIALIST (SENIOR)

MACH 86 TECHNOLOGIES CORP. 5th-13th Flr. Workspace Bldg. 1419 Industry St. Corner Finance St. Mbp Ayala Alabang Ayala-alabang Muntinlupa City 548.

JACKIE NA HUI HAU Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (BAHASA MALAYSIA SPEAKING)

588.

MAERSK GLOBAL SERVICE CENTRES (PHILIPPINES) LTD. Levels 5-8 North Wing, Estancia Offices Capitol Commons Meralco Ave. Oranbo Pasig City 591.

MORA MORENO, YULIANA Colombian

PROCESS EXPERT-SPANISH SPEAKER

MARKETROLE ASIA PACIFIC SERVICES, INC. 26/f, 27/f, 28/f The Enterprise Center Tower 1 6766 Ayala Ave. Cor. Paseo De Roxas San Lorenzo Makati City 592.

CHENG, YONGJIANG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

593.

HUANG, YONGKANG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

594.

LUO, YING Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

595.

SHEN, XIANG Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

596.

TAO, WEI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

597.

WANG, TAO Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

DENG, CHAOHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

550.

DUAN, YUPENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

551.

FANG, JINGSUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

552.

FU, CHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

HAN, JINSI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

HE, JINFU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

598.

XIONG, JIAN Chinese

HUANG, LIANGYUE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

599.

YUAN, HUI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

600.

556.

HUANG, HAO Chinese

ZHU, BINBIN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

557.

HUI, XIANGRU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

LI, FENGYANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

559.

LI, GUANGYAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

560.

LI, LEI Chinese

561.

562.

549.

553.

554.

555.

558.

MINDSCAPE CREATIVES INC. Unit 19-o, Burgundy Corporate Tower 252 Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City 601.

CHEN, YANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

653.

LENH COONG DAU Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

706.

SU, QIHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

602.

HUANG, MENGHONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

654.

LI, PANPAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

707.

SU SU Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

603.

HE, YANLING Chinese

MANDARIN HUMAN RESOURCE SPECIALIST

655.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

708.

SUN, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

LI, HAO Chinese

604.

HSIAO, CHUN-CHAO Taiwanese

MANDARIN HUMAN RESOURCE SPECIALIST

656.

LI, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

709.

TANG, MEIHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

LI, YE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

605.

ZHENG, XIAOLONG Chinese

MANDARIN OPERATIONS SPECIALIST

657.

LI, YI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

710.

THIN THIRI AYE Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

LI, YONGQI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

606.

LI, WANZHONG Chinese

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

658.

LI, XIAOPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

711.

TIAN, ZHIMOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE


BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO. 764.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

Sunday, December 20, 2020 A13

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

ZHAO, QIANWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

765.

ZHAO, WEI Chinese

766.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

816.

PHAM THI NGOC ANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

868.

HU, JINGQI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

817.

BI, XUEWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

869.

HUANG, SHUANGSHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHENG, ZHISHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

818.

CHEN, CHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

870.

HUANG, JIANTAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

767.

ZHOU, YINAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

819.

CHENG, YANBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

871.

HUANG, XIAOPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

768.

ZHOU, LIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

820.

DENG, CHANGFU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

872.

HUANG, ZILONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

769.

ZHU, SHA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

821.

DENG, ZHIWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

873.

HUANG, XIAOQIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

770.

AI, RENFA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

822.

GUO, FUCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

874.

JIANG, PENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

771.

AI, RENXIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

823.

KE, HAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

875.

LI, HUANLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

772.

BAO, YAOHAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

824.

LI, DUO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

876.

LIAO, YUANDONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

773.

CHEN, QIAOPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

825.

LIN, GUOJIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

877.

LIN, CHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

774.

CHEN, SONGYAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

826.

NHAN HAO HUY Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

878.

LIU, LINGGAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

775.

DENG, ZHOUYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

827.

PANG, BILI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

879.

LIU, NANCAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

776.

DIAO, YANLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

828.

PEI, SHAOLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

880.

LIU, XUYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

777.

DONG, FAJIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

829.

WANG, RONGHAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

881.

LONG, WEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

778.

DONG, ZHIPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

830.

WANG, XIAOGANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

882.

LYU, XUEFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

779.

DU, LIANGYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

831.

WANG, JIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

883.

OUYANG, ZHILIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

780.

DUAN, ZHENGPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

832.

WEI, SIWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

884.

QIU, JIAJIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

781.

GUO, CHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

833.

WEN, DONGDONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

885.

QU, JIAXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

782.

GUO, JIAXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

834.

WU, BINGWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

886.

SHANGGUAN, QINGCHUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

783.

GUO, MENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

835.

XU, ZHILONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

887.

SU, QINGFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

784.

HAO, ZHIHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

836.

YI JIA MEI @ YI YI WIN Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

888.

WANG, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

785.

HE, ZONGYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

837.

ZENG, HAIPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

889.

WEN, ZHENBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

786.

HU, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

838.

ZHU, MEISHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

890.

WU, XINGLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

787.

HUANG, ENWANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

839.

JI, YUESHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

891.

WU, DI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

788.

HUANG, XIANGJI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

840.

LI, YIPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

892.

XIAN, ZHENDONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

789.

JIANG, FEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

841.

LIANG, HONGJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

893.

XUE, YONGBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

790.

LAN, YUANZHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

842.

LING MEI KUAN Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

894.

YANG, LONGHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

791.

LI, JINDE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

843.

LIU, MIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

895.

YANG, YUANMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

792.

LI, JIANGDAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

844.

LIU, TONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

896.

YANG, LIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

793.

LIANG, YUQIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

845.

LIU, XIAOLU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

897.

ZENG, XUXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

794.

LIAO, XINGPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

846.

NANG MYINT MYINT YEE Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

898.

ZHANG, JINGHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

795.

LIN, HUAIQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

847.

NGUYEN DINH DINH Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

899.

ZHANG, YONGSHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

796.

LIU, YANRUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

848.

QIAN, XIAORU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

900.

ZHANG, KUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

797.

PENG, YUNPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

849.

REN, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

901.

ZHANG, FANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

798.

RUAN, MENGQIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

850.

SHAUK WU Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

902.

ZHAO, XU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

799.

SHI, SHUCUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

851.

SHI, XIANYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

903.

NG WEI SEAN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

800.

SU, PENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

852.

SUN, CHENGLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

904.

TEO WAI KEE Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

801.

SU, PENGFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

853.

TAN, QIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

905.

WEE HONG YUANN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

802.

SUN, BIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

854.

TRAN HOA THOM Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

906.

WONG KAH KEAN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

803.

TANG, MENGYING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

855.

XIONG, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

907.

SAI KYAW SEIN Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

804.

WANG, JICHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

856.

XU, LONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

908.

HOANG THI TUYET Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

805.

WEI, DAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

857.

YAN HITE SAWT Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

909.

HOANG THI XUAN DIEU Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

806.

WU, XIAOXUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

858.

ZHAO, MENGCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

910.

HOANG VAN MANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

807.

XIE, ZHAOHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

859.

ZHU, HANGCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

911.

LENH THI NGOC Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

808.

YANG, WENYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

860.

CAI, PENGSHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

912.

LY VAN LANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

809.

YANG, PENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

861.

CUI, YUANJIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

913.

