BusinessMirror November 29, 2020

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DIGITAL BOOSTERS Six key pieces of legislation are what it would take to help along the fast-tracked march to a digital economy, according to Neda experts

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By Cai U. Ordinario

MENDING and passing six key pieces of legislation would boost the country’s digital economy, according to the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda), as the country’s digitization was forced to take the fast track by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Voting 232 affirmative and 6 negative with no abstention, lawmakers approved House Bill 7805 to curb the prevalence of online scams. The bill will now be transmitted to the Senate for its own deliberations. House Committee on Trade and Industry Chairman Wes Gatchalian, sponsor of the bill, said HB 7805 will protect consumers and merchants engaged in Internet transactions by creating the Electronic Commerce Bureau. In terms of the PSA, Ganapin said the amendments aim to focus on the definition of public utility to only three main industries: distribution of electricity, transmission of electricity, and water pipeline distribution system or sewerage pipeline system. This will enable a higher foreign equity participation of over 40 percent in other key areas such as

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.1020

BAŞAK KABADAYI | DREAMSTIME.COM

In a recent presentation, the Trade, Services and Industry Staff (TSIS) Officer in Charge of the Neda, Bien A. Ganapin, said these measures are “urgently needed” to help the country better fare in the new and digital normal. He listed them as the Public Service Act (PSA); Open Access in Data Transmission Act; E-Commerce Act of 2000; Internet Transactions Act; National Digital Careers Act of 2020; and the National Digital Transformation. “[These are] among the policies that are urgently needed, at least what the Philippine Development Plan and Neda, including all other agencies, are trying to push forward,” Ganapin said in the Neda’s forum on the digital economy. On Tuesday, the House of Representatives approved on third and final reading the proposed Internet Transactions Act (ITA).

HOUSE Committee on Trade and Industry Chairman Wes Gatchalian: “E-commerce will be the new normal, but unfortunately, regulations to protect consumers and businesses from unscrupulous individuals who take advantage of this borderless economy are inadequate.”

telecommunication and transportation services.

Level the playing field

FOR the Open Access in Data Transmission Act (HB 57), Ganapin said, this will level the playing field in the data transmission and telecommunications market. The passage of the bill will strengthen the value chain linkages

in the industry and services sectors and facilitate the realization of the full potential of e-commerce and digital trade. The E-Commerce Act of 2000, meanwhile, needs to be revisited to make the law more comprehensive in its coverage of e-commerce transactions and the rights of consumers. The law should be strengthened with the imposition of pen-

alties on service providers and requiring them to put in place high-security measures against breaches on data processing and financial transactions. The Internet Transactions Act (HB 6122), Ganapin said, will define the scope and coverage of Internet transactions, apart from the sale or exchange of digital products, and lays down the code of conduct and

qualifications for businesses who wish to engage in e-commerce. Rep. Gatchalian said the ecommerce bureau that ITA will create will be the “central authority” tasked to regulate online trade and shall act as a virtual one-stop shop for consumer complaints on Internet transactions. The bill seeks to regulate all business-to-business and businessto-consumer commercial transactions conducted over the Internet, including those related to Internet retail, online travel, online media, ride-hailing services, and digital financial services. “E-commerce will be the new normal, but unfortunately, regulations to protect consumers and businesses from unscrupulous Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4614 n UK 64.2739 n HK 6.2061 n CHINA 7.3169 n SINGAPORE 35.9372 n AUSTRALIA 35.4079 n EU 57.3232 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.8269

Source: BSP (November 27, 2020)

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Covid vaccine rush in China raises fears of booming black market

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By Bloomberg News

EFORE a planned trip to the US, Cheng wanted to get vaccinated against Covid-19. To do so, he asked a friend working at a cold-chain logistics company in southeast China to pretend he was employed by the firm, allowing Cheng access to one of the country’s experimental shots. Cheng, a business owner from Beijing, now plans to fly to Guangdong province and pay as much as $91 to take two doses of what he believes is a vaccine being produced by a unit of Sinopharm, the state-backed Chinese developer at the front of the global Covid-19 vaccine race. “You just transfer him the money via Alipay, but he won’t tell you the details because apparently it’s black market,” said Cheng, referring to a digital payments platform that’s used widely in China. Cheng asked to only be identified by his last name as he fears reprisal for speaking publicly. As developers from AstraZeneca Plc. to Pfizer Inc. near the finish line for their coronavirus vaccines, nations are preparing for the challenge of rolling them out, with inevitable supply shortages fueling concerns about inequitable distribution and even the emergence of illegal markets. One place where vaccine delivery is already being road-tested is China, which has allowed local developers’ shots for emergency use since mid-year. While that program is technically reserved for Chinese frontline workers, such as medical staff treating Covid patients and port employees, Bloomberg spoke to nearly a dozen people who have bent the rules, or know those who have, to get hold of the yet unproven Chinese vaccines. They asked not to be identified, or to just use their first names, so they could talk freely about their experiences, which point to a prevalent practice of working connections and officials to jump the queue. Unlike western frontrunners, the Chinese vaccine makers have yet to release any public data on the efficacy of their shots in Phase III trials, making it difficult to tell how successful their efforts have been. People are seeking them out nonetheless, particularly those headed outside of China, where the coronavirus has been all but eliminated.

Paying bribes

“THERE are substantial opportunities for the vaccine to be diverted to those with connections,” said

Rachel Cooper, the London-based director of Transparency International’s health initiative. “Prior to the pandemic, citizens often used personal connections, or had to pay bribes in order to access healthcare services,” she said, citing research by the anti-graft group that found one in five people across Asia has called in favors to get care. Despite the fact that the vaccines haven’t received final regulatory approval, hundreds of thousands of people in China have been jabbed under the emergency-use program. That has heightened concern among scientists over potential safety risks. China National Biotec Group Co. (CNBG), the arm of Sinopharm developing two leading Covid vaccines, has said only that its final-stage human trials—involving more than 50,000 people in countries from Argentina to Egypt—have been progressing smoothly, and it has not received any reports of serious adverse events in participants. On Wednesday, Xinhua Finance reported that the company applied for public use authorization for its shots, citing Sinopharm’s vice general manager Shi Shengyi. If approved, it would mean CNBG will be the first developer outside of Russia to reach the general market. Western developers like Pfizer and AstraZeneca are only at the stage of asking for emergency authorization. CNBG has also inked supply agreements with several countries including Malaysia, Indonesia, Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates, according to public reports compiled by Bloomberg.

Vaccine privilege

THOUGH many are taking the vaccine in China, some remain skeptical. Jason’s family friends were vaccinated through work connections with officials in the provincial government of Hebei, in China’s north. Some have pressured his family to get inoculated, but he demurred as he doesn’t trust the safety and effectiveness of the Chinese vaccines. “They are proud that they took the shots,” Jason said. “They see it

Digital boosters Continued from A1

individuals who take advantage of this borderless economy are inadequate,” he said. According to Gatchalian, many are still able to hide behind computer screen names, operate fly-by-night online stores, sell fake items, and scam innocent consumers and merchants, saying “their actions impede the growth of the Internet economy because the trust in online transactions is eroded.” The bill specifies obligations and liabilities for e-commerce platforms and online merchants, including the delivery of goods to consumers in the condition as required by the sales contract. Moreover, the ITA expressly states that any agreement between buyer and seller is “valid only if, at the time of the conclu-

sion of the contract, the consumer has knowledge of the specific condition of the goods and the consumer has expressly accepted this specific condition when concluding the contract.” Under the bill, online e-commerce platforms such as Lazada, Shopee and Zalora shall share solidary liability with their own merchants if these platforms fail to exercise extraordinary diligence to prevent any loss or damage to the consumer; fail to publish the details of their merchants; fail to examine goods related to food, drugs, cosmetics, among others. The measure also makes it illegal to cancel orders for food and/or grocery items made via ride-hailing services when the said items have already been paid by or are already in the possession of the ridehailing service partner or in transit

TECHNICIANS processing Covid-19 coronavirus tests at a laboratory in Tianjin, China.

STR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

“There are substantial opportunities for the vaccine to be diverted to those with connections. Prior to the pandemic, citizens often used personal connections, or had to pay bribes in order to access health-care services.”

—Rachel Cooper, the London-based director of Transparency International’s health initiative

as a privilege, tout it around, lobbying me and my family to be vaccinated. It’s not hard to have the access if you have some connections in China.” Staff in government ministries and state-owned companies have found low barriers to access. One person employed at China’s foreign ministry said they were vaccinated with the CNBG shot two months ago because their job puts them into contact with foreigners, even though they don’t travel overseas for work. Many bureaucrats at the ministry have also been given doses, they said. An employee at Bank of China Ltd. said many of their colleagues were vaccinated before traveling to an expo in Shanghai this month. Another at a state-owned technology company said dozens at the firm were inoculated before they hosted a big forum in September. The tech company’s employees signed nondisclosure agreements and were only offered jabs before the event. One person said they were able to get access to a vaccine because their parents worked at another state entity. A Bloomberg journal-

ist was even offered CNBG’s shot in the course of reporting this story.

to the consumer. To encourage businesses to go online and for foreign organizations to choose to register with the e-commerce bureau, the Department of Trade and Industry will be required to lead the establishment of an industry-led e-commerce Trustmark. “We really need stricter rules to hold both e-commerce platforms and courier services accountable for damaged or lost goods purchased online. Doing so would drastically reduce the incidence of fraud and theft of goods while in transit to the consumer,” Gatchalian said.

mote and strengthen digital careers, as well as provide the needed institutional support. Ganapin said the bill aims to recognize the emergence of new forms of employment, such as work on digital platforms, and requires the government to extend the social protection system appropriate to this new mode of work, especially in times of economic downturns caused by calamities and public emergencies. Lastly, Ganapin said the policy on the National Digital Transformation aims to introduce structural reforms to cut across multiple sectors to allow a shift to digital modes of conducting work and life. This will require enhancing the foundation of the digital economy through greater investment in ICT infrastructure, connectivity, and setting up a sound

Gig economy

MEANWHILE, the National Digital Careers Act of 2020 (HB 6759/ SB 1469) seeks to establish a legal framework for the “gig economy” that will map out strategies to pro-

‘Test run’

SOME, like Cheng, simply want protection from Covid-19—proven or otherwise—before they travel. One Chinese student who needs to return to France next month to complete her MBA found a CNBG booth at a Beijing expo in September offering vaccinations to students traveling overseas. “I was told this offer to students headed abroad was just a test run,” said the student, who added that the company made clear the vaccine hadn’t been fully approved. By mid-October, after presenting her student credentials, she received her first shot at the company’s factory in suburban Beijing. She was told not to talk about the inoculation on social media and she said students who did post pictures were asked to take them down. That this is happening in China, which has aggressively contained the spread of Covid-19 since its initial outbreak, may heighten concerns of misappropriation in countries with weak health sys-

tems battling higher rates of infection. The pressure on limited supply will likely be acute in neighboring India, which has enormous wealth disparities and the secondworst outbreak globally with more than 9 million infections. Despite tight travel restrictions, advertising for unverified vaccine tours to the US are popping up across Indian WhatsApp groups. Gem Tours & Travels Pvt. Ltd., a Mumbai-based company planning to run such trips for people to receive Pfizer’s mRNA shot, told Bloomberg they won’t be procuring doses themselves and have yet to nail down travel timings. However, while the firm isn’t collecting deposits yet, they are registering interested clients and collecting passport copies.

Waiting game

VACCINE producers in the country, including the Serum Institute of India Ltd.—which is running human trials for AstraZeneca and will produce at least a billion doses if its candidate gets the green light—have played down concerns that the wealthy will hive off scarce batches. They point to government

regulatory environment that promotes digital adoption. “The society and economy needs to adjust to the new normal and to veer away from the long-held manual practices of both the public and the private sectors,” Ganapin said during the forum. In the new normal, Ganapin said, digital technologies can facilitate social distancing, support business continuity, and prevent service interruptions. Digital technologies can also increase productivity of businesses, opportunities for people, and the efficiency of government. These are made possible through e-commerce platforms; digital payment solutions; remote learning and working; and digital information sharing.

Slow adoption

THE one big problem hounding the

intentions to ration the first set of jabs to front-line workers and the vulnerable before a private market develops. That hasn’t stopped some calling Serum’s Chief Executive Officer Adar Poonawalla and attempting to get first dibs on any vaccine it brings forward. “I’ve refused, whether you’re rich and powerful or a common friend, I think we all just have to wait,” he said in an interview earlier this month. “Of course, if there’s some friends and others we can always make a few hundred. It’s nothing, it’s not even a day’s production,” Poonawalla added. “But getting firstly access to all the vulnerable and elderly, the front-line workers, is the key.” Given what’s happening in China, and the enormous logistical challenges of rolling out a vaccine to the entire world, others aren’t convinced it will work out so fairly. Anil Hebbar, who runs a medical equipment firm and volunteered for Astra’s Covid vaccine trial in Mumbai after a friend died from the disease, knows people who use forged documents to ride on the city’s trains reserved for medical workers. It’s not much of a leap for the 56-year-old to imagine that will also happen once vaccines are deployed across India. “Everybody will claim to be a nurse now, or a doctor or hospital worker,” Hebbar said. “Human beings will always circumvent things to their favor.”

march to digitalization, despite the unscheduled push provided by the pandemic and its lockdowns—with resulting restrictions on mobility and cash and face-to-face transactions—is this fact: digital adoption in the Philippines remains low, mainly due to slow Internet speeds, high Internet costs and low broadband penetration. A study by the Neda and the World Bank showed that 63.7 percent of communities interviewed did not have telecommunication towers in their areas and 70.2 percent of interviewed barangays do not have fiber-optic cables installed in their communities. The findings also showed that majority or 87.8 percent of interviewed barangays do not have free Wi-Fi and the absence of this free service is evident across all regions. With a report by Jovee Marie N. Dela Cruz


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World economy risks buckling into 2021 despite vaccine news

Esdras Zayas places the Thanksgiving turkey on the dining room table before his family celebrates their first holiday without their beloved mother Ana Martinez who died at 78 on April 1 while recovering at a nursing home from a knee replacement on November 26, 2020, in Deer Park, N.Y. AP/John Minchillo

Sitting for roasted turkey? WHO reminds all to get more active

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ENEVA—As the coronavirus leaves many people housebound and many Americans sit to feast for Thanksgiving, the World Health Organization says people need to get more active, insisting that up to 5 million deaths worldwide could be avoided each year if people would run, walk and simply move more. The UN health agency, launching updated guidelines on physical activity and its first advice on sedentary behavior, is pointing to figures that one in four adults—and four in five adolescents—don’t get enough physical activity, a situation that’s complicated by the Covid-19 crisis that has shut up many people indoors. It recommends at least 2 1/2 hours of “moderate to vigorous aerobic activity” for adults per week, and an hour per day for kids and teens. A lack of physical activity leads to extra health care costs of $54 billion per year, plus another $14 billion in lost productivity, WHO said. The findings come as the Geneva-based agency released an update on “WHO Guidelines on physical activity and sedentary behavior”—building upon, revising and expanding recommendations in the previous guidelines published a decade ago. “Physical activity of any type and any duration can improve health and well-being, but more is always better,” said Dr. Ruediger Krech, WHO’s director of health promotion. “If you must spend a lot of time sitting still, whether at work or school, you should do more physical activity to counter the

harmful effects of sedentary behavior.” “The old adage—prevention is better than cure—really applies here,” Krech said. “WHO urges everyone to continue to stay active through the Covid-19 pandemic. If we do not remain active, we run the risk of creating another pandemic of ill-health as a result of sedentary behavior.” Dr. Fiona Bull, who heads the physical activity unit at WHO, said the guidelines offer advice on “sedentary behavior” for the first time. She added that experts previously believed physical activity should be done in blocks of at least 10 minutes. But the increasing use of fitness-monitoring devices has generated new science showing that it’s really most important to get 150 minutes at least per week. “In fact, that 10-minute minimum is not so important and every move counts,” she said. “It’s the total amount we all achieve: Reaching 150 [minutes] and extending.” Bull said only 78 countries, based on WHO’s most recent survey, have national guidelines on physical activity. She encouraged nations to leverage the new guidelines “as the basis for fast-tracking their policy development.” Regular physical activity is important to help prevent heart disease, diabetes and cancer while also reducing symptoms of depression and anxiety, and “boosting brain health,”WHO said. People aged over 65 should focus on balance, coordination and muscle strength to help prevent falls, it said. AP

In policy shift, IMF gives nod to debt monetization in Asia By Enda Curran, Michelle Jamrisko & Eric Martin

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Bloomberg

he International Monetary Fund’s October acknowledgment of the case for temporary debt monetization in Asia marked yet another example of how the pandemic has upended economic orthodoxy. It’s an about face for the IMF in a region where its calls for policy austerity are sometimes blamed for worsening the economic hardship caused by the Asian financial crisis of the 1990s. In 1998, as a financial crisis raged across Asia, then-IMF Managing Director Michel Camdessus was photographed as he stood with arms folded watching Indonesian President Suharto sign an unpopular bailout agreement that demanded steep spending cuts and painful reforms. Now, the IMF is at the other end of the policy spectrum by acknowledging in its outlook for the region that those countries with limited room to borrow, or who are vulnerable to swings in bond market sentiment as deficits soar, can lean more on their central banks. The October report even gave qualified approval for central banks in some cases to directly buy their government’s debt, with a list of conditions. “These are highly unusual and exceptional times,” Jonathan D. Ostry, acting director of the IMF’s Asia and Pacific Department said in an e-mail response to follow up questions from Bloomberg News. “In such highly exceptional circumstances, in cases where inflation remains low, debt monetization could be appropriate, provided it is well communicated, time -bound, and implemented within a clear operational framework that preserves central bank independence and does not impede monetary policy,” he said. Indonesia’s debt monetization program approved in July and implemented in August has earned worldwide attention. Bank Indonesia has snapped up more than 270 trillion rupiah ($20 billion) in government bonds so far, while reiterating alongside a surprise interest rate cut last week that it won’t carry direct purchases into 2021. Central bank and finance officials have calmed

investors around the “burden-sharing” arrangement, repeating a pledge to keep it temporary. They’ve also worked to quell worries around proposed legislation that was initially seen to threaten central bank independence. The rupiah is the biggest gainer in the Asia currency basket in the past month, rising more than 3 percent against the greenback. In the Philippines, where talk of direct purchases was bubbling up as the economy suffered from a resurgence of the virus, the central bank has recently scaled back debt purchases. While officials at Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas have said they remain ready to use unconventional policies as needed, their purchases of securities even in the secondary market has fallen in data through October. Measures taken by governments in the years since the Asia crisis, such as bolstering foreign exchange reserves, mean the region’s governments have more wiggle room this time compared to the 1990s crisis, said Brad Setser, senior fellow on leave from the Council on Foreign Relations and a former economist at the US Treasury Department, who commented before being named to president-elect Joe Biden’s transition team. “The constraints that Asia faced in 1997 simply aren’t there,” he said, adding that asset purchases— given interest rates have been slashed—are now an accepted par t of the monetary policy toolkit globally. “It would be very strange for the IMF to recognize needs for asset purchases to address constraints of zero lower bound in advanced economies and not recognize that some emerging economies are in a similar position,” Setser said. Thailand and South Korea are two such Asian economies approaching the zero lower bound, each showing a benchmark interest rate of 0.5 percent after 75 basis points in cuts this year. Mark Sobel, a former US representative at the IMF who’s now at the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum think tank, said it’s a sign of the macroeconomic policy space these countries now have that they can lean on policies such as asset purchases without spooking investors. “It was made possible by the progress they’ve made in strengthening their economic fundamentals in recent decades since the Asia crisis,” Sobel said. Bloomberg News

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he surging coronavirus is stoking fears of a fresh downturn for the world economy, heaping pressure on central banks and governments to lay aside other concerns and do more to spur demand. Hopes a re mou nt i ng t h at Covid-19 vaccines will become available as soon as December, but widespread delivery will take months and infections are rising again in many large economies. Authorities are responding with more restrictions to limit the virus’s spread at the price of weaker economic activity. Wall Street economists now say that it wouldn’t take much for the US, euro area and Japan to each contract again either this quarter or next, just months after they bounced from the deepest recession in generations. Bloomberg Economics gauges of highfrequency data point to a doubledip downturn, with European factory indexes on Monday justifying that worry, though a US measure of business activity was upbeat. That leaves policy-makers hearing calls for more stimulus, even when central banks are already stretched and starting to worry about froth in financial markets. Meantime, politicians from the US to Europe are clashing over just how much they can and should do with fiscal policy. “While there is much excitement over the progress of vaccine development, it will not be the quick fix that many expect it to be,” Singapore’s Trade & Industry Minister Chan Chun Sing told reporters on Monday. “Manufacturing enough doses, then distributing and vaccinating a significant population of the world, will take many months, if not years.” Against such a backdrop, the European Central Bank is set to ease monetary policy again next month, while the Federal Reserve could concentrate more of its bond purchases on longer-term securities to push down interest rates. But there are concerns the central banks have run out of room to act decisively and that even easier financial conditions won’t translate into an economic boost. The International Monetary Fund is among those also warning elevated

asset prices potentially point to a disconnect from the real economy and so may pose a financial stability threat. “There is a glut of savings and a shortage of investment,” which is the core problem facing developed economies, former Fed Chair Janet Yellen, who is set to be nominated for Treasury Secretary by President-elect Joe Biden, told Bloomberg’s New Economy Forum last week. “We have to have fiscal policy, structural policy other than just relying on central banks to achieve healthy growth.” The problem is fiscal policy in the US and Europe isn’t racing to the rescue. Lawmakers in the US are at loggerheads over how much more to spend as Biden prepares to take office. President Donald Trump’s Treasury Department last week reduced the Fed’s ability to aid some credit markets. In Europe, $2 trillion in aid is being held up by a fight over political control. “Exactly at the time central banks everywhere are acknowledging the centrality of fiscal policy in dealing with the economic consequences of the pandemic, governments are facing difficulties in implementing the next leg of their stimulus,” said Gilles Moec, chief economist at AXA SA. “Our base case is a contraction of 4.1 percent in global output in 2020, followed by a rebound to 4.9-percent growth in 2021. Uncertainty on the course of the virus, extent of stimulus, and timing of a vaccine mean the range of possible outcomes remains unusually wide,” said Bloomberg economist Tom Orlik. For the US, the pace of infections prompted JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts to forecast an economic shrinkage next quarter as various states impose social distancing curbs and some government benefits expire. Recent data show more people filing for unemployment benefits and fewer dining out at restaurants.

