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VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
EDGEDAVAO Serving a seamless society
INTENT. An elderly woman (center) listens intently to the speeches of the aspirants for the next Indigenous Peoples Mandatory Representative (IPMR) to the Davao City Council during yesterday’s selection process at the Davao City Recreation Center. Lean Daval Jr.
TENSION OVER IP REP Confusion forces deferment of selection
By ARMANDO B. FENEQUITO JR.
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abf@edgedavao.net
HE National Commission on Indigenous People (NCIP) deferred the selection of the new Indigenous People’s Mandatory Representative (IPMR) to the Davao City Council yesterday due to tension and confusion during the proceedings. In an interview, NCIP Davao del Sur director Cris-
tito Ingay told reporters that they decided to move the selection to January 12 because some “Baragwas” or councils of elders went home because they thought the eight aspirants already chosen the person who will represent the IPs in the City Council. The next IPMR is to come from the 37 Kagan communi-
ties since the IP representative rotates among the city’s indigenous tribes. “Ang ubang mga Baragwa naguli naman tungod lang pud atong pag-concede sa ubang aspirants. Sigruo, na kondisyon ilang mga huna-huna na nag concede sila in favor kay Apadan. Pero naa pa ma’y nabilin na usa (The
other Baragwa went home because of the withdrawal of other aspirants. Maybe their minds had been conditioned that Apadan was their person to be the IPMR. However, there was one who stood up),” Ingay said. The aspirants are Janor Balo, Macapayao Apadan,
FTENSION, 10
INSIDE EDGE
PINOY PRIDE 29 IN DAVAO Pagara, Servania will be tested
SPORTS page 14
2 THE BIG NEWS EDGEDAVAO
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
WALK THROUGH. Outgoing Indigenous Peoples Mandatory Representative (IPMR) to the Davao City Council Councilor Berino L. Mambo-o (center) attends the IPMR selection process yesterday at the Davao City Recreation Center. Lean Daval Jr.
Cops confiscate P440M in illegal drugs in 2014 W
AFP to be placed on red alert for Francis
By FUNNY PEARL A. GAJUNERA
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HE Davao City Police Office (DCPO) seized a total of P440,571,304.87 in illegal drugs in 2014, more than 60 times the amount seized in 2013. DCPO spokesperson Senior Inspector Milgrace Driz said the huge jump was due to the seizure of more than P400 million worth of cocaine in separate operations. She also said the increase
was due to the higher number of operations conducted by the different police station in the city. Last year, authorities conducted 510 operations and apprehended 726 people, resulting in 922 cases filed on court. In 2013, DCPO conducted only 372 operations and arrested 545 individuals, with 556 cases filed on court.
“One factor of the increase of the amount of the recovered illegal drugs is that for the year 2014, police recovered millions worth of cocaine while in 2013 there was no cocaine recovered,” Driz said. In 2014, authorities recovered P417,750,624 worth of cocaine, including more than 60 bricks of the drug recovered from the Sumifru wharf.
Authorities also seized P22,110,188 worth of shabu in 2014, while in 2013 police recovered P6,344,405 worth of the same drugs. A total of P710,492.87 worth of marijuana was also seized last year, while in 2013 authorities seized P566,065.90. Driz said the DCPO intends to intensify its campaign against illegal drugs this year.
ITH Pope Francis scheduled visit to the country this coming January 15 to 19, all units of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) will be placed on “red alert” status starting this Saturday. This was disclosed by AFP chief-of-staff Gen. Gregorio Pio Catapang in a briefing with reporters Wednesday. Catapang said the “red alert” status, which will last until Pope Francis has safely concluded his visit to the country, is to ensure that “no enemies of the state” can take advantage of the country’s preparations and excitement
for the Pontiff’s visit. He said the number of security troops tasked to secure Pope Francis in his visit to Manila, Tacloban and Palo, Leyte has now climbed to 37,000. This can be broken down into 20,000 for the Philippine National Police (PNP) and another 17,000 for the AFP. Catapang said the AFP figures can be broken into 10,000 regular troops, bulk of which will come from Metro Manila, while the remaining 7,000 are from the military reservist units. He also said that they are still to detect any security
contact their respective airlines to rebook their flights or refund their tickets. The airlines have said they will not charge for rebooking if the flights are within 30 days of the original departure. Miascor Ground Handling Corporation supervisor Bobby Salvalion said Silk Air will not cancel any of its international flights. “Our flight bound for Singapore is not affected because it will not pass Manila but Cebu,” Salvalion said. CAAP deputy chief for operations Rodante Joya said in an earlier report that there will be disarray in airline flight schedules because of the limited operations at NAIA for the
security of the pope. CAAP, together with representatives from different government agencies and NAIA, issued a Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) in a consultative meeting announcing the suspension of arriving flights in on NAIA terminals from 2 p.m. to 5:15 p.m. on January 15 and then from 6 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. on January 19. Departure flights, however, will proceed subject to the availability of the aircraft, the report said. Departure flights that arrived before 2 p.m. will be still allowed to take-off before the “no fly” hours. NAIA’s flight operation will
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Permit bureau notes Airlines cancel flights due to papal visit increase in renewals By CHENEEN R. CAPON
By ARMANDO B. FENEQUITO JR.
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abf@edgedavao.net
HE Davao City Business Bureau noted an increase in the number of businesses that renewed their business permits this year. In an interview, Business Bureau head lawyer Lawrence Bantiding told Edge Davao that his office noted an increase of more than 2,000 applications compared with last year. “This simply mean that our taxpayers already know their obligation when to renew their business permits,” Bantiding said. Based on daily statis-
tics, the Business Bureau received a total of 6,390 application from January 3 to 6, 201,5 compared with last year which had 4,352 applications from January 2 to 5, 2014. Batinding said although his office started earlier last year, it was still able to surpass last year’s number of applications. “We started last 2014 on January 2 which is earlier than this year. That is why even though it was Saturday we started on January 3 to give the taxpayers an ample
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ARELY a month after the chaos that marked the holiday travel season last December, thousands of airline passengers are in for another rough time as airlines announced the cancelation of more than 200 of flights on January 15 and 19 to give way to the arrival and departure of Pope Francis in the country. In their statements, the airlines cited the limited operations at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) as announced by the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP) as the reason for the cancelations. Cebu Pacific Air, already in hot water over numerous
flight delays and cancelations last December, said it was canceling a total of 79 domestic and eight international flights on the two dates. Eight of those flights bound for Davao City. Philippine Airlines, for its part, canceled a total of 71 domestic flights, of which five are bound for Davao City, and 15 international flights on January 15 and 19. Tiger Air Philippines cancelled a total of 16 flights on January 15 and January 19, while Air Asia Philippines said it has canceled a total of 24 flights on January 15, 17, and 19. Passengers in canceled flights have been advised to
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VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
EDGEDAVAO
3 P1-M cash awaits ‘Happiest Pinoy’ NEWS
By JON JOAQUIN
H HAPPINESS. Cebuana Lhuillier public relations manager Richard Villaseran explains the mechanics of this year’s Search for the Happiest Pinoy during yesterday’s media road show at Pinnacle Hotel along Sta. Ana Avenue in Davao City. Lean Daval Jr.
Abu Sayyaf suspect captured in Basilan C
OMBINED military and police forces have captured a suspected Urban Terrorist Group (UTG) leader of the Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) following a shootout in the nearby town of Sumisip Wednesday, an official said. Colonely Eliglen Villaflor, Army’s 4th Special Forces Battalion commander, identified the captured UTG leader as Imran Daiyong Mijal alias Boh, who
was wounded during the shootout. Villaflor said the shootout ensued after Mijal “violently resisted” when they served warrant of arrest against the UTG leader around 5:20 p.m. Tuesday in Barangay Marang, Sumisip. Villaflor said Mijal has a standing warrant of arrest issued by the court for the crime of frustrated murder. Villaflor said that Mijal
TOTAL of eight full-time and part time media practitioners in the Davao region died during the year just ended, two of them violently. Of those who wrote -30-, Ramon “Ram” M. Maxey, was the oldest at 92. At the time of death from stroke, Maxey was
the editorial consultant and desk editor of the Edge Davao. The son of an American educator from Massachusetts who married a Mandaya lass in Baganga, Ram was born in Surigao City, where he acquired his primary education. In college, Ram studied in the
8 media workers write -30- in 2014 A
Maxey
is known to have participated in numerous terroristic activities such as bombing, liquidation, kidnapping, ambush and extortion. He said the troops who are trained and equipped in Combat Life Saving (CLS) immediately applied first aid to the arrested UTG leader to ensure his survivability. He added Mijal was hit in the right arm during the shootout that led to his ar-
rest. He said the troops have recovered from Mijal’s possession an M-16 Armalite rifle with several rounds of ammunitions, one rifle grenade, and a caliber .45 pistol with ammunitions. He attributed the successful arrest of Mijal to the active participation of concerned citizens in information gathering and their sincere desire to end lawlessness in this province. (PNA)
OW much is your happiness worth? If you win Cebuana Lhuillier’s Search for the Hapiest Pinoy, it could be to the tune of P1 million in cash tax-free. Richard Villaseran, Cebuana Lhuillier public relations manager, told Davao City reporters at a press conference yesterday that the biennial search, which is now on its third run, is looking for the Filipino who possesses three traits: a positive outlook, the ability to rise above life’s challenges, and the ability to impact the lives of other people. He said this year’s Search for the Happiest Pinoy has a wider scope, new special awards, and bigger cash prizes. “We have made the
effort to make this the biggest search ever,” he said. The grand prize winner will receive P1 million in cash, tax-free, which is four times the prize in the last search done in 2012. Nine runners-up will receive P50,000 each. The company will also give special prizes to the Happiest Student and Happiest Overseas Filipino Worker. Also new this year are the P10,000 cash prizes for the nominees of each of the nine runners-up and a P50,000 prize for the nominee of the grand prize winner. Filipinos 18 years old and above and with good moral character can be nominated to the search. Nomination
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DCWD pipe bridge done by March 28 By CHENEEN R. CAPON
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crc@edgedavao.net
HE Davao City Water District (DCWD) yesterday announced that the construction of the pipe bridge crossing between the two Governor Generoso bridges in Bankerohan will be completed on March 28 “under normal conditions.” Speaking in yesterday’s Club 888 media forum at The Marco Polo, Davao, newly-installed DCWD spokesperson Bernardo D. Delima said “normal conditions” means no occurrence of floods and other calamities. Delima said the replacement of the existing pipes
with a 1,000 millimeter (mm) diameter one started in early December last year. This after a delay of more than five months because of illegal settlers under the bridge who left only upon the request of Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte himself. “It took as time to relocate the settlers. Naglisud mi kay dili man manghawa. Actually, we had to tap the local government just to help us relocate the settlers,” Delima said. The mainline pipe that supplied water from the Dumoy pumps to the downtown
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Gajitos
NEW LANDMARK. Davao City Water District (DCWD) spokesperson lawyer Bernie Delima says the Bankerohan Pipe Bridge Crossing will be a suspension-type bridge structure looking like the famous Golden Gate Bridge of
San Francisco which will soon be one of the city’s landmarks. Delima was a guest in yesterday’s Club 888 media forum at The Marco Polo, Davao. Lean Daval Jr.