NONG VAN THAO Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

810.

YUAN, QIANMENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

862.

DU, XUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

914.

PHAM THI YEN MAI Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

811.

ZHANG, KAIPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

863.

FAN, PANPAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

915.

PHUN CON HUNG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

712.

TRINH VAN SAU Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

713.

WAN, ZHENYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

714.

WAN, FULIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

715.

WANG, JING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

716.

WANG, FANGFANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

717.

WANG, JUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

718.

WANG, LILI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

719.

WANG, JIANXUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

720.

WANG, QIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

721.

WANG, XUEMEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

722.

WANG, QINGYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

723.

WANG, GUIZHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

724.

WANG, HAIPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

725.

WANG, JUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

726.

WANG, XIANCHANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

727.

WANG, YINGJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

728.

WEN, CHANGLE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

729.

WU, RUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

730.

XIANG, YANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

731.

XIE, CHAOHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

732.

XIE, BINBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

733.

XIONG, HUOZHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

734.

XU, ZHIFU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

735.

YAN, JINHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

736.

YANG, SHITANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

737.

YANG, ZHIMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

738.

YANG, YIQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

739.

YE, XIAOLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

740.

YE, JINHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

741.

YIN, CHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

742.

YIN, ZHENGSHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

743.

YONG SZEE SHIONG Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

744.

YU, ZHENJIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

745.

YUAN, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

746.

YUAN, XINGJIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

747.

ZANG, PENGPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

748.

ZHANG, SUQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

749.

ZHANG, TIANSHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

750.

ZHANG, YAZHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

751.

ZHANG, LELE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

752.

ZHANG, ZEFA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

753.

ZHANG, KAIJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

754.

ZHANG, NA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

755.

ZHANG, WEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

756.

ZHANG, YING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

757.

ZHANG, LIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

758.

ZHANG, WEILIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

759.

ZHANG, XINGPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

760.

ZHANG, XUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

812.

ZHANG, XINZE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

864.

FAN, DAXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

916.

THAN THI XUAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

761.

ZHANG, YANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

813.

CHOW YIK SANG Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

865.

GUAN, QINGYONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

917.

TRAN DUNG MUI Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

762.

ZHAO, PAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

814.

TEOH SWEE HUAT Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

866.

HAN, JIALE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

918.

CHEN, SENCAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

763.

ZHAO, MINGYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

815.

BUI VAN LANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

867.

HE, KUILIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

919.

DU, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE


BusinessMirror

A14 Sunday, December 20, 2020 ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

www.businessmirror.com.ph

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

920.

HAN, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

966.

GAO, HAILONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1019.

SU, LIXING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1072.

LEE GIA WEI Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

921.

KUANG, HONGGUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

967.

GAO, JINCHUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1020.

SUN, CHAOPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1073.

LEE PEY YEE Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

922.

LI, SHENGJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

968.

GU, WENJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1021.

SUN, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1074.

LEE SHIN YEE Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

923.

LI, YANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

969.

GUO, JUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1022.

SUN, ZHIQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1075.

LEE VI VIAN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

924.

LI, BINGPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

970.

GUO, JING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1023.

TANG, JINRUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1076.

LEONG WAI LING Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

925.

LIU, JING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

971.

HAN, HONGLI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1024.

TIAN, YANGFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1077.

LIM SIN HUI Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

926.

LIU, FANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

972.

HONG, JIEHANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1025.

WANG, ZHENQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1078.

LOKE CHUN CHYUAN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

927.

LUO, BAILIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

973.

HU, LEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1026.

WANG, ZHENZHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1079.

NG WAI HONG Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

928.

LY VAN TIEN Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

974.

HUA, FEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1027.

WANG, YIFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1080.

TAN DICKSON Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

929.

PHUNG THI PHUONG Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

975.

HUANG, FUYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1028.

WANG, BO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1081.

TAN XIAN ZHE Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

930.

PHUNG THI QUYNH Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

976.

HUANG, WEIYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1029.

WANG, XIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1082.

TEH YING SOON Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

931.

QIN, BANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

977.

HUANG, BAIXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1030.

WANG, ZHIMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1083.

WAN WENG KEAT Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

932.

SHI, YONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

978.

JIANG, MEIJIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1031.

WEI, NING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1084.

WONG SUIT FONG Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

933.

SU, XIAOKAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

979.

JIANG, TAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1032.

WEI, LIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1085.

WONG SUIT KUIN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

934.

SU VAY LINH Vietnamese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

980.

JIANG, DONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1033.

WENG, QINGMEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1086.

ARR SEIN @ LI LI WIN Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE

935.

WANG, XIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

981.

JIN, YADAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1034.

WU, ZHAOXI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1087.

KYAW MIN TUN Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE

936.

WU, YUXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

982.

LI, DONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1035.

WU, DI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1088.

SAI AUNG AUNG Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE

937.

XIE, CHENGZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

983.

LI, XUEMEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1036.

WU, DECAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1089.

TIN AUNG KYAW Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE

938.

XIE, TONGHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

984.

LI, XINXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1037.

WU, CHAOJI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1090.

TSAI, CHING-I Taiwanese

TAIWANESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

939.

YANG, JIANXING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

985.

LI, QIANGNONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1038.

XIAO, JIANDE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1091.

CHU THI THAO LINH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

940.

YIN YIN MYINT Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

986.

LI, JINCAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1039.

XING, XIAOPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1092.

DANG THI THAM Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

941.

ZHANG, SHIJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

987.

LI, YUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1040.

XING, YANJU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1093.

LAM THI NGOC KIEU Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

942.

ZHAO, XUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

988.

LI, XIAOLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1041.

XING, XIAODONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1094.

LAM THI TUYET LIEN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

943.

ZHOU, JISHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

989.

LI, PENGHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1042.

XU, TIANBAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1095.

NGUYEN HOANG HIEP Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

990.

LI, DAHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1043.

XU, ZHONGZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1096.

TRAN ANH TUAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

991.

LI, BEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1044.

XU, JUNRU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1097.

VU THI KIM THO Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

992.

LIAO, GUOYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1045.

XU, LING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1098.

BAO, ZHENGXUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

993.

LIN, PINGJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1046.

XU, KUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1099.

CAI, RUIXUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

994.

LIN, FENGLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1047.

XU, WENJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1100.

WU, GUOQUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

995.

LIN, HENGYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1048.

YAN, XIAOCHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1101.

XIA, CHUNQIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

996.

LIU, XUECHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1049.

YAN, JIAWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1102.

XIN, YANGYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

997.

LIU, XU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1050.

YANG, WENQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1103.

XIONG, CHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

998.

LIU, SHANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1051.

YANG, JINCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1104.

YI, JIEBANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

999.

LIU, FUSHUAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1052.

YANG, YUANYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1105.

ZENG, MINGJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1000.

LIU, XUEQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1053.

YANG, HAIWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1106.

ZHANG, YANWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1001.

LU, GENBAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1054.

YUAN, XUEBING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1107.

ZHANG, XINDONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1002.

LU, YANJU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1055.

ZHANG, NING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1108.

ZHANG, XIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1003.

LU, ZHENNAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1056.

ZHANG, SHENGLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1109.

ZHAO, XUEFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1004.

LUO, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1057.

ZHANG, JINXI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1110.

ZHAO, TIANCAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1005.