Cargo workers demonstrate the cold chain handling of medicines and vaccines as they stand next to a pharma transport vehicle at Swissport Pharma Center in Machelen, Belgium, on November 25. Safely delivering Covid-19 vaccines, once approval has been made, will be the mission of the century for the global air cargo industry. The Swissport Pharma Center, which opened in October 2019, has a state of the art temperature controlled warehouse space dedicated specifically to pharmaceutical shipments going out of Brussels airport. AP/Virginia Mayo

“It is possible we could have negative growth if this resurgence gets bad enough and mobility falls off enough,” Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan told Bloomberg Television last week. In Europe, further evidence arrived on Monday that a doubledip recession is on the way, with a survey of purchasing managers dropping sharply. Japan’s manufacturing and service sectors worsened at a faster pace in November, early purchasing managers’ indexes showed, adding to concern over the strength of the recovery. Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has called for a third extra budget to keep the economy on a growth path. Both the International Monetary Fund and the Group of 20— which comprises the world’s richest nations—warned during the G-20’s meetings last weekend that the recovery is at risk of derailing despite positive news around vaccines buoying global stocks. China is the world’s only major economy tipped to grow in 2020 as the government’s early control of the virus allowed lockdowns to be eased months ago. While its trade-led recovery is offering a boost to global commerce for now, it’s vulnerable to the global outlook. Fed Chair Jerome Powell and ECB President Christine Lagarde are among the central bankers warning against exuberance on news of successful vaccine trials. The main reason for caution is the time needed to roll out shots for the world population to an extent enabling an end to growth-sapping movement restrictions. The announcement of a vaccine itself may drive market

optimism, but doesn’t reopen economies for now. “The vaccine gives more of a vision for what may be late next year, and what 2022 will look like, but not for the next six months,” ECB chief economist Philip Lane said in an interview with Les Echos. “The situation will not materially improve in the last weeks of 2020.” The ECB’s downbeat tone on the immediate outlook is the backdrop to the likely arrival of a boost to the central bank’s 1.35 trillioneuro ($1.6 trillion) emergency bond-buying program and its cheap bank loans. Policy-makers meet on December 10. The worst affected sectors continue to shed jobs as companies warn on profits. Boeing Co. is almost doubling its planned job cuts while Adidas AG became one of the first consumer-goods companies in Europe to warn that renewed lockdowns will weigh on its earnings again and bring a swift end to a recent sales rebound. JPMorgan analysts are hopeful that a vaccine and another round of fiscal support totaling $1 trillion in the US will be enough to deliver average growth of more than 5 percent in the middle quarters of 2021. Even then, the virus’s legacies of record debt and elevated unemployment will endure. Economists at ABN Amro Group NV, however, see mobility restrictions around the world lasting well into 2022. “Only then can the global economy break into a growth spurt to make up the lost output versus trend growth,” analysts including chief economist Sandra Phlippen wrote in a report on Monday. “The vaccine is tantalizingly close, but still out of reach.” Bloomberg News

3 billion people live in farm areas with water shortages

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oughly 40 percent of the world’s people live in farming areas facing large water shortages, and scarce supplies pose an increasing risk to food security as populations swell and the climate changes, the United

Nations said. About 3.2 billion people live in agricultural areas with “high to very high” water shortages and competition over resources is rising, the UN’s Food & Agriculture Organization said in a report.

Severe droughts are becoming more common. About 3.2 billion people live in agricultural areas with “high to very high” water shortages and competition over resources is rising, the UN’s Food & Agriculture Organization said in a report.Bloomberg

Many farms that depend on rain are at risk as severe droughts become more common, and bigger global incomes are spurring demand for water-intensive foods like meat and dairy. Of the total, 1.2 billion people—a sixth of the global population—are in areas with severely constrained water supplies, and the amount of freshwater available per person has dropped 20 percent in the past two decades, according to the report. Swaths of Asia and North Africa have been most affected, while small amounts of people in Europe and the Americas have seen extreme restrictions. Agriculture accounts

for 70 percent of the world ’s freshwater withdrawals, and the UN called for better management to keep resources in check and boost agricultural yields. Earlier this year, CME Group Inc. announced its first futures contracts on water supplies in California, which has been afflicted by droughts and wildfire. Bloomberg News


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China set to eclipse America as world’s biggest oil refiner

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arlier this month, Royal Dutch Shell Plc pulled the plug on its Convent refinery in Louisiana. Unlike many oil refineries shut in recent years, Convent was far from obsolete: it’s fairly big by US standards and sophisticated enough to turn a wide range of crude oils into high-value fuels. Yet Shell, the world’s third-biggest oil major, wanted to radically reduce refining capacity and couldn’t find a buyer.

As Convent’s 700 workers found out they were out of a job, their counterparts on the other side of Pacific were firing up a new unit at Rongsheng Petrochemical’s giant Zhejiang complex in northeast China. It’s just one of at least four projects under way in the country, totaling 1.2 million barrels a day of crude-processing capacity, equivalent to the UK’s entire fleet. The Covid crisis has hastened a seismic shift in the global refining industry as demand for plastics and fuels grows in China and the rest of Asia, where economies are quickly rebounding from the pandemic. In contrast, refineries in the US and Europe are grappling with a deeper economic crisis while the transition away from fossil fuels dims the longterm outlook for oil demand. America has been on top of the refining pack since the start of the oil age in the mid-19th century, but China will dethrone the US as early as next year, according to the International Energy Agency. In 1967, the year Convent opened, the US had 35 times the refining capacity of China. The rise of China’s refining industry, combined with several large new plants in India and the Middle East, is reverberating through the global energy system. Oil exporters are selling more crude to Asia and less to long-standing customers in North America and Europe. And as they add capacity, China’s refiners are becoming a growing force in international markets for gasoline, diesel and other fuels. That’s even putting pressure on older plants in other parts of Asia: Shell also announced this month that they will halve capacity at their Singapore refinery. There are parallels with China’s growing dominance of the global steel industry in the early part of

this century, when China built a clutch of massive, modern mills. Designed to meet burgeoning domestic demand, they also made China a force in the export market, squeezing higher-cost producers in Europe, North America and other parts of Asia and forcing the closure of older, inefficient plants. “China is going to put another million barrels a day or more on the table in the next few years,” Steve Sawyer, director of refining at industry consultant Facts Global Energy, or FGE, said in an interview. “China will overtake the US probably in the next year or two.”

Asia rising

But while capacity will rise is China, India and the Middle East, oil demand may take years to fully recover from the damage inflicted by the coronavirus. That will push a few million barrels a day more of refining capacity out of business, on top of a record 1.7 million barrels a day of processing capacity already mothballed this year. More than half of these closures have been in the US, according to the IEA. About two thirds of European refiners aren’t making enough money in fuel production to cover their costs, said Hedi Grati, head of Europe-CIS refining research at IHS Markit. Europe still needs to reduce its daily processing capacity by a further 1.7 million barrels in five years. “There is more to come,” Sawyer said, anticipating the closure of another 2 million barrels a day of refining capacity through next year. Chinese refining capacity has nearly tripled since the turn of the millennium as it tried to keep pace with the rapid growth of diesel and gasoline consumption. The country’s crude processing capacity is expected to climb to 1 billion tons a year, or

The rise of China’s refining industry, combined with several large new plants in India and the Middle East, is reverberating through the global energy system. Bloomberg

20 million barrels per day by 2025, from 17.5 million barrels at the end of this year, according to China National Petroleum Corp.’s Economics & Technology Research Institute. India is also boosting its processing capability by more than half to 8 million barrels a day by 2025, including a new 1.2 million barrels per day mega project. Middle Eastern producers are adding to the spree, building new units with at least two projects totaling more than a million barrels a day that are set to start operations next year.

Plastic driven

One of the key drivers of new projects is growing demand for the petrochemicals used to make plastics. More than half of the refining capacity that comes on stream from 2019 to 2027 will be added in Asia and 70 percent to 80 percent of this will be plasticsfocused, according to industry consultant Wood Mackenzie. The popularity of integrated refineries in Asia is being driven by the region’s relatively fast economic growth rates and the fact that it’s still a net importer of feedstocks like naphtha, ethylene and propylene as well as liquefied petroleum gas, used to make various types of plastic. The US is a major supplier of naphtha and LPG to Asia. These new massive and integrated plants make life tougher for their smaller rivals, who lack their scale, flexibility to switch between fuels and ability to process dirtier, cheaper crudes. The refineries being closed tend to be relatively small, not very sophisticated and typically built in the 1960s, according to Alan Gelder, vice president of refining and oil markets at Wood Mackenzie. He sees excess capacity of around 3 million barrels a day. “For them to survive, they will

need to export more products as their regional demand falls, but unfortunately they’re not very competitive, which means they’re likely to close.”

Demand trap

Global oil consumption is on track to slump by an unprecedented 8.8 million barrels a day this year, averaging 91.3 million a day, according to the IEA, which expects less than two-thirds of this lost demand to recover next year. Some refineries were set to shutter even before the pandemic hit, as a global crude distillation capacity of about 102 million barrels a day far outweighed the 84 million barrels of refined products demand in 2019, according to the IEA. The demand destruction due to Covid-19 pushed several refineries over the brink. “What was expected to be a long, slow adjustment has become an abrupt shock,” said Rob Smith, director at IHS Markit. Adding to the pain of refiners in the US are regulations pushing for biofuels. That encouraged some refiners to repurpose their plants for producing biofuels. Even China may be getting ahead of itself. Capacity additions are outpacing its demand growth. An oil products oversupply in the country may reach 1.4 million barrels a day in 2025, according to CNPC. Even as new refineries are built, China’s demand growth may peak by 2025 and then slow as the country begins its long transition toward carbon neutrality. “In an environment where the world has already got enough refining capacity, if you build more in one part of the world, you need to shut something down in another part of the world to maintain the balance,” FGE’s Sawyer said. “That’s the sort of environment that we are currently in and are likely to be in for the next 4-5 years at least.” Bloomberg News

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Boris Johnson’s Conservative Party burns bridges with China

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s a prominent China critic and advocate of Hong Kong’s freedoms, Benedict Rogers is used to unwanted attention. But even he was surprised when he found out that the Chinese embassy in London had attempted to persuade members of the British Parliament to warn him off. The episode occurred in 2017 when Rogers was deputy chair of the ruling Conservative Party’s human-rights commission that he co-founded. According to three separate people familiar with the events, the embassy lobbied Conservative MPs to try and convince Rogers, who is not a lawmaker, to “shut up” about China. His experiences are among the incidents revealed in interviews with MPs, diplomats, party officials and security sources that help explain the UK’s souring relations with Beijing, and show how far China is prepared to go to try and influence the narrative. Many asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of their interactions with Chinese diplomats. Falling out with China is a risky path for the UK as it exits the European Union’s orbit, leaving it more exposed to retaliatory action by the world’s No. 2 economy, as Australia is witnessing. China was the UK’s third-biggest trading partner last year, after only the US and Germany; the UK ranked a distant 14th for China. Having already barred Huawei Technologies Co. from 5G networks from 2027 amid pressure from the Trump administration, Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government is considering a ban on installing the Chinese company’s equipment as soon as next year to appease his own Conservative MPs. It’s part of the price for their backing on telecommunications security legislation due in Parliament next week. Separate national security legislation aimed at shielding British assets from foreign investment is another flash point that risks angering Beijing.

Backbench insults

“This has severely undermined the legitimate interests of Chinese companies and impacted the basis of mutual trust between China and the UK,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told a daily briefing in Beijing on Wednesday as he condemned the UK’s moves against Huawei as without evidence. Johnson has called himself a Sinophile and expressed a desire to work with China, but that fine line between asserting Britain’s values without alienating Beijing is becoming harder to tread given his MPs’ increasing hawkishness. Iain Duncan Smith, a former Conservative leader and frequent critic of Beijing, called China “the single-biggest threat and problem posed to the United Kingdom and the free world” last week in Parliament. While his is an outlier voice, it reflects the growing international headwinds Beijing is encountering as China flexes its muscles on issues as diverse as Hong Kong, human rights, and the acquisition of strategic infrastructure and companies overseas. The UK is one of nine major economies from the US to South Korea where negative perceptions of China have reached a record level, a global survey by Pew Research Center found last month.

Tense call

An illustration of how strained ties have become came this fall, when a group of lawmakers took part in a Zoom call with Chinese Ambassador Liu Xiaoming to congratulate him on the occasion of the 71st anniversary of the People’s Republic of China. A Tory member brought up China’s treatment of its Muslim Uighur minority, and the ambassador slapped him down, telling the MP not to get involved then proceeding to rebut his points for five minutes. “It was quite tense,”said a participant. The Chinese embassy had no comment as of Wednesday evening, more than 48 hours after being asked for its response to the points in this story. Against a backdrop of mutual suspicion, many MPs are pressing Johnson’s government to curb what they see as China’s creeping state-backed influence in critical areas of British life from energy to finance and technology. Huawei’s lobbying has been par ticularly extensive. Many members of the upper House of Lords were approached to make the case for the Chinese company, according to a person familiar with the activities. “Most are avoiding them like the plague,” the person said. Huawei’s UK office declined to comment when contacted on Wednesday. Huawei has publicly called on the UK government to revisit the ban in light of President Donald Trump’s election defeat.

Buying legitimacy

The issue when it comes to China’s influence in the UK is one of “buying legitimacy,” according to a person familiar with the intelligence community’s thinking. “They will acquire businesses and firms which are both perfectly lawful and ethical and that way acquire legitimacy,” the person said. “The British elite is soft and malleable and easily bought.” To be sure, one Conservative lawmaker described interactions with the Chinese embassy as a two-way conversation: frank exchanges with efforts to persuade on both sides and no attempts to apply pressure. Another said that the ambassador had never behaved in any way that could be considered improper, and that cooperation rather than confrontation should be the nature of the relationship. The reality is still one of worsening relations that constitutes a setback for China’s international standing five years after then-Prime Minister David Cameron declared a “golden era” in bilateral ties, and even arranged for President Xi Jinping to be taken to Buckingham Palace in a golden carriage for an audience with Queen Elizabeth II. The government in Beijing has struggled to push back against the Trump administration’s efforts to paint China as a threat to the global world order, particularly in middle powers like the UK.

Five eyes

“There has been a clear deterioration in China-UK relations in the last few years,” said Wang Yiwei, director of China’s Institute of International Affairs at Renmin University in Beijing. Wang attributed the change in part to the UK increasingly drawing on its relationship within the Five Eyes intelligence alliance, saying that it “needs to improve its relationship with the US to counter the damage from exiting the European Union market.” UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab was a signatory to a Five Eyes statement last week calling on China to live up to its duty to the people of the former British territory of Hong Kong. China issued threats to the UK on more than one occasion this month over its criticism of Beijing’s actions in Hong Kong, lumping it together with Australia, another Five Eyes member that is in the thick of a damaging trade conflict with China. “Should they insist on going down the wrong path, China will make firm, legitimate and necessary reactions,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told a regular news briefing on November 13, referring to both countries. Rogers, the chief executive of Hong Kong Watch, which monitors threats to the territory’s basic freedoms, says that he found himself on the wrong side of such actions back in 2017. He said that he wrote an article to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the handover of Hong Kong that the Chinese embassy in London made clear it didn’t want to be published. An MP contacted him before the piece was published on the web site ConservativeHome to alert him about the lobbying effort, raising questions of how Chinese authorities knew the article was coming.

Anonymous letters

Rogers wasn’t granted a visa to enter Hong Kong in October that year. His case is not unique: Nigel Evans, a Conservative MP for almost 30 years who is now a deputy speaker of the House of Commons, is understood to have been denied a visa to enter China after visiting Taiwan as chairman of the parliamentary group on Taiwan. In the last few years, Rogers said that he received anonymous threatening letters sent to his home address as well as to neighbors who were asked to “keep an eye” on him, and even to his mother. He received e-mails along similar lines, and said that fake e-mails were sent in his name to MPs and journalists. The harassment got so bad that a cabinet minister raised the issue with intelligence services, according to a person familiar with the events. The aggressive form of “wolf warrior” diplomacy displayed during the pandemic has contributed to a reconsideration of the relationship in the UK, according to Charles Parton, a former diplomat with more than two decades’ experience of China. That change of heart also goes for those who advocate on Beijing’s behalf, he said. “Whereas before it was completely open season, if you wished to make money and drown your conscience in silver, that was very easy to do because no one would hold you to account,” said Parton, a senior associate fellow at the London-based Royal United Services Institute. “That is not the case any more.”

Bloomberg New

US and China shouldn’t force others to choose sides, says Australian PM

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ustralian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has warned that intensifying competition between the US and China is pressuring other nations to choose sides, and urged the superpowers to give governments “more room to move.” Morrison, who has long tried to balance Australia’s close trading ties with China and enduring security alliance with the US, said the ongoing rivalry had created challenges for Indo-Pacific nations that could spread further west. “Like other sovereign nations in the Indo-Pacific, our preference in Australia is not to be forced into any binary choices,”

Morrison said in a speech to a U.K.-based think tank on Monday night. “Our present challenge in the Indo-Pacific though is a foretaste for so many others around the world, including the United Kingdom and Europe.” Australia is the world’s most China-dependent developed economy and deteriorating diplomatic ties with Beijing have led to a string of its commodities exports being targeted. China has accused Australia of siding with the US after Canberra blocked Huawei Technologies Co. from building its 5G network and called for a probe into the origins of the coronavirus. Similar tensions are playing

out in Europe, as Beijing seeks to keep the continent from aligning more closely with the US on disputes ranging from market access to human rights.

‘More room’

“If we are to avoid a new era of polarization, then in the decades ahead there must be a more nuanced appreciation of individual states’ interests in how they deal with the major powers. Stark choices are in no one’s interests,” Morrison said. “Greater latitude will be required from the world’s largest powers to accommodate the individual interests of their

partners and allies. We all need a bit more room to move.” Morrison rejected any notion that Australia needs to pick sides. “Australia desires an open, transparent and mutually beneficial relationship with China,” he said. “Equally we are absolutely committed to our enduring alliance with the US, anchored in our shared world view, liberal democratic values and marketbased economic model.” Since Canberra’s call for the virus probe in April, Beijing has placed crippling tariffs on Australia’s barley exports, halted beef imports from several large

meat plants, warned its citizens against holidaying or studying in Australia and ordered traders to stop buying at least seven commodities including coal, copper and wine. China has become increasingly vocal in recent weeks in saying Australia is to blame for strained ties. “The root cause of the deteriorating bilateral ties is Australia’s repeated wrong acts and remarks on issues concerning China’s core interests and major concerns as well as its provocative and confrontational actions,” China’s embassy in Canberra said in a statement posted on its website

on Monday. “Those who have caused problems should be the ones to solve problems.”

US puppet

In his speech, Morrison dismissed the notion that Australia is a puppet of the US. “Our actions are wrongly seen and interpreted by some only through the lens of the strategic competition between China and the US,” he said. “It’s as if Australia does not have its own unique interests or it’s own views as an independent sovereign state. Th i s i s ju st f a l se. A nd wor se it need lessly deter iorates re l at ion s h ip s .” Bloomberg News


Science

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

BusinessMirror

Sunday

Sunday, November 29, 2020 A5

UNCTAD: PHL one of highest overperformers in frontier technologies T

he Philippines has been identified as one of the highest “overperformers,” second only to India, in frontier technologies, indicating the country’s propensity to adopt frontier technologies relative to its per capita GDP is high. This was disclosed by Shamika N. Sirimanne, director of the Division on Technology and Logistics, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), at the recent web streamed opening ceremony of the National Science and Technology Week (NSTW). Among frontier technologies are big data, the Internet of Things, artificial intelligence and 3D printing. These technologies demonstrate great potential to enable the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Sirimanne said. The Philippines status “can be attributed to the fact that the [it] has a high ranking for industry,” Sirimanne said. “This reflects high levels of FDI [foreign direct investment] in high-technology manufacturing, particularly electronics,” she said Sirimanne added: “Multi-national enterprises (MNEs) are attracted by the country’s strong supply chains and solid base of parts manufacturing. The

Philippines also has pro-business policies along with a skilled, well-educated and English-speaking workforce and a network of economic zones.” The Philippines has also been one of the most successful at seizing opportunities for trade in digitally information and communication technology (ICT)-enabled (or digitally delivered) goods and services. In 2017, the share of ICT goods in total merchandise exports was around 40 percent, while the share of ICT services in total exports of services was over 15 percent, she said. “The country is making significant strides in capturing value in e-commerce,” Sirimanne added. In 2015, transportation and storage accounted for 71 per cent of turnover from e-commerce, likely from online purchases of travel services. She disclosed that accommodation and food services, which were the second largest source of e-commerce revenue in the Philippines, were also connected to travel-related activities and food ordering. Sirimanne’s information was culled from her office’s forthcoming publication—”Technology and Innovation Report 2020”—that has developed a country readiness index.

It considers technological capabilities related to physical investment, human capital and technological effort and covers national capabilities to use, adopt and adapt these technologies. She said the overarching challenge for developing countries to reap the benefits of frontier technologies, as much as from old technologies, is to learn to adopt, disseminate knowledge and technologies to promote sustainable development. “Only a few countries currently create frontier technologies and, in the short run, this is unlikely to change. But all countries need to prepare for them,” she added. Sirimanne posted two obser vations and challenges. First, everyone on this planet has a stake in the outcome of science, technology and innovation efforts, “but not every country or every section of society is participating equally in defining the course of the technological race.” “The need for an inclusive conversation about technological change and its impact on people and societies, including the ethical dimension, is stronger than ever,” she said. Second, addressing global challenges like Covid-19 in vastly different in local contexts that

require the combination of cutting-edge scientific capabilities with detailed local knowledge. She added that regional and global science net works devoted to the development of diagnostics, therapeutic and vaccines for the Ccovid-19 pandemic can increase the capacities of developing countries to participate in global science and innovation networks.

More creative, resourceful, innovative NSTW

Secretary Fortunato T. de la Peña, for his part, said the DOST officials were challenged on how to push through with the week-long NSTW celebration while highly considering the safety of everyone from Covid-19. “The pandemic did not deter us us to celebrate the 2020 NSTW. On the contrary, it inspired us more to think outside of the box,” he said at the opening ceremony. He said it became “an avenue for all of us in the DOST to be more creative, be more resourceful, be more innovative.” “I told myself, this is the DOST people. We have playful minds and creative,” he said. The DOST decided to move forward to the

new normal with its commitment to hold the NSTW “because it is the symbol of hope and it mirrors the aspiration of each and every Filipino to overcome adversities using science, technology, and innovation.” This year’s theme: “Agham at Tekolohiya: Sandigan ng Kalusugan, Kabuhayan, Kaayusan at Kinabukasan [Science and Technology: Foundation of Health, Livelihood, Order and Future]” was based on this premise. With technology, the DOST was able to design virtual and interactive exhibits that feature its many knowledge products and services, and locally developed technologies in agriculture, health and nutrition, enterprise development, emerging technologies, education and distance learning, disaster preparedness, robotics, nuclear and space science, It had 27 knowledge-rich webinars, film showing, career talks, virtual demonstrations and forums on cutting-edge technologies and innovations. It also featured Regional Science and Technology Week celebrations. “As we now enter the virtual world, as you experience the new NSTW today, you are also looking at what the future will be for the years to come,” de la Peña said.

“We are now at the dawn of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, and with the things happening around us, I could say that we are here, prepared and with all our strength, we are facing the future, because our progress as a people, as a nation, is based on science, technology and innovation. “We are facing our new life, that we call new normal, with our heads high, with firm resolve to confront whatever challenges come,” he said in Filipino.

Platform to promote research results

Undersecretary Rowena Cristina Guevara, after identifying the many recent researches made by DOST agencies, said the NSTW is „the best platform to promote the results of research and development.“ This “will make sure that our lawmakers and budget departments take notice of R&D’s contribution to social and economic development,” she said. She added: “We have to emphasize the impacts of our projects to our communities and the country.” “An R&D investment is an investment to making change happen!” Guevara pointed out.