4 SUBURBIA EDGEDAVAO
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
SIGNED UP. Department heads affix their signatures affirming their pledge of commitment to the 5S Pro- BLESSING. City officials led by Mayor Allan L. Rellon and employees witness the blessing of six heavy equipgram of the city government of Tagum. Photo by Kelvin Palermo of CIO Tagum ment units expected to boost the local government’s infrastructure and disaster response services. Photo by Kelvin Palermo of CIO Tagum
2015 will be a banner year for Tagum: Rellon E
MPLOYEES of the city government of Tagum are headed in full gear this year with a fresh command from Mayor Allan L. Rellon to exert maximum effort to usher in a new phase of development in order to make 2015 a banner year for Tagum City. Rellon gave his marching order to department heads and employees during the local government’s monthly
convocation program last January 5. On the same day, new heavy equipment purchased by the local government were blessed for what Mayor Rellon described as a year of the implementation of massive infrastructure projects in the city. The local government is now working double time along with the provincial government of Davao del
Norte ahead of its hosting of the 2015 Palarong Pambansa scheduled in May this year. Six units of heavy equipment, all worth P16,192,500, are expected to boost the city government’s infrastructure projects. The units include a skid loader truck, payloader, 12,000-liter capacity tanker, 8-wheel backhoe, and a dump truck. The local government also purchased one
fire truck to be used by the City Disaster Reduction and Management Office. City Hall employees were also encouraged to continue doing their best in public service, being in the front line of the EAGLE WINGS Program, the tenpoint development agenda of the administration. On the first working day for 2015, the city government launched the 5S Pro-
gram which is a workplace organization method that uses a list of five Japanese words: seiri (sort), seiton (systemize), seiso (sweep), seiketsu (sanitize), and shikutse (self-discipline). The 5S Program is expected to achieve higher standards of workplace organization and discipline in order to make work easier, faster, cheaper, safer, and more effective towards pro-
moting a positive attitude among workers which will cultivate an environment of efficiency, effectiveness and economy. “As we face 2015, let us be positive and be pro-active. Let’s work together amidst the challenges. Let us pray to God that He will pour more blessings to Tagum,” Rellon said in his challenge to the city workers. Louie Lapat of CIO Tagum
Utilities of the City Council. Culima during his privilege speech before the SP session on Tuesday said that the mobile water purifying facilities were sent in by MMDA Chairman Francis Tolentino in response to the request of Butuan City Mayor Ferdinand M. Amante, Jr. as among the efforts of the local government to help address the scarcity of potable water experienced here in the city, at the height of TS “Senyang” and until this time as the local water utility here is still in the process of repair and rehabilitation of its water filtration system damaged
by the recent typhoon in Iyao, Brgy. Taguibo. According to Councilor Culima, each equipment can purify 3,000 liters (or 3 cubic meters) of water per hour. Both equipment can purify 6,000 liters of water per hour, Culima said. He also said that the mobile water purifiers will be placed at the evacuation center where most of the evacuees were housed. The purified waters will not be only consumed by the evacuees but will also be transported to the villages where scarcity of waters are being experienced. He said this will reinforce the
Butuan City Water District scheduled supply of water by district, the operation of its pumping stations and the transporting of potable waters to water-needy areas. Presently, both mobile water purifying facilities are at the Philippine Ports Authority, purifying waters from Agusan River. Culima said that the city government has availed of 2 water tankers, one from ADFIL , 2 from the Bureau of Fire Protection and 3 from Equiparco to transport purified, potable waters to the areas needing waters. (PNA)
T’boli towns. She said the bank has pledged a funding of Php2.64 million under its flagship DBP Forest Program to support the project, which will be implemented as an income-generating initiative for poor upland farmers. The funds will mainly be utilized for the purchase of planting materials, establishment of the tree plantations and maintenance, she said. “The project includes a livelihood component for the beneficiaries,” said Manlisis, the project’s designated focal person.
Under the MOA, she said around 74 hectares of upland areas will be planted with budded rubber and bamboo as the main crops. She said it will be intercropped with high value crops like coffee, cacao, rambutan and mangosteen. The boundary areas of the plantation sites will also be planted with forest trees like mahogany and lauan, she said. Manlisis said they have identified 34 hectares of plantation areas for rubber and 15 hectares for bamboo in Sitio Libas of San Vicente as well
as 15 hectares for rubber and three hectares for bamboo in Sitio Lamcot, Barangay Malaya, both in Banga town. In T’boli town, she said around 17 hectares in Sitio Lamlaban of Barangay Sinolon will be intercropped with various trees. The tree seedlings and buddings will be supplied by the Linan Nursery in Tupi town, she said. “The project will start in the second quarter and has a timeline of one year but we’re planning to finish it before the end of the year,” Manlisis added. (PNA)
Bunker-fired power plant MMDA gives two mobile water purifiers to Butuan starts construction in SoCot
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ISTRIBUTION utility South Cotabato I Electric Cooperative (Socoteco I) is building an 11.9-megawatt (MW) bunker-fired power plant to augment the growing power requirements of industries and residential consumers in parts of South Cotabato and Sultan Kudarat provinces. Santiago Tudio, Socoteco 1 general manager, said Wednesday they have partnered with energy firm Supreme Power Corporation for the construction and operationalization of an embedded power plant that will be run by modular generator sets. He said the construction of the plant will begin on Thursday in a property owned by the electric cooperative in Matulas, Barangay Paraiso in Koronadal City. “We’re targeting to complete the construction and eventually operate the plant by July,” he said in a radio interview. Citing their initial agreement with Supreme Power, he said the company will operate the plant for 15 years using imported generator sets from South Korea. He said the plant will directly stream its generated power to Socoteco 1, which serves Koronadal City, eight municipalities in South Cotabato and Lutayan town in Sultan Kudarat. “After 15 years, the power plant will be owned at no cost by the cooperative. We will assume full ownership and take charge with its operations,” he said. Details are not immedi-
ately available regarding Supreme Power, which is based in Metro Manila. A document posted at the Department of Energy’s website showed that it issued a “clearance for grid impact study” to the company on May 19 last year. Tudio said they decided to deal for the building of an embedded bunker-fired power plant to address the continuing supply shortage in the Mindanao grid. He said the plant will serve as insurance in case the hydropower plants of the National Power Corporation (NPC) in the Lanao provinces and Bukidnon would experience supply shortages and when other power plants in Mindanao will bog down. He said they are anticipating a possible drought this year lasting three to four months that would drastically reduce the generating capacity of the hydropower plants. Socoteco 1’s peak power requirement increased to as high as 36 MW this year from 33 MW a year ago. The cooperative mainly draws its supplies from the NPC and Aboitiz Power Corporation’s subsidiary Therma South Inc. It has a backup supply of 12 MW from a diesel-fired power plant operated by Mapalad Power Corporation (MPC), which is controlled by the Alcantara-owned Conal Holdings and Aggreko Plc., in Barangay Morales in Koronadal City. Socoteco 1’s supply contract with MPC will end in 2016. (MindaNews)
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WO mobile water purifiers from the Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) arrived from Manila on board a C-130 plane, 8:15 a.m. Tuesday to help ease the water crisis experienced by the city at the height of TS “Senyang” fury and even up to this time. The arrival of the water treatment equipment and the MMDA team to man and operate the mobile water purifying facilities was met at the Bancasi Airport by local government officials, headed by City Councilor Ryan Anthony B. Culima, Chair of the Committee On
DBP, SouthCot forge MOA for planting of 75,000 trees
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HE provincial government of South Cotabato has linked up with the Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) for the planting of around 75,000 trees this year in various parts of the province. Forester Jane Manlisis, head of the Provincial Environment Management Office’s forest and inland water division, said in a statement that they recently signed a memorandum of agreement (MOA) with DBP for the implementation of a massive tree planting program in three barangays in Banga and
5 ECONOMY
EDGEDAVAO VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
NEW FARE. Passengers board a train at the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) station in Pasay City where the new fares are displayed. PNA photos by Gil S. Calinga
MRT, LRT fare hike means better services, says Palace M
ALACAÑANG has appealed for more patience from the public on the increase in MRT and LRT fares, saying it would mean better services and facilities. In a press briefing in Malacañang on Tuesday, Communications Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr. laid out the projects to be carried out for the improvement of the MRT and LRT and their corresponding
timetables. “Ipinapakita po natin ito upang ipaliwanag at ipaunawa sa ating mga mamamayan ang konteksto ng pinag-uusapan din ngayon hinggil sa pagbago ng sistema ng pagsingil na ‘yung pagdadagdag ng singil sa pamasahe, kasabay naman nito ‘yung seryosong programa sa pagpapahusay at pagpapabuti ng mga pasilidad ng MRT at LRT,” Coloma said in a brief presentation.
“Kaya’t hinihiling po natin ang pag-unawa ng ating mga mamamayan sa mga kasalukuyang kaganapan.” Coloma said the most important part of the project is the MRT capacity expansion. “Simula sa Setyembre ng taong ito, madagdagan ng 48 coaches o bagon ang MRT. Pagkatapos makumpleto ito, dadami ang biyahe at iikli ang panahon ng paghihintay. Binibigyan din ng prayoridad
ang rail installation o pagpapalit ng riles,” he said. Also part of the project, he said, is the upgrade of the MRT’s ancillary systems, such as the power substations, depot facilities for parking, the construction of the North Avenue turn back and Taft Avenue pocket track extension, the upgrade of the signaling system, the overhaul of 25 light rail vehicles and traction motors, and the installation of a new
radio communications system. Most of these will be carried out starting February, while the process of obtaining the necessary services has begun, he said. “Ina-announce pa kasi muna ang pagdaraos ng public bidding, pagkatapos ang pagdaraos mismo ng bidding, ang proseso ng pag-a-award at publication,” he explained. The MRT and LRT fares on Sunday were raised by 50 per-
cent to 87 percent. The new base fare is P11, with an additional P1 for every kilometer. End-to-end fare for MRT 3 increased from P15 to P28. The fares for LRT 1 were raised from P20 to P30 for single-journey tickets and to P29 for stored-value cards, while those for LRT 2 increased from P15 to P25 for single-journey tickets and to P24 for stored-value cards. (PNA)
6 THE ECONOMY
EDGEDAVAO
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
Phl blazes trail in A int’l capital markets
2 entities express interest in SCTEX price challenge
By CHENEEN R. CAPON
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INANCE officials hailed the successfully concluded liability management transaction, as the Philippines marked its return to the international capital markets with a showing consistent with its now emergent sterling reputation. “It took courage and conviction to pursue strategic transaction in the midst of global market volatility,” Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima said in a statement. “Strong economic fundamentals and track record of well placed deals
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HE government is addressing potential risks to inflation this year such as the lingering possibility of El Niño occurrence, the impacts of typhoons on agricultural commodity prices, and logistical issues, according to the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA). Economic Planning Secretary Arsenio M. Balisacan noted this even amid the low average inflation for full-year 2014 at 4.1 percent, within the government’s target of 3 to 5 percent for the year. This after the headline inflation declined to 2.7 percent in December 2014 from 3.7 percent in the previous month, pulled down by cutbacks in the prices of petroleum and electricity with lower increases in the price of most food items. “Given the lingering possibility of El Nino occurrence in the first quarter of 2015, we should intensify efforts to implement programs that will
nanceAsia to be an innovative case of proactive liability management,” he said. “As the reputation of the Republic of the Philippines gains steam in the international markets, we are proud to be the first to issue global bonds in the dollars space,” he added. Treasurer of the Philippines Rosalia de Leon reported on the success of the transaction, saying cash orderbook reached $7.9 billion or 15 times oversubscribed, while liability management orderbook reached $6.1 billion in market value terms.
help the areas that are highly and moderately vulnerable to the adverse impact of a dry spell,” Balisacan said. He noted that logistical issues also continue to pose inflation risks. “While the easing of the truck regulation in Manila’s ports may have possibly contributed to the moderate inflation outturn, it is critical to continue exploring a more lasting solution to the congestion problem to avoid future disruptions in the domestic supply chain that could result in higher transportation costs,” he explained. The NEDA chief also identified other possible inflation risks, such as pressures associated with higher water rates at the start of 2015 and the impact of destructions brought by typhoons “Ruby” and “Seniang” on prices of agricultural commodities. Meanwhile, Balisacan said electricity rates were lower in December 2014 due to a decline in generation and trans-
mission charges on the back of improved availability of power plants and lower cost of fuel. Meralco charges were down anew in December 2014 by 13 percent, equivalent to a reduction of PP0.73 per kilowatt hour. Moreover, the sharp decline in Dubai oil prices, which fell to its lowest levels since 2010, translated to lower domestic petroleum prices. Year-on-year food inflation in December 2014 also slowed to 5.5 percent from 6.5 percent in the previous month despite the holiday season. “The absence of new major economic shocks, which could considerably affect food supply, as well as the normalization of supply chain of other food products in part resulting from the augmentation of rice stocks from imports and the lifting of the expanded truck ban in September 2014, may have also contributed to the decline in inflation in December 2014,” added Balisacan. (PNA)
issued debt paper will be used to pay the bonds that would be offered for swap. It has offered to swap 15 existing bonds due from January 2016 to 2034. Settlement of the bond is expected to transpire on Jan. 20, 2015. The government has tapped Citigroup Global Markets Inc., Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, Deutsch Bank Securities Inc., Goldman Sachs
(Asia) L.L.C., The Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited, J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, Morgan Stanley & Co. International plc, Standard Chartered Bank and UBS AG, Hong Kong Branch as joint lead managers for the issuance. The last time the Philippine government issued dollar-denominated global notes was in January 2014 amounting to USD 1.5 billion. (PNA) The community offers all the amenities and features to be expected of a first-class subdivision.