LUO, LEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1058.

ZHANG, SHUAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1111.

ZHAO, CHAOPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1006.

LUO, PENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1059.

ZHANG, YUANYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1112.

VIVIAN CHIENG LEE TZE Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1007.

LUO, MENGYAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1060.

ZHANG, CHANGLIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1113.

AUNG MYO WIN Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE

1008.

LUO, JINBAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1061.

ZHANG, FAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1114.

AUNG WIN Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE

1009.

MA, BONING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1062.

ZHOU, ZHAOLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1115.

BRANG SAN SENG Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE

1010.

MA, JIANQUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1063.

ZHOU, GONGZHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1116.

KALYAR PHOO Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE

1011.

MAO, SHENHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1064.

ZHU, YANFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1117.

CHEN, ZHILI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1012.

NONG, CHENGXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1065.

EVAN WIJAYA Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1118.

JIANG, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1013.

PAN, GUANGFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1066.

SOEFENDI Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1119.

LI, PENGFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1014.

PAN, XUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1067.

LEE, HWEEJUN South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1120.

LI, XUEXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1015.

PAN, GUOLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1068.

FRANKY HIEW TAT MING Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1121.

LI, XIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1016.

PENG, FEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1069.

GOH SOON SING Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1122.

LIU, PENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1017.

PENG, CHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1070.

KOH CUN HUI Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1123.

MA, XIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1018.

SHANG, LUOJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1071.

KUAN MUN KIT Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1124.

XIE, QIWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

NEMO HOLDINGS INC. Unit 201, Winland Tower Tomas Morato Ave. Kristong Hari 4 Quezon City 944.

KIM, SAWON South Korean

PROJECT SPECIALIST

NEPC POWER CONSTRUCTION CORP. 15/f Cyber One Bldg. Eastwood Cyberpark City Bagumbayan 3 Quezon City 945.

LIU, XINGHAI Chinese

POWER PLANT BOILER MAINTENANCE SPECIALIST

NES GLOBAL TALENT LIMITED Regus 9/r. Filinvest One Building Northgate Cyberzone Filinvest Alabang Muntinlupa City 946.

GILMOUR, MICHAEL LEE British

PROJECT CONSULTANT

NESTLE PHILIPPINES, INC. Rockwell Center 31 Plaza Drive Poblacion Makati City 947.

BUDHRAM, OMELA DEVI South African

CATEGORY CHANNEL SALES DEVELOPMENT HEAD

948.

CLARO, EDUARDO Brazilian

HEAD OF PROCUREMENT

949.

NG FOONG WOON Malaysian

PROJECT MANAGER

NEW CROSS CREDIT GATE PH INC. 10-1 One Global Place 5th Cor. 25th St. Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 950.

OLIVEIRA AUGUSTO DE SOUZA, LETICIA MARIA Brazilian

FINANCE DIRECTOR

NEW ORIENTAL CLUB88 CORPORATION Sky Garage Bldg. Aseana Avenue, Entertainment City Tambo Parañaque City 951.

LI, XIANGQIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

952.

BAI, GANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

953.

CAO, JINWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

954.

CHANG, CUNBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

955.

CHEN, HAIBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

956.

CHEN, PENGKAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

957.

CHEN, QINZHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

958.

CHEN, WENJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

959.

CHI, LIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

960.

CUI, TAOTAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

961.

DENG, CHAOWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

962.

DONG, BING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

963.

DOU, JUNFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

964.

FENG, MENGYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

965.

FU, CHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE


BusinessMirror

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

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

THONG MY VAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1125.

XU, HUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1178.

1126.

YANG, LIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

NEW WORLD INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PHILIPPINES, INC. Cor. Arnaiz Makati Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City

1127.

YU, JIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1179.

1128.

CAI, PEIBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

NEWSTAR SHOPPING MART INC. Unit Ii 3rd Floor Silpmpc Bldg. Km. 14 Malinta Valenzuela City

1129.

CHEN, RONGKUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1180.

1130.

FAN, DONGDONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

NIPPON EXPRESS PHILIPPINES CORPORATION Lot 85 A & B Avocado Road Fti Complex Western Bicutan Taguig City

1131.

FU, RAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1181.

1132.

GENG, PENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

NIRVASIAN VENTURES CORP. Unit 1201 Tycoon Center Pearl Drive, Ortigas Center San Antonio Pasig City

1133.

GU, KAILUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1134.

HUANG, XIUNA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1135.

HUO, MENGNAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1136.

JIAO, NI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1137.

KONG, XIAOZHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1138.

LI, YANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1139.

LI, PENGFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1140.

LI, JIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1141.

LIN, JINHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1142.

LIU, LEMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1143.

LIU, ZHIYUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1144.

LOU, YINGMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1145.

LU, YUANPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1146.

MAO, YONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1147.

PAN, ZHENG Chinese

1148.

PANG, YAOQIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1149.

QIN, HUIMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1150.

REN, CHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1151.

REN, SHUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1152.

SU, MINGJIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1153.

SU, LIJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1154.

SUN, BO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1155.

TAN, KAIYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1156.

TANG, HONGMEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1157.

TAO, XUJIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1158.

TAO, GUIREN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1159.

TIAN, MULIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1160.

TU, JIANQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1161.

WANG, XIAOLING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1162.

WANG, CHENYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1163.

WANG, XINYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1164.

WANG, PENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1165.

WEI, JICHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1166.

WEI, ZHAOJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1167.

WU, PENGHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1168.

XU, SHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1169.

XU, SHIBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1170.

YANG, CHUNPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1171.

ZHANG, JIAJIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1172.

ZHANG, XUDONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1173.

ZHANG, MENGYUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1174.

ZHENG, WANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1175.

ZHENG, YULONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1176.

ZHOU, MINGYANG Chinese

1177.

FONG TAI RUI Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1182.

ISHII, MOE Japanese

XU, YUHEN Chinese

TANAKA, TAKAYUKI Japanese

IZEGNANE, MOUAD Moroccan

JAPANESE SPEAKING GUEST SERVICES OFFICER

MARKETING MANAGER

GENERAL MANAGER AT LOGISTICS DIVISION

PRESIDENT / GENERAL MANAGER - METRO MANILA

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 1183.

CAO, RENZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1184.

CHEN, PO-CHENG Taiwanese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1185.

CHEN, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1186.

CHEN, CHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1187.

CHEN, JIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1188.

CHENG, HENGFANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1189.

CUI, JIARUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1190.

DENG, KUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1191.

DENG, XIAOQIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1192.

FEI, YIQI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1193.

GE, BEICHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1194.

GUO, WENFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HAN, YANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HE, LONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1195. 1196. 1197. 1198.

HUANG, JINYU Chinese HUANG, YIQI Chinese

Sunday, December 20, 2020 A15

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

1226.

MEI, MEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1269.

LONG, QIANQIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1227.

PAN, XIANGYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1270.

QIAO, YAXING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1228.

PENG, HUIWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1271.

YANG, GANGGANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1229.

TANG, JIAJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1272.

YANG, KUAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1230.

WANG, XINGHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1273.

YANG, ZHIMIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1231.

WELLYAN Indonesian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1274.

ZHAO, GUOYI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1232.

WU, HEFU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1275.

ZHENG, JIA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1233.

XIE, JIMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1276.