Lyn B. Resurreccion

BAMBOO MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS INNOVATION, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM

Marrying science, culture and arts By Lyn B. Resurreccion

L

istening to the beautiful musical pieces and renditions of the artists and groups composed of Joey Ayala, Dipolog Community Rondalla, PNU Himig Kawayan, Pangkat Kawayan, Prof. Armando Solarza with the Las Piñas Bamboo Organ, Dr. Benicio Sokong, Dulag Karatong Festival Ensemble, Joseph Gara, Huni Ukulele and DOST-FPRDI Himig Agham Kawayan, one would be transported to a world absent of stresses caused by the Covid-19 pandemic and damages brought by a series of typhoons. There’s more: DOST top officials Science Sec. Fortunato T. de la Peña and Undersecretary Rowena Cristina Guevara themselves played BMIs during the concert—kawagong for de la Peña and marimba for Guevara. Kawagong, composed of bamboo tubes, was named by de la Peña himself from the words kawayan (bamboo) and gong. Incidentally, Guevara, besides being an engineer, is also a pianist. The beautiful musical performances indeed gave the listeners a sort of a “chicken soup for the soul.” The concert, tagged “Musika ng Kawayan, Yaman ng Bayan” that used bamboo musical instruments (BMIs), was organized by the Forest Products Research and Development Institute (FPRDI) of the Department of Science and Technology’s (DOST) on November 27. It was the first official concert held in the many years of celebration of the National Science and Technology Week (NSTW), led by the DOST. Besides the concert, the Himig Agham Kawayan of the DOST-FPRDI wowed the crowed—again in a virtual presentation—with their rendition of Filipino music during the NSTW opening on November 23. It was the 20-member bamboo band’s inaugural performance using BMI prototypes the agency made. Having no training in BMI praying, they were mentored by Ronnel Ramos and Dave Ramos, fifth generation descendants of the founders of Musikawayan. Meanwhile, at the recent separate DOST-FPRDI webinar, “Pantugtog Kawayan ni Juan: Usapang Kultura at Kabuhayan,” Talaandig Datu Rodelio (Waway) Saway of Bukidnon in Mindanao played a courtship music with his kubing, a strip of bamboo played by the finger while on the artist’s lips. In the same webinar, Prof. Siegfredo Calabig showed videos of members of his Banda Kawayan Pilipinas playing the Christmas music “Jingle Bell Rock” and “Silver Bells” with BMIs, some of which were invented by Calabig himself.

BMI research and development program

Don’t get me wrong. The DOST-FPRDI is not turning into a musical agency. The above mentioned activities highlighted the agency’s BMI Innovation, Research and Development Program to apply science in developing and improving BMIs. “This is particularly important as some local bamboo musical instru-

ment makers encounter issues in the processing, durability, aesthetics and sound quality of their instruments. With locally developed technologies, we hope to better the processing and hasten the production of BMIs,” said DOST-FPRDI Director Dr. Romulo T. Aggangan at the webinar. The BMI Program will study the sources of raw material and the existing market of the instruments, Aggangan said. The results are expected to help broaden the raw materials base for musical instruments and identify the potential market for BMIs. “It is our fervent hope that with these pieces of information, many local entrepreneurs and start-up businesses will become interested in venturing into BMI production,” Aggangan added. He lauded the Department of Education (DepEd) for including in the K-12 curriculum the study and playing of indigenous BMIs. “We see this as an opportunity to deepen the knowledge and rouse the interest of Filipino youth on the beauty of our ethnic music,” Aggangan said.

PNU Himig Kawayan

DOST Secretary Fortunato de la Peña and Undersecretary Rowena Cristina Guevara

Photos from DOST-FPRDI

DOST-FPRDI Himig Agham Kawayan

Banda Kawayan Pilipinas

Music in Filipinos’ life

DOST Undersecretary Rowena Cristina Guevara said music has been a way of life for Filipinos to celebrate and record history, such as in celebrations and in religious activities. “In every part of the country, regardless of ethnic group, music plays at the background and sometimes at the centerstage of our events. Rhythm and beats are made even livelily by our indigenous music instruments like bamboo materials,” Guevara said during the webinar. This is the reason why the DOST recognizes the importance of preserving and promoting the country’s local indigenous music and local musical instrument made from bamboo, she said. “We recognize the potential profitability of BMIs as we continue to support the establishment of a BMI processing facility,” she added.

Solving BMI problems

Forester Aralyn Quintos, leader of BMI Innovation, Research and Development Program, said in the same webinar that the initiative is under the DOST program on creative industries that includes music, design, film, art and visual arts, and furniture. The DOST believes in the wholistic approach for development, aligning the creative sector with science and technology. Quintos said among the identified the problems the program will attend to include the bamboo’s durability because it is prone to attack by insects that affect the sound quality. Another is the BMI makers’ concern on the bamboo species suitable for a specific instrument and where they can be found. There is also the changing of traditions, Quintos said, that causes the loss of some BMI, while others have improved. One of the biggest problems, she said, is the poor timbre or tone quality

Joey Ayala and the Dipolog Community Rondalla and playability, and inaccurate tuning. “We want to generate information and technology on indigenous and innovative processing of bamboo as musical instrument,” she said.

‘Bamboosical Innovation’

Calling it “Bamboosical Innovation, “ Quintos said the program components include: 1. Documenting the BMIs to identify the species of bamboo and where to find them. This also involves the documentation of the BMIs used and produced in the country, and establish and analyse the industry value chain—from raw materials to the production of BMI. 2. Coming up with protective technology for BMIs by using chemical and nonchemical treatment—from drying technology, thermal modification, protective remedial treatments and finishing techniques—to see their effect on the sound or acoustics of the BMI. 3. Developing prototype designs of musical instruments using select Philippine bamboo species and processing technologies to check the qualitative characteristics through digital processing techniques. 4. Construction of a processing facility for BMIs and other lignocellulosic materials. “We are currently establishing the facility for upscale processing and improvement, technical and economic feasibility of processing different BMIs, training center for teachers and interested individuals and local BMI makers, she explained.

Datu Rodelio Waway Saway

Beneficiaries and what it offers

Quintos said the beneficiaries of the program include the DepEd K-12 program, educators, and students. Also among recipients are the creative industries, such as BMI makers and music enthusiasts. The bamboo plantation owners and suppliers; the Philippine culture, in general, and the general public; and related researchers, will also benefit. According to Quintos, the program’s outputs are the designing of teaching modules for K-12 program; developing a database/web site to serve as repository of BMI information, where the species can be found. It will also come up with training and appropriate processing techniques and technologies for BMI transfer of technology; and construction of BMI processing facility, which will be open for commercialization. The program partners are the UP DiIiman’s Center for Ethnomusicology, and Electronics and Electrical Engineering Institute, and the Philippine Normal University.

BMI maker

Calabig, founder of Banda Kawayan which he established in 1973, makes and invents BMIs, including kalagong, which name he got from his surname and the gong. He said there is good business opportunity in BMI-making and sale because there is less competition. “The raw materials [bamboo] is very cheap or could even be free because we have many species of bamboo,” he said,

with transporting the raw materials as the only expense. Calabig does all the work from looking and buying raw materials to making the instruments. He also does repairs. He said the best seller BMI is angklung, costing from P1,800 to P2,500. Calabig added that a BMI band can be organized in one month. He has organized several bands, including the Banda Kawayan Filipino Community (Hawaii USA), Banda Kawayan Paete in Laguna, Don Bosco School Sta.Mesa, Mary Help Catholic School Mabalacat, Pampanga, and Villa Hermosa Bamboo Band Silay, Negros Oriental. He gives free training to interested BMI enthusiasts from 7 years old to 70 years old. About 75 percent of the members of his bands are graduates of his trainings. When invited, Calabig said the standard fee his band asks is P50,000 an hour. His band plays Filipino folk songs, Christmas and Western songs.

‘Nature and culture are one’

Saway, the leader of Talaandig School of Living Tradition (SLT), said musical instruments are important to the Talaandig and to all indigenous peoples in the Philippines because “music has links to their culture.” Talaandigs are basically farmers, but their music, dance and their language are not lost, he said in Filipino. “The culture of Talaandigs is very much alive. Their beliefs and rituals that respect the land and the environment are not lost,” Saway said. Saway said “musical instruments are lost if they have no economic value.” They

need improvement in design and quality. “We need science.... If the indigenous knowledge and modern science go together, we will surely have beautiful and quality BMI instruments,” Saway pointed out. He expressed gratitude to the DOST for its RDI program for BMIs. “I now see a future for BMI makers and farmers who plant bamboos,” he said. “Bamboos are part of reforestation, as we love the environment and our culture. We need to plant bamboos because it is also important to our livelihood,” he explained in Filipino. He said in taking care of the environment, they also protect the source of their culture. “The sound of the musical instruments come from the environment. We are inspired by the sound of the hornbills, the frogs, the cicadas so we could make beautiful musical instruments,” he said. “Nature and culture are one.” In order to preserve the Talaandig culture, Saway said the SLT teaches the youth about their culture—from traditional music, dance, rituals, language, story telling to chanting. As an instrument maker, he said he does not teach inside the SLT building, but go outside and encourages other communities to make musical instruments to ensure their existence.

Influence of Western culture

Calabig said his band show that BMI could play any music. “But we do not forget the Filipino music. It should always be present,” he said. For Saway, he said school teachers should be creative and link with experts on how to take care of the youth’s awareness on local musical instruments. “The cultural experts know how to help the teachers on how to create local musical instruments and how to deepen the awareness [of people]. Our problem is the awareness. We already have love, but the awareness is deeper than love for local musical instruments,” Saway explained.


Faith

Sunday

A6 Sunday, November 29, 2020

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

Pope advances sainthood causes of priests with early, late vocations

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ATICAN—Pope Francis advanced recently the sainthood causes of several men and women, including two Italian priests of the 20th century— one who was ordained at age 23 and another who was ordained at 65.

A statue of St. Peter in front of the Vatican Basilica. VATICAN MEDIA Venerable Fr. Mario Ciceri knew his vocation from a very young age and died after an accident at just 44 years old. Servant of God Fr. Alfonso Ugolini was ordained after a lifetime dedicated to helping the poor and disaffected of his district, and lived to be 91 years old. The pope decreed that the sainthood causes could advance to the next stage after a November 23 audience with Bishop Marcello Semeraro, prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints, who was made a cardinal last Saturday. Among the causes promoted was also that of Fr. Juan Elias Medina and 126 companions, who were killed during the Spanish Civil War. Declared martyrs, they will now be beatified. Venerable Mario Ciceri will also now be declared blessed, after Pope Francis approved a miracle attributed to his intercession. Ciceri was born to poor farmers

in northern Italy in 1900. He was the fourth of six children and, after the death of an aunt, Ciceri’s parents also brought her 13 children to live with them. From childhood, Ciceri knew he had a vocation to the priesthood. He would go often to the local parish and attend religious functions, serving as altar boy. With the permission of his devout parents, he left to begin studying at a seminary high school while still in grade school. His achievements earned him scholarships, which allowed him to continue his studies despite his family’s limited financial means. Ciceri was ordained a priest of the Archdiocese of Milan at age 23. As a new priest, he was responsible for the parish’s catechism classes and helped with the Catholic Action youth group. He founded and directed a schola

cantorum for young people. Ciceri also helped to repair the buildings, acting as a carpenter, bricklayer, and electrical engineer. The priest also used these skills to build a small reproduction of the Lourdes Grotto. One young man at the parish wrote that the priest somehow found time to do these activities while also never neglecting his priestly ministry and was “always in church.” The man said: “Yet if you go to the hospital, you can find him there at any time; if you go around the country, wherever there is a material or spiritual need, a pain to soothe, a need to help, you will find him there. Where you are sure not to find him is at his home, which really is not his home, but that of the young people.” Ciceri cared for and encouraged the poor, the sick, former prisoners, and the young men who were soldiers fighting at the front during World War II. In February 1945, while riding his bicycle home from a neighboring parish, where he had helped to hear confessions, he was hit by a buggy and fatally injured. He died two months later, on April 4, at the age of 44, after offering his suffering for an end to World War II and the safe return of soldiers. In contrast to Ciceri, there is Fr. Alfonso Ugolini, who spent most of his life serving the Church as a layman, before being ordained a priest at age 65. He was declared “venerable” by Pope Francis November 23. He was born in France in 1908 to a once wealthy Catholic family. After losing everything, they moved to Sassuolo, Italy. Ugolini’s parents were deeply religious and taught their son the values of faithfulness, honesty and love of neighbor, despite their poverty. When he was between 12 and 15 years old, Ugolini’s parents and only sister, who was a nun, died of tuberculosis. Ugolini himself came close to dy ing f rom the d isease, but attributed his recover y to the Virgin Mar y, to whom he had entrusted himself during the deep loneliness

he experienced following the death of his mother. At age 17, he began spiritual direction with his parish priest, who incorporated him into the life of the parish, giving him jobs as a sacristan, parish secretary, catechist and handyman. In addition to these roles, Ugolini took it upon himself to transform a little room next to the church into a reception space for the poor. There he would meet the poor and give out food and support, or help them to find a job. He was known for his acceptance of everyone, and lines of gypsies, immigrants, ex-prisoners, drug addicts, the unemployed, and homeless people from throughout the district would form outside his little office looking for help. When people complained that he helped even atheists, communists, and swindlers, he would respond: “They are all children of God.” People in the area so trusted and esteemed Ugolini that they were eager to give him money, open their doors to the poor, and create jobs. He is estimated to have handled in about 15 years the equivalent of $300,000—a huge amount of money at the time. Some called him “God’s banker.” In 1972, the local bishop asked Ugolini if he would like to be ordained a priest, and he agreed. His remaining 26 years of life he served in priestly ministry, with many hours spent in the confessional administering the Sacrament of Penance. Ugolini died on Octoober 25, 1999, at the age of 91. Pope Francis also declared on November 23 the “ heroic virtue” of Servants of God Italian bishop Fortunato Maria Farina (1881-1954) and Spanish priest Fr. Andres Manjon y Manjon (1846-1923), as well as three Italian women: Sr. Maria Francesca Ticchi of the Poor Clares (1887-1922); Sr. Maria Carola Cecchin of the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Giuseppe Benedetto Cottolengo (1877-1925); and Sr. Maria Francesca Giannetto of the Congregation of the Daughters of Mary Immaculate (1902-1930).

Hannah Brockhaus/Catholic News Agency

China criticizes pope on comment on Uighur B

EIJING—China criticized Pope Francis recently over a passage in his new book in which he mentions suffering by China’s Uighur Muslim minority group. Foreign Ministry Spokesman Zhao Lijian said Francis’s remarks had “no factual basis at all.” “People of all ethnic groups enjoy the full rights of survival, development and freedom of religious belief,” Zhao said at a daily briefing. Zhao made no mention of the camps in which more than 1 million Uighurs and members of other Chinese Muslim minority groups have been held. The US and other governments, along with humanrights groups, say the prison-like facilities are intended to divide Muslims from their religious and cultural heritage, forcing them to declare loyalty to China’s ruling Communist Party and its leader, Xi Jinping. China, which initially denied the existence of the facilities, now says they are centers intended to provide job training and prevent terrorism and religious extremism on a voluntary basis. In his new book Let Us Dream, due on December 1, Francis listed the “poor Uighurs” among examples

Pope Francis incenses the altar as he celebrates Mass on the occasion of the Christ the King festivity, in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican on November 22. Vincenzo Pinto/Pool Photo via AP of groups persecuted for their faith. Francis wrote about the need to see the world from the peripheries and the margins of society, “to places of sin and misery, of exclusion and suffering, of illness and solitude.”

In such places of suffering, “I think often of persecuted peoples: the Rohingya, the poor Uighurs, the Yazidi—what Islamic State did to them was truly cruel—or Christians in Egypt and Pakistan killed by bombs that went off while they prayed in church,”

Francis wrote. Francis has declined to call out China for its crackdown on religious minorities, including Catholics, much to the dismay of the Trump administration and human-rights groups. The Vatican last month renewed its controversial agreement with Beijing on nominating Catholic bishops, and Francis has been careful to not say or do anything to offend the Chinese government on the subject. On Tuesday the Vatican confirmed that Qingdao Bishop Thomas Chen Tianhao had been recently consecrated bishop with papal consent as a result of the 2018 deal, the third such ordination. In a statement, the Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said the Holy See expected more bishops to be named as a result of the deal “because several procedures are under way for new episcopal nominations.” China and the Vatican have had no formal relations since the Communist Party cut ties and arrested Catholic clerics soon after seizing power in 1949. AP

New Vatican envoy to arrive in Manila

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Archbishop Charles John Brown, the new Apostolic Nuncio to the Philippines. VERITAS IRELAND/SCREENGRAB VIA YOUTUBE

he new Apostolic Nuncio to the Philippines, Archbishop Charles John Brown, is set to arrive in Manila this weekend. In a communiqué to the bishops, the Apostolic Nunciature in Manila said that Brown is arriving on November 29. Brown is expected to present his credentials to the Philippine government soon thereafter. Filipino bishops welcomed the scheduled arrival of Brown, as the country is set to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the arrival of Christianity in the Philippines next year. “We wish His Excellency a fruitful, meaningful and memorable stay in our country,” Bishop Gerardo Alminaza of San Carlos said.

The Vatican diplomat will be coming from his home city, New York, where he spent a few weeks break after his tour of duty as nuncio to Albania. Prior to starting his new mission, Brown also met Pope Francis during a private audience in the Vatican on October 23. The pope appointed the 61-year-old American archbishop as his new ambassador to the Philippines on September 28. The post has been vacant since November 2019 when Archbishop Gabrielle Caccia was named head of the Holy See’s Permanent Observer Mission in the United Nations in New York.

CBCP News

The words “Muhammad, the Apostle of God” are inscribed on the gates of the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina. Wikimedia Commons

Muslims visualized Muhammad in words, calligraphy for centuries

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he republication of caricatures depicting the Prophet Muhammad by French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in September 2020 led to protests in several Muslim-majority countries. It also resulted in disturbing acts of violence: In the weeks that followed, two people were stabbed near the former headquarters of the magazine and a teacher was beheaded after he showed the cartoons during a classroom lesson. Visual depiction of Muhammad is a sensitive issue for a number of reasons: Islam’s early stance against idolatry led to a general disapproval for images of living beings throughout Islamic history. Muslims seldom produced or circulated images of Muhammad or other notable early Muslims. The recent caricatures have offended many Muslims around the world. This focus on the reactions to the images of Muhammad drowns out an important question: How did Muslims imagine him for centuries in the near total absence of icons and images?

Picturing Muhammad without images In my courses on early Islam and the life of Muhammad, I teach to the amazement of my students that there are few pre-modern historical figures that we know more about than we do about Muhammad. The respect and devotion that the first generations of Muslims accorded to him led to an abundance of textual materials that provided rich details about every aspect of his life. The prophet’s earliest surviving biography, written a century after his death, runs into hundreds of pages in English. His final 10 years are so well-documented that some episodes of his life during this period can be tracked day by day. Even more detailed are books from the early Islamic period dedicated specifically to the description of Muhammad’s body, character and manners. From a very popular ninth-century book on the subject titled “Shama’il al-Muhammadiyya” or “The Sublime Qualities of Muhammad,” Muslims learned everything from Muhammad’s height and body hair to his sleep habits, clothing preferences and favorite food. No single piece of information was seen too mundane or irrelevant when it concerned the prophet. The way he walked and sat is recorded in this book alongside the approximate amount of white hair on his temples in old age. These meticulous textual descriptions have functioned for Muslims throughout centuries as an alternative for visual representations. Most Muslims pictured Muhammad as described by his cousin and son-in-law Ali in a famous passage contained in the Shama’il al-Muhammadiyya: a broadshouldered man of medium height, with black, wavy hair and a rosy complexion, walking with a slight downward lean. The second half of the description focused on his character: a humble man that inspired awe and respect in everyone that met him.

Textual portraits of Muhammad That said, figurative portrayals of Muhammad were not entirely unheard of in the Islamic world. In fact, manuscripts from the 13th century onward did contain scenes from the prophet’s life, showing him in full figure initially and with a veiled face later on. The majority of Muslims, however, would not have access to the manuscripts that contained these images of the prophet. For those who wanted to visualize Muhammad, there were nonpictorial, textual alternatives. There was an artistic tradition that was particularly popular among Turkish- and Persianspeaking Muslims. Ornamented and gilded edgings on a single

page were filled with a masterfully calligraphed text of Muhammad’s description by Ali in the Shama’il. The center of the page featured a famous verse from the Quran: “We only sent you [Muhammad] as a mercy to the worlds.” These textual portraits, called “hilya” in Arabic, were the closest that one would get to an “image” of Muhammad in most of the Muslim world. Some hilyas were strictly without any figural representation, while others contained a drawing of the Kaaba, the holy shrine in Mecca, or a rose that symbolized the beauty of the prophet. Framed hilyas graced mosques and private houses well into the 20th century. Smaller specimens were carried in bottles or the pockets of those who believed in the spiritual power of the prophet’s description for good health and against evil. Hilyas kept the memory of Muhammad fresh for those who wanted to imagine him from mere words.

Different interpretations The Islamic legal basis for banning images, including Muhammad’s, is less than straightforward and there are variations across denominations and legal schools. It appears, for instance, that Shiite communities have been more accepting of visual representations for devotional purposes than Sunni ones. Pictures of Muhammad, Ali and other family members of the prophet have some circulation in the popular religious culture of Shiite-majority countries, such as Iran. Sunni Islam, on the other hand, has largely shunned religious iconography. Outside the Islamic world, Muhammad was regularly fictionalized in literature and was depicted in images in medieval and early modern Christendom. But this was often in less than sympathetic forms. Dante’s Inferno, most famously, had the prophet and Ali suffering in hell, and the scene inspired many drawings. These depictions, however, hardly ever received any attention from the Muslim world, as they were produced for and consumed within the Christian world.

Offensive caricatures and colonial past Providing historical precedents for the visual depictions of Muhammad adds much-needed nuance to a complex and potentially incendiary issue, but it helps explain only part of the picture. Equally important for understanding the reactions to the images of Muhammad are developments from more recent history. Europe now has a large Muslim minority, and fictionalized depictions of Muhammad, visual or otherwise, do not go unnoticed. With advances in mass communication and social media, the spread of the images is swift, and so is the mobilization for reactions to them. Most importantly, many Muslims find the caricatures offensive for its Islamophobic content. Some of the caricatures draw a coarse equation of Islam with violence or debauchery through Muhammad’s image, a pervasive theme in the colonial European scholarship on Muhammad. Anthropologist Saba Mahmood has argued that such depictions can cause “moral injury” for Muslims, an emotional pain due to the special relation that they have with the prophet. Political scientist Andrew March sees the caricatures as “a political act” that could cause harm to the efforts of creating a “public space where Muslims feel safe, valued, and equal.” Even without images, Muslims have cultivated a vivid mental picture of Muhammad, not just of his appearance but of his entire persona. The crudeness of some of the caricatures of Muhammad is worth a moment of thought. Suleyman Dost/The Conversation


Biodiversity Sunday BusinessMirror

Asean Champions of Biodiversity Media Category 2014

Editor: Lyn Resurreccion

Sunday, November 29, 2020

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‘One Health’ approach vs Covid-19, future pandemics

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By Jonathan L. Mayuga

s nations continue to reel from the devastating impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic, various stakeholders in Southeast Asia are compelled to look deeper into the issue of wildlife conservation and zoonotic diseases. The concept of “One Health” as a holistic approach to understanding risks to human, animal and ecosystem health is fast becoming the buzzword as a post-Covid-19 recovery strategy in the region.

Emerging infectious diseases

Kung Phoak, deputy secretary general for Asean Socio-Cultural Community, underscored the substantial impacts of emerging infectious diseases that are zoonotic (an infectious disease that has jumped from animals to humans) to human health, agricultural production, tourism and economies. At a recent webinar dubbed, “Wildlife Conservation and Zoonotic Diseases: Halting Species Loss and Tackling Public Health in the Asean,” Phoak said 75 percent of known emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic, all of which have had substantial impacts on human health, agricultural production, tourism and economies. Organized by the Asean Centre for Biodiversity (ACB), in collaboration with Vietnam through the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, the Asean Secretariat, the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), the webinar aimed to explore the issue of wildlife conservation and zoonotic diseases from the “One Health” perspective.