Proposed 25-year global bond gets ‘BBB-’ rating F
ITCH Ratings has given a “BBB-“ rating on the Philippines’ planned US dollar-denominated global bond due 2040. In a statement, the ratings agency said rating of the debt watcher “would be sensitive to any changes” in the country’s long-term foreign currency issuer default (IDR) rating, which is also at “BBB-.” The government said part of proceeds of the soon-to-be
The BCDA is bidding out the rights, interest, and obligations in the management, operation, and maintenance of the SCTEX under a business and operating agreement for a period of 28 years or ending in 2043. The SCTEX is a four-lane divided expressway traversing the provinces of Bataan, Pampanga and Tarlac and is directly linked to the North Luzon Expressway. Manila North Tollways Corporation (MNTC), which was also present during the conference, will have the right to match the highest bid for the project. The BCDA and MNTC signed a business operating agreement on the SCTEX subject to the approval of the President of the Philippines. As a condition for the approval, Malacanang ordered the price challenge in the interest of transparency. (PNA)
allowed the Philippines to be the first issuer in the global dollar market and to execute a $2 billion 25year bond at an all time low coupon of 3.95 percent for the 25-year dollar bond,” he added. Purisima said this figure is of particular note as 3.95 percent is a welcome decrease from the last time the Philippines issued a 25-year bond, in 2012, at a coupon of 5 percent. “This is reminiscent of the award-winning 1-day Accelerated Switch Tender Offer conducted on January 10, 2014, hailed by Fi-
Gov’t addressing risks to inflation for 2015: NEDA
“The size of the final deal is $2.0 billion, of which $1.5 billion were used to switch and retire old bonds $500 million in new money will be used for funding the budget,” de Leon said. “Notably, we attracted new name investment grade-only investors in this transaction. This robust response from the international markets reflects that our manifest confidence in the strength of the Philippine economy and liability management strategy is very well placed,” she added.
T least two parties expressed interest in the price challenge being conducted by the Bases Conversion and Development Authority on the management, operation, and maintenance of the 94-kilometer Subic-ClarkTarlac Expressway. San Miguel Corporation and an undisclosed client represented by the law firm of Aguirre Abaño Pamfilo Paras Pineda and Agustin attended the pre-selection conference conducted by the BCDA Tuesday. Both parties bought the bidding documents. “We are pleased with the turnout and we are confident of the project’s viability,” the BCDA’s price challenge selection committee chair Atty. Nena D. Radoc said. “Healthy competition should bring about better service for motorists and the best deal for government,” Radoc said.
Living with prime accessibility in Davao City
Valle Verde Residential Estates is arguably the most accessible exclusive residential enclave in Davao City, being a mere five minutes away from the Davao International Airport.
B
EING the center of trade, commerce, and industry in the Mindanao region, Davao City is bustling with immense activity on a daily basis. Since it is a renowned tourist destination as well, thousands of travelers pass through its international airport hour after hour, and hundreds of vehicles constantly ply its roads, transporting people and goods. More and more people – Filipinos and tourists alike – are discovering a very attractive living proposition in this nature-rich city, with its leisurely vibe, safe and secure atmosphere, and affordable cost of living. Thus, choosing a place to call one’s home in Davao City should be able to
take advantage of all these benefits. Sta. Lucia Land, one of the most trusted and renowned real estate companies in the Philippines especially in the field of subdivision development, offers the most advantageous place to live in Davao City with Valle Verde Residential Estates. The premier, gated residential community is located a mere five minutes away from the Davao International Airport – spelling utmost convenience and accessibility for busy travelers, executives, professionals and entrepreneurs who wish to establish business, career or family life in the burgeoning city center. For discerning
Davaoeños as well, living in Valle Verde Residential Estates places them in the center of everything, making work and play all the more easy and enjoyable. Valle Verde Residential Estates is sprawled across 13 hectares of prime property in Panacan, accessible along the main thoroughfare of the Philippine-Japan Friendship Highway. Apart from proximity to the airport, it is very near schools and academic institutions like the Jose Maria College. The community offers all the amenities and features to be expected of a first-class subdivision. The development, first and foremost, is bound by a perimeter wall,
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7 ENVIRONMENT
EDGEDAVAO VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
Oceans crying out for help
Early morning while crossing the ocean from Davao to Cebu.
Text and Photos by HENRYLITO D. TACIO
N
EARLY 270,000 tons of plastic, which is enough to fill more than 38,500 garbage trucks, are floating in the world’s oceans. This is based on a study done by 5 Gyres Institute, an organization that aims to reduce plastic in the oceans. According to a news dispatch released by Associated Press, the researchers dragged a fine mesh net at the sea surface to gather small pieces to gather data. “Observers on boats counted larger items. They used computer models to calculate estimates for tracts of ocean not surveyed. The study only measured plastic floating at the surface. Plastic on the ocean floor wasn’t included,” the news agency reported. Bits greater than about 8 inches (20 centimeters) accounted for three-quarters of the plastic that the research estimated is in the ocean. The plastic is broken up into more than 5 trillion pieces, said the study which was published in the scientific journal PLOS ONE. The recent finding is comparable to an earlier study done by researchers in Spain who used different methodology. That said study estimated “there was 7,000 to 35,000 tons of plastics this size floating in the ocean.” “Once thought to be so vast and resilient that no level of human insult could damage them, the oceans are now crying out for attention,” noted a report released by the
Washington-based Worldwatch Institute. “The world’s oceans are in danger, and the enormity of the challenge is bigger than one country or organization,” said World Bank president Robert Zoellick during the World Oceans Summit held in Singapore some years back. “We need coordinated global action to restore our oceans to health. Together we’ll build on the excellent work already being done to address the threats to oceans, identify workable solutions, and scale them up,” he added. The Philippines, which faces the Pacific Ocean, is not spared. In 2012, the results of the Ocean Health Index ranked the Philippines 105th out of 117 territories, making it among the most deteriorated marine ecosystems in the world. The Index focuses not only how pristine the ocean is but how it can sustainably deliver benefits for the people within its territory. It uses 50 distinct indicators such as the sustainability of methods of seafood harvesting and coastal protection. Senator Loren Legarda, chair of the Senate Committee on Climate Change, pointed out: “The Ocean Health Index is a new kind of yardstick because it measures how well our oceans can continue to deliver the needs of our growing population. It recognizes people as a legitimate component of ocean health. And based on the recent results, it is clear that the health and socio-eco-
Taken during a tour at the Great Barrier Reef in Australia.
nomic value of our oceans will continue to deteriorate if we do not innovate our strategies towards their conservation.” The recent assessment report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has confirmed that indeed the world’s oceans are under serious threat. It noted that as a direct result of increased carbon intake, acidification has increased, which has a direct correlation to the overall health and balance of oceanic ecosystems. Furthermore, sea levels are predicted to rise in 95 percent of ocean area. Professor Alex Rogers of Somerville College, Oxford, and scientific director of International Program on the State of the Ocean (IPSO) said: “The health of the ocean is spiraling downwards far more rapidly than we had thought. We are seeing greater change, happening faster, and the effects are more imminent than previously anticipated. The situation should be of the gravest concern to everyone since everyone will be affected by changes in the ability of the ocean to support life on Earth.” Senator Legarda agrees. “The destruction of our marine ecosystems will not only lead to the extinction of thousands of species but will also be detrimental to tourism, food supply, and sustenance and livelihood of our fisherfolk. This makes our responsibility over protecting our oceans even greater,” she pointed out.
Among the assessments of factors affecting ocean health, the panel identified the following areas as of greatest cause for concern: • De-oxygenation: The evidence is accumulating that the oxygen inventory of the ocean is progressively declining. Predictions for ocean oxygen content suggest a decline of between 1% and 7% by 2100. This is occurring in two ways: the broad trend of decreasing oxygen levels in tropical oceans and areas of the North Pacific over the last 50 years; and the dramatic increase in coastal hypoxia (low oxygen) associated with eutrophication. The former is caused by global warming, the second by increased nutrient runoff from agriculture and sewage. • Acidification: If current levels of carbon dioxide release continue we can expect extremely serious consequences for ocean life, and in turn food and coastal protection; at carbon dioxide concentrations of 450-500 ppm (projected in 2030-2050) erosion will exceed calcification in the coral reef building process, resulting in the extinction of some species and decline in biodiversity overall. • Warming: As made clear by the IPCC, the ocean is taking the brunt of warming in the climate system, with direct and well-documented physical and biogeochemical consequences. The impacts which continued warming is projected to have in the decades to 2050 include the
Oceans are now fished to the limit.
following: reduced seasonal ice zones, including the disappearance of Arctic summer sea ice by ca. 2037; increasing stratification of ocean layers, leading to oxygen depletion; and increased incidence of anoxic and hypoxic (low oxygen) events. • The ‘deadly trio’ of the above three stressors - acidification, warming and deoxygenation - is seriously effecting how productive and efficient the ocean is, as temperatures, chemistry, surface stratification, nutrient and oxygen supply are all implicated, meaning that many organisms will find themselves in unsuitable environments. These impacts will have cascading consequences for marine biology, including altered food web dynamics and the expansion of pathogens. • Continued overfishing is serving to further undermine the resilience of ocean systems, and contrary to some claims, despite some improvements largely in developed regions, fisheries management is still failing to halt the decline of key species and damage to the ecosystems on which marine life depends. In 2012, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization determined that 70% of world fish populations are unsustainably exploited, of which 30% have biomass collapsed to less than 10% of unfished levels. “From afar, aliens might see the obvious: the sea is Earth’s life-support system,” wrote marine biologist Sylvia A. Earle, former chief scientist
of the U.S. National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration. “The services provided are so fundamental that most of us who live here tend to take them for granted.” “The earth’s great sea is the heart of the hydrological cycle – nature’s solar-driven water pump,” explained Don Hinrichsen, an award-winning environmental journalist and author of Coastal Waters of the World. About 430,000 cubic kilometers of water evaporate from the oceans every year. “Of this amount, around 110,000 cubic kilometers fall as freshwater precipitation over land, replenishing surface and ground waters and eventually completing the cycle by returning to the sea,” Hinrichsen reports. The ocean is also the engine that drives the world’s climate, storing huge quantities of solar energy in the process. “The ocean absorbs and stores carbon dioxide from the atmosphere,” says Hinrichsen. “Since this invisible gas is one of the main agents of climate change, the ocean is an important sink that helps to modify human impacts on global climate.” Ocean currents, the blue planet’s super highways, transfer enormous quantities of water and nutrients from one place to another. The Gulf Stream, for instance, pushes more water from the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean across the Atlantic into northern Europe, than is carried by all the rivers on earth.