ZHOU, TENGXIAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1234.

YANG, MAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1277.

ZHU, ZHIFENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1235.

YANG, CHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1278.

ZHU, SHENGMAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1236.

YANG, LIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1279.

ZOU, CHENGJIA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1237.

YANG, LIYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1280.

NG KHAI MUN Malaysian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1238.

YAP PUI EE Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1281.

LO, HSING-HUNG Taiwanese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1239.

ZENG, PAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1282.

QIU, YUE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1240.

ZHANG, JIAYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1283.

REN, JINJIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1241.

ZHU, JIANXUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1284.

WANG, SHUNYI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1242.

GOH, GWANGMIN South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1285.

ZHAO, YINGCHI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1243.

KIM, CHANGHWAN South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1286.

ZHOU, HONGWEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1244.

KIM, SEOKHAN South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

QUANTIFICARE ASIA INC. Upper Ground Floor Olympia Somerset Bldg. 7912 Makati Ave. Urdaneta Makati City

1245.

KIM, YOUNGKI South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1246.

LEE, DUKHYUNG South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1247.

YUN, YONGDUK South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1248.

NGUYEN THI HUONG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

OMAN AIR (S.A.O.C) Room 445 4th Level Naia Terminal 1 Vitalez Para単aque City 1249.

AL BALUSHI, SALAH SAKHI MAHMOOD Omani

COUNTRY MANAGER

ORACLECMS INTERNATIONAL INC. U-11b 11/f Trafalgar Plaza 105 H.v. Dela Costa St. Bel-air Makati City NEEDHAM, MARK RODNEY Australian

GENERAL OPERATIONS MANAGER

1199.

HUANG, WEIWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1250.

1200.

HUANG, CHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

OUTWIT, INC. 2/f Marvin Plaza 2153 Chino Roces Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City

1201.

HUANG, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1251.

1202.

HUO, CHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

PHILFUN GROUP INC. 6628 E. Ramos St. Pio Del Pilar Makati City

1203.

JI, CHENYAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1252.

1204.

JIANG, TECHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

PHILIPPINE GEOTHERMAL PRODUCTION COMPANY, INC. 14/f 12 6750 Bldg. 6750 Ayala Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City

1205.

KAW YAN Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1253.

1206.

LEAW YI FAN Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

POWERPORT DATA SYSTEM TECHNOLOGY INC. 16/f, 17/f, 18/f & 19/f Corporate Tower Alphaland, Makati Place, 7232 Ayala Avenue Extn. Bel-air Makati City

1207.

LI, JINPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1208.

LI, ZHIPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LI, CHONGBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1209. 1210. 1211.

LI, GUANGYUAN Chinese LIANG, XIAOMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHEN, YU-REN Taiwanese

ZHANG, QI Chinese

JONES, RICKY Canadian

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT SUPERVISOR

MANAGER CHINESE SPEAKING REPRESENTATIVE

CONTRACT SENIOR DRILLING REPRESENTATIVE

1287.

LEPRINCE, REMI ANTOINE CHRISTIAN French

BUSINESS DEVELOPER

RAPOO PRO TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION Unit 8 Robinsons Cybergate Plaza Pioneer Brgy. Barangka Mandaluyong City 1288.

CHEN, JING Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE

RED DOT MARKETING AND BRANDING INC. Unit 1514 Burgundy Transpacific Place Taft Ave. 079, Bgy. 727 Malate Manila 1289.

DUONG AI MY Vietnamese

MANDARIN ACCOUNTS STAFF

1290.

LI, YANLIANG Chinese

MANDARIN ACCOUNTS STAFF

1291.

TAN JINN YI Malaysian

MANDARIN ACCOUNTS STAFF

1292.

TEOH HUI SIN Malaysian

MANDARIN ACCOUNTS STAFF

1293.

WANG, CHUANPENG Chinese

MANDARIN ACCOUNTS STAFF

1294.

WANG, SHUAI Chinese

MANDARIN ACCOUNTS STAFF

1295.

WU, CHIN-HUI Taiwanese

MANDARIN ACCOUNTS STAFF

1296.

YVONNE ONG YEE WEN Malaysian

MANDARIN ACCOUNTS STAFF

1297.

YUAN, YUQIONG Chinese

MANDARIN ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST

1298.

XIA, SHUWEI Chinese

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

1299.

DENG, SIJIE Chinese

MANDARIN ACCOUNTS STAFF

1254.

DONG, PENGZHEN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTANTIVE

1300.

LING WEI SING Malaysian

MANDARIN ACCOUNTS STAFF

1255.

GONG, XINLEI Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTANTIVE

1301.

ZENG, LIPING Chinese

MANDARIN TEAM LEADER

1256.

GUO, ZIMING Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTANTIVE

1302.

HONG, TIANCAI Chinese

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTANTIVE

1303.

1257.

LIU, LIAN Chinese

ZHANG, ZHENGWEI Chinese

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

1304.

MA, YING Chinese

LI, XIAOYU Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING-QUALITY SURVEY

1258.

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTANTIVE

1305.

CHINESE SPEAKING-QUALITY SURVEY

1259.

QIN, XIANGHAO Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTANTIVE

PANG, YUE Chinese

1260.

WANG, XIUQUAN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTANTIVE

1261.

WANG, YUE Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTANTIVE

1212.

LIAO, YOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1213.

LIN, BIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1214.

LIN, CHENG-WEI Taiwanese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1215.

LING LEE WOON Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1216.

LIU, MEILING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1217.

LIU, ZIXUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1262.

XU, WEILIN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTANTIVE

1218.

LIU, JINHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1263.

GONG, YU-LIN Taiwanese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1219.

LIU, KUNSHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1264.

GUO, YANPING Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1220.

LONG, YIQI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1265.

HSIUNG, CHIA-HUNG Taiwanese

1221.

LU, YOUZHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HUANG, LIHUA Chinese

1222.

LUO, FA Chinese

1266.

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1223.

LUO, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

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

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1224.

LYU, HONGCHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1267.

HUANG, YANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1225.

MAI, MINGQI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1268.

LIU, XIHUA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

RIGHT CHOICE FINANCE CORP. 5e-1 Electra House Bldg. 115-117 Esteban Street San Lorenzo Makati City 1306.

CAI, GUIGUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SUPPORT

1307.

CHEN, YUTIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SUPPORT

1308.

WANG, HUIBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SUPPORT

1309.

WANG, YANBEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SUPPORT

1310.

WEI, XU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SUPPORT

1311.

XU, YICHANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SUPPORT

1312.

YANG, XIAOJIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SUPPORT

1313.

ZHANG, MENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SUPPORT

1314.

LI, JIANFENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ROYAL CARGO, INC. Rcc Bldg. Sta. Agueda Pascor Drive Sto. Ni単o Para単aque City 1315.

WICHMANN, MATTHIAS German

PROCUREMENT MANAGER FOR SPECIALIZE OFFSHORE TRANSACTIONS


BusinessMirror

A16 Sunday, December 20, 2020 ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

RUBICON OFFSHORE INTERNATIONAL PRIVATE LIMITED 5/f, Richville Corporate Tower 1107 Mbp Ayala Alabang Muntinlupa City 1316.