Illegal wildlife trade

Describing the illegal wildlife trade as a ubiquitous problem, Phoak said it contributes to the continuously harrowing decrease in populations of wild flora and fauna and emerging infectious pathogens in the region. “In the long run, such disruptions in ecological systems could provide opportunities for the emergence of zoonotic diseases,” he warned. He said the links between wildlife and human health are particularly complex, and should be addressed with coordinated actions.

One Health

In the international community, “One Health” has been known as a collaborative and a transdisciplinary approach that recognizes connections between

health and people, and animal and the environment, Phoak said. Such approach, he added, offers a holistic pathway for biodiversity mainstreaming in Asean’s post-2020 biodiversity framework and broader sustainable development agenda. To this end, Phoak said the Covid-19 pandemic and its recovery should be seen as an opportunity to explore ways and leverage on Asean’s existing partnership and initiatives toward a more collective and coordinated response to mitigate its multifaceted impact.

A wake-up call

According to Phoak, the Covid 19 pandemic has been a wake-up call for the modern society. “We need to live in harmony with the broader ecosystem as our lifeline reservoir. We need to look after the environment and biodiversity, if not for anything then for humanity’s longterm survival,” he said. Hence, Asean’s Covid-19 strategy should look at strategies to mainstream sustainability considerations into all dimensions of work, from the environment, health, agriculture, disaster management and to financing.

Devastating impact

ACB Executive Director Theresa Mundita S. Lim, in her keynote address during the webinar, said most parts of the world, including the Asean region, have experienced the impacts of the global pandemic. Citing the World Health Organization report as of November 15, she said almost 4 million new cases and 60,000 new deaths led to the world total of 53.7 million confirmed cases and 1.3 million deaths. “ T he A sean BioDiaspora Virtual Center reported that there are 1,055,110 confirmed cases of Covid-19 in the region with a total of 25,055 deaths as of November 16,” she added.

Biodiversity links

Lim said the webinar hopes to broaden the discussion on the links among wildlife and their natural habitats, domestic animals and human activities, and dependence on biodiversity

A screenshot of the participants of the webinar “Wildlife Conservation and Zoonotic Diseases: Halting Species Loss and Tackling Public Health in the Asean.” ACB The anthropogenic drivers of zoonotic diseases—or human activities that cause the jump of illnesses from animals to humans—as illustrated by the United Nations Environment Programme and International Livestock Research Institute in 2020 is shared by ACB Executive Director Theresa Mundita S. Lim during her presentation at the recent webinar “Wildlife Conservation and Zoonotic Diseases: Halting Species Loss and Tackling Public Health in the Asean.” ACB and healthy ecosystems which have been the subject of conversations by Asean on the Covid-19 pandemic and its links to biodiversity. “While the wildlife species, such as bats and pangolins, have been identified as natural reservoirs for viruses, there needs to be an intermediate host for the virus to be transmitted to humans,” Lim, a licensed veterinarian and an expert in zoonotic disease, said. Viruses, she said, usually do not simply jump from the wildlife species to humans. However, because of the increasing human-wildlife interactions, there are currently cases of direct transmission, she said, citing the latest Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services report on pandemics.

Increasing risks

The increasing anthropogenic changes, or alterations as a result of human action or presence, such as land-use change, agricultural expansion and intensification, wildlife trade and consumption, and other drivers, including climate change, substantially increase the risk of a pandemic occurrence, she pointed out. “As wildlife species are displaced from their natural ecosystems, the instances of interaction with humans in settlements increase. When this happens, natural host-pathogen dynamics are disrupted, increasing opportunities for direct contact between the wildlife species [which are natural virus reservoirs] and humans,” Lim explained. Anthropogenic drivers of zoonotic diseases are now occurring in the same places, amplifying their impact because of the increasing demand for animal protein, she said. In Southeast Asia, since the 1960s, the share of the region’s daily food

supply of proteins from animal products doubled to 21 percent, she noted. “The increasing demand for animal-source foods stimulates the intensification and industrialization of animal production, which then result in the proliferation of genetically similar animals,” she said. Meanwhile, the unsustainable agricultural intensification and monoculture approach to livestock-raising narrows down genetic diversity, weakens disease resistance, and makes the population more vulnerable to viral infections, she said. Lim cited as an example the factory farming of pigs that was said to have promoted transmission of swine flu due to closed confines of the animals. “The IPBES report likewise cited that more than 25 percent of all—and more than 50 percent of zoonotic—infectious diseases have been linked to agricultural-intensification measures, such as dams, irrigation projects and factory farms since 1940,” she said.

Exploitation of wildlife

Another problem is the exploitation or overexploitation of wildlife, Lim said. In the region, illegal wildlife trade has become a lucrative business fetching an estimate of $20 billion annually. The increased exploitation of wildlife significantly contributes to the risk of zoonotic disease emergence, she said. “Hunting of wild animals for bushmeat, recreation, consumption, and social norms, as well as presumptions that wild meat is fresh, natural, traditional and safe, often fuel the illegal wildlife trade system,” she explained. “Furthermore, live animal trading for recreation, research, medical, medicinal, commercial, and decorative purposes largely compound to this,” Lim added.

Food supply chains, climate change

According to Lim, longer food supply chains not only contr ib ute to carbon footprints, but also increase opportunities for w ider disease transmission. “It is not a coincidence that more diseases have been spreading as the global temperature rises, as zoonotic diseases thrive and survive in warmer and wetter climates,” she added. According to Lim, a former official of the DENR, the changing environmental conditions may affect the population of host animals, causing ecological imbalance and enabling virus transmissions. “Clearly, these human-driven activities lead to biodiversity loss and faster spread of diseases. The decline of species can trigger the spillover of viruses that have long been dormant or inactive, leading to their transmission to domestic animals and humans,” she explained.

Era of pandemics

She reiterated that Cov id-19 may not be the last pandemic, citing IPBES’s description or reference to the current period as the “era of pandemics.” “There are around 1.7 million unidentified viruses believed to still exist in mammals and water birds that can infect people. The risk of pandemics is increasing rapid, with more than five new diseases emerging in people every year, any one of which has the potential to spread and become pandemic,” she said.

Curbing the risks

According to Lim, curbing the risk of future pandemics would entail the reduction or a complete halt of destructive practices, and the promotion of more nature- and biodiversity-friendly mindset and lifestyle. She said the most urgent measure that people in A sean must

undertake is the conser vation of protected areas that ser ve as habitats of w ildlife animals. This means halting the overexploitation and the unsustainable use of resources in high biodiversity regions to reduce the wildlife-livestock-human contact interface and help prevent the spillover of novel pathogens. Responsible consumption and reducing consumption of meat from livestock production, she said, can also help to significantly reduce the risk of pandemics.

ACB’s role

As a regional hub for biodiversity conservation, the ACB has a significant role in the ongoing discussions in the region on the development of One Health approach. One of the ACB’s main thrusts now is mainstreaming biodiversity considerations across development sectors, and along with its mandate of fostering regional cooperation among the 10 Asean member states. Lim said the ACB can support in the adoption of the One Health approach in sub-national, national and regional planning following the Conference on Biological Diversity guidance and the joint work program between CBD and World Health Organization on Health and Biodiversity. Lim said the webinar aims to bring together the sectors of biodiversity conservation, wildlife trade and enforcement, forestry, agriculture and animal health, human health and infectious diseases in Asean, and tackle an integrated response to the Covid-19 challenge through the lens of One Health approach. Finally, sharing an editorial cartoon that illustrates the various disasters the world is facing, Lim said the world is only bracing for a fraction of health and ecological threats. “Focusing on biodiversity—including embedding its considerations across sectors and across pillars— should be our main priority,” she said.

Dyson winner’s next project: Harvest U.V. for electricity through clothes By Lyn Resurreccion

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e wanted to help Filipinos have access to clean energy, and thought of solar energy because it is just everywhere. Then one day, when it was overcast and rainy, he noticed that his eye glasses, which normally reacts to sunlight, darkened. Voila! Carvey Ehren Maigue, 27, got an idea for his invention. “I understood that even when it is cloudy and rainy, ultraviolet light still reaches us,” Maigue said in an interview. Since conventional solar panel cannot absorb ultraviolet light, Maigue’s invention was his solution: waste crops from fruits and vegetables which converts UV light into renewable energy. His technology—Aurora Renewable Energy and UV Sequestration (AuREUS)—won for Maigue the inaugural Sustainability Award of the James Dyson Award 2020 which was announced last week. “Organic luminescent compounds are derived from fruits and vegetables. These compounds turn high energy ultraviolet waves into visible light. I use solar panels and solar films to convert this visible light into electricity,” he said in a video interview posted on Dyson’s web site. The Mapua University engineering student participated in the James Dyson Award in 2018, but failed to make it to the national level. “But I turned it into a motivation to develop my invention even further,” he said. “It was like an acid test for my idea.” With the use of AuREUS, instead of typical glass windows, a whole building can become a vertical solar energy farm.

‘Young people want to change the world’

“I truly believe that young people want to change the world. That’s absolutely right, they should do. It is their world now, not our world,” Sir James Dyson, chief engineer and founder of UK-based Dyson Ltd., a British technology company that designs and manufactures household appliances, said in a video interview posted on Dyson’s web site. He added: “This gives them the opportunity to solve the problems that they think are really important to solve, and it gives them confidence that they can literally do that.” Dyson himself surprised Maigue in a call to announce that he won the award. Dyson said: “We love to meet people who are not put off by failure. And we’ve had so many entries this year, more than ever before. And you’re the winner of the [2020 James Dyson] Sustainability Award.” In the video of the exchange, a visibly dumbfounded Maigue could only say: “Oh, thank you, thank you. Thank you very much.” “It really surprised me and it took a few more days before it dawned on me. I was very happy because I know that through this award, I will be able to reach more people,” he said in an online interview on Dyson’s web site. “I’m very, very happy and excited that I have this chance,” he said.

What is AuREUS System Technology?

When he first joined the award in 2018, Maigue‘s invention was a window that aimed to utilize ultraviolet light, from sunlight and convert it into electricity.

“We are also looking to create curved plates, for use on electric cars, aeroplanes and even boats,” he added. He explained that AuREUS has the chance to bring solar energy capture closer to people, the same way computers were only used before by the government or the military. “Now the same technology is in our smartphones, I want solar energy harvesting to be more accessible,” the young inventor said. Looking forward for more products for his invention, Maigue said “AuREUS can soon become part of our clothes, our cars, our buildings and our houses.” “This is the change that I can make for the future,” he pointed out.

10 years at the university

Carvey Ehren Maigue, the winner of Sustainability Award of the James Dyson Award 2020, with the vegetables for his winning invention, the Aurora Renewable Energy and UV Sequestration. James Dyson Award 2020

“Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to create that glass, but I continued to develop the product and I lifted the concept and the technology and found other applications for it,” he said. AuREUS is a technology that allows other devices to harvest ultraviolet light and convert it into electricity, Maigue explained. Ii is based on a plastic material, so it can be formed into different shapes.

Sustainability

He said more resources should be used and create systems that do not deplete the current resources. “While AuREUS aims to generate electricity from natural resources, I also want to show that, even if we want to become more sustainable, it’s not only the

future generation that would benefit, but also us, the present generation,” he pointed out. “With AuREUS, we upcycle the crops of the farmers that were hit by natural disasters, such as typhoons, which also happen to be an effect of climate change. By doing this, we can be both forward looking, and solve the problems that we are currently experiencing,” he explained.

Next steps

He said he plans to bring the product to the market immediately but also do more research and development. “I want to create threads and fabrics so that even your clothes would be able to harvest ultraviolet light and convert it into electricity,” he said.

Maigue is on his 10th year at Mapua University, “but I will finally graduate soon,” he quickly added. He failed to graduate on time for lack of money, he said. “To be able to fund my schooling, I take prototyping projects and fabrication projects from different students, as well as helping people who need support with their projects and their theses,” he explained. He had to stop his studies from time to time because “the finances would just not be enough. But that’s okay with me.” By taking on different projects, from different students, in different schools, he was able to expand his horizon. “There are a lot of learnings that I got, especially in terms of design, and how it would affect the user, and on the business side of things,” he said.

Inspiration

His inspiration in his career was his science teacher when he was 13.

While watching a film in their laboratory about the landing of a space shuttle, engineers doing calculations were shown in the opening of the film. His teacher said: “Carvey, I hope someday you will be someone like that.” “From then on, I knew I had a passion for physics and science and the desire to translate it into real products through engineering,” he said. Another inspiration is Elon Musk, a business magnate, industrial designer and engineer, founder, CEO and chief designer of SpaceX, and product architect of Tesla Inc. “I’m inspired by how he blazed a trail for his solution to reach the market. What really struck me is that he believed in his idea and said, ‘if you don’t want to believe in me, then I’ll do it myself.’ And then he proved it,” Maigue said. He said one does not have to start big, you just have to start with a really good product. He is also inspired by Dyson and his vacuum cleaner product. “It’s these people that I really look up to and I hope that someday I will also create a difference, in the same way they did,” he said.

Meaning of the award

Winning the award, he said, is the recognition that after two years of working on it, “I created something that is good and useful to promote a more sustainable way of life.” A “very big confidence booster,” the award “will also enable me to reach more people and hear their feedback on how we can further develop and improve this technology.” As for the prize money, he said he will buy some equipment to manufacture his product—and finish university education.


Sports BusinessMirror

IN NAPLES, MARADONA LIVES ON A8

Bryson DeChambeau holds up the US Open. AP

Johnson, DeChambeau, Casey part of Saudi field in February

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EDDAH, Saudi Arabia—The Saudi International in its third year is shaping up as one of the strongest fields on the European Tour with commitments from Masters champion Dustin Johnson, US Open winner Bryson DeChambeau and a curious one from Paul Casey. Tournament organizers said on Thursday that seven members of Europe’s last Ryder Cup team will play the Saudi International from February 4 to 7, the same week as the Phoenix Open on the PGA Tour. Johnson won the inaugural Saudi International in 2019 and was runner-up this year to Graeme McDowell. DeChambeau also played the first year, while Phil Mickelson signed up again for 2021 after a tie for third in Saudi last year. The surprise was Casey, who made it a point of saying he would not be playing when the tournament began in 2019. He noted his sponsorship of Unicef, which is on his golf bag, and said he would prefer to “sit this one out.” In an interview with the Londonbased Independent that spring, however, Casey said, “I would be a hypocrite” if he received appearance money to play the Saudi International. Players were criticized for going, especially the first year, because it was held some three months after the killing of Jamal Khashoggi, who wrote critically

of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in columns for The Washington Post. Johnson said he was going to play golf, not support the government. “I’m not a politician. I’m a golfer,” he said in 2019. Mickelson was criticized in part for skipping the Phoenix Open, where he is among the biggest draws as a past champion and Arizona State graduate. For the Europeans, a strong field could go a long way toward their bid to make the Ryder Cup team through world ranking points. Europe’s qualification process was frozen when the matches were postponed until September 2021 because of the Covid-19 pandemic. It resumes in January. “With Ryder Cup qualification on the line, I am obviously looking to get my campaign off to a fast start and getting a decent finish or winning the Saudi International against such a stellar field would be massive,” Ian Poulter said. “It’s been a really weird year with Covid, so we are all looking forward to a fresh start in 2021.” Casey renewed his membership with the European Tour to play in the 2018 Ryder Cup. Others from that winning team in France who have committed to the Saudi International are Poulter, Justin Rose, Sergio Garcia, Tommy Fleetwood, Tyrrell Hatton and Henrik Stenson.

I

mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph • Editor: Jun Lomibao

Sunday, November 29, 2020

By Andrew Dampf The Associated Press

F there’s one place outside Argentina that will likely match— or possibly even exceed—the outpouring of mourning for Diego Maradona, it’s in Naples.

While Diego Maradona was revered around the world as perhaps the greatest soccer player ever, in Naples he was more than that.

PEOPLE lay flowers and light candles as they gather outside the San Paolo Stadium to pay their homage to soccer legend Diego Maradona in Naples, Italy. AP While Maradona was revered around the world as perhaps the greatest soccer player ever, in Naples he was more than that. Maradona was treated as a deity for the way he led Napoli to its only two Serie A titles—in 1987 and 1990—and raised the spirits of the southern Italian city, which remains far removed both geographically and socio-economically from the country’s soccer capitals of Milan and Turin. “Maradona wasn’t just a player. He represented the spirit of Napoli for years,” said former Napoli President Corrado Ferlaino, who owned the club when Maradona played there. Maradona’s spokesman, Sebastián Sanchi, said he died Wednesday of a heart attack at the age of 60, two weeks after being released from a hospital in Buenos Aires following brain surgery. Upon hearing the news, thousands of Neapolitans poured out into the city’s streets to honor Maradona and light candles in his memory—even though gatherings are banned because the city lies in a coronavirus red zone. Many of them stood below huge murals of their hero that cover entire sides of downtown buildings. “It’s so emotional that you can’t say it with words, you can’t explain it,” said one local resident, Francesco Errico. “He gave us so much. He made us experience mind-blowing emotions.” Naples Mayor Luigi De Magistris immediately proposed that the city’s San Paolo Stadium be renamed for Maradona—and ordered the

stadium’s lights be turned on all night even though there was no game being played there. “Maradona is Napoli. The passion for him here is known to everyone,” de Magistris said. “Maradona united Neapolitans all over the world—as well as fans of other squads. “Today all Neapolitans embrace his family, with the awareness that this embrace will never end,” the mayor added. “Because it was real love. A great love.” Maradona, of course, already made Italians cry when his Argentina team eliminated Italy in Naples in the 1990 World Cup semifinals. Many Napoli fans cheered for Maradona and Argentina—not their own country—during that game. Maradona also led Napoli to the 1989 UEFA Cup title during his seven-season stay. He also allegedly became a regular cocaine addict in the city—a dependence that eventually led to his downfall from soccer. “Yes, he was also a controversial man,” de Magistris said. “But for us Maradona is the one who made Naples and Neapolitans dream—with his genius, his uniqueness, he gave us happiness. Many have named their sons Diego, for he was able to redeem a city that was often the target of prejudices and discrimination.” In a sign of mourning, Napoli

NGO WORK LIFTS HUELGAS’S MORALE DURING PANDEMIC

C

By Annie Abad

OMPETITION and training took the backseat for champion triathlete Nikko Huelgas during the Covid-19 pandemic, just like every other athletes all over the world. But Huelgas took a route less traveled when beaches were off limits, bicycles were banned from the highways and running was restricted to jogging in place. “I got myself into an NGO [nongovernment organization], thanks to a good friend who introduced me to something unique,” Huelgas, a two-time Southeast Asian Games gold medalist, told B usinessM irror. The NGO is called the Students’ Transformation and Enrichment for Truth-Values Integration and Promotion or STET-VIP. Huelgas said his buddy, triathlete and coach Al Gonzalez, invited him to join the organization. “Our response during this pandemic was to donate goods to the hard to reach areas and the poorest of the poor,”Huelgas said, adding they focused on indigenous people in remote areas where relief is hard to come by. Huelgas, the 29-year-old head of the Philippine Olympic Committee Athletes’ Commission, said the lockdown almost got to his system as he longed to practice his multi-discipline sport. “I had anxiety especially when the races were canceled. So there wasn’t anything to look forward to,” he said. “My goals were gone and there was no

CHAMPION triathlete Nikko Huelgas gets involved with a non-government organization. place to train. It was really awful.” But when he immersed himself with STET-VIP, he said everything changed. “STET-VIP saved me from my worries I had a bigger purpose and I was able to go out so mentally, I became better,” he said. Huelgas joined STET-VIP in visiting depressed areas where families affected by the recent typhoons Rolly and Ulysses. “I saw a bigger perspective. There are bigger problems than what I was going through and the little help we gave from simply providing milk to children, it means the world to them. I was humbled,” he said. Triathlon competitions remain shuttered although the Asian Cup was scheduled for February next year in Rayong, Thailand. But without a vaccine, the competition faces the risk of being postponed. “I’ll prepare well and get back the drive,” he said. “But at the moment, I like to enjoy what I’m doing right now with STET-VIP.”

changed its usual blue logo on its Twitter account to black. “Everyone is awaiting our words,” the club tweeted in Italian. “But what words can we use for the pain that we are experiencing? Now is the moment for tears. Then will come the time for words.” Current Napoli standout Dries Mertens tweeted, “You were the first thing that came to my mind when I signed for Naples. Wearing the blue shirt will mean even more from now on. Napoli lost part of its soul today. You were, and will always be, an inspiration to all of us.” With 128 goals across all competitions, Mertens is Napoli’s all-time leading scorer. Marek Hamsik is second with 121 and Maradona is third with 115. “If my name has ever been placed next to yours, I apologize, I will never be at your level,” Mertens added. “What you did for ‘our’ city will go down in history forever. It was an honour to have met you. Forever my idol.” Napoli plays Croatian side Rijeka on Thursday in the Europa League. The San Paolo stadium will be empty of fans due to the coronavirus pandemic. But fans were already outside the stadium late Wednesday waving banners, singing songs and lighting flares in Maradona’s honor. “He was more than a champion. He was a soccer genius, an absolute star,” said Italian sports minister Vincenzo Spadafora, who is from Naples. “He represented unrepeatable dreams and hopes for the people of my city. Naples cries tonight.”

EPL cautious on allowing fans in stadium

L

ONDON—Only half of the Premier League stadiums—mainly in London—will be allowed the return of some fans when coronavirus restrictions are relaxed next week, according to new government measures announced Thursday. Another 10 top division clubs are in areas classified as the highest risk for Covid-19 infections so will remain closed to spectators, including Manchester sides United and City. But up to 2,000 fans will be allowed into games at Liverpool and Everton from Wednesday because the region has been placed into tier 2. That is the same classification for London, providing entry for up to 2,000 fans at Arsenal, Chelsea, Crystal Palace, Fulham, Tottenham and West Ham, and on the south-coast for Brighton and Southampton. That means Arsenal will be allowed to reopen the Emirates Stadium for the Europa League home match against Rapid Vienna next Thursday. But Manchester United’s home game the previous night in the Champions League against Paris Saint-Germain—the day the national lockdown ends—will still be shut for spectators. The other clubs in tier 3 areas and closed to spectators are: Aston Villa, West Bromwich, Wolverhampton, Newcastle, Leeds, Leicester and Burnley. Fans have been largely shut out of sports events in England since March when Covid-19 was declared a pandemic. More than 56,000 people have died from the coronavirus in Britain. AP


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51.

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ZHOU, WEIGUANG Chinese

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GONG, CHUNXIANG Chinese

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LIU, HUI Chinese

LI, KEYAN Chinese

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LIANG, SHENGTAO Chinese

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LIANG, BO Chinese

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LIU, SHIYUN Chinese

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MAO, HONGQING Chinese

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XU, NENGQING Chinese

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YAN, YUZHAN Chinese

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YU, RICHANG Chinese

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ZHANG, DINGXIAO Chinese

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DANG, XIHUI Chinese

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GUI, XIANGYI Chinese

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JIANG, XIAOYU Chinese

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GUO, FEIFEI Chinese

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LIN, SHUWEI Chinese

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GUO, SHAOMEI Chinese

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MAO, JINCHENG Chinese

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GUO, YUEQI Chinese

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NI, YELONG Chinese

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NI, LIANGLIANG Chinese

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NONG, JIEYING Chinese

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CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

110.

LIU, PENG Chinese

170.

CAI, CHUNYING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

111.