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VANTAGE
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
EDITORIAL Worth the disruption
T
HE preparations for the visit of Pope Francis to the Philippines are understandably gargantuan in scale, we being the only Catholic country in Asia. Pope Francis, after all, is not just the political head of the Vatican but the spiritual leader of every Roman Catholic in the world, and in many ways that has more significance to Filipinos than their own patriotic position. This is especially true these days as government becomes less and less popular due to numerous scandals and cases of corruption, while the pope endears himself to the entire world – not just to Catholics – because of his radical stand on many issues, even those against his own contemporaries in the church. As an extremely popular pontiff, it behooves upon the administration to do all it can to protect him, especially since crowds numbering in the millions are expected to want to be near the pontiff. There are, of course, concerns that the preparations are too much for one person. It is being pointed out, for example, that cancelling more than 200 flights on January 15 and 19 – days when the pope will travel by air – is an extreme measure since
EDGEDAVAO
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it affects thousands upon thousands of travelers who, it is safe to say, really do need to get to where they are going. Canceling the flights throws off many schedules, and we will never know how many lives would be disrupted by such a drastic move. Another problem is the closing of major roads leading to the airport and other venues, a decision that has already led to the declaration of a holiday in Manila over the duration of the pope’s visit. It must be pointed out as well, however, that the papal visit is a historic event, one that does not happen very often especially in a country like the Philippines. We can either complain about the hassle or take the opportunity to renew not just ourselves but our country as well. The presence of the pope could very well be the spur that we need to finally lick the perennial problems that have bogged us down for so long. Pope Francis has shown himself to be a different pontiff, and his example and his blessing may well set us on the path of positive change. If that happens, then the disruption we will go through next week would be more than worth it. ANTONIO M. AJERO Editor in Chief
NEILWIN JOSEPH L. BRAVO Managing Editor
AGAPITO JOAQUIN JR. Associate Editor
KENNETH IRVING K. ONG ARMANDO B. FENEQUITO JR. CHENEEN R. CAPON BAI FAUZIAH FATIMA SINSUAT AMBOLODTO Reporters MEGHANN STA. INES AQUILES Z. ZONIO NIKKI GOTIANSE-TAN LEANDRO S. DAVAL JR. FUNNY PEARL GAJUNERA Lifestyle Photography CHA MONFORTE JOSEPH LAWRENCE P. GARCIA Correspondents ARLENE D. PASAJE Contributing Photographer Cartoons MUNDA • HENRYLITO TACIO • MA. TERESA L. UNGSON • EDCER C. ESCUDERO AURELIO A. PEÑA • MARY Columnists: CARLOS MA. TERESA L. UNGSON • EDCER C. ESCUDERO • AURELIO A. PEÑA • ZHAUN ORTEGA • BERNADETTE “ADDIE” B. ANN “ADI”• C. QUISIDO • LEANDRO B. DAVAL SR., • NICASIO ANGELO AGUSTIN • VIDA MIA VALVERDE • Economic Analysts:• ENRICO BORBON MARY ANN “ADI” C. QUISIDO • LEANDRO B. DAVAL SR., • NIKKI GOTIANSE-TAN • NICASIO ANGELO AGUSTIN EMILY “GICO” G. DAYANGIRANG • JONALLIER PEREZENRICO “GICO” G. DAYANGIRANG • JONALLIER M. PEREZ ZEN CHUA • CARLOS MUNDA EconomicM. Analyst:
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EDGEDAVAO
I
N 1989, heartthrob Tom Cruise delivered one of his finest performances in Oliver Stone’s Born on the Fourth of July (which was partly shot in the Philippines). In fact, he received an Oscar nomination for his tour de force portrayal of a Vietnam War veteran. The movie came to mind when I was thinking of the title of today’s column. I think (and you may agree or disagree with me on this) it’s but fitting to use it. But since I was not born on the day Americans celebrate Independence Day, I had to change some words to make it more appropriate for my situation. Yes, last January 5, I celebrated my birthday. I don’t believe in Chinese horoscopes but tracing the years of my birth date, I was supposed to have been born in the year of the Ox. In the year I was born, the Ox started on February 15, 1961 and ended on February 4, 1962. I consulted The Handbook of Chinese Horoscopes by Theodora Lau and it gives this description of the Ox personality: “A person born during this year will be dependable, calm, and methodical. A patient and tireless worker, he sticks to routine and conventions. Although he is generally fair-minded and a good listener, it is difficult to make him change his views as he is stubborn and often has strong prejudices.” Here’s an additional piece of information: “Beneath his somewhat modest but neat appearance, the Ox shields a resolute and logical mind. His intelligence and dexterity is hidden by the reticent and undemonstrative front. But in spite of being basically an introvert, his force-
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
VANTAGE POINTS
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Born on the fifth of January ful nature can turn him into THINK ON THESE! a commanding and eloquent speaker when the occasion arises.” In terms of love affairs, here’s what the handbook states: “The Henrylito D. Tacio Ox can be terribly naïve henrytacio@gmail.com about affairs of the heart. He cannot fully comprehend the entrapments of love, much less employ enticing strategy and other allures to plead his romantic cause.” Well, I am in a good company. Among the famous Ox leaders are two American presidents (Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford), British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, and Japan’s Emperor Hirohito. From the entertainment side, among the famous Ox celebrities are Robert Redford, Vanessa Redgrave, Dustin Hoffman (all three are Academy Award winners), singer Sammy Davis, Jr., British actors Richard Burton and Peter Sellers, Greek actress Melina Mercouri, and the famed Walt Disney. Other famous personalities who are members of the Ox club are Willy Brandt, Vincent van Gogh, Eisaku Sato, Boris Spassky, Gore Vidal, Carlo Ponti, Charlie Chaplin, Archbishop Makarios, and Nehru. January 5 was the first day of work
of 2015 and most of my friends would not have come if I had celebrated on that day. So I decided to have a small gathering for them on January 3, a Saturday. Among those who came one after another (but not necessarily in the order) were: Dr. Dante Comedido, Wilfredo Rodolfo III, Rudolph Ian Alama, Wilson Catingub, Armand Mortejo, and Darrel Blatchley. Rogelio Canales and his friend joined us later in another venue. In my Facebook account, the first person to greet me -- although he sent the message privately -- was Jesus “Jess” Dureza. “Advance birthday greetings para ugma Henry!” wrote the former Press Secretary and how head of Philippine Press Institute. “Maayo ni nauna kay ugma daghan na!” He was right. I received several birthday greetings from my family, relatives, friends, and even acquaintances. Last year, I totaled 235 messages. But it was broken this year with almost 300 messages. A record, so to speak. But one of the messages that really touched me were the words of my friend, Dr. Jun Ruiz, a physician trained in the United States and the only Filipino author who has written a chapter in the Merck manual. After reading his greetings, I wrote back that it was great meeting him again after more than a decade of not seeing each other. And despite his busy schedules, he still had time to bring me to a Thai restaurant in Makati. What I was not expecting was his reply. “You are always welcome Henrylito,” Jun penned. “You are the epitome of a
genuine and sincere friend that we need to treasure. Enjoy your day.” When I posted his statement in my wall, Jun wrote another memorable lines below it: “That came from the heart. I am sure your family is proud of all your achievements. Always remember God takes care of his children who take care of themselves and their loved ones.” I also received several text messages. But the most interesting message was from my friend Judd Salas, who works with the Aboitiz Equity Ventures. “Happy birthday, my friend,” he wrote in his first text message. Then he followed it with these words: “I thought that maybe an SMS greetings is more personal than a Facebook greeting. But if the inner (message) is the same, I guess it doesn’t matter.” I texted back: “Thank you, thank you. Ang babait mo.” After reading those words, he replied: “Lolz. I could hear you sing. Ha ha ha.” Thanks to birthday leave, I didn’t have to go back to work on January 5. Instead, I was at home. When my sister Evangeline T. Capuno asked me what I would prepare for my birthday, I replied, “Something new.” So, instead of the usual lechon, we had sinugbang isda, sinugbang baboy, tinolang manok, and chicken adobo. Although there was the usual rice, my mother also cooked corn (which I ate with much gusto). We had fun eating together as it was a family affair. My nephews and nieces had fun time eating the birthday cake, too (courtesy of Dr. Comedido).
Redistricting and renaming
S
INCE 1916 when the region was first represented in the legislature, Davao had only one assemblyman or its equivalent. The same arrangement was adopted until the war, and later as part of Davao del Sur until 1972. During the Interim Batasang Pambansa the city was represented by three legislators but they were under the larger territory known as Region XI. When the regular Batasang Pambansa was created, two assemblymen-at-large were elected. It was only in 1986 that the city was divided into three congressional districts. In 1997, Davao City councilor Aristeo Albay, a lawyer, personally commissioned a study that would recommend the redistricting of the city four districts. The result of the initiative was submitted to Rep. Manuel M. Garcia (2nd District, Davao City) in order that a corresponding bill could be filed in the House but the lawmaker advised against it because the proposal amounted to amending the 1986 Constitution. Aside from filing a resolution in the City Council, Albay also discussed the matter with Rep. Prospero C. Nograles whose district and Garcia’s were the
FAST BACKWARD BY THE ARCHIVIST ones directly affected by the proposal. Under the redistricting plan, barangays Poblacion and Agdao, which was still undivided, would be placed under District I to comply with the population requisite, while the rest of District II would comprise the second legislative district. The constituents in Talomo up to Toril were to be placed under District III, while the new fourth district would comprise basically the regions west of the city, at the boundary of Bukidnon.
Actually, there is nothing in the post1986 Charter that needs amendment in order to push through with the redistricting. Article VI, Section 5 (1) states that the House of Representatives shall be composed of not more than 250 members “unless otherwise fixed by law,” and Section 5 (3) stipulates that each legislative district “shall comprise, as far as practicable, contiguous, compact, and adjacent territory” with a population of at least 250,000. The 1995 survey shows the city with 1,006,840 inhabitants, and in the 2011 census, 1,530,365 residents. The real reason for the lack of enthusiasm to redistrict the city was largely political. Incumbent city mayor Rodrigo Duterte was not supportive of the idea, and there was an unfounded apprehension the creation of a new congressional district would result in the di-vision of Davao into two cities, an idea the City Hall was strongly against. Nearly a dozen years later, the redistricting issue was revived again in the Sangguniang Panlungsod. City Councilor Danilo Dayanghirang, who wanted the creation of two more legislative districts, passed a resolution in 2008
supporting the original Albay initiative, and followed it up with another similar proposal the following year. Central to the Dayanghirang resolution was the additional P100 million in development funds per year (which was increased later to P70 billion for each congressman in 2010) that the city could get for its development efforts if the two new districts were legalized. Meanwhile, during the 12th Congress (2001-04), Rep. Manuel E. Zamora (1st District, Compostela Valley), as author, with Rep. Prospero S. Amatong (2nd Dist., Compostela Valley) as co-sponsor, filed on July 17, 2001 House Bill 1081, which sought to rename the province of Compostela Valley to Davao de Oro. The bill was contained in the Report No. 1957 of the Committee on Local Government submitted on January 5, 2004. The following month, on February 3, the House approved the bill on third reading with a vote of 166 ayes with no objection or abstention. Two days later it was transmitted to the Senate but was received only on Feb. 9, 2004. Being an election year, the bill did not get the upper chamber’s attention.