VAN ZYL, MARK AURET South African

OFFSHORE INSTALLATION MANAGER

RUNNINGMAN CORPORATION 8/f Techzone Bldg. 213 Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. San Antonio Makati City 1317.

HENDRA Indonesian

INDONESIAN-LANGUAGE CUSTOMER SUPPORT STAFF

RUNTO TECHNOLOGY INC. Unit 902&903 9th Flr. One World Place 32nd Street Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 1318.

ZOU, ZHITAI Chinese

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

1319.

CHEN, FENGJIE Chinese

VP OF SALES

SA RIVENDELL GLOBAL SUPPORT, INC. 9-11 Flr., The Biopolis Bldg. Macapagal Blvd. Brgy. 076 Pasay City

NO.

www.businessmirror.com.ph

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

1361.

MAI PHAM CONG BANG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1403.

CHEN, SHUANGHUO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1463.

ZHAN, LIZHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1362.

MAI THI NHAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1404.

CHEN, KEJU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1464.

KELVIN CROWN Indonesian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1363.

NGUYEN DUC PHAP Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1405.

CONG, PENGFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1465.

KYI KYI KHAING Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1364.

NGUYEN QUOC HUY Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1406.

DAI, ZHIJIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

UE HOLDINGS GROUP INC. U-2c, 4f One E-com Ctr. Bldg. Ocean Drive Brgy. 076 Pasay City

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1407.

1365.

NGUYEN THANH HAI Vietnamese

DONG, ZHIWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1466.

1408.

1366.

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE SPEAKING PREMIER LINE INFORMATION CONSULTANT

NGUYEN THI PHUONG Vietnamese

GUO, CHANGLONG Chinese

BU, JUN Chinese

1409.

HE, JINSEN Chinese

1467.

LIN, YU-HSIU Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING ACCOUNT PAYABLE OPERATOR

1367.

NGUYEN THI QUYNH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1410.

HE, JIANHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1468.

WANG, CHUN-KAI Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING HOTLINE OFFICER

1368.

NGUYEN THI THOAI LINH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1411.

HUANG, SHUISHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1469.

LE DANG HUNG Vietnamese

SPEAKING PAYMENT MONITOR OPERATOR

1412.

JIANG, TAIPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1470.

LU, BAIFENG Chinese

1413.

LI, CHENGQIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE CONSULTANT

1414.

LI, QIANCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1415.

LIANG, KAIFU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1416.

LIU, JINXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1320.

CHEN, HE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1369.

NGUYEN VAN MANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1321.

MA, JINZHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1370.

NGUYEN XUAN CANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

NHU THI THUY Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

1472.

DENG, CONGCONG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1473.

XIAO, LULANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1474.

LUO, DING Chinese

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1475.

PENG, FENG Chinese

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1476.

XIA, BO Chinese

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1477.

XIE, YIFAN Chinese

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1478.

YANG, XUEJING Chinese

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1479.

ZHAI, MEIHUI Chinese

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1480.

ZHANG, SI Chinese

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1481.

I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHAO, ZHIJUN Chinese

1482.

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1426.

YU, XUEJUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

DONG, YI Chinese

1483.

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1427.

ZENG, CHUIQIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WANG, GUIHUA Chinese

1428.

ZHANG, ZHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1484.

VOLENDAY INC. U1406 14/f Pacific Star Bldg. Sen. Gil Puyat Cor. Makati Ave. Bel-air Makati City

1371.

1323.

WANG, QIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1372.

TRAN MINH ANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1373.

DO THI HUONG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1417.

LUO, ZHONGNIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1374.

DUONG THI MY DUYEN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1418.

SU, JUNBAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1375.

NGUYEN DANG TAM Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1419.

WANG, JIAWAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1420.

WU, FANGJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1421.

WU, QILIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1422.

WU, YILONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1423.

XU, JUNYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1424.

XU, RILING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1425.

YE, WEIJUN Chinese

1324. 1325. 1326.

LI, JIARUI Chinese LI, NA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1376.

NGUYEN QUOC HIEU Vietnamese NGUYEN VAN HAI Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LIU, XIAOTING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1377.

1328.

YIN, YUANYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1378.

NGUYEN VAN TUAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1329.

ZHANG, XIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1379.

NGUYEN XUAN HUONG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1330.

FU, LINLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1331.

LI, WANJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1327.

SPARVA INCORPORATED 7/f Insular Life Bldg. 6781 Ayala Ave., Cor. Paseo De Roxas Bel-air Makati City 1380.

JUPRI Indonesian

1332.

LI, LIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1381.

1333.

LI, YI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

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

1334.

SU, LINGXIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1382.

QIN, GAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1429.

ZHANG, XIANJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1383.

CHI MY LINH Vietnamese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1430.

1335.

YOU, SHAOXI Chinese

ZHAO, WENBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1431.

ZHOU, SHANGLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1432.

TEE WEI KUAN Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1433.

CUI, SHAOKUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1434.

DUAN, ZHIXIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1435.

GUO, SHIJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1336.

ZHI, QISHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

RICKY HENDOKO Indonesian

TEAM LEADER ACCOUNT OFFICER

SUMMIT SUPPORT SERVICES, INC. Level 17 Office Tower 6750 Ayala Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City LIU, XIU Chinese

ACCOUNT MANAGER

DIANA THERESIA BINSAR Indonesian

COUNTRY MANAGER INDONESIA

HUANG, WEICHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1384.

1338.

HUANG, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1385.

1339.

MA, GUOSHUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

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

1340.

WANG, MENGRU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1386.

CHOC DAU LENH Vietnamese

CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

1436.

HOU, ZHENSHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1341.

WANG, QIONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1387.

DANG HONG GIANG Vietnamese

CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

1437.

LI, MING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1342.

WANG, TING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1388.

LE THANH DAT Vietnamese

CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

1438.

WANG, ZHIBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHANG, JINDONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1389.

NGUYEN THI NGA Vietnamese

CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

1439.

1343.

WU, XUEYIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1344.

LI, ZONGYING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1440.

1390.

NGUYEN TIEN DUNG Vietnamese

CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

WU, YINGTONG Chinese

1441.

1345.

LIU, JIANCHEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1391.

NGUYEN XUAN VINH Vietnamese

CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

1346.

LIU, WENJUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1392.

PHUN KIM HOA Vietnamese

1347.

WANG, PENGHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1393.

PHAN TAN QUAN Vietnamese

1348.

XIAO, HAIMIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1337.

SNAKEJOY TECHNOLOGY INC. 15th Floor Unit 1501 Bonifacio Prime Bldg. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 1349.

WEI, ZHE Chinese

DEVOPS ENGINEER

1350.

LIAO, CHIEH-JU Taiwanese

PERSONAL ASSISTANT OF BUSINESS MANAGER

1351.

ZHANG, WANG Chinese

SENIOR FULLSTACK DEVELOPER

SOLARGAS INTERNATIONAL 294 Macarthur Hi-way Dalandanan Valenzuela City 1352.

HSU, MING-CHE Taiwanese

OWNER/PROPRIETOR

SOMI UNLIMITED SOLUTIONS, INC. 6/f Filinvest Cyberzone Bldg. Cbp1 Bay City Brgy. 076 Pasay City 1353. 1354.

CHEN, SHIYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

DONG, BINGXIONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1355.

LIU, KAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1356.

CAN NGOC NAM Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1357.

DIP TU LOC Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1358.