MA, XIUCHUN Chinese

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CHEN, QIUHUA Chinese

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NONG, DAOJUN Chinese

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RUAN, RONGXIANG Chinese

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GAO, FEI Chinese

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SAI SEIN MYINT Myanmari

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174.

HE, JINPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

115.

SHEN, BANGKUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

175.

HE, XI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

116.

TIAN, YUNXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

176.

HU, TAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

117.

TIAN, YUNSHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

177.

HU, XIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

118.

WANG, JIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

178.

HUANG, KAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

119.

WANG, PENGFEI Chinese

179.

HUANG, KUNYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

120.

WANG, CAIMEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

180.

HUANG, PINJIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

121.

WEI, HUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

181.

HUANG, QINGFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

122.

WEI, JIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

182.

JULIO ANDREAN Indonesian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

123.

WILY YANTO Indonesian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

183.

LEE WEE LIANG Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

124.

WU, GUOHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

184.

LIANG, CONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

125.

WU, SHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

185.

LIU, CHENGZONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

126.

WU, XIANZONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

186.

LIU, KUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

127.

WU, YANGYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

187.

LIU, LUSHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

128.

WU, XIAOXIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

188.

LUO, LIANGNAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

129.

XIA, HAIFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

189.

NONG, SHIAIMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

130.

XIE, RUIHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

190.

SU, HAIJUN Chinese

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131.

XIE, XIAOXUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

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SUN, XIAOGANG Chinese

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XIE, YAXIN Chinese

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192.

WANG, TINGHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

133.

XIE, ZHONGTUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

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WANG, XIAOWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

134.

XIE, DAJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

194.

WANG, YANCHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

17.

QIAN, YUJUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

18.

SUN, LU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

19.

XUE, SHENGTONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

20.

ZHANG, WEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

21.

ZHU, YIYANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

22.

FENG, ZHENYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

23.

LIANG, SHIQIU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

24.

LIU, SHUAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

25.

REN, DE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

SUN, BIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

70.

ZHANG, QIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

71.

CHEN, XIAOLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

ZHOU, RI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

72.

CHEN, XIAOLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

ZOU, ZENGDI Chinese

CHEN, YUQI Chinese

29.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRSENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

73. 74.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

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BAO, XINNAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

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75.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

31.

CHEN, QIMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHEN, TIANHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

32.

CHENG, JIANGYU Chinese

76.

CHEN, WENYING Chinese

33.

CHENG, JUNJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

77.

CHEN, DAMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

135.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

195.

WANG, ZHENGQIU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

34.

GUAN, YUE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

78.

CHEN, JINHUI Chinese

XIE, HUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

136.

XIE, JINGMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

196.

XU, WANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

35.

LI, RUIXUE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

79.

CHEN, XIAODAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

137.

XIE, JUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

197.

YANG, GANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

36.

LIANG, SHUAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

80.

CHENG, CHUANLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

138.

XIE, SHICHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

198.

YANG, RONGWEN Chinese

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37.

LIN, KE-YOU Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

81.

CHI, SHANGBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

139.

XU, CHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

199.

YANG, XIAOFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

38.

LUO, XIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

82.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

140.

XU, JINYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

200.

YANG, XIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

39.

WU, PO-HSUN Taiwanese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CI, HAO Chinese

83.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

141.

XU, WENWEN Chinese

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201.

YI, SHA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

40.

YAN, QING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

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142.

202.

YIN, HONG Chinese

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41.

YI, SHIYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

XUE, HONGZHOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

84.

DENG, BIQIANG Chinese

143.

YANG, JUHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

203.

YU, WENLOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

ZHAO, CHUNJIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

85.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

42.

DENG, QIJUN Chinese

144.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

204.

YUAN, ZHONGMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

43.

ZUO, DIAN Chinese

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86.

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YI, KUN Chinese

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145.

YU, XIANGYUAN Chinese

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205.

ZENG, XIN Chinese

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YUAN, ZHILING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

206.

ZHANG, YANWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

147.

ZENG, HAISHENG Chinese

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207.

ZHANG, GUITONG Chinese

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DONG, ZHICHENG Chinese

45.

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88. 89.

FANG, ZHIWU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

148.

ZHAN, FUMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

208.

CAI, GUOQIANG Chinese

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ZHU, YATING Chinese

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90.

FU, YANLI Chinese

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149.

ZHANG, XUELIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

209.

CHEN, FANGZHENG Chinese

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150.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

210.

CHEN, HUAJIE Chinese

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151.

ZHANG, LIJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

211.

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CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

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ZHANG, DONGDONG Chinese

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CHEN, LONG Chinese

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153.

ZHOU, DAN Chinese

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213.

CHU, XI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

26. 27. 28.

47. 48. 49.

67.

AEGINS TECHNOLOGIES INC. 12/f Oledan Square 6788 Ayala Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City 68.

HUANG, DA Chinese

I.T SUPPORT

AMDOCS PHILIPPINES INC. 23/f, 25th And 26th Floors Eco Tower 32nd St. Cor. 9th Ave. Bonifacio Global City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 69.

MANPUNEET SINGH Indian

SOFTWARE ARCHITECT

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

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

DENG, XINGYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

91.

GAO, FENG Chinese

FAN, YI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

92.

GAO, LINGCUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

93.

GONG, ZHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

OU, NA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE


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NO.

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

214.

CONG, XIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

283.

ZHOU, SHUWANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

344.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

284.

ZHU, HONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

215.

DENG, QIN Chinese

WU, HONGCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

345.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

ASIAN TECHNOLOGY SERVICES, INC. 11/f Tower 2 Double Dragon, Macapagal Blvd. Brgy. 076 Pasay City

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

216.

DU, MANMAN Chinese

YU, TAO Chinese

346.

217.

DUAN, HAIQIANG Chinese

ZHANG, YULI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

347.

KAUNG MYAT THU Myanmari

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

218.

EDI SUSANTO Indonesian

219.

FU, JILONG Chinese

348.

TONG KEI KHOON Malaysian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

220.

GU, FENGXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

349.

HUANG, XIAODONG Chinese

221.

GUAN, YUANSAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

350.

222.

HE, ZETAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

223.

HU, FEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

224.

HUANG, GUIMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

225.

HUANG, WENYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

226.

HUANG, QIUMEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

227.

HUANG, WENCHANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

228.

HUANG, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

229.

KO KO LATT Myanmari

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

230.

LIANG, FAJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

231.

LIN, WEIYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

LIU, YUNSHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

MA, HONGFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

MA, MINGBING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

MA, WEIWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

236.

QIN, LIXIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

237.

CHEN, FEIFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

238.

CHEN, MINGLI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

239.

CHEN, JINZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

240.

CHEN, XIAODONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

241.

CHEN, YANGZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

DAI, WENYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

243.

DAI, WENTAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

244.

DAI, SHIWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

245.

DENG, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

246.

DING, XIAOHANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

247.

FAN, XINGXING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

248.

GAN, BING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

249.

HU, HONGZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

250.

JIANG, FEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

251.

JIANG, CHENGYAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

252.

KE, BINGQUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

253.

KOW CHUN HAU Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

254.

LAW WEI SHENG Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

255.

LI, ANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

256.

LI, HUAYING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

257.

LI, JIANFEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

258.

LIM JING YANG Malaysian

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

259.

LIU, XIAODONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

260.

LIU, YUNJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

261.

LUO, XIANMAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

262.

SHI, CHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

263.

SU, HAILIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

264.

SUN, CAIQIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

265.

TANG, YUNTIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

266.

WANG, KUNSHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

267.

WANG, LIYUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

268.

WANG, MINBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

269.

WANG, ZHAOYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

270.

WANG, XUE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

271.

WEI, YOUZHOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

272.

WU, XIFU Chinese

273.

285.

KIM, CHIHO South Korean

MANAGER

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

286.

YUN, SUKHYUN South Korean

MANAGER

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

ASIANA AIRLINES, INC. 6 The Salcedo Towers 169 H.v. Dela Costa St. Bel-air Makati City

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

287.

JUNG, DA JEONG South Korean

MANAGER

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 288.

TAM, KA KIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE MANAGER

BANK OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS 11f, 12f, 14f-17f Ayala North Exchange Tower 1 Ayala Ave. Cor. Salcedo & Amorsolo Sts. Makati City 289.

KIYOTA, KEISUKE Japanese

BANCASSURANCE OFFICER, STRATEGY AND BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT

290.

GAI, GUOFAN Chinese

TRADE FINANCE MANAGER OPERATION DEPARTMENT

BIBO GLOBAL OPPORTUNITY, INC. 3 & 4 Penthouse Panorama Tower 34th St. Cor. Lane A, Bonifacio Global City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 291.

NOMA, CHIKAKO Japanese

NIHONGO INSTRUCTOR

BIG EMPEROR TECHNOLOGY CORP. 5f-13f, Jiaxing Tower Building Aseana Avenue,

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

402.

KAUR, GAGANDEEP Indian

ASSISTANT MANAGER ACCOUNTS PAYABLE

403.

LABENDIA, RHYAN KIM Austrian

BILINGUAL CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

404.

SANJO YOMI, JOSEPH ALAIN MBA Cameroonian

BILINGUAL CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE FRENCH

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

405.

NAIR, PRAMOD Indian

DIRECTOR FOR OPERATIONS

LI, YANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

406.

GAIKWAD SRINIVASA RAO, ARUN KUMAR Indian

DIRECTOR OF CONTROLLERSHIP

351.

LI, LIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

407.

LU, HAITAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

SENIOR MANAGER ANALYTICS

352.

VERMA, SANJEEV KUMAR Indian

353.

SUN, XIUSAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

354.

TANG, JIAJIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

408.

RATHORE, ANKITA Indian

ASSOCIATE CONSULTANT (B1)

355.

XIONG, CHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

409.

QIN, SIHAO Chinese

SENIOR ASSOCIATE (A4)

356.

XU, MINGKUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

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

357.

YE, QIUJI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

410.

COURT, ANTOINE THINH French

MULTILINGUAL SERVICE DESK MEMBER

358.

YANG, SHUANGTING Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING TRANSLATOR

411.

GONCALVES RAMOS, DIOGO Portuguese

MULTILINGUAL SERVICE DESK MEMBER

412.

SAYEH, MAHMOUD Moroccan

MULTILINGUAL SERVICE DESK MEMBER

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

292.

CHEN, CAIFA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

359.

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

293.

WENG, CAIJIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

KYAW MIN OO Myanmari

360.

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

PYONE MYINT NAING Myanmari

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

294.

QUACH THUY DAO Vietnamese

361.

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

TAN YEN YING Malaysian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

295.

CHIM THI MAI Vietnamese

296.

LOW CHIEN SOON Malaysian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

362.

CHEN, MING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

297.

THANT ZIN HLAING Myanmari

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

363.

CHEN, XIAOZHEN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

298.

BAO, XIULING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

364.

DONG, HONGLI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

299.

CHEN, ZEFENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

365.

LI, MIANMIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CIMB BANK PHILIPPINES INC 28th Floor Ore Central 9th Ave. Cor. 31st St. Bonifacio Global City, Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

300.

DENG, ZHENGYANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

366.

LIN, YALING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

415.

AISHA STEPHANIE Indonesian

ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT FOR DIGITAL CHANNELS (U5)

301.

FAN, FENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

367.

CHEW JIEN KIT Malaysian

ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT FOR PRODUCTS (U5)

302.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

416.

HU, DINGGUO Chinese

ZHANG, TAO Chinese

368.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

ZHANG, ZHENG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

417.

303.

JIANG, YUAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

304.

KOU, ZUJIAN Chinese

TIN SHONE Myanmari

DIGITAL CHANNEL MANAGER (GRADE 36)

369.

MARISA HEAH TSUI YING Malaysian

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

370.

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

DIGITAL CHANNEL MANAGER (GRADE 36)

LAI, HUIYI Chinese

STEVEN TAN SIONG HENG Malaysian

305.

WINE WINE AYE Myanmari

418.

306.

LI, YANGSHUAI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

371.

SHUMM SHWIN @ MOE MOE Myanmari

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

419.

JONATHAN LEE ZHENG YAN Malaysian

HEAD OF PRODUCTS (GRADE U5)

307.

LI, HONGJUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

372.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

308.

LIN, JIADE Chinese

LIN, MEILING Chinese

373.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

420.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

374.

310.

LIU, WEI Chinese

ZHEN, WEIWEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

HUANG, DA-YUN Taiwanese

EQUIPMENT SUPERVISOR

309.

LIN, YONGLONG Chinese

YU, LI Chinese

421.

PIPING SUPERINTENDENT

311.

LU, CONGNAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

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

CHANG, KUEI-CHANG Taiwanese

422.

LIAO, KEI-WEI Taiwanese

PIPING SUPERVISOR

312.

LYU, LINGYAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

375.

DIAO, QIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

313.

SONG, SHIFANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

376.

314.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

423.

WANG, SHIJI Chinese

FU, LIJUAN Chinese

315.

WANG, TONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

377.

HAN, DAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

316.

WANG, DAIHUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

378.

HE, JIAHUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

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

317.

XU, JINGJING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

379.

KE, CHENBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

318.

XU, YAYING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

380.

LUO, NINGBO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

319.

YAN, ZHIBO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

381.

LUO, RUIFENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

320.

YE, RUIHONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

382.

QIAO, ZHIHUA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

426.

DALEE, RAZANEE Thai

EMPLOYEE - CONTENT REVIEWER

321.

ZHANG, HAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

383.

SHANGGUAN, JINMEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

427.

AHN, MIN JAE South Korean

ADVISOR I, BILINGUAL

322.

ZHANG, YANJIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

384.

JIN, JAE YONG South Korean

EMPLOYEE - CONTENT REVIEWER

323.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

428.

ZHAO, YIJUN Chinese

SHANGGUAN, WENHUI Chinese

385.

JANG, KUNGSOO South Korean

ADVISOR I, CUSTOMER SERVICE

324.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

429.

ZHAO, HUI Chinese

SU, TONGXING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

SUDIBYO Indonesian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

COSMOLINK GLOBAL SOLUTIONS INC. 11 Ortigas St. Brgy. 076 Pasay City

325.

ZHENG, LONGXIN Chinese

386.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

387.

WANG, YIFENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

430.

326.

ZHOU, SHUAI Chinese

HUANG, ZHIZHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

327.

LIM EE SHING Malaysian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

388.

WEI, HANPEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

431.

KHIM, SOKNY Cambodian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

328.

TRAN MY ANH Vietnamese

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

389.

WU, LINJIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

432.

LIANG, SHUAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

329.

DAI, CHUNBAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

390.

WU, YUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

433.

LIN, ZHISHAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

330.

HE, YINGDE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

391.

XIAO, RONGKAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

434.

LIU, HAIYING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

331.

JIANG, KELI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

392.

ZHANG, DONGDONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

435.

LYU, BINGQUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

332.

LI, KAI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

393.

BAI, CHUNXING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

436.

MAI THI MY HUYEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

333.

LIANG, QIUYING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

394.

CHEN, ZHIBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

437.

SUN, BIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WU, YUXUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

334.

LIAO, SHUKAI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

395.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

438.

TAO CAM THANH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

274.

XIAO, QIANG Chinese

LIU, JIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

335.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

396.

WANG, YUXIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

439.

WEI, QIUYAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

275.

YANG, LINPENG Chinese

LIU, ZHENDONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

336.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

397.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

YI, XIANRONG Chinese

276.

XUE, YUZHUANG Chinese

440.

YANG, HUIWEI Chinese

LIU, JIANG Chinese

337.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

LYU, YAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

BITVERSE CORPORATION Five E-com Center Moa Complex, Pacific Drive Brgy. 076 Pasay City

441.

277.

YE, JIANHUA Chinese

YOU, QINYING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

338.

278.

YU, ZHILUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

PANG, BO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

398.

WEN, FAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

442.

ZHANG, PEIDE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

339. CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

PENG, YINGUANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

399.

YAO, CANPING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

443.

279.

YUAN, GUOQING Chinese

ZHU, WEIMIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

QIN, XIAOXIAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

400.

280.

ZENG, XIANGYU Chinese

340.

HUANG, BINGGUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE5

281.

ZHANG, YANPING Chinese

341.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

SHUAI, CHENHUI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

CXLOYALTY PHILIPPINES, INC. 10f W Fifth Building 32nd St. Cor. 5th Avenue Bonifacio Global City, Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

342.

WU, WEIHUA Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

282.

ZHAO, JIANBO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

343.

WU, SHANYAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

232. 233. 234. 235.

242.

BONIFACIO LANDMARK HOTEL MANAGEMENT CORPORATION 2/f Gt Tower International 6813 Ayala Ave. Cor. H.v. Dela Costa St. Bel-air Makati City 401.

BOGENSPERGER, GOTTFRIED ALOIS Austrian

GENERAL MANAGER

CHIANG KAI SHEK COLLEGE, INC. #1477 Narra St. 022, Bgy 244 Tondo I/ii Manila 413.

CHEN, JOU-YI Taiwanese

MANDARIN LANGUAGE SPECIALIST

CHINA COMMUNICATIONS SERVICES PHILIPPINES CORPORATION 12/f One/neo Bldg 26th St. Cor 3rd Ave., Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 414.

HAN, CHAO Chinese

MANDARIN SPEAKING PROJECT SUPERVISOR

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

COCA-COLA BEVERAGES PHILIPPINES, INC. 27/f Six / Neo Bldg. 5th Ave. Cor. 26th St. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City GARCIA ZULUAGA, HERNANDO Colombian

COMMERCIAL EXCELLENCE DIRECTOR

424.

THUBE, POOJA KAILAS Indian

SW TEST ENGINEERING SPECIALIST

425.

SUN, WEIMIN Chinese

MANDARIN SERVICE DESK ASSOCIATE

CONCENTRIX SERVICES CORPORATION 18th, 20th, 21st Floor, Tera Tower Bridgetown Along C-5 Road Ugong Norte Quezon City

444.

AKONO MBIDA, ETIENNE MARCEL Cameroonian

FRENCH CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

445.

KONE, FRANCOIS Guinean

FRENCH CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE


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ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

446.

NGOMA, SOKI VALENT RAPHAEL Congolese

FRENCH CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

447.

MALUNDU, JOEL Zambian

QUALITY ANALYST

448.

AYALA TORRES, RINA VANESSA Honduran

SPANISH CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

449.

CAMACHO CAMACHO, TULIO CLAUDIO Venezuelan

SPANISH CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

450.

BIJABA, JEAN CLAUDE NKOU Cameroonian

FRENCH CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

DATACENTRIC CORPORATION 7th And 8th Floor One Griffinstone Bldg Commerce Ave. Corner Spectrum Midway Fcc Alabang Muntinlupa City 451.

WONG TOU HAO Malaysian

SALES MANAGER - ASIA

DIGISPARK TECH CORP. Unit 1618 High Street, South Corporate Plaza, Tower 2 26th St. Corner 9th Ave. Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 452.

LI, RUIJI Chinese

GENERAL MANAGER

453.

LI, ZHIWEI Chinese

SYSTEM NETWORK ADMINISTRATOR II

DHL EXPRESS (PHILIPPINES) CORP. 2306 Don Chino Roces Ext. Magallanes Makati City 454.

NURHAYATI NADARAJAN BINTI ABDULLAH Malaysian

OIC COUNTRY MANAGER

EASTERN GOLD CORPORATION 503 Nueva St Binondo Manila

Sunday, November 29, 2020 A11

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

POSITION

494.

WEI, XIANGUO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

495.

WEI, LIAOTIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

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

496.

ZHAO, DI Chinese

497.

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

617.

YIN, YANAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

551.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

618.

YU, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHEN, XINGYE Chinese

552.

GUO, CHAOQI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

619.

YUE, YUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHOU, QINGXIU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

553.

HE, AO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

620.

ZANG, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

498.

ZHU, QUANYUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

554.

HU, CUNWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

621.

XIONG, JIANBO Chinese

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

555.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

499.

LI, HUAN Chinese

ZHANG, CHENHAO Chinese

622.

LE THI THANH THUY Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

556.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

500.

LI, XIAOJING Chinese

ZHANG, TINGTING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

557.

ZHANG, JIANYONG Chinese

PU, JIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

623.

501.

LI, ZILONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

558.

ZHAO, JUAN Chinese

WU, ZHENGXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

624.

502.

LI, WEILAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ZHENG, WEI Chinese

503.

LIAO, YANMIAO Chinese

625.

ZHANG, YIFU Chinese

559. 560.

ZHU, HAIMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

504.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

626.

ZOU, LI Chinese

LIN, YAMEI Chinese

561.

505.

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

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

WANG, YAROU Chinese

LIU, SHUNDONG Chinese

562.

LIU, WANGGEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

506.

DAO THI HUONG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

563.

LYU, YAFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

507.

FU, CHAOLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

564.

MENG, HAILIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

508.

KARIMOVA, ELVIRA Russian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

565.

QI, MIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

509.

LI, DAZHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

566.

QI, DINGLI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

567.

QIN, CONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

568.

QIN, CHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

569.

QIU, SHUANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

627.

KO, CHIH-WEN Taiwanese

MARKETING CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING CLIENTS)

628.

WANG, XIAOCHUN Chinese

MARKETING CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING CLIENTS)

629.

WU, CHIN-JUNG Taiwanese

MARKETING CONSULTANT (MANDARIN SPEAKING CLIENTS)

FRONTIER ORTIGAS HOTEL AND RESORT CORPORATION Marco Polo Hotel Ortigas Manila Meralco Ave. Cor. Sapphire Road Ortigas Ctr. San Antonio Pasig City

455.

LI, ZHUOLIN Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

510.

LI, DATAO Chinese

456.

LU, LIXIN Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

511.

LIAO, LIANGQUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

457.

QIN, GUANYUAN Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

512.

LIU, JIA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

570.

458.

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

513.

NONG, BAOANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

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

ZHANG, FAN Chinese

QU, NANNAN Chinese

571.

QU, XIULI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

631.

459.

CHEN, QINGQING Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

514.

PAN, YIHUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

572.

SHI, FEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

460.

LIU, DAN Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

515.

QIN, FAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

573.

SHU, CHANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

GALACTICA TRAVELS, INCORPORATED G/f The Colonade 132 Legaspi St.-l.v. San Lorenzo Makati City

461.

SHE, HAO Vanuatuan

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

516.

WEI, SHOUTAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

574.

TUO, HONGFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

462.

SONG, YINGJIE Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

517.

WEI, XIPENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

575.

WANG, JICHENG Chinese

463.

SU, FEIPENG Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

518.

WEI, JUNMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

576.

464.

ZHANG, TING Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

519.

HONG, WEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

465.

ZHENG, WENCHAO Chinese

MARKETING AND SALES AGENT

520.

QIN, YONGSAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

521.

CHEN, FUCHENG Chinese

522.

EMAPTA VERSATILE SERVICES INC. 12th Floor, Ibm Plaza Building Eastwood City Cyberpark Bagumbayan Quezon City 466.

TOO TOO, MARISHKA HERESALEO New Zealander

ONLINE ENGLISH TEACHER

EXANET TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. Unit 2905, 2906 & 2907 One San Miguel Avenue Condo. San Miguel Ave. Cor. Shaw Blvd. Ortigas Center Pasig City 467. 468.

469.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

633.

UJIIE, ANDREW NAOTO American

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

YANG, YANQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

634.

MANAGING PARTNER

577.

ZHAO, LEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

DE ASSIS SANTOS, WELITON Brazilian

578.

ZOU, JIHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

579.

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

BAI, SHILEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

580.

CHEN, DELONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

SONG, FENG Chinese

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

581.