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NEWS
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Bobby Mohammad, Jafar Pandadagan, Larry Cabaguio, Joel Bustamante, Lito Lapitan, and Halila Sudagar During the presentation of the aspirants, four of them – Mohamad, Pandadagan, Cabaguio, and Bustamante – withdrew their candidacy in favor of Macapayao Apadan. Lapitan expressed support for the decision of his co-aspirants but firmly said he was not withdrawing his candidacy. Sudagar, who was the Sangunniang Kabataan Federation president of the city from 2007- 2010, also opted not to quit the race. In the presentation, Sudagar said she believes she also had the capability to represent the IPs in the city. The NCIP tried to pursue the selection process between Sudagar and Apadan. But they were not able to proceed because only a few Baragwa remained inside Davao City Recreation Center. Ingay said they were
supposed to continue the selection process on Monday between the Apadan and Sudagar but Lapitan objected, saying he did not withdraw his candidacy and so must also be included in the selection. After Lapitan’s motion to include his name in the list of selection, the other aspirants who had already withdrawn their candidaces also said they wanted their names include in the list. The NCIP then decided to include all the name of aspirants, but Lapitan again objected, saying they had already conceded. With tension high, Ingay said they might not be able to follow the City Council’s timeline to have a representative of the Kagan tribe to assume the position of outgoing IPMR councilor Berino Mambo-o Sr. He said the position might remain vacant until they settle the problem in the selection process.
time to renew their businesses,” he said. Bantiding also attributed the high turnout of applications during first four days to information dissemination through the help of the media. “We are hoping that we will hit our target of 30,000 renewal applications before the deadline,” he said. Bantiding reminded business owners who have not yet renewed their permits to renew them before January 20 to avoid penalties. “In order for them (taxpayers) not be penalized, they should renew within
the first 20 days of January. They should not wait after the deadline because we will really impose a 25 percent surcharge if they will renew their permits on 21,” he said. The Business Bureau has already issued 821 permits during the first four days of the renewal period. Last year, the Business Bureau issued 50 permits in the same period. Bantiding said the Business Bureau will still accept new applicants even beyond January 20 because under the tax code of the city, every business should have a permit first before it operates.
be also limited on next Saturday January 17 when Pope Francis flies to visit Tacloban City from 7:45 a.m. to 8:45 a.m. and from 5:45 p.m. to 6:45 p.m. for the Pope’s arrival. Joya said almost 43,000 passengers will be affected by the cancelation of some domestic and international flights. He said that it would be
better for passengers to contact their travel agencies of airlines for rescheduling of their flights. This would also incur economic loss to regional airports. An official of CAAP-Davao, who requested anonymity, said the airport stands to lose millions of pesos because of limited operation in NAIA. [CRC]
with a landscaped entrance gate and a guardhouse that provides round-the-clock security. Ease of living is assured with wide concrete roads, centralized interrelated water system, and underground storm drainage system. In keeping with the laidback, leisure countryside lifestyle of Davao being a famed tourist destination, facilities such as a clubhouse with multi-purpose function room, basketball court and swimming pool are available for the enjoyment of residents and their guests. Indeed, Valle Verde Resi-
dential Estates is the perfect opportunity for homeseekers in Davao to enjoy the comforts, security and spaciousness of living in an exclusive subdivision that is highly accessible—bringing the positive changes and progress of cosmopolitan growth in the region to everyday living. To know more about Valle Verde Residential Estates, call (82) 221-9442 or 9444, or visit the website of Orchard Property Marketing Corporation, the exclusive sales and marketing arm of Sta. Lucia Land at www. opmc.ph.
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VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
STUNTBOY. Ignoring the possibility of breaking his bones, a young boy eager to gain the admiration of his playmates jumps from atop a fence at the Roman Catholic cemetery in Madapo Hills, Davao City yesterday. Lean Daval Jr.
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threats saved for the “temperament of the crowd” who might take this opportunity to get as near to the Pontiff as possible. Catapang further revealed that no drones will be allowed to fly in the path of Pope Francis’ convoy. The AFP chief also dis-
closed that a team of 100 snipers, mostly from the Special Forces units, will be deployed in the buildings along Roxas Boulevard to ensure the safety of the Pontiff against groups or individuals that may attempt to harm him during the scheduled event in the area. (PNA)
area up to Sasa area was broken in December 2012. The pipe was replaced with two smaller ones with a diameter of .725 meter. “We will replace the two existing pipes which has a diameter of .725 meter with a bigger pipes that has a diameter of 1.785 meters,” Delima said. Delima said the new pipe has a higher water holding capacity of 8 percent, enabling the DCWD to reach more clients suffering from limited to no water supply. “It will address the low water pressure in high areas in the central business district of the city,” he said. Delima said the existing water pipe located in the Governor Generoso bridge is part of the Line 1 supplying water to 45,000 commercial or resPadre Faura St. Manila campus of the University of the Philippines taking up foreign studies with intention to become a diplomat. His studies were rudely interrupted by World War II which forced him to join the guerilla movement against the invading Japanese Imperial Forces. He and his brother were captured and incarcerated. Later, upon release, they rejoined the resistance movement. When WWII ended, Ram returned to Manila to resume his studies. Due to the transfer of many courses to the newly opened UP Diliman campus in Quezon City, he opted to enroll in journalism at the Far Eastern University and upon graduation joined the postwar Evening News as sports reporter. Later, he settled in
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idential clients from Bangkal to Sasa. The construction of the new pipe bridge has an estimated cost of more than P115 million. It will be constructed by the consortiums of RD Policarpio & Co., Inc., Allado Construction Co., Inc., and TGV Builders Inc. Delima gave assurance that the construction of the new mainlines will not cause further water interruptions in the some parts of the city because DCWD already installed two temporary pipes that transport water to its clients. Delima said DCWD and DPWH both agreed that temporary facilities will be removed once DCWD finishes the project by the end of March.
forms can be downloaded from www.happiest-pinoy. com and are available in any of Cebuana Lhuillier’s more than 1,700 branches nationwide. Accomplished nomination forms can be mailed together with supporting documents to: SEARCH FOR THE HAPPIEST PINOY SECRETARIAT, PJ Lhuillier Group of Companies, Inc., 2/F Annex 2, PJL Corporate Centre, 1782 N. Garcia cor. Candelaria Sts., Makati City 1209. Scanned copies of the accomplished nomination forms and supporting documents can also be emailed to www.happiest-pinoy@ pjlhuillier.com. Nominations can be submitted from October 24, 2014 until March 31, 2015. Villaseran urged nominators to make their presentations stand out as these will be used by the company to filter the entries before the final 20 or 30 nominees are given to the judges. The board of judges is composed of CNN 2009 Hero of the Year Efren Peñaflorida, Camarines Sur 3rd District Rep. Maria Leonor Robredo, McCann-Erickson Chairman
Emeritus Emily Abrera, Assistant Secretary Anne Corominas, Cebuana Lhuillier Insurance Solutions (CLIS) General Manager Jonathan Batangan, Happiest Pinoy grand winners Winston Maxino and Rommel Arellano, inspirational speaker and corporate trainer Francis Kong, and broadcast journalist Luchi Cruz-Valdez. Villaseran said the search was launched in Manila in October last year and has since garnered almost 10,000 nominations. He said the company targets to get as many as 30,000 nominations this year, more than double the 13,000 nominations in 2012. The Search for the Happiest Pinoy was launched in 2009 and has awarded two grand winners. Winston Maxino, a corporate executive who was diagnosed with Ankylosing Spondylitis, a degenerative and incurable bone disease, was declared the first Happiest Pinoy grand winner in 2010. Rommel Arellano, a guidance counselor who was afflicted with polio at age 1, was declared Happiest Pinoy in 2012.
General Santos City and established a local newspaper and then later came to Davao City to work here. Despite his sight-straining job, Ram did not wear eyeglasses.As sort of reward for the role that he played in the anti-Marcos “Yellow Friday Movement,” Ram was appointed press secretary of the late OIC Mayor Zafiro L. Respicio, who also died last year. He is the father of sportswriter Charles Maxey. Samuel “Sammy” Oliverio was a nightclub singer who joined broadcasting after older brother Emmanuel or “Dondon” suffered a massive stroke and was unable to go back to radio work. Last year, after being a virtual of the wheelchair for close to two decades, “Dondon” finally died. A few months
after that, Sammy was shot dead in Digos City where he had been a hard-hitting radio announcer. The other media practitioner who died a violent death was “Sonny” Garcia whose real name was Ramon Teodoro Yuvienco (TY) Garcia. “TY”, who owned “Nanay Bebeng,” a chain of restaurants specializing in native dishes, wrote a column for the Mindanao Times. He was abducted and killed allegedly by an umbrella girl and her boyfriend, her alleged accomplice, now being detained while being tried for murder. Other mediamen who wrote -30- in 2014 were Rogelio J. Flaviano, publisher-editor of the People’s Daily Forum and part-owner of the Mindanao Daily Mirror; Rogelio Israel,
long time anchorman of the popular “Dangpanan” public service program of station DXDN of the University of Mindanao Broadcasting Network in Tagum City; award-winning columnist, literary writer and English college instructor Renato “Rene” E. Bartolo Sr.; and Rodrigo “Ody” Gajitos, columnist, author, retired school teacher, table tennis (pingpong) champion and retired employee of the Philippine Ports Authority. Aside from being a well-listened to broadcast and radio station manager, Israel was a multi-awarded Rotarian and Jaycee leader, a positive factor in politics. He got elected as a member of the Davao del Norte provincial board several times. He was married to a lady judge.
8 Media... FFROM 3
11 BIGGER PICTURE
EDGEDAVAO VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
SIARGAO ON MY MIND
By DIANA LHYD SUELTO Photos by Amyssa Ocariza
W
HEN one is stuck at work doing the same boring, repetitive things, one tends to look at the latest vacation pictures and wishes time can be turned back and be there instead of here. That is exactly what I am doing – looking at pictures of the short vacation I took in Siargao before Christmas and wishing I were right there right now, chilling on the rattan hammock under the nice hut while listening to the waves crash on the beach wall. It was my first time in Siargao and it definitely will not be my last. The tiny island on Surigao del Norte is one of the best places to just laze around and enjoy the day as it passes by. Unilke Boracay, Siargao is not filled with tourists, although there are a not a few “eye candies” that you can feast on. The best part is because it is not as com-
mercialized as other tourist destinations, you won’t have to rob a bank just so you can have a good time. What I love about the island is that it is perfect for an adventurer like myself. There are so many body ache-inducing activities that you can do. Siargao is best known for its waves, therefore it would be a shame if you go to there and not learn how to ride them big waves. Just tell the front desk receptionist of the resort you are staying in that you want to take surfing lessons and they will gladly hook you up with an instructor. An hour of surfing lesson costs P500. You have to try surfing. The exhilaration of being able to stand up on the board and actually glide with the waves is worth the soreness you will feel the next day. Plus, you’ll get to brag to your friends how you rode the waves, even if you just did it once after a hundred
tries. I did it four times. I’m a natural. Siargao is dotted by a lot of small islands and there are island-hopping tours that will take you to some of them. I was able to go to Naked Island, a small sand islet that you can walk around in five minutes. The islet constantly changes its shape depending on how the waves decide how it will look. There are days when it looks like a small hill, and some days it is as flat as your floor. I also got to visit Daku Island, so called because it is the biggest of the small islands. It is where tourists take a break for lunch. You can sit on its beach and watch expert surfers do their thing a few hundred meters away and wish you were as good as they are. The third and last island I went to is called Guyam. It reminded me of Waniban Island in Mati. One side of the
island is rocky and the other side is sandy and you can walk around it in just a few minutes. Siargao is also the perfect place to go on a relaxing motorcycle rides. There’s no traffic congestion and the roads are long and smooth. It is also the best way to discover what the island hides, such as the empty, ghostlike Bayud Resort
which is just beside the overly expensive Dedon Island Resort (a night’s stay will have you coughing out P34,000). Motorcyle rides will also allow you to see the island’s other beauties, like its old houses, rice paddies, seaside boulevards, and church. If you are lucky enough, you might be able to pass by a fisherman un-
loading his fresh catch. How I wish I were in Siargao right now… Shoutout to the Department of Tourism, for arranging the trip and to Siargao Adventure for making sure I had a great time, and for Amyssa for being such a fun travel companion. Until our next adventure.
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VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
INdulge!