DUONG TRI TOAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1359.

DUONG TUAN ANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1360.

HOANG NGOC DIEN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LIU, FEIMEI Chinese

MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1488.

PANG, ZHENYANG Chinese

MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

XIAN ELECTRIC ENGINEERING COMPANY LIMITED PHILIPPINES BRANCH 2101-2102 Raffle Don Francisco Ortigas Center San Antonio Pasig City

XPERT AIR SERVICES, INC. No. 7 Ideal St. Brgy. Addition Hills Mandaluyong City

1442.

XU, JIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1491.

CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

1443.

YAO, YU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

FINANCE SPECIALIST (MANDARIN SPEAKING)

1444.

BAI, HAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1445.

CHEN, WENCAN Chinese

1446.

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

GENERAL MANAGER

THERMA LUZON INC. 14/f Nac Tower 32nd Street Bonifacio Global City, Fort Bonifacio Taguig City TECHNICAL SERVICES CONSULTANT

TOPKING TECHNOLOGY INC. U/604 6/f Itc Bldg. 337 Sen. Gil J. Puyat Ave. Bel-air Makati City MANDARIN COMPUTER PROGRAMMER

TOYO CONSTRUCTION CO. LTD. 3/f Planters Products Bldg. 109 Esteban St. San Lorenzo Makati City TOBARU, DAICHI Japanese

1487.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

THE BUDDHIST TEMPLE OF ZENG SHAOYA INC. Unit 1705 World Trade Exchange Bldg. 215 Juan Luna St. 027, Bgy. 287 Binondo Manila

1400.

MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WU, ZHISHENG Chinese

TELFA OUTSOURCING SERVICES INC. Unit 3b Mrb 1160 J. Bocobo St., 072 Bgy. 670 Ermita Manila

1399.

CHEN, JUNFENG Chinese

BUSINESS MANAGER

ASSOCIATE - CS INTERNET

LU, JUNHUI Chinese

1486.

REN, RONGQIANG Chinese

1395.

PRINCE, SHIREEN SAMANTHA South African

W.E.W RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, INC. 50/f Pbcom Tower 6795 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. Bel-air Makati City

1490.

KATSURA, RONTO Japanese

1398.

CME MANAGER

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

SENIOR DIRECTORINFRASTRUCTURE

QIU, GONGLI Chinese

EDY MUGIANTO Indonesian

BUSINESS MANAGER

1394.

1397.

1485.

(ENGLISH - MANDARIN SPEAKING) - MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATE

DENG, ZHILIANG Chinese

CAI, SHANG Chinese

SANTHANAM, VASANTH KUMAR Indian

YEO LI QIN Malaysian

VIVO MOBILE TECH., INC. Unit 3302c, 3302d, 3303a, 3303b, 3303c, 3303d, 3304a, 3304b, & 3304c E Ortigas Center San Antonio Pasig City

1489.

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

1396.

VAN GOGH BUSINESS PROCESS OUTSOURCING INC. 5th To 8th Flr. Sm Southmall Tower 2 Alabang Zapote Rd. Almanza Uno Las Piñas City I.T. TECHNICAL MANDARIN

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

POSITION

ZHANG, WEN Chinese

WANG, MINGXUAN Chinese

HU, YUFEI Chinese

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

1471.

1322.

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

NO.

ASSISTANT CONSTRUCTION MANAGER (TEAM SCP)

TRIVES TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION Tower 4 Bayport West Naia Garden Residence, Naia Road Tambo Parañaque City

HAN, KWANGWOO South Korean

RESERVATIONS / CUSTOMER SERVICE STAFF

ZAPPORT SERVICES, INC. 36/f Burgundy Corporate Tower 252 Sen. Gil J. Puyat Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City 1492.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

FENDY Indonesian

INDONESIAN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

1493.

FU, QUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

IRWAN TADY Indonesian

INDONESIAN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

1494.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

INDONESIAN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

1447.

GU, XILONG Chinese

TEDY BASKARA Indonesian

1495.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

THAI SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICER

1448.

GUO, HAITAO Chinese

KUDRUNG, SUPAPORN Thai

1449.

JIA, MEIJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1450.

KE, YUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1496.

1451.

LI, DAYIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1452.

LIU, ZE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZX-PRO TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION 16/f Robinsons Cybergate 3 Pioneer Brgy. Barangka Ilaya Mandaluyong City

1453.

LIU, XINRAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1454.

LUO, LIQIONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1455.

PENG, RUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1456.

RUAN, WEISONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1457.

TU, GUANGYUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

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.

1458.

WANG, QIZHE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

Please inform DOLE-NCR if you have any information on criminal offense committed by the foreign nationals.

1459.

WANG, LIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1460.

WANG, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1401.

CHANG, YONGDE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1461.

XIE, YIXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1402.

CHEN, ZHIXU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1462.

XING, LIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZTE PHILIPPINES INC. Unit 1201 & 1202 12th Floor Fort Legend Towers 3rd Ave. Corner 31st St. Bgc, Fort Bonifacio Taguig City YE, HUYUAN Chinese

OSP DELIVERY MANAGER

1497.

ZHANG, QIAOLIN Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1498.

ZHANG, XINHUA Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK

1499.

PAN, JIAO Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING DATA ENTRY CLERK *Date Generated: Oct 26 to Oct 30, 2020

ATTY. SARAH BUENA S. MIRASOL REGIONAL DIRECTOR


LIFT LIKE

A GIRL

Inspired by Olympic medalist and hometown hero Hidilyn Diaz, teenage weightlifting sisters continue to raise the bar


2

BusinessMirror DECEMBER 20, 2020 | soundstrip.businessmirror@gmail.com

YOUR MUSI

SoundSampler by Tony M. Maghirang

MORNING HAS BROKEN

Leanne and Naara wax contemplative on debut album

I

T’S been a panic-driven, pandemic haunted past year and relief no matter how brief from all the troubles is just what the living and the surviving need.

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

“Daybreak,” the debut album from Leanne & Naara, offers such solace just in time for the holiday season. It opens with two lounge pop numbers topped by the soulful yearning of “Keeping Me Up All Night.” Then “Choose You” slithers to a swaying ballad worthy of a Norah Jones treatment before slow rocking to the dance-friendly “Til The Morning Comes.” The mid-tempo pace is all over the album to make it a sonic balm for frantic folks terrorized by the Covid-19 dread. Curiously, its lyrical arc as drawn from titles like “Too Soon,” “Who’s Gonna Love You” and opener “Never Made It Far” deal with some sort of half-blown chances. “Prayers” even admits that they’re all the singer has for an unnamed ‘you.’ That sense of quiet unraveling of the songs on the album is inherent in how the album came to be. Naara (Joacueza) explained, “Most of the songs were written in the wee hours of the morning. As such. their lyrics reflect contemplative and private moments.” Leanne (Mamonong) gave a glimpse on which tracks to include and which ones to release as singles. She offered, “We picked out what we believe were the strongest songs in their own right. “Keeping Me Up” was going to be an introduction to our new sound, so we wanted to hit the listeners with that right away, although we were a bit worried at first since it’s a big jump sound-wise. “ “Who’s Gonna Love You, we thought, would appeal to younger listeners,” Leanne added “Since we want to open up our music to more people we thought it would make a great single. Basically these songs give our fans a taste of what the album is going to be like. But at the same time there’s still so much to look forward to that we don’t want to give away just yet.” Speaking of their new sound, the duo took their hats off to their musical associates and collaborators. Leanne said, “We credit our producer Brian Lotho for the amazing overall work he’s done on the album, to Len Calvo our keyboardist, Jeff Tan our basisst, and Kid Guevarra our guitarist who did that astounding guitar solo for “Who’s Gonna Love You.” We also had some help from our main band in terms of direction, Carlos Castaño who