CHEN, YONGJIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

GENX SPORTS & MEDIA PRODUCTION CORP. 11/f Aseana I Bldg. Bradco Ave. Aseana City Tambo Parañaque City

523.

WANG, PENG Chinese

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

582.

HAN, BINGBING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

637.

XU, TAO Chinese

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

583.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

524.

HUANG, YUHANG Chinese

LI, QINGSONG Chinese

584.

JIANG, HAIXIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

638.

LIU, YANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

585.

LI, MAOSONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

586.

LI, JINDE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

639.

XING, BINBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

587.

LI, LIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

640.

ZHOU, JINLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

588.

LI, YANSONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

589.

LI, ZHE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

641.

NGUYEN XUAN KHA Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE VIETNAMESE SPEAKING

590.

LI, XIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

642.

WANG, JING Chinese

591.

LI, SHIHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

592.

LI, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

643.

SUN, YONGCHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE- MANDARIN SPEAKING

593.

LI, TAISHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

594.

LI, XIULI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

595.

LIAO, YAMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

YANG, WENCHENG Chinese

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

PIAO, HAIHUA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

526.

YANG, CANBIN Chinese

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

FABROS LTD. INCORPORATED (YOYOMARKET) 2nd Floor South Global Forum 7th Avenue Corner Federacion Drive Bgc, Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 470.

LU, QIAOGUI Chinese

STORE MANAGER

471.

ZENG, MIAO Chinese

STORE MANAGER

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

MANDARIN DEPUTY PROJECT MANAGER

OUTBOUND TOURISM CONSULTANT

525.

SENIOR MANAGER - BUSINESS ANALYST

GUO, JIPING Chinese

CHEF DE CUISINE

MOHAMED MAHMOUD BADR MAHMOUD Egyptian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

NAIR, AJEESH BALAKRISHNAN Indian

DONAZZAN, ANDREA Italian

632.

BAE, YUNGYEONG South Korean

EXLSERVICE PHILIPPINES, INC. 6th Floor, One E-com Center Harbor Drive Mall Of Asia Complex Pasay City

630.

FAR EAST VISA AND TRAVEL INC. Ug-02 & 04 Cityland 10, Tower Ii 154 H.v. Dela Costa Cor. Valero Sts. Bel-air Makati City 527.

MEI, XIUFENG Chinese

MANDARIN BUSINESS CONSULTANT

FCI SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGIES INC. Unit 2202 Richville Corporate Tower Alabang Zapote Road Madrigal Business Park Alabang Muntinlupa City 528.

IMAM, AHMED MOHAMMED Ethiopian

APPLICATION DEVELOPER

529.

HANSEN, JAN ESKLUND Danish

CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER

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

GATEWAYSOLUTIONS CORP. 8/f Edsa Cor. Sultan Brgy. Highway Hills Mandaluyong City 635.

GWEE JIN LE Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

636.

SONG, CONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

GLOBALLGA BUSINESS PROCESS OUTSOURCING Ground Level, Level 2-5 Floor Silver City 4, Ortigas East Ugong Pasig City 644.

CHEN, XIAOLI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

645.

HE, YANKAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

646.

HOU, TONGDA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

647.

LI, JINHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

648.

LIN, XIAOLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

649.

LIU, WEIBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

650.

NGUYEN VAN LUYEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

651.

SHANG, ZHENGSHI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

652.

WANG, LAIXING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

653.

WEI, MINGMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

654.

XIAO, JIAXIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

472.

CHEN, JIANNAN Chinese

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

473.

CHEN, JINBIN Chinese

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

531.

474.

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

596.

HU, KUN Chinese

XIONG, XIAOFANG Chinese

LIU, HAO Chinese

532.

LIU, YU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

475.

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

597.

LUO, JIANGLONG Chinese

XIONG, XIUHONG Chinese

533.

LIU, PENGPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

476.

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

598.

SU, QISHUI Chinese

YEU, THUY OANH Vietnamese

599.

LUO, ZHUCHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

477.

TING YIK LIAN Malaysian

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

600.

SHI, WEICAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

478.

WANG, RENTAI Chinese

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

534.

CHEN, GENGXIN Chinese

601.

SONG, JIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WEI, DONGLING Chinese

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

535.

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

602.

479.

KE, JIAHAO Chinese

SUN, MENGJIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

536.

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

603.

480.

ZHANG, LONGWEI Chinese

MA, CHUNJIA Chinese

TANG, JUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT)

537.

TONE MA SEE Myanmari

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

604.

481.

ZHAO, TONGFENG Chinese

WANG, TIANHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

WAN YOE SHAN Myanmari

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

605.

482.

FAN, XIAOPING Chinese

538.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

539.

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

606.

483.

GUAN, LINFENG Chinese

WANG, ZHIFENG Chinese

WANG, XUECHUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

540.

ZHAO, HONGLI Chinese

WANG, DONGSHENG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

541.

CHEN, CHANGLIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

607.

484.

HE, YONGHENG Chinese

WANG, HUANLIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

542.

GOU, XIWU Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

608.

485.

JIANG, GEN Chinese

WANG, XIAOFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

JIANG, ZHUYAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

543.

HU, ZONGQIANG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

609.

486.

WANG, XIAOJI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LI, XIAOXI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

544.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

610.

487.

LI, JINLONG Chinese

WU, JIANHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

655.

YAO, GUIQIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

545.

LIU, JIZHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

611.

488.

LIANG, JINYAO Chinese

WU, HONGCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

612.

489.

546.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

PENG, YANGHAO Chinese

ZHANG, QIUXIANG Chinese

LU, HAO Chinese

WU, YUQUN Chinese

656. 657.

EFFENDY Indonesian

QIN, BEIBEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

490.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

491.

TANG, XINGYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

492.

WANG, YINGYING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

493.

WANG, QIUYANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

530.

NGUYEN, VAN HIEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

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

547.

TAN, YAOYAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

613.

YANG, SHUANGYI Chinese

548.

YANG, XIONGJIE Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

614.

YANG, YANLING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

658.

HAN, LIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

549.

YU, XIANGYUAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

615.

YAO, YI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

659.

LI, RUOFEI Chinese

550.

YUAN, WEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

616.

YAO, QICAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

660.

LIU, JINLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING


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661.

NGHIEM NGOC TOAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

710.

ZHANG, WENQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

759.

WEI, LONGHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

808.

ZHANG, LEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

662.

NGUYEN, VAN CA Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

711.

ZHANG, CHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

760.

YANG, GUOCHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

809.

ZHENG, JIA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

663.

PI, BINGFENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

712.

ZHANG, FENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

761.

ZHOU, QIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

810.

ZHOU, YUJIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

664.

QIN, LI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

713.

BI, XINGXIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

762.

YE, YIWEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

811.

665.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

714.

CHEN, MEIYAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

763.

ZHOU, WEIXIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

TANG, FUJING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHU, YUANYUAN Chinese

812.

666.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

715.

CHEN, CUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

764.

CHEN, ZEKUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

VU VAN DINH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHU, DAIHONG Chinese

667.

WANG, LIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

716.

CHIA, SEE SOON Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

765.

CHEN, XUZHUO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

668.

WEN, YANLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

717.

CHU VAN LAP Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

766.

DUONG VAN TAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

669.

WU, HAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

718.

DAO BICH DUYEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

767.

FAN, JIALIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

670.

XU, DONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

719.

FENG, TAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

768.

FANG, HONGHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

XU, GUANGPING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HE, KUNLIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

769.

GUO, LU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHANG, ZHENGWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

721.

HOU, JIAOJIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

770.

HOU, LINGXIA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHANG, HONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

722.

HUANG, XINGAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

771.

HU, JIABIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

772.

HUANG, JIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

671. 672. 673. 674.

ZHU, YUANQING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

675.

BUI THI THUY DUY Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

676.

CHAI YAP YEN Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

677.

CHEN, YONGXIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

678.

CHENG, YAMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

679.

CHENG, WEIYI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

720.

723.

HUANG, YINZHANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

724.

LE VAN QUANG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

773.

HUANG, HONGYAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

725.

LI, GUOBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

774.

HUANG, JUNHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

726.

LI, BINBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

775.

HUANG, SENWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

727.

LI, GUANGXIA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

776.

LI, LINGJIA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

728.

LIN, MIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

777.

LI, GUO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

LIU, LIANBEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

778.

LI, XUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

GM PHILIPPINES, INC. 19th Floor, Rcbc Savings Bank Corporate Center 26th And 25th Streets Bonifacio Global City Taguig City 813.

DAS, SRILEKHA Indian

SENIOR ANALYST

GMO GLOBALSIGN INC. Units 7&8, 23/f Zuellig Bldg. Makati Ave. Cor. Paseo De Roxas Urdaneta Makati City 814.

NOEL, GREGORY MELAINE French

MULTILINGUAL TECHNICAL SUPPORT SPECIALIST (FRENCH)

GOODYEAR REGIONAL BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. 23f Twenty-five Seven Mckinley Building 25th St., Cor 7th Ave. Bgc Taguig City 815.

DRUMOND NETO, JOSE MARIANO Brazilian

PROCUREMENT TEAM LEAD

GOODYIELDS SERVICES INC. Unit Ug-08 Ug/f Cityland 10 Tower 2 154 H.v. Dela Costa Cor. Valero Sts. Bel-air Makati City 816.

LIU, XIAOYANG Chinese

MANDARIN COORDINATOR

817.

ZHU, CHUN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

GUMI ASIA PTE. LTD. (PHILIPPINES BRANCH) Unit 401, 4/f Ortigas Technopoint Bldg. Ortigas Home Depot Complex #1 Doña Julia Vargas Ave. Pasig City 818.

AHAMMER, KLAUS Austrian

GAME SUPPORT REPRESENTATIVE (GERMAN)

HAMMERTIME CONSTRUCTION INC. Unit 203-s3 2nd Flr. Fbr Arcade Bldg. #317 Katipunan Ave. Loyola Heights 3 Quezon City 819.

LI, ZONGHENG Chinese

CHINESE EQUIPMENT SUPERVISOR

820.

CHEN, JIAXIANG Chinese

PROJECT CONSULTANT

821.

FENG, HONGLIN Chinese

PROJECT CONSULTANT

822.

LIU, HAO Chinese

ASSISTANT PROJECT MANAGER

823.

PAN, GENGSHENG Chinese

ASSISTANT PROJECT MANAGER

824.

PI, PULIANG Chinese

ASSISTANT PROJECT MANAGER

825.

XU, GUOXIONG Chinese

ASSISTANT PROJECT MANAGER

826.

CHEN, HAILIANG Chinese

CHINESE EQUIPMENT SUPERVISOR

827.

HU, ZHIWEN Chinese

CHINESE EQUIPMENT SUPERVISOR

CHU MINH QUAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

729.

681.

DENG, WEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

730.

LIU, YUHANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

779.

LI, ZHAOTI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

682.

DU, JUNJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

731.

LIU, TINGTING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

780.

LIANG, JIALONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

FANG, XUSHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

732.

NG, CHONG HUI Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

781.

LIANG, FENGPING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

733.

NGUYEN, VAN NINH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

782.

LIN, SENYUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

734.

NGUYEN, THI ANH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

783.

LIU, XIAOWEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

828.

OUYANG, SHUGUANG Chinese

CHINESE EQUIPMENT SUPERVISOR

735.

NGUYEN, VAN DUNG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

784.

LIU, YUNDONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

829.

WANG, MINGLIANG Chinese

ELECTRICAL AND INSTRUMENTATION CONSULTANT

736.

NGUYEN THANH TUNG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

785.

LIU, JINLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

830.

XIONG, YIMING Chinese

737.

NGUYEN THI MY HUYEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

786.

LONG, TIANFU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ELECTRICAL AND INSTRUMENTATION CONSULTANT

831.

CAO, CANJUN Chinese

LANGUAGE TRANSLATOR

PAN, XIONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

787.

LU, WU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

832.

HUANG, JUNHANG Chinese

LANGUAGE TRANSLATOR

KE, XISONG Chinese

LANGUAGE TRANSLATOR

788.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

833.

PHAM, AN SON Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

OU, YAJUAN Chinese

834.

PROJECT CONSULTANT

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

789.

QIN, WENJIAN Chinese

XIONG, ZHIJUN Chinese

SU, RUNZE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

835.

XIONG, XIAOQIANG Chinese

PROJECT CONSULTANT

836.

XU, YONG Chinese

PROJECT CONSULTANT

680.

683. 684.

JIANG, LINA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

685.

KIEU MINH HUONG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

686.

LIU, YUJIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

687.

LIU, YUE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

688.

NINH VAN THANG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

OU, YUJIAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

689.

738.

PHAM THI TUOI Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

739.

PHAN THI THUY Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

740.

692.

SONG, LIPENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

741.

TAN, FUYUAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

790.

SONG, JIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

693.

SUN, XIUQING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

742.

TEO, LENG SOON Malaysian

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

791.

WANG, LINHONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

837.

LI, TAO Chinese

QUALITY ASSURANCE (QA) / QUALITY CONTROL (QC) ADVISER

694.

TONG, LE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

743.

TRAN BUI THU THUY Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

792.

WANG, BOTAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

838.

PAN, HAIAN Chinese

QUALITY ASSURANCE (QA) / QUALITY CONTROL (QC) ADVISER

695.

WANG, YUNHE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

744.

TRAN VAN CAU Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

793.

WANG, QIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

839.

PI, SHICAI Chinese

696.

WANG, JINJING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

745.

VU VAN LONG Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

794.

WANG, BO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

QUALITY ASSURANCE (QA) QUALITY CONTROL (QC) ADVISER

840.

WANG, REN Chinese

697.

WANG, ZHENDONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

746.

WANG, HAIJUN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

795.

WANG, ZHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

QUALITY ASSURANCE (QA) QUALITY CONTROL (QC) ADVISER

841.

WANG, SHIQING Chinese

STEEL STRUCTURAL SUPERVISOR

698.

WEI, WEILAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

747.

WANG, NA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

796.

WEI, CHUHUA Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

699.

WEN, JIAYONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

748.

ZHANG, YANGLONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

797.

WU, XIAOJIE Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

HC CONSUMER FINANCE PHILIPPINES, INC. 15th Floor, Ore Central 9th Ave. Cor 31st. Bonifacio Global City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

WU, BIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

ZHOU, ZHEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

798.

XIA, ZIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

799.

XIE, ZHANGCHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

800.

XU, CHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

801.

YANG, JUNSONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

690. 691.

700. 701.

YAN, WEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

702.

ZU SENG Myanmari

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

703. 704. 705.

749. 750.

ZHOU, XIAYU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

751.

WU, SHUAIYU Chinese

MARKETING STAFF MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

752.

AI, QILIANG Chinese

DO THI LINH Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

753.

CHEN, ZHENTIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

802.

YANG, BIHONG Chinese

LI, HUANGCHAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

754.

GUO, KAITONG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

803.

YAO, LIQI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

804.

YE KYAW LIN Myanmari

805.

DO THI HANG Vietnamese

706.

LY THI VAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

755.

NGUYEN MANH HUNG Vietnamese

707.

NGUYEN THANH HUYEN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

756.

PANG, LUWEN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

708.

WANG, HONGYANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

757.

WANG, XIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

WEI, LI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

758.

WANG, JINGYI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

709.

842.

KRPALEK, JAN Czech

TECHNOLOGY AND DIGITAL RISK MANAGER

HK GOLDEN MOUNTAIN PROPERTY CO., LTD INC. U-607 Eastfield Ctr. Cbp1, Macapagal Blvd. Brgy. 076 Pasay City 843.

ZHOU, CHUNXIU Chinese

SENIOR FINANCE OFFICER

HSBC ELECTRONIC DATA PROCESSING (PHILIPPINES) INC. Filinvest One Building Alabang Zapote Road, Northgate Cyberzone Filinvest City, Alabang Muntinlupa City 844.

MUHAMMAD IZZAT BIN JAHAYA Malaysian

G6-MANAGER(SUBJECT MATTER EXPERT)

HUAWEI TECHNOLOGIES PHILS. INC. U-5302, 53/f Pbcom Tower 6795 Ayala Ave., Cor., V.a. Rufino St. Bel-air Makati City 845.

ZOU, ANLONG Chinese

CONTROL MANAGER FOR SMART LTE ROLLOUT PROJECT

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

846.

KANG, HONGLI Chinese

YIN, KEYI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

DATA CENTER INTEGRATION SOLUTION SPECIALIST FOR DITO AND GLOBE DATA CENTER PROJECTS

847.

CHEN, QIUYU Chinese

HUMAN RESOURCE SPECIALIST

806.

ZHANG, LEI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

848.

QUE, WENJUN Chinese

GLOBE WIRELESS EXPANSION PROJECT MANAGER

807.

ZHANG, ZENGHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE MANDARIN SPEAKING

849.

DUAN, JIAHAO Chinese

OPTICAL NETWORK SPECIALIST FOR PHILIPPINES DITO FIXED NETWORK PROJECT


BusinessMirror

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ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

HUAYOU CONSTRUCTION DEVELOPMENT PHILIPPINES CORPORATION Unit 102 Cedar M Blessed Josemaria Escriva Drive, Ortigas Ctr. San Antonio Pasig City 850.

CHEN, JING Chinese

HR ASSISTANT MANAGER

HUBEI SHUIZONG WATER RESOURCES AND HYDROPOWER CONSTRUCTION CO. LTD. - PHILIPPINES BRANCH OFFICE Unit 1402, 14/f Aseana 3 Macapagal Ave. Aseana City Baclaran Parañaque City 851.

HAN, SANPING Chinese

MANDARIN ASSISTANT DEPUTY PROJECT MANAGER

852.

YU, CHUNHUA Chinese

MANDARIN ASSISTANT FINANCE MANAGER

853.

SONG, WEI Chinese

MANDARIN CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS COST CONTROL SPECIALIST

854.

QIAN, BAOGUO Chinese

MANDARIN ELECTRICAL COMMISSIONING SPECIALIST

HUBWOO.COM 16/f Insular Life Tower Ii Fcc Muntinlupa City 855.

OMIUNU, ALEXANDER ABGAHUMON Nigerian

CUSTOMER OPERATIONS MANAGER

INFOSYS BPM LIMITED - PHILIPPINE BRANCH 19th-23rd Flr. Bgc Corporate Center 11th Ave. Corner 30th Sts. Taguig City 856.

CHIGAL, RAHUL Indian

TECHNOLOGY ANALYST

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

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

JP MORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION Units 1, 5, 6, 7 & 8, 30/f Zuellig Bldg. Makati Ave. Cor. Paseo De Roxas Urdaneta Makati City 898.

SREEDHAR, SPARSHA Indian

ANALYST ( ASIA ANALYST DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM )

KANYE HOT POT RESTAURANT 28th Street Corner 5th Avenue Bonifacio Global City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 899.

GUO, YUZHE Chinese

CHINESE COOK

LARSEN & TOUBRO INFOTECH LIMITED Units 2024, 2026, 2027, 2028, & 2030, 20f Zuellig Bldg. Makati Ave. Cor. Paseo De Roxas Makati City 900.

VEER, ADITYA RAGHUNATH Indian

SENIOR ASSOCIATE CONSULTANT

LUCKY365 CONSULTING LIMITED CORP. U/18a 18/f 18/f Trafalgar Plaza 105 H.v. Dela Costa St. Bel-air Makati City 901.

CHEN, MINGGEN Chinese

Sunday, November 29, 2020 A13

MANDARIN SPEAKING MARKETING SPECIALIST

LULU FINANCIAL SERVICES (PHILS.) INC. Unit 1006 One World Place Condominium Blk 7 Lot 5, 32nd St. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 902.

GIDHWANI, PARESH Indian

ACCOUNTS MANAGER

903.

PARAMBATHUKANDI MOHAMED, AMITH MOHAMED Indian

ASSISTANT MANAGER BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT

904.

THODENGAL, SAKKEER HUSSAIN Indian

DEPUTY GENERAL MANAGER

NO.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

946.

XIONG, FENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1007.

PHAM NGOC ANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

947.

XU, SANGUO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1008.

PHAM XUAN HUNG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

948.

XU, YAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1009.

PHU NHUC LIN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

949.

YANG, ZHENHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1010.

SAM TONG SANG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

950.

YANG, XI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1011.

SLU VINH KINH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

951.

YANG, YONGQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1012.

SY NGOC KHIN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

952.

YIN, JUNSONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1013.

TRAN THANH THUAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

953.

YUE, RUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1014.

TRAN VAN TUONG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

954.

ZHAN, YUQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1015.

TRUONG THI BICH HOP Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

955.

ZHAO, PENGFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1016.

TRUONG THI TRINH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

956.

ZHONG, MINGYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1017.

TRUONG TUYET PHUNG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

957.

ZHOU, JIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1018.

UNG NHIT PHI Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

958.

ZHU, SHUNJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1019.

VAN NGOC VAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

959.

ZHUANG, SHAOYAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1020.

VONG MY VAN Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

960.

AILEEN HII IK TIING Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1021.

VONG NAM CHANH Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

961.

CHAN JIA SENG Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1022.

CEN, GUOLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

962.

CHEN MOI HIONG Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1023.

CHEN, SHAOHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

963.

EDWARD LEE JIA JIN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1024.

CHEN, HAOSHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

964.

KEVIN YEO CHENG HUANG Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1025.

CHEN, WEIJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

965.

LAI SOON POH Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1026.

CHEN, LIPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

966.

LAI SOON WEI Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1027.

CHEN, YOUYOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1028.

DAI, XIANGMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1029.

FENG, YANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1030.

HE, JIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1031.

HOU, XIAOMENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1032.

HUANG, RIHUI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1033.

HUANG, QILIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1034.

HUANG, JINGMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1035.

LEI, MING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1036.

LI, HONGWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1037.

LI, FEITENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1038.

LIANG, SEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1039.

LIAO, WENXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

857.

MIN, XIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

858.

XIE, ZHIBAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

859.

XU, HUAITIAN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

905.

860.

XU, KAI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

MAXICARE HEALTHCARE CORP. Lot 12 Blk 2 Maxicare Tower Salcedo St. San Lorenzo Makati City

861.

YANG, WUMING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE (CSR)

906.

862.

DONG, BENLIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

863.

FAN, MINGZHU Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MINDSCAPE CREATIVES INC. Unit 19-o, Burgundy Corporate Tower 252 Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City 907.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MANDARIN MARKETING SPECIALIST

967.

864.

JIANG, ZHUO Chinese

CAO, QIANG Chinese

LAU KUAN JING Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

908.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

968.

865.

LIN, BING Chinese

WANG, KANG Chinese

LAU SII WEI Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

909.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MANDARIN HUMAN RESOURCE SPECIALIST

969.

866.

LIN, DONGMU Chinese

TEN PUI LAI Malaysian

LIM KAH HOCK Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

910.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MANDARIN MARKETING SPECIALIST

970.

867.

LIN, LIANJIE Chinese

YANG, SHAOYU Chinese

LOH KOK KHEONG Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

911.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MANDARIN OPERATIONS SPECIALIST

971.

868.

LUO, YONGJIANG Chinese

DUAN, CHAO Chinese

MOH YEE MEN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

912.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

972.

869.

MA, GUANGSHENG Chinese

HONG, XIAOYING Chinese

NG CHIEW KHUAN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

913.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

973.

870.

QI, YUXIAN Chinese

HUANG, ZUBIN Chinese

NGEO MUN KIT Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

914.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MANDARIN TECHNICAL SUPPORT

974.

871.

REN, HUIHUI Chinese

LI, WENZHONG Chinese

TAN LEONG WEI Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

872.

SHEN, TUCHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

975.