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
EDGEDAVAO
Finding comfort at J. Palermo’s Diner FOOD
By HENRYLITO D. TACIO
WHEN my View editor-in-chief, Joseph Cortes, asked me to write something for the food issue of the magazine, I paused for few seconds (while thinking of a food street located in the city). I couldn’t think of any. There are some good restaurants and eateries in the city but they are not situated in one area only. They are scattered all over the city. So I told him that I couldn’t write the assignment since Davao City has no such thing as a food street here. But it was only a few days ago that I learned the city has one, after all. It’s situated in the Circumferential Road. There are several out-of-the-way restaurants, which very few Dabawenyos know of. In the past, you could only find Sea Green Café and Lifestyle Shop and Rumah Kari. As the city boomed, eateries have also sprouted like mushrooms. Consider these two additions: Siggy’s Davao Lechon Liempo and Caitlyn’s Dimsum and Specialty House. The most recent to open a restaurant in the area is no less than Juliana Palermo. Yes, the former Miss Kadayawan who made her first movie screen appearance in Tikoy Aguiluz’s “www.XXX.com.” Her other movies include the following: 2004’s “Panaghoy Sa Suba,” 2005’s “Lisensyadong Kamao,” 2006’s “Kaleldo,” 2006’s “Mourning Girls,” 2007’s “Faces of Love,” 2007’s “Agent X44,” and 2006’s “Kasal, Kasali, Kasalo” and its sequel “Sakal, Sakali, Saklolo” (2007). Palermo never dreamed of becoming a movie star. After winning the Miss Kadayawan in 2002, she went to Manila and joined the Ponds Facial Wash Ms. Soft Skin Search. With a brown complexion, she was beaten by the Jaboom
Twins (Jaja Gonzales and Boomboom Gonzales). But Aguiluz saw her. She was given the lead role in www.XXX.com, which earned her an acting award. According to her, she joined the movies to support her then 15-yearold brother who was blind and had autism. After years of making several movies, she went abroad and worked there. Last September, she returned to Davao. “I want my son to have his own culture, instead of growing in various places of the world,” she said. Palermo – a screen name given to her by Aguiluz after a holiday spot – said Davao is the best place for her son to grow up and learn about life and living. At first, she had a hard time figuring out the kind of business she would engage in that could sustain her and her son in the city. Then she saw the ad that Chef Edgar Arvidsson’s Western Express Food was up for sale. Thinking of having a restaurant business, she bought it. She and some of her chosen staff underwent an extensive training with the Swedish chef. As if it was a destiny, she also found a place in Circumferential Road at Marfori Heights Subdivision corner Mabini Street, where the J. Palermo Diner is now located. “Actually, it was my brother who gave me an idea of opening a restaurant,” said Palermo, who is actually Alvi July S. Juanico in real life. “He is a Christian missionary and if there are meetings and gatherings, they can actually use the restaurant.” Palermo is referring to
Nacho salad.
Burger ala Edgar all in.
Swedish meatballs.
The author with Juliana Palermo. Alwood Wick, who came to Davao City last January 2014. They are halfsiblings as both have the same mother. Like Palermo, Wicks and his family are also considering settling in Davao for good. Although she never had formal schooling on cooking – except for the training she went through re-
Panacotta.
cently – Palermo has been cooking since she was still a teenager. “I grew up in the United States, where my mother was working as a nurse,” she recalled. “Every time I came home from school, my mother wasn’t home yet. But since I was already hungry, I just cooked my own.”
Last January 3, we – Alwood, my friend Rudolph Ian Alama, and myself – had the opportunity of tasting the food Palermo prepared herself. The first we tried was cured salmon, which was served with salad and hard-boiled eggs. Next was beef bourguignon (a classic French beef casserole served with roasted potatoes). We had not consumed everything yet when the Thai chicken curry came along. “Are you ready for a surprise?” Palermo asked us. The surprise was burger ala Edgar “all in.” This mind-boggling burger is served with two beef patties, garlic sauce, and salsa. Rudolph and I had a hard time figuring out on how to eat the burger. The next two servings were my all-time favorites: Swedish meatballs (served
with mashed potatoes and gravy) and nachos salad. The ceviche was also good. For dessert, we were given the panacotta with berry sauce. Aside from those served to us, J. Palermo Diner also offers tacos, Caesar salad, pasta carbonara, spaghetti Bolognese, burger steak, and French onion soup. Just like the other food we tasted, they are as mouthwatering. “I only cook what I like to eat,” she said. Don’t worry about prices. The food is reasonably priced, from as low as P80 to as high as P295 per order. Drinks cost from P40 to P50 while alcoholic prices range from P55 to P150. Palermo doesn’t only cook, she also sometimes serves the food herself. And if she’s not so busy, you may be lucky to have your picture taken with her.
EDGEDAVAO
A2 INdulge! UP AND ABOUT
Globe IG boosts companies, SMEs’ competitive advantage with real M2M solutions
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
EVENT
ONE of its executives shared that the networking of machines and devices are already evident in everyday living, connecting and enabling a vast array of equipment - from enterprise servers to everyday products - to obtain data and insights about the status of an asset. He shared these facts as the ICT arm of Globe Telecom recently sponsored conferences in the Philippines which were attended by heads and managers of supply chain, purchasing, logistics, materials, procurement and warehousing. “In 2008, the number of people on earth was exceeded by the number of things connected to the Internet. And by ‘things,’ we mean more than just smartphones and tablets. By 2020, there will be about 50 to 75 billion connected devices around the world,” said JD Montelibano, Globe IG Head of Product Management for Business Applications. He added that, “these numbers are spurred by the expanding wireless network coverage worldwide, providing necessary bandwidth for everything to be connected and creating a critical mass of mainstream use. For Globe, the new rule for the future is that, anything that can be connected will be connected. Thus, we are ushering in a new era of ‘Telco 2.0’ by providing industries with best-in-breed solutions beyond our core services, such as M2M.” M2M regional demand: “Asia, where the Philippines is an emerging player, is the largest regional M2M market accounting for 42% of global M2M connections, followed by Europe at 28%; North America at 18%; Latin America, 8%; Africa, 4%; and Oceania, 1%;” he said, quoting the GSM Association or the GSMA which represents the interests of mobile operators worldwide. As a telco company, Globe is a founding member of Bridge Alliance, the region’s largest machine-to-machine alliance today, a one-stop-shop experience for M2M deployment across the Asia Pacific region and the center of excellence for M2M services and solutions. Montelibano commented that, “with Philippine organizations now operating in a global setting, especially with the onset of the Asean Economic Cooperation, they can hurdle the challenges of blurred geographical advantages, compromised proprietary technologies and increasing difficulties in breakthrough innovations in products and services.” Montelibano also noted that, as key supply chains become more complex, companies and SMEs face a myriad of challenges involving data handling, delays and inefficiencies, as well as human limitations. They now contend with various measures to keep up with the pace of their businesses, which may compromise productivity, cost and safety of assets to name a few. “M2M is all about taking more control over assets, as it enables remote surveillance, 24/7 support and reducing costs as well as operating expenses. But above and beyond these, its greatest benefit is providing the competitive advantage to companies as well as SMEs in terms of business analytics, spanning standard access and reporting, to analytics, which allow statistical analysis, forecasting and extrapolation, predictive modeling, and until optimization,” told Globe Vice President for IG Rey Lugtu. Globe advantage on M2M: The wide mobile and broadband network of Globe, he pointed out, makes it possible for businesses to maximize the three key features of M2M, which is optimization through real-time monitoring and maintenance, transitioning from “preventive” to “predictive;” efficiencies by eliminating delays, excessive overtime charges and accident-related incidents; as well as security through proactive alerts and faster reaction time to theft and pilferage. “The entire degree of intelligence runs the gamut of analytics which will be the key to supply chain optimization. Customers can harness data into information, which can lead them to insight and action,” Lugtu emphasized. He also asserted that the Globe approach to M2M is “holistic,” involving the user, subscribed M2M devices, its modernized network and state-of-the art Network Operations Center. These are all backed by the telco’s stamp of credibility on accessibility, storage capability, flexible plans and 24/7 managed services. For more information on Globe IG’s M2M solutions, visit m2msolutions.globe.com.ph or send an email to ig.marketing@globe.com.ph.
L-R: ANFLOCOR AVP for Systems & Audit Mr. Richard Go, VP for Cash & Bank Ms. Susan Matus, GM Mikel Villaverde, Senior AVP for Finance & Admin Ms. Elisa Estanislao, AVP for Cash & Bank Ms. Lillian Castillo, AVP for Finance Ms. Pamela Pasinabo, Asst. Resort Manager Heartwell Gutierrez.
The holidays at Pearl Farm
FOR TWO WEEKS and a day, Pearl Farm Beach Resort had been the holiday retreat that homed guests from both local and foreign roots. Lined-up events and activities turned every day into merriment.
Starting off with the annual Lighting of Parola last December 16, the resort embraced the spirit of fellowship and solidarity with the theme One Love for Christmas. It was led by General Manager Josu Mikel Villaverde, who was accompanied by ANFLOCOR Vice President for Cash & Bank Susan Matus, in lighting the iconic Parola. Guests from ANFLOCOR, public and private sectors, travel agencies, and media graced the event. Captivating everyone’s soft spots, UP Mindanao Koro Kantahanay performed acapela Christmas songs throughout the evening. Up ‘til Christmas Eve, the resort was filled with soulful holiday songs sung by duet Chinky Amparo and Lyra Arriola, USeP Harmonia Polifonica Chorale, San Pedro College’s Coro Expressivo, and the Choristers of Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish - Obrero. Toys and treats were
New Year’s countdown at Malipano Island. given to the children of Brgy. Adecor, Kaputian on Christmas Day as a way of giving back to the community. December 26 featured Dabawenyo Magikero Gino Alonzo Janducayan who showcased comical tricks of magic and ventriloquism. The following day, a Mindanaoan theme enveloped the night with authentic Mindanaoan cuisines and a special number from the Kalumon Performing Ensemble. On December 29, a Videoke King from the guests was hailed as a karaoke contest was held during dinner. Then guests flocked the face painting booth the next day. Cocktails, bingo and movie night were consecutively done from the 27th to the 30th. The New Year Count-
The Parola Bar by night. down was jam-packed with guests coming from more than ten countries, who were entertained by the ZySix Band and Utopia Band. The Spiral Firedancers exhibited firepoi dances that instantly wooed the crowd. Guests had their ala torotot festi-
val as they blew their torotots right before the splendid, multi-hued fireworks display. For two decades and more, Pearl Farm Beach Resort has been the blissful retreat for all. Visit www. pearlfarmresort.com for more resort details.
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
EDGEDAVAO
INdulge! A3
ENTERTAINMENT
GMA Network brings viewers a step closer to their second chance BEGINNING January 12, a compelling and encouraging series will captivate the hearts of the Kapuso viewers as GMA Network presents an emotionally engaging primetime drama program Second Chances.
The series is a story about heartache and the love that heals it which topbills Jennylyn Mercado, Camille Prats, Rafael Rosell, and Raymart Santiago. It will dramatically narrate how an opportunity can change someone’s life and will also provide a powerful response to viewers’ demand for validation that indeed, we all deserve a second chance. Fresh from her success at the recently concluded 2014 Metro Manila Film
critically-acclaimed director Laurice Guillen, Second Chances also stars Roi Vinzon, Miriam Quiambao, Gerard Pizarras, Frencheska Farr, Miggs Cuaderno, Joshen Bernardo, and Chynna Ortaleza with special participation of Luis Alandy, Jackie Rice, Glenda Garcia, Ayen Laurel and Mr. Ricky Davao. The creative team is composed of Creative Director Roy Iglesias; Creative Head for Primetime, Concept Creator and Headwriter RJ Nuevas; Writers Des Severino,
Festival, Best Actress and one of Kapuso prime leading ladies Jennylyn Mercado once again delivers an unquestionable performance as Lyra Ber-
mudez. Her life suddenly changes when a tragedy befalls her family and she loses both her husband and son in an instant. All set to show a new
Lobert Villela, and Onay Sales; and Brainstormers Nehem Dallego and Kenneth Enriquez. Second Chances, created by the GMA Drama group, is supervised by the Executive-in-Charge of Production Lilybeth G. Rasonable; VP for Drama Redgie A. Magno; AVP for Drama Cheryl Ching-Sy; Program Manager Helen Rose S. Sese; and Executive Producer Carol Galve. Don’t miss the muchawaited telecast of Second Chances beginning January 12, Monday to Friday on GMA Telebabad.
dimension to her acting ability is Camille Prats who will portray the character of Rebecca Villacorta, the childhood friend of Lyra. A bipolar who became addicted to drugs as she pines for the son she lost. Returning to primetime is sought-after leading man Rafael Rosell as Jerome Padilla. He is a lawyer who has always loved Lyra even before she married her late husband. Seasoned actor Raymart Santiago breathes life to the character of a single father and widower, Bernard Castelo. He finds the meaning of life and how to love again when he meets Lyra. Under the helm of
Jairus plays physically challenged teenager in “MMK”
KAPAMILYA teen star Jairus Aquino will inspire young viewers to strive hard for their dreams amid challenges in the upcoming “Maalaala Mo Kaya” episode this Saturday (January 10).