helped us with “Too Soon” and Choi Padilla who helped us figure out “Choose You.” Leanne and Naara were blockmates in college for four years and they eventually found out that they sound good together. The duo proceeded to post covers on Soundcloud and Youtube as Leanne & Naara. Their version of originals by Itchyworms, Barbie’s Cradle and Nina as well as their more recent rework of songs by BTS and Blackpink have taken OPM fans and critics alike to ecstatic highs. Leanne and Naara soon established a solid presence in the music scene including performing alongside Filipino music heavyweights, and playing at several notable venues like the Marina Bay Sands in Singapore. Looking back to their early sound and how their music has evolved, Leanne observed, “Lyrically, I feel like the writing has become simpler. One of the goals was to make the new songs more singable and to have a stronger recall and so we had to do away with the wordy verses. I had a hard time at first, since my writing style is

LEANNE and Naara

more close to storytelling but it’s a nice challenge to convey something with fewer words. Production-wise, we wanted a more modern feel to the album so it’s very much like Run Run again, with all the synths and the beats and not so much of the band, organic feel. Even the acoustic sound that everyone’s so used to isn’t quite there anymore. It’s interesting that we get to unveil this side of us that I think started when we released “Destination.” They still remember their most memorable show so far. Leanne recalled, “Our first gig after being signed by Warner Music in 2016 was in U.P. Town Centre. Sud was also in the lineup. We were so nervous that we even had our spiels written on index paper. “Given our experience thus far, our advice to aspiring musicians would be to allow themselves to go through that rough nerve-wracking start and see it as training for them to blossom into better artists.” Leanne & Naara shared that were some new songs were written during the lockdown and two of them were included in the album. At the same time working in the studio with producer Brian Lotho allowed them to be more efficient and made the whole collaboration process much easier. With that, they are focusing now on improving their online performances. Still, they fervently look forward to sing in front of a live audience again.


IC

soundstrip.businessmirror@gmail.com | DECEMBER 20, 2020

3

BUSINESS

RHYTHM & RHYME by Kaye Villagomez-Losorata

Five songs that kept us afloat this year

LADY Gaga and Ariana Grande (Photos by Jordan Strauss Invision AP) BILLIE Eilish (Photo by Willy Sanjuan Invision AP)

No Time To Die by Billie Eilish. THE movie was pushed back but the song made rounds in time before COVID-19 changed everything. Released sometime mid-February, this play on classic Bond themes had us all “falling for a lie” that was early 2020. At least now, we know the answer to “Are you death or paradise?” when we listen to this song. Despite the time we found on our laps this year, we had No Time To Die so here’s the link should you want to celebrate that bit of surviving this year https://youtu.be/BboMpayJomw.

Rain On Me by Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande.

TAYLOR Swift (Photo by Joel C Ryan Invision AP, File) DUA Lipa (Photo by Jordan Strauss Invision AP)

L

IFE as we know it took a turn no one was prepared for. We tried countless of ways to cope, grasp, and hold on to the pieces that kept things together. At least we made it this far—the end of 2020.

We’ve also seen social media posts reminding us that come 2021, we would still be dealing with the same problems and reeling from the same injuries but that’s one of things 2020 taught us—how to find hope in the basics. After all, it’s not New Year if it doesn’t come with hope, and these days, we could use even the smallest sources of hope because it doesn’t seem to spring eternal anymore. This time last year, I was just trying to predict that 2020 will be a year for women in music. Who would have thought a year after, I’d be writing about hope losing its mojo.

But the music industry somehow survived the new normal by migrating to everything digital. Artists have released new materials and opted to go the livestream route during the early stages of the pandemic. It wasn’t the same for the movie industry or live sports events. Because music is the easiest and most accessible bandage, we saw quarantined people singing from their homes or windows or balconies. Good songs were released and they kept our hearts beating this year. Women still dominated the charts and here are five of 2020’s best that most likely sustained a day or two for you this year.

FROM a song written when we had no clue that we will be interpreting everything from a new normal standpoint moving forward, we move to another that has 2020 anthem written all over it. This collaboration was written specifically for people facing seemingly unbeatable challenges—basically all of us. Billboard agreed with the intentions of Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande and named it number one for the year. “Gaga and Grande’s voices prove to be a perfect match: The strong, theatrical mezzo Gaga brings to the table meshes faultlessly with Grande’s light, shimmering soprano. Their duet is only further bolstered by the house-shaking production, courtesy of BloodPop, BURNS and Tchami, whose intricate mix of French house basslines, ‘90s dancepop beats and hallucinatory techno drops (with some good-old fashioned disco drama thrown in for fun) thrust ‘Rain on Me’ to a stratospheric level of pop perfection,” said Billboard. Here’s the link should you need to convert that cry into a good one: https:// youtu.be/AoAm4om0wTs.

Break My Heart by Dua Lipa.

SPEAKING of Billboard-approved releases, Dua Lipa’s Break My Heart “found unexpected relevance thanks to its ‘I should have stayed at home’ lyric that fueled internet interest and provided some much-needed laughs for her crystal ball prediction.” The site added, “More than its timeliness, though, Lipa is most vulnerable underneath the glossy pop production and bouncy bassline as she questions if she’s falling for someone who will ultimately hurt her -- but goes for it anyway. And while the way in which Lipa flirts with the concept of love is echoed throughout its parent album, it’s that uncertainty that makes this hit so strong.”

‘cardigan’ by Taylor Swift.

IF Gaga made a song about the woes of 2020, Taylor Swift served an entire realitybiting album in, ironically, Folklore. The song ‘cardigan’ (yup, title written that way) is the second track from the album that Swift said she “started with imagery [and] visuals that popped into my head and piqued my curiosity: stars drawn around scars, a cardigan that still bears the scent of loss twenty years later.” While the whole album ranks up there in The-Things-We’re-Thankful-Forin-2020 countdown, “cardigan” being a visual song takes us back to a time when we thought we could try “to change the ending.” You can’t listen to this song and not hear black and white or sepia in the visuals inside your head like memories of pre-Coronavirus life. We now all wish to be wrapped in that cardigan from the past when some things still went as planned. Go travel back in time with this link https://youtu.be/K-a8s8OLBSE.

People, I’ve Been Sad by Christine and the Queens.