TAN WEI JIE Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

915.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

976.

873.

SONG, LUOTONG Chinese

BAI, CHUNLIANG Chinese

VOO CHIN KEAT Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

916.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

874.

TIAN, ZUOQI Chinese

CHEN, LIZHI Chinese

977.

875.

ZENG, WENBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

917.

CHEN, MIN Chinese

WINSON CHEW ENG CHUN Malaysian WONG CHIONG LIANG Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1040.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1041.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1042.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

981.

921.

JI, XIANGWEI Chinese

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

878.

YANG SOON LONG Malaysian

LIN, WENXIAN Chinese

ZHAO, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

980.

920.

GAO, ZHU Chinese

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

877.

WONG YE CHIN Malaysian

LIM AIK LEE Malaysian

ZHANG, DI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

979.

919.

DING, JING Chinese

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

876.

WONG LEE HUI Malaysian

LIAO, XIONG Chinese

ZHANG, WULONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

978.

918.

CHEN, TINGQING Chinese

1043.

982.

922.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

KE, BINGTU Chinese

YIAW TECK WEI Malaysian

LING, WANTING Chinese

1044.

983.

923.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LI, ZUJIAN Chinese

YII MIN CHEG Malaysian

LIU, GANG Chinese

1045.

984.

924.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LI, YUNPENG Chinese

CHOUK LIAN Myanmari

LIU, TAO Chinese

1046.

985.

925.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LI, HUAN Chinese

HONE LYU BAN Myanmari

LONG, NIAN Chinese

1047.

986.

926.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LI, SHANGBIN Chinese

HTAUK YU KU Myanmari

MENG, ZHENGXIAN Chinese

1048.

987.

927.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LI, QUAN Chinese

KYAUK TAE FU Myanmari

QIN, DENGSHANG Chinese

1049.

LI, HUAZHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

988.

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

928.

KYAW MIN TUN Myanmari

RUAN, SHIQING Chinese

1050.

989.

929.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LIAO, JIE Chinese

LA MYAR TAR Myanmari

TANG JI QIN Malaysian

1051.

990.

930.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LIU, JINYU Chinese

SIN HWAY Myanmari

WANG, XIANGKUN Chinese

1052.

991.

931.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MA, YAO Chinese

SOE SOE LWIN Myanmari

XIAO, RUIQING Chinese

1053.

992.

932.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

QI, ZHILONG Chinese

THEIN WIN Myanmari

XU, CHAOSEN Chinese

1054.

993.

933.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

QIN, ZHIXING Chinese

CHE CHANH QUAY Vietnamese

XU, YONGCHANG Chinese

1055.

994.

934.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

SU, TINGTING Chinese

CHE SY LINH Vietnamese

YANG, HAO Chinese

1056.

995.

935.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

SUN, YONGSHENG Chinese

CHUNG VAN TAM Vietnamese

YUAN, JIANWEI Chinese

1057.

996.

936.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

TAN, YOUYI Chinese

HOANG CONG PHUC Vietnamese

YUE, ZHEN Chinese

1058.

997.

937.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WANG, YANGYUN Chinese

HOANG CONG PHUONG Vietnamese

ZHANG, YI Chinese

1059.

998.

938.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WANG, SHASHA Chinese

HUYNH VAN TAN Vietnamese

ZHANG, QIAN Chinese

1060.

999.

939.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WANG, BO Chinese

LE XUAN NHIEN Vietnamese

ZHANG, FUJIN Chinese

1061.

1000.

940.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WANG, HAIXIANG Chinese

LOC HOI LAY Vietnamese

ZHANG, HONGHE Chinese

1062.

1001.

941.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

WANG, SHENGNAN Chinese

LUC THI MY TRINH Vietnamese

ZHENG, TAO Chinese

1063.

942.

WEI, YUNQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1002.

MINH NGOC THAO VY Vietnamese

ZHOU, XIAOXIONG Chinese

1064.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1065.

943.

WU, DAQIAN Chinese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1003.

MOC SI WAY Vietnamese

ZHOU, XUEWEN Chinese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1004.

NGAN A SANG Vietnamese

ZHU, QINGHE Chinese

944.

XIE, CHEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1066.

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1005.

NGUYEN DINH NAM Vietnamese

ZHU, KUNPENG Chinese

1067.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1006.

NGUYEN THI DUNG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

945.

XIONG, QIAO Chinese

SUTINA Indonesian

1068.

LILIANA PAU JIA LING Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

ISCALE SOLUTIONS, INC. 12/f Jaka Bldg. 6780 Ayala Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City 879.

CUNICO LUKE GINO Singaporean

CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER

JINSHENGLONG BUSINESS SUPPORT, INC. 3rd, 4th, 5th, 7th, 8th, 9th Flr. Filinvest Bay City Brgy. 076 Pasay City 880.

FENG, XIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

881.

LING, XIANGHUI Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

882.

WANG, QIANGQIANG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

JIU ZHOU TECHNOLOGIES INTERNATIONAL, INC. 16/f Tower 11 Rcbc Plaza, 6819 Ayala Ave. Bel-air Makati City 883.

LAI, YU-SHENG Taiwanese

ADMIN SUPPORT SPECIALIST

884.

YEN, CHIEN-KANG Taiwanese

ADMIN SUPPORT SPECIALIST

885.

ATHIPHATPANYA, NAPAT Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

KHONGSONGMUANG, JETSADA Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

887.

ONGSANTIPAP, SIRIPORN Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

888.

SAEJIN, NATTAYA Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

889.

SEETABUT, PADIMAKORN Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

886.

YONGCHOOYOT, ANAPAT Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

891.

NGU THUY CHAU Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

892.

TAN, WEN-CHIEH Taiwanese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

893.

CHUA YONG WEI Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

894.

GOH ZHEN YI Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

895.

ROTKUN, FAKAMON Thai

THAI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

896.

DO DUY CUONG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

890.

JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A.- PHILIPPINE GLOBAL SERVICE CENTER 23/f Net Plaza 31st St. E-square Zone Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 897.

SUDHAKARAN, SANIL Indian

VICE PRESIDENT, CONTROL MANAGER

MARINA SQUARE PROPERTIES, INC. 5/f Ag New World Manila Bay Hotel 1588 1588 Mh Del Pilar Cor. P Gil. 076 Bgy. 699 Malate Manila XU, XIAOHONG Chinese

VANAGS, RIHARDS Latvian

PROJECT MANAGEMENT MANAGER

CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE MANAGER

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


BusinessMirror

A14 Sunday, November 29, 2020 ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

NO.

1069.

NG SENG HOCK Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1128.

1070.

YAU CHUN HAO Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1071.

AUNG PAING SOE Myanmari

1072.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS NO.

ZHANG, YOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1190.

TAN, JIMING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1129.

ZHANG, YIHE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1191.

TAN, GAOLING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1130.

ZHANG, LINPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1192.

TAO, XIAOMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

LU SHEIN KYAE Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1131.

ZHANG, XIAOWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1193.

WANG, ZIHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1073.

ZIN MAR AUNG Myanmari

MYANMARI CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1132.

ZHANG, QINSAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1194.

WANG, DING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1074.

DINH QUOC THANG Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1133.

ZHANG, YOUCHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1195.

WANG, DINGHUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

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

1075.

HO XICH THUY Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1134.

ZHU, HAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1196.

WANG, LIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1244.

1076.

NGAN NGHIEP DAT Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1135.

NI NI LWIN Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1197.

WANG, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1077.

NGUYEN THI THUY Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1136.

SUN, XIBIN Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1198.

WANG, WEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

PRIME METRO BMD CORPORATION 16/f Three E-com Moa Complex, Bayshore Cor. Ocean Drive Brgy. 076 Pasay City

1137.

WEI, ZHENG Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1199.

WU, ZHENJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1138.

YU, CHENGHAO Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1200.

WU, PANJIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1139.

BAI, XIAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1201.

WU, SHIWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

PRINCETECH MARKETING SOLUTIONS OPC 23f Tower 6789 6789 Ayala Ave. Bel-air Makati City

1140.

BIAN, ZHAOPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1202.

WU, XIAOLI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1247.

CUSTOMER SUPPORT

1141.

FAN, QIXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1203.

XIANG, GUODONG Chinese

CHUNLIM, CHATCHADAPORN Thai

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1248.

CUSTOMER SUPPORT

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1204.

XU, SHIYAO Chinese

SRIMUNG, JINNARAK Thai

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1249.

YOTAPRASERT, NUTTHIDA Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT

1250.

LERTLUM, PATTARA ANONG Thai

CUSTOMER SUPPORT MANAGER

1251.

PONKOKGROUD, SAKUNIT Thai

MARKETING EXECUTIVE

1078.

NATIER, GEORGE CHARLES BERNARD French

SENIOR ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

NEW ORIENTAL CLUB88 CORPORATION 8/f Ecoplaza 2305 Don Chino Roces Ave. Magallanes Makati City CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

POSITION

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

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

www.businessmirror.com.ph

POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

POINTED ARROW OUTSOURCING GROUP INC. 23rd Floor Bonifacio Stopover Corporate Center 31st Street Corner 2nd Avenue Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 1242.

WORKMAN, JUSTIN American

AMERICAN RETENTION SPECIALIST AGENT

PRICELESS ALEX ENTERPRISE INC. Flr. No. 3, Bldg. No. 342 Carmen Building Bldg. Lot No. 1, Gil Puyat Ave. St. Zone 7 Barangay 49, District 2 Pasay City 1243.

AHMED, KAMILU ALEX Nigerian

LEI, WEI Chinese

ASSISTANT GENERAL MANAGER TECHNICAL

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1245.

LA VALLE, SALVATORE Italian

DIVISION HEADUNDERGROUND

1246.

ALLCOCK, ANDREW JOHN British

MECHANICAL, ELECTRICAL AND PLUMBING (MEP) MANAGER

1079.

GUO, WEI Chinese

1080.

BAI, YANNI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1142.

HUANG, JUNLONG Chinese

1081.

CHEN, DAOBAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1143.

LUO, ZHENXUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1205.

XU, HAIQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1082.

CHEN, YUEBIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1144.

MA, ZHAOYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1206.

YAN, XIAOHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1083.

CHEN, MEISHAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1145.

PAN, YINGMEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1207.

YANG, QUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1084.

CHEN, QINGLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1146.

PI, CHENLONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1208.

YIN, XIANGKE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1085.

CHEN, HAOXUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1147.

QI, XIAOQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1209.

YUAN, XIADOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1086.

CHU, CANHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1148.

SHAO, RUIRONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1210.

ZHANG, XIAOPING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1087.

DENG, DAYU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1149.

SU, ZHENHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1211.

ZHANG, GUOYI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1088.

DENG, LIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1150.

SUN, ZHIYANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1212.

ZHANG, FENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1089.

DONG, WENQIONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1151.

WAN, XIANLU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1213.

ZHANG, HANWEN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1090.

FAN, LIHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1152.

WANG, CHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1214.

ZHONG, LIANGJIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1091.

GOU, YAXIONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1153.

WANG, YANFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1215.

ZHONG, YOUXIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

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

1092.

HUANG, LU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1154.

WANG, YAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1216.

ZHOU, PENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1255.

JEONG, DAEHEE South Korean

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1093.

HUANG, SHAOHAI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1155.

XU, HAIJUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1217.

QIN, HAIQING Chinese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1256.

JUNG, JAEBONG South Korean

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1094.

JIA, TAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1156.

XU, LUJUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1218.

MELANI PRASTUTI Indonesian

INDONESIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

SAP PHILIPPINES, INC. 27/f Nac Tower 32nd St. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

1095.

JIANG, YONGQING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1157.

XU, ZILONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1219.

JUNG, SINIL South Korean

KOREAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1257.

1096.

LI, JIE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1158.

ZHU, GUANGLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1220.

TEO CHIA YAN Malaysian

MALAYSIAN CUSTOMER SERVICE

1097.

LI, MING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1159.

CAO, HAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1221.

ARR HAUNG Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1098.

LIANG, GUOYONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1160.

CHEN, SHUNJIAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1222.

AUNG KYAW KYAW Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1099.

LIANG, ZHIZHI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1161.

CHEN, FEIZHOU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1223.

HAY MAN HNIN Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1100.

LIANG, XIAODONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1162.

CHEN, JINFU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1224.

KHIN MAUNG TUN Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1259.

1101.

LIN, AFEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1163.

CHEN, XIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1225.

KYAW HTAY NAING Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

SINO ONE STOP SERVICES INC. U-610 Eastfield Center Cbp1 Brgy. 076 Pasay City

1102.

LIU, YUFANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1164.

FU, PANFENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1226.

MIN HAN THIT Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

1260.

1103.

LIU, WEITING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1165.

GAO, JIAYAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1227.

SHWE YAMIN OO Myanmari

MYANMAR CUSTOMER SERVICE

SITEL PHILIPPINES CORPORATION Ortigas Home Depot Julia Vargas Ave. Ugong Pasig City

1104.

LIU, SHUAIXING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1166.

GONG, ZHIHAO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1228.

NGUYEN VAN MAI Vietnamese

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1261.

1105.

LUO, XIAOTONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1167.

GONG, YUANYUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

OKKDA ASIA TECHNOLOGY INC. Unit 5b 5/f Marvin Plaza 2153 C. Roces Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City

1106.

MA, CHAOQUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1168.

HE, YI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1229.

CHEN, PENG Chinese

PRODUCT SPECIALIST

1107.

MA, BEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1169.

HOU, HEXIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1230.

DAI, NIANCHANG Chinese

PRODUCT SPECIALIST

1108.

PENG, YU Chinese

1170.

HU, CHANGLONG Chinese

1231.

NIU, LEI Chinese

PRODUCT SPECIALIST

1109.

QIU, GUANGYAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1171.

HUANG, SHUNFA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1110.

RONG, XIAOJING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1172.

JIA, HONGGUO Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1111.

SHANGGUAN, GUILONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1173.

JIANG, MEIJUAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1112.

SHI, XIAOKE Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1174.

LI, QINGHUA Chinese

1113.

SONG, QIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1175.

1114.

SU, CAILI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1115.

SU, YIFANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1116.

TANG, JUNYONG Chinese

1117.

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

OMNIWEALTH ENTERPRISE INC. Unit Ajk 27th Flr. Ibm Bldg. Eastwood Cyberpark City Bagumbayan 3 Quezon City 1232.

LUO, FANGFANG Chinese

MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1233.

ZHAO, CHUNQI Chinese

MANDARIN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

LI, XIAOXU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1176.

LI, HAOZHANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

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

1177.

LI, JIA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1178.

LI, KANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

WAN, KANGKANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1179.

LI, YANHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

PAYPAL PHILIPPINES, INC. 17/f Filinvest Axis Tower One Northgate Cyberzone Alabang Muntinlupa City

1118.

WANG, RISHENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1180.

LI, YAPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1236.

1119.

WANG, GENSHU Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1181.

LI, FAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1120.

WU, JIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1182.

LI, FEI Chinese

PARTNERS GROUP PRIME SERVICES SOLUTIONS (PHILIPPINES), INC. 18/f Net Park Bldg. 5th Avenue Cor. 26th Street Fort Bonifacio Global City Taguig City

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1121.

XIAO, MEIFANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1183.

LIANG, YULAN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1122.

XU, YANHONG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1184.

LIAO, YIPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1123.

XU, QIUPENG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1185.

MA, XIAOQIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1124.

YANG, SIMIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1186.

PAN, HAIDI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1125.

YE, HAIYING Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1187.

PAN, YUN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1126.

YU, FANGQIANG Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1188.

QU, YONGHUA Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

PHILIPPINE FULL WIN GROUP OF COMPANIES INCORPORATED 3/f Net One Center 3rd Ave. Cor. 26th St. Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

1127.

ZANG, HANLIN Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1189.

SUN, JUNWEI Chinese

CHINESE CUSTOMER SERVICE

1241.

RUNNINGMAN CORPORATION 8/f Techzone Bldg. 213 Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. San Antonio Makati City 1252.

MEX MARTEN Indonesian

SENIOR INDONESIAN LANGUAGE CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

1253.

HTET SHWE YEE AUNG Myanmari

BURMESE-LANGUAGE CUSTOMER SUPPORT STAFF

RJ GLOBUS SOLUTIONS INC. Units 304, 305, & 306 3/f, Rockwell Business Tower, Tower 1 Meralco Ave. Ugong Pasig City 1254.

SARMIENTO GALINDO, MARIA FERNANDA Colombian

RAYA, CAROLINE SABATINI Indonesian

INTERNATIONALS SALES REPRESENTATIVE - SPANISH

FINANCE OPERATIONS ASSOCIATE

SEA OPPORTUNITIES PH INC. Basement National Life Insurance Bldg. 6762 Ayala Ave. San Lorenzo Makati City 1258.

EZER, AGAM Israeli

INTERNATIONAL TECHNICAL MARKETING CONSULTANT

SERVEAHEAD INCORPORATED U-26l-o2, 26f, Burgundy Corporate Tower Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City ZHENG, CANLIN Chinese

YU, QIAOLEI Chinese

JEUNG, JINBAEK South Korean

MANDARIN SALES OFFICER

MANDARIN SPEAKING ACCOUNTANT

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

SMARC GROUP ASIA INC. 11f Tower 2 Dd Plaza, Edsa Ext. Cor Macapagal Ave. Brgy. 076 Pasay City 1262.

KIM, CHANHO South Korean

CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSISTANT

SPINAL CARE CHIROPRACTIC INC. Unit C 9th/f Menarco Tower, 32nd St. Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City 1263.

CHEW HUI MIN Malaysian

GONSTEAD SPECIALIST AND CONSULTANT

SPEED QUALITY TECH INC. 3/f Eco Plaza Bldg. 2305 Chino Roces Ave. Extn. Magallanes Makati City 1264.

MA, XINWEI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE SPECIALIST

STARTEK PHILIPPINES, INC. G/f Sm Makati Cyberzone 1 69 Jupiter St. Bel-air Makati City 1265.

CHATURVEDI, AAKANKSHA Indian

VICE PRESIDENT - HUMAN RESOURCE, PHILIPPINES

1234.

ZHANG, XIN Chinese

MANDARIN ACCOUNTING OFFICER

SUN LIFE OF CANADA (PHILIPPINES), INC. 2/f Sunlife Center 5th Ave. Cor. Rizal Drive Bonifacio Global City Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

1235.

FAN, JIAMING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1266.

1237.

DRUEHL, MARTIN German

CASUTT, SIMON Swiss

CONSUMER RISK SERVICES TEAM LEADER

TEAM HEAD PLATFORM COMPLIANCE

PH GLOBAL JET EXPRESS INC. 11th Floor, The Marajo Tower 26th Street Cor. 4th Avenue Bgc Fort Bonifacio Taguig City

FRANCO, RUTH JENNIFER American

MANAGER, DATA ANALYTICS

TECSCO GLOBAL SOLUTIONS INC. Unit 2301 Ibp Tower Julia Vargas Ave., Ortigas Center San Antonio Pasig City 1267.

AGUS Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1268.

RITA ANGGRAINI Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1269.

ADI PUTRA Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1238.

LIU, JIANWEI Chinese

MANDARIN OPERATIONAL SUPERVISOR

1270.

AGUSTINO HALIM Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1239.

DING, LEI Chinese

MANDARIN OPERATIONS MANAGER

1271.

ANDI Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1240.

LI, RUI Chinese

MANDARIN FINANCE SUPERVISOR

1272.

BOBBY PRATAMA Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1273.

BUDI Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1274.

CENNY DEBBY CRISTINA Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

FU, XIANHAO Chinese

MANDARIN SPEAKINGADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT


BusinessMirror

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

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

CHRISTIAN KISSEHANDLES ANTONIO Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1276.

CUARDI TJOA Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1277.

DEVID Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

DEWI ANGGREANI Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1279.

DONNY INDRAWAN GUMULYA Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1280.

EDEY Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1281.

ERISEN Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1282.

FENDY YAP Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1283.

FRANCISKO Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1284.

FUJI HAMDANI Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HANGGA HANGGARA Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1330.

1275.

1278.

1285.

1321.

1322.

OPERATIONS SENIOR MANAGER

AGRAWAL, ANUJ Indian

ORACLE CONSULTANT

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS POSITION

NO.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

POSITION

1377.

WU, YIZHENG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1445.

ZHANG, HONGYANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1378.

XU, MINGXING Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1446.

ZHAO, SHILUN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1379.

XUE, SHIJIE Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1447.

ZHONG, XINJING Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1380.

ZHANG, JIANMIN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1448.

CAO, YANHUA Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1381.

ZHOU, JUNHUA Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1449.

CHEN, JIULONG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1382.

CHEN, SONGGANG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1450.

CUI, HAIBO Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1383.

CHEN, JINRONG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1451.

DONG, ZHISHUAI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1384.

LIANG, TI Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1452.

HUANG, HE Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1385.

LIN, CHUNFANG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1453.

LI, CHONGREN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1386.

SHOU, CAILI Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1454.

LIU, PENG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1387.

SUN, HAORAN Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1455.

WU, FENG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1456.

XIANG, LINGHUA Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

XIONG, ZHIHAO Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CLIENT COORDINATOR

1324.

HUANG, ZE Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE HELPLINE ANALYST

1325.

YEW FOONG HEI Malaysian

CHINESE SPEAKING EXECUTIVE CUSTOMER CARE OPERATOR

1326.

GOH CHEK NENG Malaysian

CHINESE SPEAKING PERSONAL SERVICE INTERPRETER

1327.

NG LI FEN Malaysian

CHINESE/CANTONESE SPEAKING CLIENT OFFICER

1388.

1328.

LI, SHUTING Chinese

CHINESE/CANTONESE SPEAKING HUMAN RESOURCES SENIOR COORDINATOR

WANG, RUI Chinese

1389.

WU, JIAODING Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1457.

YAN, JIALI Chinese

CHINESE/CANTONESE SPEAKING PERSONAL SERVICE OFFICER

1390.

XU, YUNFEI Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1458.

BAI, XUE Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1329.

CHEAH SHEAU BOON Malaysian

1391.

TRUONG THI MINH HIEU Vietnamese

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1459.

CAO, BO Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1460.

CHEN, BINGZHI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1392.

CAO, YONGPENG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1461.

CHEN, ZUNYAO Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1393.

CHEN, HUIDONG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1462.

DAI, LONGYI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1394.

GUO, SHUAIWEI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1463.

DING, XIAOKUN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1395.

HU, YUCHI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1464.

DONG, WANRU Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1396.

LIANG, RONGWEI Chinese

1397.

WANG, SHOUYU Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1398.

WU, HANYAO Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1399.

YANG, YINGNING Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1400.

YANG, QIJING Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1323.

CHUNG, AI-NI Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING 24 HOURS CALL CENTER OFFICER

1331.

TU, CHIA-CHENG Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING 24 HOURS CALL CENTER OFFICER

1332.

KUO, HAN-WEI a.k.a. LAUREN KUO Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING CUSTOMER CARE TRANSLATOR

1333.

KUO, CHE-MIN Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSISTANT MANAGER

1334.

LIU, YU-CHUN Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE COORDINATOR

1287.

HARRY Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HARTONO Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HENDRIK SUGANDA Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HERDY HERDIAWAN Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1335.

JONSON Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1336.

JURENDY Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1293.

LEONARD THEODORE Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1294.

RAYVIN NICKYRAYDO Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1295.

RICO SURIANDI Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1296.

RUSTAM EFENDI Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1297.

SHERLY CHANDRA Indonesian

1298.

1291.

KIMURA, KAZUHIKO Japanese

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

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1290.

POSITION

TRUDI I.T. SOLUTIONS Unit 520, Cityland Pasong Tamo Tower 2210 Chino Roces Ave. Pio Del Pilar Makati City

HANS CHRISTIAN Indonesian

1289.