Jairus will portray the character of Andre who has always lived life happily despite having difficulty walking because of a rare muscle disease called Muscular Dystrophy. He grew up to be an optimistic student, and his father Rodolfo (to be played by Dominic Ochoa), was always at his side to lift his spirits up
with constant love and encouragement. How will Andre deal with life’s challenges when his ultimate source of strength, his father, suddenly leaves his
side? Will he succumb to hopelessness, or will he continue to reach for the dreams that his father envisioned for him? Also starring in the upcoming “MMK” episode
are Lara Quigaman, Eliza Pineda, Angelo Ilagan, and JB Agustin. The episode is directed by Raz de la Torre and written by Mary Rose Colindres. “MMK” is led by business unit head Malou Santos and creative manager Mel Mendozadel Rosario. Capturing the hearts of Filipino viewers all over the world for the past 23 years, “Maalaala Mo Kaya” has legions of fans from different generations who cried, laughed, fell in love, and got inspired through the real-life narratives of the show’s letter-senders.
January 8, 2015
NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB Ben Stiller, Robin Williams PG 13
12:00 | 2:00 | 4:00 | 6:00 | 8:00 | 10:00 LFS
THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES Martin Freeman,Ian Mckellen, Richard Armitage PG 13
1:00 | 4:00 | 7:00 | 10:00 LFS
SEVENTH SON Ben Barnes, Julianne Moore, Jeff Bridges PG 13
R-16
12:40 | 3:00 | 5:20 | 7:40 | 10:00 LFS
THE AMAZING PRAYBEYT BENJAMIN / * LOVE ROSIE PG 13 / *R 13
Vice Ganda, Richard Yap / * Lily Collins, Sam Claflin 12:00 | 2:00 | 4:00 LFS / * 6:00 | 8:00 | 10:00 LFS
EDGEDAVAO
A4 INdulge!
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
FOOD
Leftover favourites: Going loco for pasta
PASTA is a staple food. Of course, it is rooted from traditional Italian cuisine that has won our hearts since we can remember. Mostly, pasta is commonly used to refer to a wide variety of pasta dishes. From what we know, anything that has pasta, sauce and cheese is a dish in itself. In the Philippines, we like ours sweet while in some parts of the world, they like it differently. From alfredo to bolognaise, we have our version that we love and crave for. But, did you know that for every pasta variety there is a sauce to match? Simple sauce like pesto is best for long and thin strands of pasta. Tomato sauce, on the other hand, is best with thicker pastas. For chunkier sauces, such are best with holed, short and tubular pasta. The ratio of the sauce to the pasta varies – mostly depending on one’s preference and texture. Traditionally, the sauce need not overpower the whole dish. In short, it should be “just right” – something that we truly not know how to measure. Agree? I think so too. DID YOU KNOW
THAT... Both dried and fresh pasta are categorically used in 3 kinds of pasta dishes – PASTA ASCUITTA (cooked pasta served with complementary sauce or condiment), PASTA IN BRODO (pasta served soup like) and PASTA AL FORNO (pasta is incorporated with another dish)? Now, that is versatility! Let’s get into the PASTA vibe and explore! Here are 3 easy to make and budget friendly pasta
sauces that will blow your taste buds away. Easy Breezy Pasta In a pan, warm ¼ cup olive oil. Add 1 cup halved fresh tomatoes (use the cherry variety), sliced 3 garlic cloves and a bunch of fresh basil leaves (or 1 teaspoon dried basil). Let simmer. When the tomatoes are soft, add your pasta and add some cheese and season to taste. Serve hot with a slice (or two) of garlic melba toast. On the Go Pasta
Before you add pasta to the boiling water, gently slide in some diced veggies (zucchini and carrots). Cook for a few minutes, until crisp-tender, and then scoop out with a slotted spoon. Cook your pasta. Heat your all purpose cream, garlic paste and mushroom sauce in a sauté pan. Add cooked vegetables and pasta; toss
well. Toss and Eat I love it light, quick and fragrant! In a pan, sauté chopped garlic until translucent. Add chopped fresh basil and roughly chopped nuts. Add cooked pasta and toss. You can add some sun dried tomatoes, pitted and chopped olives
and even some roasted red bell pepper. Drizzle with olive oil before serving. Make #TheRoyalChef your Thursday habit! Email me at leeb ay 4 57@ y a h o o. c o m (subject:RoyalChef) or tag me on instagram (herroyalheiress) for your delicious pics and food finds!
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
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Account Executives (2) - Male / Female, not more than 30 years old - Candidate must posses a Bachelor/ College Degree in any Business field. - Willing to work under pressure, flexible, persuasive, can speak fluently and computer literate - A team player - With Basic Salary, Transportation, Communication, allowance + Commission For interested applicants, you may send your resume to: HR Department EDGEDavao
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- At least high school graduate, not more than 30 years old - Physically and mentally fit - Can handle minor repairs of the machine - Has the ability to be cool under pressure of deadlines and complex projects - Experience of at least one year Door 14 Alcrej Building, Quirino Ave., 8000 Davao City, Philippines E-mail: marketing@edgedavao.net zion_publishing@yahoo.com Telefax: (082) 2213601 Website: www.edgedavao.net
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SPORTS
EDGEDAVAO
VOL. 7 ISSUE 209 • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
PINOY PRIDE 29 IN DAVAO Pagara, Servania will be tested
T
WO of the more promising boxers from the ALA Promotions stable, light welterweight Jason “El Nino” Pagara and super bantamweight Genesis “Azukal” Servania, will be tested when they face-off against tough Mexican opponents in the 29th edition of the hugely successful “Pinoy Pride” series in Davao City on February 7. The 26 year old Pagara who has a record of 34-2 with 21 knockouts is coming off a successful
fourth title defense of his WBO International title against resilient Mexican Mario Meraz, scoring a TKO with one second remaining in the 4th round when referee Danrex Tapdasan called a halt despite the fact that Meraz beat the count, raised his hands and indicated he was ready to continue last June 21, Pagara won the title with a smashing 6th round TKO in a rematch with menacing-looking Rosbel Montoya who had won a unanimous ten round decision to grab the WBO Asia Pacific Youth title on September 10, 2011. Pagara will battle 27 year old Cesar “El Dolar” Chavez who has a record of 23-7 with 11 knockouts.
JASON PAGARA. The 26 year old Pagara who has a record of 34-2 with 21 knockouts is coming off a successful fourth title defense of his WBO International title against resilient Mexican Mario Meraz.
Chavez is coming off a rousing 3rd round knockout of Javier Gallegos last October 3 and had earlier won the
Sharapova starts strong in Brisbane I N other tennis action Tuesday, at the Brisbane International, second-ranked Maria Sharapova opened her 2015 season by winning nine straight games in a 6-0, 6-1 win over Yaroslava Shvedova. The Russian had a bye in the first round at the season-opening WTA event in the sub-tropical east coast city, where Williams won the title in 2014 but skipped this year in favour of the Hopman Cup. Third-seeded Angelique Kerber advanced earlier Tuesday with a 6-3, 7-5 win over Daria Gavrilova. In a men’s first-round upsets, Lukasz Kubot of Poland beat fifth-seeded Kevin Anderson of South Africa 7-6 (3), 6-4 and Sam Groth beat defending champion Lleyton Hewitt 6-3, 6-2 in a night match. Seventh-seeded Alexandr Dolgopolov of Ukraine advanced over Carlos Berlocq of Argentina 6-2, 6-3.
Venus advances in Auckland At the ASB Classic in Auckland, New Zealand, third-seeded Venus Williams made short work of her first match of the new year by sweeping past Jana Cepelova of Slovakia 6-4, 6-0 in 52 minutes. The seven-time major winner reached the final of the Auckland hard-court tournament last year. “I was welcomed when I came on the court and I felt like I left off right from last year,” Williams said. “I felt comfortable right away.” Top-seeded Caroline Wozniacki had to work hard to subdue qualifier Julia Glushko of Israel 6-3, 6-2. Urzula Radwanska beat former French Open champion Francesca Schiavone 6-4, 7-5 and another qualifier, Lucie Hradecka of the Czech Republic, toppled fifth-seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova 3-6, 7-6 (6), 6-4
vacant Mexican Pacific Coast light welterweight title with a 5th round TKO of Fernando Hernandez on December 29, 2011 but lost by a 4th round knockout to Roberto Ortiz in a WBC Silver title fight on February 4, 2012. The undefeated 23 year old Servania who has a record of 25-0 with 11 knockouts apparently faces a tougher challenge than Pagara when he battles the 32 year old “Black Pearl” Juan Luis Hernandez who sports a record of 17-3-1 with 9 knockouts. After a layoff of more than three years Hernandez returned to the ring and scored what Mexican media described as a “difficult victory” over Pedro Palma last November 14 winning by a unanimous decision with judges Franco Esteban scoring the fight 58-56 whike Carlos Briones and Antonio Villas turned in identical scorecards of 59-56. From the opening bell Palma came with everything in search of victory and three punches from all angles while Hernandez connected with far more effective punches. In a clash for the WBC International super flyweight title, Hernandez engaged Carlos Rueda in an epic ring war that was considered Tijuana’s “Fight of the Year” in which the “Black Pearl” dropped Rueda twice in round two but was himself dropped in round seven and lost by TKO. Boxing writer Felipe Leon of Fight News reported that with Box Latino and
PM Promotions planning for a rematch, Hernandez was matched against Alejandro “Timon” Martinez (12-1-1, 8 KO’s) of Puerto Rico. Leon said Martinez “began the bout relaxed and quicker to the punch as he counter punched Tijuana’s Hernandez easily developing a mouse under the right of Hernandez by the end of the first stanza. Hernandez took control in the second as he attacked the body trying to slow down the come forward style of Martinez. Near the end of the round, Hernandez lands a right hand that gets Martinez’s attention and “Perla Negra” tries to finish the night early attacking furiously until the bell but to no avail. Hernandez begins to slug it out in the third hoping “Timon” had not recouped from the last round. Martinez begins to box as he tries to keep the attacking Hernandez at bay. By mid round, Hernandez hurts Martinez again and speeds up his assault but only to leave himself open for a left hook that makes his knees buckle. In the third round, Hernandez slowed down considerably as he began to breathe thru his mouth.” In its continuing description of the fight Felipe Leon reported “The fight moved to the center of the ring for round four as both fighters were content to make it a phone booth war and began to exchange upper cut from either fist. Hernandez seemed to have the upper hand. Hernandez began to box for the
beginning of round five, using the ring and moving around its perimeter. Despite Martinez not being as skillful on the inside as Hernandez, standing a w k wa r d ly at close range, “Timon” decided to force the action once again to the proverbial phone booth and attacked the body of GENESIS SERVANIA. The undefeated 23 Hernandez. In the year old Servania who has a record of 25-0 sixth and seventh, with 11 knockouts apparently faces a tougher a stronger and challenge than Pagara when he battles the fresher Martinez 32 year old “Black Pearl” Juan Luis Hernandez. stalked Hernandez around the ring as the Tijua- goes after the mid section of na favorite looked worse for the Cosa Rican trying to end wear and boxed around the the night early. Martinez gets ring trying to stay away from hit with pot shots as Hernanhis attacker. dez although seemingly windEarly on in the eighth Mar- ed is still able to box in the tinez rocks Hernandez with a tenth round. As Martinez tries hard right hand and seconds to gain real estate coming in later lands a left hook to the with his hands down, Hernanbody that drops “Perla Neg- dez meets him with jab/right ra” to the canvas wincing in hand combinations through pain. Suprinsingly, Hernandez out the tenth and final round. beats the count and goes on Judge Juan Carlos Pelayo the counter attack and wins scored it 95-94 for Hernandez the round. Presumably behind while Monique Rendon saw on the score cards, Hernandez it the other way for Martinez begins the ninth boxing from also with a 95-94 tally while the perimeter but then thinks the tie breaking judge Juan against it and invites Martinez Jose Ramirez scored it 96-93 into the phone booth in the awarding a split decision for middle of the ring again and Hernandez.”