TIME named it Song of the Year and here’s how Time backed its claim up: “People I’ve Been Sad serves as proof that the best art usually comes from personal experience rather than attempts at universality. In English and French, Héloïse Letissier sings about losing people and ‘solitude folle’ (‘crazy loneliness’) over a frigid synth beat, her voice blue but yearning, as if trying to vocally excise her despair. And whereas many others this year offset their musical misery with some pablum of eventual edification, Letissier instead belts an oddly comforting pledge of mutual destruction. ‘If you fall apart, then I’m falling behind you/ You know the feeling/ You know the feeling.’ It’s a mantra of acceptance of communal suffering and of making peace with tragedy—and her soaring, open voice makes it nearly impossible not to howl along.” Since when was missing out this universal? Although released before the global standstill, the song couldn’t have been more forewarning. And yes, we now all “know the feeling.” Howl along with this link https://youtu.be/uNGguudoLVs. (Follow the author @kayevillagomez on Instagram and Twitter for more updates.) This communication is intended solely for the use of the addressee and authorized recipients. It may contain confidential or legally privileged information and is subject to the conditions in http://www.smart.com.ph/ corporate/disclaimer.


LIFT LIKE A GIRL Inspired by Olympic medalist and hometown hero Hidilyn Diaz, teenage weightlifting sisters continue to raise the bar By Pauline Joy M. Gutierrez

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OSEGIE RAMOS started weightlifting when she was 15. Her sister Rose Jean began at the age of 11.

Born and raised in Zamboanga City, the young girls followed the life and career of Filipina weightlifting champion Hidilyn Diaz. The sisters watched in fascination when their hometown hero powered her way through the 2016 Rio Olympics, winning a silver medal and ending the Philippines’s 20-year Olympic medal drought, while becoming the first Filipina to score an Olympic podium finish. Four years later, right at Diaz’s own gym and with neighbors watching, the Ramos sisters claimed the spotlight for themselves when both reaped medals in the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) Youth World Cup, a virtual tournament organized in Peru with 402 participating athletes from 62 countries. Rose Jean, now 15, topped the 65-kilogram division snatch (63 kg) and finished second in total (138 kg). Meanwhile, Rosegie, 17, bagged silvers in 55-kg division snatch (78 kg) and total (176 kg). She also claimed bronze in clean and jerk (98 kg). “I want to be a weightlifting champion one day,” Rosegie told Y2Z. “I want to be just like Ate Hidilyn.”

On the Rise SO far, Rosegie is on track to reach her goal. She has already tasted international success, starting in 2016, when she won the

“POWER Scholars” pose with Hidilyn Diaz, together with executives of Alcantara and Sons Power Group and coaches.

ROSEGIE RAMOS (left), 17, and her sister Rose, 15, hope to follow the footsteps of 2016 Rio Olympics silver medalist Hidilyn Diaz. Youth Junior Championship bronze medal in Japan. In 2018, Rosegie placed fourth in the same international meet held in Uzbekistan. She also captured one gold and two silver medals in the Indonesia Youth Championship, then placed seventh in the Asian Youth Championship held in the city of Ningbo in China. Meanwhile, the younger Rose Jean continues to earn her stripes in national competitions. She dominated the 32-kilogram category in the 2016 Batang Pinoy, and repeated the feat in the same category in its 2018 and 2019 iterations. Allen Jayfrus Diaz, Rosegie’ and Rose Jean’s weightlifting coach and a cousin of Hidilyn, remarked about the sisters’ discipline during training sessions. “They would wake up early and train for hours,” the coach said. “In our family, we want the kids to [pursue] weightlifting so we encourage them to really persevere.” But the sisters do not need a lot of convincing. “Sometimes my body would be-

come really sore,” Rosegie said, “but that’s okay because I enjoy the sport a lot.” Rose Jean shares the same level of passion. “I want to help my parents, too, for all the sacrifices that they made for us,” she said.

Never give up EVEN at an early age, the Ramos sisters have observed that many young women abandon sports after being dealt with challenges. Of course, in today’s world, there is no bigger hurdle than the Covid-19 pandemic, which restricts aspiring young athletes like them to fully pursue their dreams. “It’s been hard because we can’t train like we used to,” Rose Jean said. “I just keep thinking that I have to train so that I’ll be stronger.” The Ramos sisters are both “Power Scholars” under the Alsons Power-Hidilyn Diaz scholarship program for aspiring weightlifters in Zamboanga City. The program is part of the company’s commitment to help provide more educational opportu-

nities for young people in the area, where Alsons Power is the primary supplier of electricity in the city’s eastern portion. “To date, over 4,000 students have become Alsons Power Scholars,” Alsons Power said in a statement. “In partnership with Hidilyn, we provide youth beneficiaries subsidy checks that will cover the provisions for their school uniforms, shoes, bags, and school supplies, as well as a monthly stipend for transportation and food allowances for the school year.” “The initial batch of five power scholars were named in 2017 and have gone on to participate and win medals in international competitions,” the company added. “This program is the company’s contribution to the country’s quest for gold, particularly in the Olympics.” That ultimate prize is what Rosegie and Rose have set their eyes on. But aside from working hard to achieve that elusive gold, they also want to inspire other girls to have the courage to pursue their dreams, much like how their Ate Hidilyn did for them. “I want the girls to train well and not to give up easily,” Rosegie said. “Do what you can do to achieve your dreams.”

ON THE COVER Rose Ramos steps to the platform during a recent competition.

TV and Broadway star celebrates Gen Z voices By Mark Kennedy The Associated Press

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EW YORK—When the coronavirus pandemic closed high schools, Broadway and TV star Laura Benanti knew it also meant most spring highschool musicals would be scrapped. So Benanti asked crestfallen young people across the country to record themselves performing their songs, post them on social media and tag her. Stages might be silent, but she wanted to hear them. The response stunned her—15,000 submissions. “I really thought the initial sort of call to action would be quite small. I never imagined it would turn into what it did,” says Benanti, a Tony Award winner and star of shows

like Nashville, Supergirl and Younger. The effort—dubbed Sunshine Songs—has led to a new poignant special on HBO Max led by Benanti called Homeschool Musical: Class of 2020, which was filmed remotely and offers a window on Gen Z. The hourlong documentary follows seven seniors and how they’ve navigated what should have been the best months of their lives. Several jumped into social activism, one experienced homelessness and one realized she was transgender. “While some of these kids dealt with such a tough time in 2020, as well as personal challenges before, it was really inspiring to see their outlook on it all,” said Jennifer O’Connell, an executive vice president at HBO Max.

4 BusinessMirror

The seven—aged 17 or 18—come from across the United States—Indiana, Georgia, Mississippi, New Jersey, Ohio and two from Texas. Each tells their story and sings a song that shares their experience. A teen from West Orange, New Jersey, sings R.E.M.’s apocalyptic “It’s the End of the World as We Know it [And I Feel Fine]” and one from Douglasville, Georgia, sings Gloria Gaynor “I Will Survive” with masked background dancers armed with bubble guns. “We really wanted a cross-section of America and not just the typical pretty princess white girl that you associate with musical theater,” Benanti said. “And I include myself in that.” The special highlights voices from a generation that often gets looked down on. But viewers are re-

DECEMBER 20, 2020

minded that these young people, born around 9/11 and never knowing a world without smartphones, have endured school shootings, environmental degradation and now Covid-19. “This is the generation that self-identifies as anxious more than any previous generation. Their levels of anxiety are through the roof,” said Benanti, who is shooting a Gossip Girl reboot for HBO Max and Younger for TV Land. “We’ve handed them this world and then we turn around and call them entitled and spoiled and really put them down. And I find that deeply upsetting because when I look at them, I see them using social media for good. They’re not just on TikTok looking fabulous. They’re on TikTok fighting for democracy.”


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