ESTABLISHMENT / ADDRESS

TL FORWARDING SERVICE (PHILIPPINES) CORPORATION Perry’s Bldg. Ninoy Aquino Avenue, Pascor Drive Sto. Nino Parañaque City

1286.

1288.

FOREIGN NATIONAL / NATIONALITY

Sunday, November 29, 2020 A15

HU, CHIH-KAI Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING FOREIGN EXCHANGE COORDINATOR

DUAN, YONG Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING FOREIGN EXCHANGE SPECIALIST

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

VONOTEC, INC. Ph Goodwill Bldg. 393 Sen. Gil Puyat Ave. Bel-air Makati City 1465.

BANGS, DEAN ROBERT British

SAFETY & IMPROVEMENT MANAGER

W-TECH SOLUTIONS INC. 5/f Eco Plaza Bldg. 2305 Chino Roces Ave. Extn. Magallanes Makati City 1466.

YEO, YEN YEE Malaysian

CAGE ASSISTANT

1467.

FANG, CHAO Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1468.

GAN, LONGQI Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1469.

JI, LIQIAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1470.

LIU, DINGRONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1471.

WU, MEIJUAN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHANG, YU-PEI Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING HOTLINE EXECUTIVE

1401.

ZHANG, JING Chinese

WANG, SZU-HUAN Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING PERSONAL SERVICE OFFICER

1402.

ZHENG, BINGLEI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1339.

BAN, HAEUN South Korean

KOREAN SPEAKING CLIENT COORDINATOR

1403.

ZHU, SHAOQIN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1340.

PARK, JIHUN South Korean

KOREAN/CHINESE SPEAKING CLIENT OPERATOR

1404.

HUANG, GUANFA Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1341.

LEUNG, WAI YING HAYNES Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING STRATEGIC ANALYST

1405.

MO, HUIWEN Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

YANG, XUERONG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

TOCK, SIN LING Malaysian

1406.

1342.

CHINESE/CANTONESE SPEAKING PREMIUM SERVICES ASSOCIATE

1407.

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1472.

XU, ZHIHONG Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1343.

WANG, YU-HSUAN Taiwanese

CHINESE/FUKIEN SPEAKING CUSTOMER CARE TRANSLATOR

LIM ZHEN YAN Malaysian

1408.

CHEN, YOUYI Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1473.

ZHANG, XUEXING Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

TOMMY SALIM Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1344.

XIONG, ZHIHAO Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING CLIENT COORDINATOR

1409.

JIANG, KANGKANG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1474.

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1410.

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

VANDERIC GIWANDIO Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

UNITED POWER RENTALS, INC. Unit 304 Ua Bldg. N. Domingo St. Brgy. Balong-bato San Juan City

WANG, QINGZHONG Chinese

ZHANG, GUANGDE Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

TRAN THI QUYNH TRANG Vietnamese

VIDEO STREAM PRESENTER

1411.

ZHANG, LIJUN Chinese

1475.

WILHAM Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1412.

ZHANG, YANXUAN Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1413.

1301.

WILLY HADINATA Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

CHEN, DAIHUA Chinese

CHINESE SPEAKING TRANSLATOR

1414.

TAY KAY KEAN Malaysian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1302.

WYDIYANTO Indonesian

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1303.

1292.

1299. 1300.

1304. 1305. 1306. 1307.

1345.

SOH TIAN LAI Singaporean

COUNTRY MANAGER

VAN GOGH BUSINESS PROCESS OUTSOURCING INC. 5/f Ayala Circuit Bpo-1 Bldg. Theater Drive Circuit Makati Carmona Makati City

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

AGUS RIANTO Indonesian

1347.

HA THI THI Vietnamese

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1415.

ZHANG, YONGBIN Chinese

PHUI DUC THUAN Vietnamese

CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1348.

LIM KAH CHUN Malaysian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1416.

FANG, HONGLIANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

ANSORI WIJAYA Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1349.

1417.

GONG, ZHAOYANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1418.

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

ANTONY Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HUANG, YUEQIU Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

DIAN ARISANDI Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

HENDRA Indonesian

BAHASA SPEAKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1308.

AKEL, OUSSAMA Moroccan

1309.

LAMAH, SEBASTIEN Guinean

FRENCH OPERATIONS CSR

1310.

MERCY BIH BAKO Cameroonian

FRENCH OPERATIONS TSR

1311.

NKENFACK AZEH, TANIA Cameroonian

FRENCH OPERATIONS TSR

1312.

NGOY, VICTOR NGE Congolese

FRENCH OPERATIONS CSR

1313.

MUHIZI, PATRICK Rwandan

FRENCH TECHNICAL SUPPORT REPRESENTATIVE III

FRENCH OPERATIONS CSR

THE PENBROTHERS INTERNATIONAL INC. 6/f Opl Bldg. 100 C. Palanca Cor. Dela Rosa & Gil Sts. San Lorenzo Makati City GUILLERMO ERNESTO, CONDE LANDAVERDE Salvadoran

HEAD OF CUSTOMER AND DESIGNER SUPPORT

THINK SUPPORT SERVICES, INC. Rm. 602 6/f Vicente Madrigal Bldg. 6793 Ayala Ave. Bel-air Makati City 1315.

1338.

1346.

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

1314.

1337.

CHAE, HEEKWANG South Korean

SALES CONVEYANCER

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

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

WHOLESOME CONSULTING SERVICES CORP. Unit Ug-02, G/f Cityland 10 Tower 2 154 H.v. Dela Costa Cor. Valero Sts. Bel-air Makati City 1477.

GAN, YINGFANG Chinese

MANDARIN ADMIN SUPPORT

1478.

FANG, PEIMIN Chinese

MANDARIN CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

NGUYEN THI HAI YEN Vietnamese

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1351.

SY NGUYEN PHUOC Vietnamese

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1419.

JI, SHASHA Chinese

1352.

WONG CHI KONG Malaysian

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1420.

LI, MAOLIN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1353.

JIANG, YUEBIAO Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1421.

LI, YONGQIANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1354.

LIANG, QINGQUAN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1422.

LIANG, YANHUI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1355.

LIN, YIMEI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1423.

LIU, JIANYE Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1356.

WU, LIANGDI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1424.

LIU, ZHIQIANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1357.

CAO, MENG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1425.

LIU, FANGHUA Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1358.

CHEN, YONGSEN Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1426.

LIU, XIUSHUI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1359.

FU, YAFANG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1427.

LUO, HAIHONG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

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

1360.

FU, HUANNAN Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1428.

MA, JIAQI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1484.

1361.

GUO, FENGWEI Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1429.

MENG, QIUSHI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1362.

HE, SONG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1430.

PAN, YUNJIE Chinese

ZENROOMS SERVICES PHILIPPINES INC. 6060 Osias Cor. Palma Sts. Poblacion Makati City

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1363.

HU, YONGSAN Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1431.

SONG, ZHIXIN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1364.

LIANG, CHANGYIN Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1432.

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1365.

TAO, CHUNYU Chinese

TANG, HENGHU Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1433.

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1366.

YANG, LAI Chinese

TU, HUAQIANG Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1434.

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1367.

ZHOU, SHIWEI Chinese

WANG, ZEXU Chinese

IT TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1435.

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1368.

LEE SIANG MIN Malaysian

WEN, MINJUAN Chinese

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

1436.

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1369.

CHEN, CHUNZHU Chinese

WU, DANDAN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

WU, XINBO Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1370.

LAN, ZHENBAO Chinese

1437.

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1438.

XIA, LAIXIANG Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1439.

YANG, TAO Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1440.

YANG, TIANYOU Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1441.

YANG, KUN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1442.

YU, ZIYAO Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1443.

ZHANG, YELIN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1444.

ZHANG, JIATAI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1316.

1371.

1317.

WATANABE, TAKASHI Japanese

DIRECTOR OF GENERAL AFFAIRS

1372.

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1318.

CARLYLE, IAIN British

DIRECTOR OF TABLE GAMES TRAINING & DEVELOPMENT

LI, XUEKUN Chinese

1373.

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1319.

HO, CHI LOI Chinese

LU, ZIRONG Chinese

SENIOR SOUS CHEF

1374.

MEI, CHONGZHU Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1375.

SUN, HAOYUAN Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

1376.

WANG, JI Chinese

I.T TECHNICAL MANDARIN

MANAGER, IT PROJECT MANAGEMENT

VIETNAMESE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

1350.

LI, ZHENG Chinese

BELLIAPPA, NETHRA Indian

UNG CHI PONG Vietnamese

COMPUTER SYSTEM ANALYST

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR BUSINESS PLANNING

1320.

1476.

MASLI JAYA Indonesian

MAEDA, YUSUKE Japanese

TPPH-FHCS, INC. Teleperformance Center Ayala Corner Sen. Gil J Puyat Avenue Makati City

WANFANG TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT, INC. 6-9/f Double Dragon Plaza Edsa Cor. Macapagal Ave. Brgy. 076 Pasay City

WUHAN FIBERHOME INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGIES PHILS., INC. U-19d 19/f Rufino Pacific Tower 6784 Ayala Ave. Cor. V.a. Rufino St. San Lorenzo Makati City 1479.

LIANG, DONG Chinese

MARKETING DIRECTOR

1480.

REN, YINGDONG Chinese

PRODUCT MANAGER

1481.

SHU, BO Chinese

PROJECT MANAGER

1482.

WEN, ZHILI Chinese

PROJECT MANAGER

1483.

ZHAN, XUELIANG Chinese

PROJECT MANAGER

CHEN, JINLEI Chinese

PROJECT MANAGER

1485.

WANG, TIANYOU Chinese

HEAD OF BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE

1486.

LEE, SANGJIN South Korean

STRATEGY MANAGER

*Date Generated: Aug 3 to Aug 13, 2020 Any person in the Philippines who is competent, able and willing to perform the services for which the foreign national is desired may file an objection at DOLE-NCR Regional Office located at DOLE-NCR Building, 967 Maligaya St., Malate Manila, within 30 days after this publication. Please inform DOLE-NCR if you have any information on criminal offense committed by the foreign nationals.

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What makes K-dramas so addictive


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BusinessMirror NOVEMBER 29, 2020 | soundstrip.businessmirror@gmail.com

YOUR MUSI

SEEING THE LIGHT Guy Sebastian on the profundity of his latest release

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By Stephanie Joy Ching

USTRALIAN singer-songwriter Guy Sebastian, best known for his heartfelt debut single, “Angels Brought Me Here”, has recently released T.R.U.T.H., his much-anticipated ninth studio album.

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 Villagomez-

According to Sebastian, his latest release is one of his most “profound” ones, stating that it “pinpoints a lot of moments in the last few years.” From witnessing his friend’s battle with mental health to a song about his kids, the album chronicles “moments of victory and triumph and tough times,” leading him to describe it as “the most honest piece of work” he’s put out. “I feel that’s what the album represents-a snapshot in time of the last few years that have really been up and down,” he shared. The album contains singles that tackle almost everything under the sun, from the quiet, somber, ARIA winning “Choir” to the defiant and steady “Before I Go” and to the fun R&B inspired “Love on Display,” the album is diverse yet cohesive. It ranges from “really extreme waves of emotion or tension release” to pure, elated joy. However, T.R.U.T.H’s origin

Losorata Annie S. Alejo Photographers

: Bernard P. Testa Nonie Reyes

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GUY Sebastian

story was rather dark. He shared that the first single written, “Before I Go”, had actually stemmed from a messy, public split with his former manager and old friend. “Over here in Australia it was quite a public split, my management was arrested for over $1.1 million worth of fraud he committed against me, and it was absolutely heartbreaking. To think that somebody I was so close to, like our families were best of friends, our kids were best of friends, he managed me for twelve years, I knew him even longer than that, it blew my mind that somebody could have done that to me. It took me a long time to be able to trust again, and that’s how I started the album, by breaking out of that relationship,” he shared. “That was a really dark thing that I had to deal with, but on the other end, I probably had one of the biggest career moments in my life,” he said.

Though some songwriters have stated that writing has helped them process their feelings, Guy shared that for him, songwriting allows him to tell his audience that he too has gone through something they have and he wants to help. “A lot of the songs I write are because I have gone through something, and I want to help others process when they go through that themselves,” he shared. “I would be lying if I say I can’t talk about my feelings, I can talk about them, and I don’t have to write a song to process them. But I feel that the purpose of my songs is more about me saying; ‘I’ve gone through this, and I really want to put it down in song so that for other people who are going through it, it will help them,” Now liberated from the darker moments in his life, Guy is living out his life as truthfully and happily as he can, which reflects on the album cover. Featuring a simple photo of Guy smiling widely, the album cover encapsulates the album’s thesis of freedom from lies and the joys of having nothing to hide. “There’s definitely a sense of freedom,” Guy adds, “When you live a truthful life, you can smile without anything behind it; uninhibited joy knowing that you are doing your best to be the best person you can be. None of us are perfect, but the truth is important and it is something we should all strive for. I think throughout my life I will always look back on this album cover and remember exactly what I was feeling, even decades from now.” T.R.U.T.H is now available on all digital streaming platforms worldwide via Sony Music.


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soundstrip.businessmirror@gmail.com | NOVEMBER 29, 2020

BUSINESS

SoundSampler by Tony M. Maghirang

THESE LADIES JUST WANNA ROCK

BEABADOOBEE Fake It Flowers

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HE Philippine-born, London bred musician Beabadoobee (real name Bea Laus) now rates among the artists to watch in 2021. Her debut album certainly puts her in the same league as Billie Ellish and Benee. Bea’s honeyed lo-fi initial single, “Coffee” has already made the rounds of TikTok 10 billion times and the excitement over the Pinay expat blows up further with the sustained ‘90s alt-rock revival that powers her first album. Its sonic affinity shuttles from Hole’s acerbic hard rock to Liz Phair’s killer ballads. “Fake It Flowers” has been branded “bubble grunge” which should not be perceived as a critical slur. There’s as much to enjoy in the powerhouse pair of “Care” and Together” as the slow numbers. Perhaps, the preponderance of slow burners could deter studs from loving the record from start to finish. It’s time for the female of the species to step up for the rocking sisterhood with Beabadoobee.

RINA SAWAYAMA Sawayama

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ORN in Japan and raised in London, Rina Sawayama sings about the clash and convergence of two different cultures. Her debut album titled “Sawayama” documents the struggles of fitting

in after migrating from her Asian birthplace at a young age to a Western country that shaped her adolescence. “I’m losing myself in the darkness of the world/Touch me before I fall,” Rina sings in the album opener “Dynasty” which henceforth blossoms to an anthemic R n B and soul collision. The fear of the fall on the lead track is one of many anxieties scattered across the album such as personal affront in “STFU,” private demons in “Bad Friend,” and burning bridges in “Whose Gonna Save You Now?” The album’s overall musical arc traces the sound of the era when Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera ruled the dance pop roost. Then again, a few hold surprises;“ Dynasty” uncoils some Rage Against The Machine quoting metal scrap while “Akasaka Sad” reminds of Cypress Hill. “Sawayama” makes you forget your own distress as it echoes the music of an earlier, safer, freer era. Play it again, Sam!

dropping allegiance to the relentless disco beat of the Seventies. Imagine “Saturday Night Fever” transported to the present, blending seamlessly with today’s mix-and-match anything goes post-punk aesthetics. This is no hard sell. Check out the album yourself and get gloriously smashed.

THE ESTHERS Something Strange Happened Here…

NOA MAL Hypocrisy Runs Deep But I Am Shallow DUA LIPA Future Nostalgia

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ITH her latest album, the British pop star Dua Lipa pole vaults to the ranks of superstars like Lady Gaga and Madonna. In fact, Madonna graces the cover of a subsequent remix album helmed by the likes of Mark Ronson and DJ Marea Stamper aka The Blessed Madonna But, that’s getting ahead of where all the current critical rave and chart action are coming from. “Future Nostalgia” lives up to its billing, remaking ‘70s disco into a pop classic today and into the future. In short, it’s a euphoric mix of the past and the present stitching ‘80s soul and ‘90s house into the flamboyant fabric of old school disco. The tracks are hummable and insanely dance-friendly without

T

HE Esthers are an all-Pinay fivepiece band from Quezon whose debut in 2019 offered dark slices of synth-driven alternative pop about being broken, bluesy summer and wanting what can’t be had. The group’s latest release titled “Something Strange Happened Here…” starts on a buoyant swing pushed by a triangle of hushed guitars, muted drums and whispered vocals. A similar pattern goes on through the subsequent tracks underlined by intriguing titles like “Thank God for these brains” and “Crazy gf anthem.” The strangeness in all the slight goings-on is how The Esthers remain a pleasurable company with repeated listen. Guitarist Noa Mal must be the inspirational center of The Esthers. She already has three solo albums under her belt this year and her

newest release titled “Hypocrisy Runs Deep But I Am Shallow” finds Noa stepping up to a higher platform than her fellow Esthers twee popsters. Noa’s first two releases for 2020 see the twee spirit periodically gouged by moments of splendid noise particularly in “Lonely Is The Sound of the World When It’s Silent” on the ‘Hangman’ album and “Ghost Town” on ‘You Know, I Was Saved’ album. The latter even sounds like it belongs to a Siakol Greatest Hits collection. Her third and latest album this year finds Noa lifting the twee haze a bit, with her voice rising in volume equal to the rocking guitar and drums. The midtempo pace is a constant for the most part up to a metallic surge in the middle of “1:37” and a major shoegazing eruption in the album closer, “Shoot Me.”

Pinoy Rockers Electric Sala Cover “Game of Love” to Fend off Quarantine Blues

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LUES and classic rockoriented Electric Sala hook up with a guitar-slinging friend to do a cool remake of Michelle Brand’s “Game of Love.” The former Philippine entry to the youth division of the International Blues Competition in Memphis had the fun of their lives while in isolation. Electric Sala vocalist/lead guitarist Angel Paolo Ferrer tells SoundStrip, “It’s is our first cover. Narinig ako nagpapractice minsan ni Chen (of unit 406 band) at sabi niya katunog ko daw si Santana. “She suggested we cover the song “Game of Love” because Santana is my favorite guitar player and Chen is a fan of Michelle Branch. We eventually decided to do a collab also as our way of dealing with the loss of regular gigs.”

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What makes Korean dramas so addictive? By Pauline Joy M. Gutierrez

from many other Asians.” Korean writers also often shed light on pressing issues: class divides, the power dynamics between men and women, attitudes toward work and success, frustrations about love, workplace politics, and other complexities of social life.

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INE times. I’ve watched the hit 2015 K-drama series Reply 1988 nine times. The story picks up in a lone, quiet street in Seoul. The year is 1988, and the neighborhood, Ssangmundong—where five childhood friends living in the same block exist in an unhurried world of their own making—bears witness to stories of friendship, family and long forgotten youth. It is pure, warm and raw—attributes that, when coupled with relatable protagonists, masterful acting and a wistful original soundtrack, allows shows to successfully create emotional connections with its viewers. In line with the continuous growth of the Korean wave spurred by the proliferation of K-dramas in the country, The Embassy of the Republic of Korea and the Korean Cultural Center in the Philippines (KCC) recently organized a two-day webinar held earlier this month. Titled “The Role of K-Dramas in Sharing and Shaping Culture Beyond Borders,” the webinar explored the surge of audiences for Korean television across Asia.

Creativity with global appeal KIM HEE-YEOL, vice president and head

No cookie-cutter

K-DRAMA stars Lee Hye-ri and Park Bo-gum in the 2015 hit Reply 1988. A recent webinar by The Embassy of the Republic of Korea and the Korean Cultural Center in the Philippines explored the success factors of Korean television shows across Asia. of drama production of top Korean drama company Pan Entertainment, said that many K-dramas offer chaste storytelling that gets more complex and original over time. “We have created an environment where one single drama has been enjoyed by many different people living in different countries,” said Kim, who was also the producer of the 2002 global hit drama Winter Sonata. “I think one of the biggest competitiveness of Korean dramas is excellent writers,” she added. “Thanks to them, Korea has produced many dramas in different genres through various platforms that blur bound-

aries between traditional and new media channels.” This investment toward creative effort is what makes K-drama storylines deeply absorbing. As Kim Hee-yeol puts it, these shows reflect familiar situations that people can relate to. “I think our creativity appeals to the global citizens,” he said. “Specifically, the cultural similarities between Korea and the Philippines works best to attract world attention from your country. Asian cultures and values respecting elderlies, promoting good and punishing evil, I think that is a basic fundamental to attract attention

FILIPINO TV and theater director and actress Laurice Guillen believes that Korean writing integrates narrative, things and subject matter in a seamless way. She said that the plot of these shows do not concentrate on one genre alone, that they are unafraid to make innovations. “That is something that is different from our situation in the Philippines where we usually produce the same kind of dramas that have rated very well previously in the ratings,” she said. “Always the stories are character-based. There is always the moral of the story,” Guillen added. “In Korean dramas, it is not only the lead character who shines but also the support. They are strong and necessary and the audience loves them.” Recognizing these cultural differences and relating to even the most unrelatable stories are all part of what makes watching Korean dramas a satisfying experience. Korean dramas offer more than a breath of fresh air—they’re a full, deep, cleansing breath of unbridled humanity, the kind where you can find solace in nostalgic lilts, pop culture antics, and the relatability of the otherwise mundane lives of the characters.

Unicef urges government, society to listen to children’s Covid-19 experiences

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N commemoration of World Children’s Day on November 20, Unicef amplified the voices of many Filipino children experiencing various threats to the fulfillment of their rights, and urges the Philippine government and society to listen to their concerns. This year’s anniversary of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the most widely ratified humanrights treaty in the world, takes place during one of the most challenging moments for the fulfillment of children’s rights in the Philippines. The Covid-19 pandemic, combined with a threatening typhoon season, have upended thousands of children’s lives and has left many more children uncertain about their future. Children face a trifecta of threats: direct consequences of the disease itself, interruption in essential services and increasing poverty and inequality. A Unicef report, titled “Averting a Lost Covid Generation,” reveals data from different countries of the dire and growing consequences for children as the pandemic drags on. Children’s and adolescents’ mental health has suffered during the pandemic, while globally, the number of children living in multidimensional poverty—without access

to education, health, housing, nutrition, sanitation, or water is estimated to have soared to a 15-percent increase, an additional 150 million children by mid-2020. To address these, Unicef recommends the “Six Point Action Plan” that calls on governments and partners to prioritize children’s needs. 1. Ensure all children learn, including by closing the digital divide. 2. Guarantee access to health and nutrition services and make vaccines affordable and available to every child. 3. Support and protect the mental health of children and young people and bring an end to abuse, gender-based violence and neglect in childhood. 4. Increase access to clean water, sanitation and hygiene and address environmental degradation and climate change 5. Reverse the rise in child poverty and ensure an inclusive recovery for all 6. Redouble efforts to protect and support children and their families living through conflict, disaster and displacement. “We must listen to children and young people now, working with them to secure a better future,” said

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Oyunsaikhan Dendevnorov, Unicef Philippines representative. “In the years to come, children and young people will be living with the impact of this pandemic and with the consequence of how we choose to respond. They must have a say in the decisions that will affect their future.” Unicef social-media channels are highlighting the voices of young people like Vanessa, 21 years old, who are speaking up about their experiences, needs, and their aspirations for the future.

NOVEMBER 29, 2020

“Right now, children need to be reassured that they will be safe and that there is a brighter tomorrow,” she said. “They need to be supported, as they try to adjust to these changes brought about by this pandemic at a pace that they are comfortable in.” “I have the right to learn and make my dreams come true,” said Bai Aleyah Limba, 10 years old from Cotabato City. “I want to be a doctor and heal the sick and save lives. I dedicate my life to Bangsamoro children. We all have the right to dream.”


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