Spurs bow to Pistons
STOPPER. Marco Belimelli shoots one for the Spurs.
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AN Antonio Spurs point guard Tony Parker started but played just 13 minutes Tuesday night in a loss against the Detroit Pistons in his third attempt to get back on the court after straining his left hamstring. Parker had missed 13 games total since initially suffering the injury Dec. 5 at Memphis. Parker had missed
five straight games since aggravating the injury for a second time Dec. 25 against Oklahoma City. “It’s been very frustrating,” Parker said. “It’s never happened to me before for that long, but it happens. Hopefully it’s behind me and the last treatment I did is hopefully the good one and now I can put it behind me
and just get back to playing and playing good basketball.” Parker was 0-for-3 shooting and had just two assists, not playing in the second half, but he did not appear to aggravate the injury — great news for the defending NBA champion Spurs. The Pistons beat the Spurs 105-104 on a last-second shot. Parker did not talk to the
media after the game. Coach Gregg Popovich, when asked if his point guard was OK, said, “Yeah, he’s healthy.” “He wanted to play, but I’m being conservative,” Popovich said. “He had 13 minutes. That’s good after sitting out as long as he did; make sure he doesn’t reinjure the thing.”
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Mysterious tiredness hounds Serena W ORLD No.1 Serena Williams was left searching for answers after her mystery tiredness continued during her shock 6-2 6-1 Hopman Cup loss to Canadian Eugenie Bouchard on Tuesday night. Williams, who needed a mid-match coffee hit to get over Italian Flavia Pennetta on Monday, again looked flat in her second match of the year. The 33-year-old battled to hold serve throughout the 50-minute contest, and appeared lethargic in her attempts to chase down balls. “I don’t know what’s wrong with me. I’m so tired,” Williams said after the match. “It’s weird. I can’t get my body to move. I feel like I’ve got no energy. “It’s a little frustrating because I know I can play two thousand times better.” Williams arrived in Perth from America on Saturday, but she doesn’t think the fatigue is purely due to jetlag. “I’ve been trying to rest up,” Williams said. “I did a little gym work, but I just felt depleted. I don’t know why. I don’t know how to describe it.
“I’ve just got to get my feet moving. I have to figure it out. Hopefully I can do better in the next match.” Bouchard, who had lost her previous two encounters to Williams, capitalised on her opponent’s lethargy with some sharp ground strokes. “I know she didn’t definitely play her best,” Bouchard said. “Maybe she needed another coffee. I know she can serve amazing. But I’m happy I stayed with it and held my nerve to the end.” Canada secured the tie win when world No.56 Vasek Pospisil notched an upset 6-3 7-6 (7-4) win over big-serving American John Isner. “He’s one of the best serves in the world right now,” Pospisil said. “You’ve just got to go with your instincts. “I’d won our last meeting and I knew what to expect.” Williams perked up for the mixed doubles, combining with Isner to secure a 6-3 7-5 win. The US must beat the Czech Republic on Thursday night if they are to secure a spot in Saturday’s final.
ORLD No.6 Eugenie Bouchard will consider joining the super coach bandwagon as she attempts to snare a maiden grand slam and become No.1 in the world. Bouchard is currently without a coach after ending her eight-year partnership with Nick Saviano last November. In the meantime, 35-yearold former hitting partner Diego Ayala has joined up with the Bouchard camp to help her through the Australian summer. Bouchard is in no rush to line up a full-time coach, but said she would consider following the leads of Agnieszka Radwanska (Martina Navratilova) and Andy Murray (Amelie Mauresmo) by hiring a tennis legend down the track. “That would be an interesting option for sure. A lot of the players are starting to do that a bit,” Bouchard said. “I think a voice of someone that has been there before is definitely helpful.” Bouchard enjoyed a breakout year in 2014, with the 20-year-old reaching the final of Wimbledon, as well as the semi-finals of the Australian Open and French Open. Despite the success, Bouchard felt the time was right to part ways with Saviano. “I felt like I needed to go in a different direction and I need some new voice to get my game to a higher level,” she said. “My ultimate goal is
to win a grand slam and to be number one in the world. “I felt like I needed to change and at the moment I am working with someone that I have worked with in the past and that is where it is at for now. “It’s going good so far.” Bouchard started 2015 in poor fashion, losing 6-0 6-4 to veteran Lucie Safarova at the Hopman Cup. But she rebounded strongly against Serena Williams on Tuesday night, thrashing the world No.1 6-2 6-1 to revive Canada’s hopes of winning the mixed-teams tournament. Bouchard’s next assignment is against Italian Flavia Pennetta on Thursday.
EDGEDAVAO
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IMPRESSIVE WIN. Eugenie Bouchard of Canada plays a backhand to Serena Williams of the United States in the women’s singles match during day three of the Hopman Cup at Perth Arena on January 6, 2015 in Perth, Australia.
EASY FOR GENIE
Bouchard makes quick work of Serena in Hopman Cup By NEILWIN JOSEPH L. BRAVO
Wanted: Supercoach S for Bouchard W
SUPERCOACH FOR EUGENIE? Eugenie Bouchard is shopping around for a “Supercoach.”
SPORTS
URPRISINGLY easy. That’s the way to best describe Euegenie Bouchard’s first ever win over world no. 1 Serena Williams after the crowd favourite from Quebec glided through a 6-2 6-1 win at the Hopman Cup on Tuesday. The comely Canadian mastered the ferocious Williams with a wide-ranging menu of shots that dotted the corners of the ocean blue court of Perth Arena leaving the highly-favored American gasping by the second set. Surprisingly, it was Williams who wilted down the stretch, mysteriously softening on her serves and looked loaded on her legs. The win came after Bouchard’s opening day loss
to Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic and Williams’ blow cold-blow hot win over Italy’s Flavia Penetta which drew trending in the internet after she ordered coffee from the sidelines to perk her up after losing the first set 0-6. This time though, there were no quick espresso shots for Williams and Bouchard, jokingly acknowledged that after the match saying her rival could have needed the “miracle coffee” to perk her up. “Maybe she needed another coffee,” said Bouchard, from Westmount, Que., who had never previously beaten Williams. “I know she didn’t play her best. I’m happy I just stayed with it and held my nerve. It’s a good way to start the year — gives me some
confidence.” The wake-up shot—either from a cup of espresso sold at the arena or her vaunted arsenal of shots--never came for Williams as she dropped the match without much of a fight from the fifth game onwards of the second set. Even her serves went from a high of 198 to a low of 130, her power obviously deserting her like a weakened battery. The end came after only 50 minutes. With Canada up 1-0, Vasel Pospisil got the boost he needed in the men’s singles and he quickly responded with a 6-3 7-4 win over ard-serving John Isner 6-3 7-6 (4) to put the Canadians on top 2-0 in the three-match singles-singles-mixed doubles tourna-
ment format. Williams, who arrived in Perth in Saturday, again appeared lethargic and later complained of fatigue. “It’s weird. I can’t get my body to move. I feel like I’ve got no energy,” Williams said. “It’s a little frustrating because I know I can play 2,000 times better. “I’ve just got to get my feet moving. I have to figure it out.” Williams later returned to the court and teamed up with the gun-serving Isner, who towers at 6-foot-10, to salvage wounded pride. Williams and Isner made it a 1-2 loss to Canada after they took the mixed doubles 6-3 6-4. The Czech Republic beat Italy 3-0 in the other Hopman Cup match.
well is still the same.” Although the 34-year-old German achieved the remarkable feat in his final season on tour, he did not get too carried away by the result. “It’s really unbelievable,” said Berrer, who until Tuesday had won just four games against the former world number one. “Losing 1-6 felt like the other matches against him so I had to do something. It’s my last season, I’m going for it, I have nothing to lose, I’m enjoying it here so why not. “It’s one of the matches that will stay in my memory but, let’s be honest, it was the first match for Rafa after many months of injuries, so we have to be realistic. But for me great.” Nadal had three break points to level the third set at 5-5 but despite jitters from Berrer, who served two double faults trying to close out the win, the German hung on to watch his opponent whip a service return wide on match
point. While 14-times grand slam champion Nadal must turn to plan B to get ready for the season’s first major, having pro-
duced 32 unforced errors, there were no such problems for Novak Djokovic who polished off fellow Serb Dusan Lajovic 6-2 6-1.
Nadal bows to German foe
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AFA Nadal’s season got off to a miserable start as his comeback from injury and illness stalled in the Qatar Open first round with a 1-6 6-3 6-4 defeat by German journeyman Michael Berrer on Tuesday. The Spaniard, who endured a stop-start season during the latter half of 2014 after suffering from a wrist injury and appendicitis, looked on track for a promising win when he took the first set at the warm-up event for this month’s Australian Open. However, 127th-ranked Berrer came out firing winners to all corners of the court to pull off his first victory over a top five player. “These things happen after a long time without being on the road... being in competition. I was playing with more nerves because after a long time away I wanted to win,” world number three Nadal told reporters. “My motivation and my hunger to keep doing things
RAFA LOSES. Rafael Nadal plays a return in his first-round match, Qatar Open, Khalifa International Tennis and Squash Complex, Doha, Qatar, January 6, 2015.
16 EDGEDAVAO Sports
OPENING THE SEASON AAK Davao to send 13 bets to 3rd Adidas International Cup
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HE Association for the Advancement of Karatedo (AAK) Davao will be sending 13 players to the prestigious 3rd Adidas International Cup karatedo tournament on January 16-18 at the SM Mall of Asia in Manila. The team is composed of veterans and newcomers led by 2014 So Kim Cheng Sports Awards Athlete of the Year Gabriel Quinones. The team will also parade four-year old Atsuko Kaiyel Tan, daughter of AAK Davao head instructor Rommel Tan, who will be campaigning for the first time in kata. “I hope we can bring more medals with these 13 players,” said Tan at this year’s inaugural edition of the weekly SCOOP Session of The Royal Mandaya Hotel last Tuesday. The veteran Quiñones, 16, a freshman college student at the University of Immaculate Concepcion, who won 1 gold and 1 bronze last year, is again the best bet for the AAK Davao karatekas with former medal winners Kyzzhia Navarro (1 gold), Sofia Agullo (1 gold), Jam Ramirez (1 silver) and Seth Michael Navarro (1 bronze). The Navarro siblings and Agullo are also all UIC students w h i l e Ramirez, 14 is from the Precious International
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FINE FORM. Miguel Ramirez (right) of AAK Davao connects in this bit of action. Dong Bacalla
Kaiyel, a Nursery 1 pupil of the Davao Christian High School, is the youngest member of the squad. “We want her to start early in karate,” said Tan, a former member of the PH national team and varsity of the Ateneo de Davao University. AAK Davao sent only six players last year but still won three golds, four silvers and two bronze medals. Also included are John Paul Ponce, 10 of Precious; Darlene Maramara, 14 of Davao City National High School; Airina Kawano, 10 of SPED Rizal, Mitsuki Kawano, 12 of Holy Child College of Davao, and Emmanuel Bayugo, 15, of UIC; Craig James Infiesto, 12 of APO Learning Village and Marcus Arellano, 6. Some of the parents of the players are also leaving on Feb. 15 to give support to the team in Manila. “Five foreign countries have already been confirmed,” said Tan. They are Uzbekistan, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and Japan. Japan will be headed by former PH and Japan national coach Shin Tsukii, who will also be giving free training to all the participants before the tournament proper.
School. Asked about her daughter’s coming out tournament, Tan said: “Kaiyel will play in the Kata competition for girls 6 years old and below.”
DEADLY KICK. Gabriel Quinones (left) shows why he is one the finest karatekas in the country today. Dong Bacalla
YOUNGEST BET. Four-year old Kaiyel Tan (3rd from left) will see action in the 3rd Adidas International Cup on January16-18 at the SM Mall of Asia. Dong Bacalla